30 April, 2023

The Corona Diaries Vol. 82: We did not go hungry this Yuletide

(early-January 2023)                                                                 (Watch the prelude.)

My first nature walk of the winter took place just a few blocks from home so it was a short, if chilly, stroll to meet up with the guide and my fellow walkers. Our guide was a young woman who announced that our venture for the day would be about trees.

She knew her stuff and lectured us on how to identify trees by the bark and leaves. What is the texture of the bark? Did the leaves grow directly across from one another or were they staggered? I need to write this stuff down because I can only recall a few of the many types of trees she pointed out to us as we ambled around the east side of the Schenk-Atwood neighborhood.

Here is a conifer with flat leaves and I cannot recall anything our guide told us about this tree except that "conifer" means cone-bearing. Or something to do with cones, anyway.

She noted that conifer trees are cone shaped because this helps keep the branches intact under heavy snow loads.

Here’s a box elder which is a type of maple, if I remember what she said correctly. There was agreement all around that the proper term for those pods is "helicopters", arborists be damned.

The pods come in pairs like other maples but aren’t spread so far apart and have a droopy appearance. This is now lodged in my brain as the identifying trait of the box elder.

Nearby was a river birch with its tell tale peeling bark.

As our allotted time neared an end, we took a path which went along the shore of Starkweather Creek. I was happy because there is a giant tree at the end and I had no idea what kind it was. When we got there, I saw that a branch had been cut off and that there were mushrooms growing on it.

For a little scale, here’s a photo of it that I took in the summer with my bicycle leaning against it.

Our guide identified it as an eastern cottonwood, the biggest one she’s ever seen, in fact. May it be around for a few more decades, at least.

********

I recently rented an Austrian movie called Die Wand or The Wall.

It’s been on my to-watch list for some time now and so I stopped by my local video rental store, Four Star, and got the DVD.

It concerns a woman who goes to a secluded Alpine hunting lodge with a couple of her friends. The friends decide to hoof it to the local village tavern while our protagonist, whom I don’t think is ever named, decides to stay at the lodge with the dog, Lynx.

Strangely, her friends don’t return that night and she goes to bed thinking they’ll turn up the next day. Waking up the following morning, the woman discovers that they still have not returned. And so she decides to walk to town only to find that there's an invisible wall blocking the road and, as she soon learns, surrounding the lodge compound.

She wanders the area trying to figure out if the wall has her totally enclosed or not. In one unsettling scene, she comes across an older couple at a cabin. The wife sits motionless on the porch while the husband stands frozen at the well. Confusingly, while the people don't move, the water from the well does. This is the only time the movie even hints at the nature of the wall beyond it being impenetrable. Did time stop out on the other side? Or was the temporal anomaly inside of it?

The movie features extended readings from the woman's diary and we get to see the scenes that she describes enacted as well. She deals with the enforced solitude and having to hunt and grow her own food. She is no mere city slicker, helpless when confronted with the absence of modern conveniences like electricity. With no other company, she becomes attached to the loyal Lynx and begins to notice the rhythms of nature in detail as she wanders the woods and around the nearby tarn.

It's a lovely, meditative film with nature being alternatively giving and harsh. The woman tries to comes to grips with her predicament by writing. I found her observations of the white crow and its rejection by its fellow corvids to be particularly moving.

Now to read the book it's based on.


********

I took my oldest stepson and his ladyfriend out to dinner recenty(ish) at Vintage Brewing and I got to try an interesting new beer. It was called Z-Quester, an ale made with a grain called Kernza.

It was neat to see something new in the beer world that didn’t involve a novel strain of hops that tastes, yet again, like some combination of tropical fruits, and promises to turn another brew into a variation of Hawaiian Punch. Kernza is a wheatgrass that is being investigated as an alternative to wheat and barley. It’s a perennial so you don’t replant it and it’s got deep roots which helps keep soil erosion at bay. Plus, it apparently sequesters carbon very well, hence the beer’s name.

I liked it quite a bit. Kernza tastes nuttier than wheat or barley but still provides a fine grainy flavor. Farmers and brewers are preparing for global climate change by looking at ingredients better suited to a warmer, wetter world, including new strains of hops as well as grains and we're off to a good start here.

