Tuesday, May 26, 2009

HANK'S HENNERY

The first dawn on the completed run for the now seven week old burgeoning chicks, halfway to the age of egg laying found them already up at the crack of false dawn a good hour earlier. With the exception of incorporating the rolling mechanism the plans below have been completed leaving only the preservation of the wood by painting it to dissolve into the loquat background using Hunter Green, Sunlight Yellow, White and Black for camouflage.



As for the chick’s development, no matter how we might speculate on the outcome, none of the babes seem to be sporting rooster characteristics such as aggression, larger size and comb or spurs. Could we have chanced on six layers?



Until I sat with them I considered the gushing reports I read on line of their entertainment qualities to be a bit on the “I CAN HAS CHEEZEBURGER” side. There are many interlacing patterns to the behavior of these motherless orphans who I seem to have taken under my wing as they imprint on me with exploratory pecks and perchings and poopings upon. My flute sends them running to the farthest corner. The most interesting aspect to date is the seemingly simultaneous, unanimous mood changes from all getting together to preen, dust-bathe, sleep, bug pick each other, drink, or eat from the feeder to each putting as much distance as possible between themselves and the others to peck and scratch on their own turf. The game is on if any one of them finds a bug big enough to be seen or stolen, which they seem more adept at than finding them in the first place. If there has ever been a classroom for studying genetic memory, this is one of them. I’m a happy man.

DANTE’S PARADOX

“He who sees a need
and waits to be asked for help
is as unkind as if he had refused it."
-Dante Alighieri, poet (1265-1321)

This quote from AWAD (A Word a Day) greeted me this morning with what felt like accusation since I am attempting to refuse contributing my energy to the system causing the greatest suffering to the needy's grossest greeds by finding a kinder way to coexist with my entire environment and its kindred spirits who’s needs are satisfied symbiotically. This blog is my unasked for help by describing my experiences and ponderings during my endeavors to balance becoming more feral with beneficial technology.

Monday, May 25, 2009

THE GIFT OF GIVING


Whenever I discover a fascinating phenomenon in nature, realize a profound aspect to perceiving reality or find a meal’s worth of garden goodies ready for the plate, something within longs to enhance the moment by sharing it. Whenever I read of the depletion of diversity in nature, of reality tunnels demanding to be taken as absolutes or of the million starving products of heedless procreation and agribusiness excesses, something within shrivels any desire to contribute energy to the culture that perpetuates such atrocity.

Blog Bud, Pisces Iscariot, posted a profundity which speaks directly to this divide this morning:

The jailer to an imprisoned mind may find his release when he realises that he is, in fact, alone.

The anonymity justified by consensus within groups relieves individuals from responsibility for their actions to the extent that if one claims adherence to the proper cocktail of group ideologies one may ignore personal responsibility altogether. The key sought in the quote above releases such imprisoning reliance on consensus by recognizing ones own unique capacities as a valid contribution to the welfare of the preexisting family of life on Earth beyond the exclusivity that defines any collective.

Friday, May 22, 2009

FAIR WITNESS

Our matching (mirror image) tattoos of the pond, porch and pets

I have a special friend. If Robert Heinlein were to ask her what color was my porch, she would answer, “It’s covered in creepy vines; on this side.” Her return to residence at the Dawgranch has rekindled a conversation that began around the pond over morning ganjava five years ago and continues each of these days around the everchanging wonder of baby chicks growing to maturity. This blog was begun as an outlet for the momentum the vigor of our discussions had generated when she upped anchor for NYC three years ago.

Unlike blogging to an unresponsive, unknown readership with rare excellent exception, our conversations deal with immediate feedback from the smoke detectors we serve each other as by calling out fuzzy language and logic in genuine efforts to share and understand new and alien ideas. The energy of our exchanges serves to drive my meditation during the times alone. It seems the ultimate value of language is that through the natural diversification of labels and meanings due to early nurturing among local customs, we each bring a naturally different picture of the world to a shared process of revealing the pre-existing theme from which all the varieties arise.

She makes me dig harder to help her get her head around my use of terms like void, infinity, gestalt and the mobius loop. I rail at her use of awesome to describe the commonest of phenomenon, only to be brought up short by my jaded, unwilling-to-be-awed attitude that permits me such condescending snobbery and blinds me to how awesome the mere quantity of the commonest critters truly is. Nature is awesome.