********

I spent Christmas Eve down in the exurbs of Chicago at an uncle's house. I had planned to see my mother that day as well but she informed me that she was quarantining as she had been exposed to Covid. We ate, drank, and chatted the day away.

Christmas Day involved a lot of eating. My Frau and I had breakfast at a fancy lakeside hotel. Although the hotel dates back to 1948, we dined at the new tower. Well, it is several years old but new in contrast to the rest of the place. One of our former mayors, Dave Cieslewicz, used every drop of blood, sweat, tears, and political capital he had to get it built despite it not conforming to the recommended building codes for the historic neighborhood that it resides in.

Cieslewicz wasn’t a terrible mayor but he drank the Richard Florida kool aid by the 55 gallon barrel and, rather than championing, for example, efforts to tackle increasing poverty in the city or trying to improve public transit, he proposed a downtown trolley and got a luxury hotel tower built for Madison's burgeoning “creative class”. I guess he adhered to a Reaganite theory of trickle down economics: if we get enough tech companies and their well-paid employees living on the isthmus, then their prosperity will trickle down to the poor people on the south side.

Just as Chicago’s Mayor Bilandic lost his bid for re-election over the city’s handling of a blizzard, Cieslewicz’s efforts to have a playground for the rich built cost him a third term.

Walking by a glass-walled room lined with wine racks, I knew I was out of my element. I am just the hoi polloi. On the other hand, one wall was lined with photos of local luminaries, including Aldo Leopold.


At least wealthy out of towners can get a feel for the city’s history as they head towards some haute cuisine.

The food was fine but I didn’t get anything fancy, no omelet made with quail eggs collected by virgins on a full moon served on a gold plate or any such thing. I also didn’t eat too much as the gluttony was scheduled to happen that night.

Although my youngest stepson was in town that weekend, he and his ladyfriend were elsewhere so Christmas night was just my Frau, a friend of hers, me, and enough food to feed an army.

The first course was a Québécois meat pie called a tourtiere. While the Frau had explained the concept to me, I got worried when she asked me to grab the springform pan instead of using a pie pan.

This thing was massive!

And it looked simply wonderful.

Our first course was tourtiere with roasted Brussels sprouts and roasted yellow squash & grapes.

It was some serious rib sticking food. Second course was some vegetarian lasagna that the Frau's friend had made. Delicious!

I was quite full but had just enough room for a slice of chocolate bundt cake from a bakery here called Nothing Bundt Cakes. And, yes, they make bundt cakes and nothing else. But they do come in 4 sizes and even more flavors.

********

A few days after Christmas we had a snow storm which made things very pretty once again.

And a few days after that was New Year’s Eve. We took it easy but the Frau cooked a wonderful dinner consisting of pasta tossed with chick peas and kale and these little patties of ricotta cheese and other ingredients that shall remain secret.

It was all quite delicious, I can assure. 

While I went to bed with no resolutions to keep starting the next day, I was determined to figure out what do with all of this.

I came into work one day back in the fall and discovered that my boss had left me a million pounds of rhubarb. While I managed to give a lot of it away to one of my Frau’s friends who is a prolific baker, I still had a freezer full of the stuff. What do to with it all?

********

Bonus photo. I didn’t mention it a few entries ago but the city replaced the dead sapling out on the front terrace back in November. I am hoping this one lives. I watered it well for a couple days before it started freezing at night and have been told to water it again come the spring.

I cannot recall what species it is but I think it’s a new variety of elm that is resistant to Dutch elm disease. Welcome!


(Listen to the postlude.)

29 April, 2023

Ow! My mitochondria!


It is 1906 and a gentleman named Isiah is in a town watching a group of morris dancers (I think) pass him as they perform their ceremony. They carry a pole and atop it is a crude doll house which holds the wren. I see that there is (or was) a wren ceremony that took place in some parts of the UK on Boxing Day in which a wren was sacrificed. A few of the dancers collapse and the Doctor's diagnosis is that their mitochondria have lost their metabolic energy.

It turns out that Isiah is an electrical engineer and that the wren is not what it seems. Instead of being a dead bird, it is a sentient being that looks like a small round ball. It is starving for energy and, like E.T., just wants to get home. The Doctor and Isiah take the creature to the latter's lab and discharge all of his primitive batteries into the ball which gives it enough energy to burst through a window and fly up into the firmament.

I am beginning to warm to these short stories with a Christmas theme. This is a simple, straightforward tale that compacts a normal TV story into just a dozen or so pages. It's slight but I liked the appropriation of folklore and the happy ending.


The Doctor brings on Darkness and night

"Bringer of Darkness" is a comic that appeared in the 1993 summer special edition of Doctor Who Magazine and so is very different from the comics that appeared in the late 1960s.

The Doctor, Victoria, and Jamie finally escape the London of The Web of Fear and land in the forested part of a planet. It all seems idyllic until they discover a damaged Dalek ship with a trio of the evil eye-stalked demons building a beacon to send a distress call to bring even more of these menaces to their rescue.

In classic style, the Doctor reverses the polarity of the beacon's neutron flow or some such thing causing the SOS signal to go in reverse and kill the Daleks. Victoria gets to see the creatures in the metal shells and feels a bit of empathy for them in contrast to the Doctor's glee at having killed 3 of his enemies. Victoria is disturbed by the display of hatred on the part of the Time Lord and wonders why the Daleks referred to him as Ka Faraq Gatri, a name which the Doctor dismisses a superstition. She realizes that she must leave the TARDIS.

A neat little tale that gets into Victoria's head more than you'd think possible. I like how the text that is from her journal is in script while Dalek dialogue is in their font. It was really nice to have a comic with a bit of substance and one where the Doctor does not refer to his companions as "children".

I Will Be Your Father Figure

Jamie is M.I.A. here. Victoria dreams of her father while an automaton waits silently in graveyard.

The TARDIS hasn't left London after the events of The Web of Fear - still some webs to be cleaned out of her systems - and Victoria decides to visit her parents' graves. On her way there, she ponders on how the Doctor whisking her away in the TARDIS kept her from confronting her father's death and all the feelings she has about it.

At the graveyard, Victoria is confronted by the automaton which has been waiting for her so it can kill her. Before it can do so, however, the Doctor appears and shoves his sonic screwdriver into one of its eye sockets which is missing an eye and renders it inoperative.

While the sonic screwdriver hasn't appear in the TV show yet, I believe it was mentioned a couple novels ago.

In addition to missing her father and contemplating the Doctor's role in her life, Victoria muses that it is time for her to say goodbye to the Time Lord so I presume she leaves by the end of this season.

It's nice to see Victoria in a pensive mood instead of a screamy one. A gentle diversion from action into the mind of a companion. A nice change of pace.

The Doctor cannot let his life be ruled by threads

The brigadier! Sadly his first moments onscreen are lost but we do get an animated recreation here.

As we saw at the end of The Enemy of the World, the TARDIS door was open while in flight but Jamie steps up at the beginning here and gets them closed. But our heroes find the ship covered in a fearful web and unable to go anywhere.

Once the web clears, the TARDIS puts the pedal to the metal and lands at a tube station. Unbeknownst to them, yeti stalk the Underground and Professor Edward Travers from The Abominable Snowmen, some 40 years older and wiser, has been brought in to help. A fungus that looks suspiciously like bath bubbles, at times, and cobwebs at others, is filling up the tunnels and killing anyone in its way.

A base under siege story, it handles a large cast well with various groups filling up 6 episodes rather nicely. The Underground sets are really good with the various platforms and stretches of rail being moody and having more than a hint of danger about them. The tube stop or wherever the Army has holed up is more than just a single room and there's also a sequence out on the streets so there is nice variety in locations.

The whole story is dimly lit which lends a sense of menace lurking just underneath the surface at all times. (Think Ghost Light.) Scenes in the Underground especially show a nice use of light and shadow. It made me wonder what a story like Kinda could have been with more creative lighting. Episodes 3 & 4 had good cliffhangers, especially the scene where Travers steps between 2 yeti.

The Doctor is gone for roughly 1 episode so I suspect Troughton went on vacation. Victoria is very screamy-whiny here and very annoying at several points. But she is wearing a short dress and does have a nice set of wheels. Conversely, Travers' daughter Anne is a scientist in her own right and works with the Doctor to turn the tide against the Great Intelligence instead of cowering and screaming. Jamie is always ready to take action and, as is his wont, sometimes does so impetuously.