Friday, May 08, 2009

BRUTIFULLY EATEN


Here comes Peter Cottontail
Hopping down the bunny trail
Where, perchance, flew Ollie Owl
Spotting hopping with keen eyed scowl
It was over in a trice
Haunting echo left on the ice
Rabbits scream as they are eaten
Now silenced on this path well beaten
Silenced too are their stomach's growls
By this meeting of two prowls

Thread courtesy of Pisces Iscariot

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

THE URGE TO WRITE



There’s no hot topic about which to opine, no brilliant insight into breaking the spell of the myth that has lead western civilization to abandon the symbiosis man shared with the nature of the planet when it employed totalitarian agriculture to become a malignant parasite threatening the health of the body on which its own well being depends, no report of the bumper crop that keeps me from having to go to the grocery store to supplement my garden.

There’s just this urge to express myself that feels akin to water making its way down the mountain after being deposited by winter in the dormant state and wakened by the returning sun to overfill ancient caverns, stalactited with calcified tradition forcing a seep through the seems of conclusions and the faults in boulders of certainty to reemerge on the surface as the fountainhead of fresh thoughts sifting and shifting the grains of factual sand and rolling the theoretical pebbles along arid arroyos of habit to remerge inevitably with the ocean from which it evanesced in the endless cycle of why and understanding my mind is wont to indulge.

The past couple of months have brought a change in the tenor of my “daily dozen,” as my grandmother used to refer to her solar cycle maintenance routine. Rather than acting from the solitary inspiration of watching the sun being slowly revealed by the rotation of earth’s occluding bulk, I have been turning my back to that relatively changeless event cycle to share the observation of its light revealing six brand new sizes and styles of fledgling feathered pterodactyls every cycle with my equally inspired friend, Erica. As chick fuzz molts to be replaced by the multicolored variegation of the adult feathers the wearers of the costumes retire at twilight larger and more colorful than they awoke that dawn.

While they are young, my caution sharpened by the slaughter of three of the first six chicks by my neighbor's dogs and the ensuing insanity, I seal the babes up in the coop with a door over what will remain open for the adult chickens to roost and lay eggs via the walkup ramp and let them down at first light of false dawn. I sleep in the hammock next to the coop with the sharpest ears these old cauliflowers can sprout and often awake to stray cats’ curious investigation of restless peeps and floor peckings emanating from within. Priest, my faithful companion, has made peace with their uncanny resemblance to the birds he catches and the chicken wire that separates him from them to hang with Erica and me to watch in fascinated wonder. Ella, Erica’s dog, on the other hand, has a lifelong reputation for herding to uphold and cannot sit still if there are less than all in sight and constantly circles the coop and looks up into the top for the missing ones in addition to a periodic check of the pond to count the fish.

It feels much better to express thoughts about my experiences in returning to symbiosis with my environment than my experiences of hearing endless news about the results of the wars against whatever, such as the simultaneous calls for compassion, by the Dalai Lama at Harvard, and for empathy, by Barack Obama qualifying justice, while the politicians translate such feelings as code words for liberal treason. Yeah, no more politics here.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

TECHNOLOGY ENTERTAINMENT DESIGN - TED

I have been constantly entertained by the designs technology promises as I browse the entertainment technology has already designed on my never-quite-state-of-the-art iMac. The two TED talks I have embedded here seem to combine ideas that will enable any and all to access the information offered by any and all, anywhere, any time.

First is Blaise Aguera-y-Arcas, demonstrating Photosynth, a photo collecting/montaging program that can form 3D images of anywhere in the world that has ever been photographed from enough angles to form the subject. It not only lets you look at often photographed locations but enables you to scan it through time using the chronology of the photos.



Next is Patti Maes demonstrating wearable computer technology that can both scan ones surroundings and project applications upon them.



The possibilities of either innovation are staggering and when combined put anyone availing themselves of them capable of getting to the essence of any subject by synthesizing the various information available. Nothing beats actual experience for growing wisdom but it can never lead to the expression of more than one person's version of that experience, their reality tunnel. Photosynth, when expanded to more than photographic information, will enable the user to take as many versions of any subject as are available and get a model of its reality less subject to the idiosyncratic warps of personal filters than actual experience.

Of course, nothing can nor should eliminate the individual's unique slant on any subject no matter how informed, but this technology is bound to make personal biases less influential and may actually help shed them.