Episode 3 remains lost and was animated for this release. It seems like whoever it was that did the work used a different technique than on the other animated episodes I've seen. The limb movement had a pronounced rigidity and some faces were really flat and not very detailed. At some angles Victoria looked like Mrs. Potato Head. I got used to it and into the story eventually but it was jarring for a couple minutes.

It was really neat to see the debut of the Brigadier, though he's not with U.N.I.T. here. I kept hoping he'd say "Five rounds rapid!" I felt that the yeti were much scarier here than in The Abominable Snowmen with their rifles that spat webbing. With the large ensemble cast, the variety of locations, and some great videography, this was a fine, fine story.

28 April, 2023

Beer & Buses?

I think something like this would be a good idea for Madison Metro with the network redesign being put in place in June and BRT coming next year.

New Genesis footage from '76

Although it has been on Youtube for a couple months, I just discovered this wonderful footage of Genesis performing on 31 March 1976 at the Concert Bowl, Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto. Super8 footage taken by concert photographer Jim Kelly has been cleaned up, uspscaled, and synced with audio. The Movement does not list any known audio recordings of this show which makes me think the audio here is from the second night in Toronto on the following day or perhaps a few days earlier in Buffalo. Good recordings of both nights exist.

Kelly's nickname was "Speedy" and I've seen that name in trading hubs. I wonder if it was the same person.

Phil and Steve both appear to be wearing the same outfits that they are in the In Concert film that would be filmed 3 months or so later.

It's neat to see video of Phil dressed as Harry for "Robbery, Assault, and Battery" and of "it/Watcher of the Skies". Mike is playing a different double neck than he does in In Concert. Looks to be an 8-string bass on the bottom there. His playing on "Los Endos" is hot! Bruford is great here too. Love his work on "Supper's Ready".

The Corona Diaries Vol. 82 - Prelude: How to Recognise Different Types of Trees From Quite a Long Way Away

 
 

27 April, 2023

Falcon cam returns

The MG&E peregrine falcon cam is back! You can watch it here.

Everybody Wants to Rule the World

The Enemy of the World was mostly lost for decades as only 1 of the 6 episodes was known to exist until about 12 years ago when copies of the other 5 were discovered. Aside from being known as a "lost story" for ages, it was also famous for featuring Patrick Troughton in 2 roles: the Doctor and the villain Salamander.

In addition to our hero looking exactly like the bad guy, security bad ass who carries a stick, Bruce, has more than a passing resemblance to Dick Cheney. I sat there waiting for him to say, "Simply stated, there is no doubt that Salamander now has weapons of mass destruction." I couldn't not see him as our former Vice President.

So the TARDIS crew lands on a beach and the Doctor goes for a brief swim. They are noticed by a trio of brutes in a hovercraft who mistake the Doctor for the megalomaniac dictator, Salamander. They are rescued by one Astrid Ferrier who takes them to her boss, Giles Kent. They are moving against Salamander while the dictator goes about consolidating his power.

For reasons unknown, the makers of this story chose to give Salamander an odd accent that came across as a blend of Mexican and French. While I can completely understand the need to differentiate him from the Doctor since they are played by the same actor and a part in Troughton's hair just wouldn't be enough, this goofy accent was an odd choice.

The Doctor is largely sidelined for the first 4 episodes as he demands proof of Salamander's ill intentions before he agrees to act against him as an impostor. He rejects the evidence put before him as circumstantial for quite a while. This allows Troughton to chew some fine scenery as the evil villain.

I noticed that there isn't much incidental music here and what there was is very straight ahead dramatic orchestral stuff and not the more pseudo-pop classical or weird early synth music I am used to. Maybe I just haven't paid strict attention to the scores lately. While on the subject of music, I still think of how much better the theme is here than it has been since the show returned nearly 20 years ago every time I watch one of these old stories. 

If memory serves, this story marks the first time someone gets sucked out of the TARDIS to die an agonizing death in the vortex. I think it's also the first appearance of a hovercraft.

I rather liked The Enemy of the World. I smiled whenever Cheney came onscreen and Salamander with his preposterous accent was just a lot of fun to watch. There are a lot of characters in this story so, while they're not totally sidelined, Jamie and Victoria don't get quite as much screentime as they might have. Plus, they're separated from the Doctor for a while so that character dynamic is truncated.

Whatever its faults, this story is a workout for Troughton and really fun for that alone.

And who thought Benik's haircut was a good idea? His smile made him weasely enough. They didn't have to torture us with that coif.

25 April, 2023

R.I.P. Harry Belafonte



The Corona Diaries Vol. 81: The Sound of Ice

(late-December 2022)

It was about a week after I got back from Stevens Point green with envy over the snow they had gotten that we down here in Madison experienced our first major snowfall of the season. And so it was off to Acewood Park to enjoy it.

It was right around freezing and so the snow was wet and heavy with big flakes pelting my face and threatening to soak through my hat. I tried to take photographs quickly before my camera and phone became covered in slush.

As I was walking along the path, I saw several birds flying from tree to tree, most way up in the bare canopies. While I took many photographs hoping to see what species they were and perhaps match them to a winter survival scheme that I had read about in Winter World (from last entry), most of them were out of focus or suffered from motion blur.

Except this one.

That’s a mourning dove. Winter survival strategy: unknown. It just seemed content to sit on the branch, snowstorm be damned.

Since I see them a lot, I would guess that they are the kind of bird that eats all day to fatten up in time for bed.

Although it was cloudy and grey out, the Acewood Arch still looked lovely to me.

I walked out behind the cattails on the south side of the park and saw an area in which they were matted down. Perhaps it was the bed of a deer. I followed a ditch out of the wetland which led through a wooded area towards another bit of wetland before ending at a pond. Just before a culvert I spied something odd on a tree. I moved in a little closer to see what it was but I couldn’t make it out. So I made a bee line for the tree. Finally, once my face was inches away from it, I was able to identify what the thing was that had caught my attention.

A trail cam. I presume the city is looking to get a handle on the wildlife that live in the park. Some poor employee of the Parks division is in for a shock when they watch the footage and are confronted by my disheveled, unshaven face in extreme close-up, icicles hanging from my moustache and a perplexed look with eyes squinting as they peer over my glasses.

Farther down the ditch were more cattails.

I made my way back to Acewood pond and stepped out onto the ice. It cracked beneath my feet revealing that a thin layer of it covered frozen mud. I looked out and saw spots on the ice where water was bubbling up.

I continued walking on the frozen surface, not too far from shore, and my footfalls caused 2 types of noises. First was the expected cracking of ice that we are used to hearing when we trudge along sidewalks that our neighbors couldn't be bothered to shovel after the last snowstorm or when we select crushed ice from our refrigerator's icemaker for that refreshing gin & tonic after a hard day at the office.

SCRUNCH!

Second was the sound of cracks radiating out from where my foot had fallen and sounding like tightly strung wires loosed from their moors.

P-YOO!

As this latter sound became more common, I got nervous. To quote Ernest Shackleton, "Well, that just doesn't sound good." Feeling a general sense of apprehension, I figured that I should head back to the shore. I turned and took a couple of strides before

CRACK!

My right leg went through the ice and into the mud up to just above my knee. This was swiftly followed by my left leg plunging through the ice but it didn’t sink quite as deep.

Well crap.

I hope I didn't drop down onto a sleeping turtle.

What was the worst that could happen? I’d call the non-emergency police number and they'd send a fire fighting crew to pull me out after they had finished laughing. But that was only what a small part of me was thinking. The much larger part was convinced that I had become like that guy in Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” and that this was the end of me. My legs would freeze solid and some jogger would find my corpse in the spring and see the evidence of what turtles do when they're pissed off because you stepped on them when they were trying to hibernate.

As it happened, I managed to crawl out fairly easily. I beat a hasty retreat to my car and went home to change and put my clothes in the washer. But it had been a wonderful walk nonetheless.

********

Just about a week ago, nearly 6 months after a tree had fallen and totaled my neighbor's house, a crew was seen out there demolishing it.

For reasons unknown, they left a couple of walls standing which it seems they’re going to keep. Which means he is rebuilding.

I didn't realize he had no basement. A small house, no basement yet it was still probably worth $250,000 in this market.

********

Food! Having bought that rhubarb BBQ sauce in Stevens Point, I decided to make ribs. I began by whipping up a dry rub.

I made these in the oven so they got the rub and were then lovingly placed in a baking dish along with some beer and cooked low & slow until tender. I then sauced half of them and let them sit under the broiler for a short while to caramelize/get crispy. They didn’t turn out half bad. The sauce was good. It had a nice tartness and tanginess to it and wasn’t like eating corn syrup. But my dry rub needs work. I want to work on it so it's less chili powdery and more, um, something else. Maybe lean on the paprika and garlic & onion powder a bit more.

My Frau made macaroni & cheese with pimentos to go along with the ribs and we had one of those bagged salads made of shredded broccoli. So it was a kinda sorta healthy dinner.

I also recently cooked some artichoke spinach chicken which the Frau had found the recipe for. Here are the ingredients. Well, most of those are. Lemon curd - those jars with the gingham lids that look like they were processed by a French grandmother - was not an ingredient. Neither were those 2 cans of cat food.

We’ve got chicken breasts, cream cheese, lots of garlic, artichoke hearts, spinach (not shown), sour cream, chicken broth, salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes. Did I mention garlic?

My Frau will stand for no less than twice the garlic called for by a recipe. I don't know how she developed this garlic addiction. It's gone from simply having multiple heads of the stuff on hand at all times to buying a ceramic garlic roaster and, most recently, a tube of minced garlic that I think was 50% off at the Dollar Store. I pray it doesn't go any further lest she commission garlic artwork or some such thing.

This recipe is all done in one pan which makes clean up easier. It turned out well.

Back in October, I read about a new restaurant that had opened just north of us called La Pollera Colombiana which specializes in Columbian roasted chicken. I immediately thought to myself, “Ooh! I have no idea what makes roasted chicken Colombian but we’ve got to try that place out.”

Well, October came and went without us going. November did the same. Then in the middle of this month it hit me, this craving for roasted chicken. I felt like a junkie climbing up a wall unable to get his fix. So one evening, I jumped in my car and drove there.

While a few Columbian touches were to be had, the interior wasn’t radically different from its predecessor, Om (Indian) Fusion.

But it had a warm and cozy feel to it on a blustery late fall evening. I let things get out of control and ended up ordering too much food so we had plenty of leftovers.

We had roasted chicken – delicious! – grilled skirt steak (also delicious) along with grilled potatoes, fried plantains, beans, and rice (delectable, tasty, yummy, and tastilicious). It was a fine, hearty meal that really hit the spot. I had been quite hungry and just kind of gobbled it down not really trying to discern the flavors. And so I look forward to a return visit so I can try to figure out what seasonings were used on the chicken and just what makes it Columbian style.

********

In the middle of the month we got a big storm that covered the ground in a new layer of pristine white. It was gorgeous outside.

As you can see, whatever the survival strategy of the neighborhood birds was, chowing down at our backyard feeder in the wake of the storm was not it.

After work the next day, I went for a walk around the neighborhood. One of the great benefits of working from home is to be able to logoff, put on my boots, and immediately be outside on a stroll.

Not too cold out and just lovely.

I walked by this one house and noticed the tree out front still had berries on it.

“Ooh! I know this one!”

Winter World had a section on winter berries. They weren’t holly but rather something cranberries. I couldn’t remember the name and so looked it up when I got home. Highbush cranberries. Now, in the tree in the backyard of the house next door to this one I spied a flock of hungry birds who were getting impatient with the human.

When I walked down the street just a little bit farther, they all swooped down at once and started chowing down on the berries.

I thought they were house sparrows but the beak of that one on the right coming in for a landing looks too narrow to be a sparrow. Hmm…

I dropped something off at the library and circled back to Starkweather Creek. The path to the railroad tracks looked inviting.

The creek was rather serene.

A bunch of birds were all in a tizzy on the other side of the bridge.

Now those look like house sparrows. Males have that white chest with the black stripe below the neck.

I went home to cook dinner and warm up. But I would be out in the snow and cold again the next day on a walk led by a tree expert.

********

Bonus photo. This is a picture of how a friend of mine spent his winter solstice way up north. I am green with envy again!

 
(Bang your head to the postlude.)