Wednesday, August 31, 2022
Tree wonder
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
Cheese mad
我在美国吃过最臭的“气死”(干酪),洋人大多闻到就要掩着鼻子,不过对我来说其实没有什么,比臭豆腐差远了。
Perhaps the author is purposely using characters which have their own extreme meaning - above is what my Pleco dictionary says.
This appears at the end of an account of the "five tastes" of Chinese food, wondering if there isn't perhaps a sixth, "stinky." The example is the "stinky tofu" whose aroma befouls many a Shanghai alley, and the author finds it similarly repellant, but is also proud of having managed to eat some. I have eaten the smelliest "quisi" (cheese) in America. Western people cover their noses when they smell it but to me it was nothing - it doesn't come close to "stinky tofu." I have to agree!
Monday, August 29, 2022
Interrupted flow
Sunday, August 28, 2022
Saturday, August 27, 2022
Rolling river
Friday, August 26, 2022
Into the woods!
Met most of the students in my first year seminar yesterday. We met first as a group in a sixth-floor classroom I've never been in before, which boasted this view of the school tree-filled courtyard and environs, and then in pairs in my office. The class is "Religion and the Anthropocene" and it emerged that most had chosen up it because of the first word (under-stood in lots of different ways) while overlooking or misreading the latter. Our work's cut out for us!
Thursday, August 25, 2022
Wooden words
I was charmed by the idea of Katie Holten's "Tree Alphabet." However using it - while beautiful in its way - just seems silly to me.
Wednesday, August 24, 2022
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
Baking
European rivers aren't the only ones drying up. Last summer the reality confirming that the Anthropocene is upon us for my Chinese students was the record-breaking flooding in Zhengzhou. This year a far larger area (also including Zhengzhou) is suffering the longest and strongest heat wave on record - anywhere. This map shows high heat days over the last 2.5 months - and it's not over.
Monday, August 22, 2022
Autumnal
It's only been four days since I was last down there, but returning to school today for new student orientation felt like a different season.
Those leaves on West 12th Street have been munched for a while, I suspect, but the flashes of gold of the Lang courtyard maples are new!
Sunday, August 21, 2022
Saturday, August 20, 2022
Up, down and all around
Friday, August 19, 2022
It depends
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
Rub
Monday, August 15, 2022
Tree syllabus
It's adding-the-final-touches time for syllabi - or will be soon - so I've started wrangling the "Religion of Trees" course into some sort of shape. As any of you who've put courses together know, it's not enough to gather relevant and exciting materials and activities. Deciding in what sequence and rhythm to assemble them is key. Most useful for this process is defining the sequence of assignments, which in turn correlate to the "learning outcomes" of the course. Somehow the architects' symbols for different kinds of tree and shrub plantings above are helping me - not least because a sequence of drawing will definitely be part of the course's unfolding.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
10 Questions
Saturday, August 13, 2022
Late summer colors
Colors of late summer at Queens Botanical Garden
But are those leaves really purple? I've started reading Ed Yong's An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us and am losing confidence that anything is just as it appears to us. His discussion of vision is amazing. He lets us feel more connected than the many animals whose eyes only have two cones ("dichromats") where we have three ("trichromats") - although before that we've learned about how much more they get from the sense of smell than we can even imagine. But then he laconically observes that there are many other animals - such as birds - who see colors we cannot on the UV part of the lght spectrum. Some even have four cones.
[Birds] don't just have human vision plus ultraviolet, or bee violet plus red. Tetrachromacy doesn't just widen the visible spectrum at its margins. It unlocks an entirely new dimension of colors. Remember that dichromats can make out roughly 2 percent of the colors that trichromats see—tens of thousands, compared to millions. If the same gulf exists between trichromats and teatrchromats then we might be able to see just 1 percent of the hundreds of millions of colors that a bird can discriminate. Picture trichromatic human vision as a triangle, with the three corners representing our red, green, and blue cones. Every color we can see is a mix of those three, and can be plotted as a point within that triangular space. By comparison, a bird’s color vision is a pyramid, with four corners representing each of its four cones. Our entire color space is just one face of that pyramid, whose spacious interior represents colors inaccessible to most of us.
If our red and blue cones are stimulated together, we see purple—a color that doesn’t exist in the rainbow and that can’t be represented by a single wavelength of light. These kinds of cocktail colors are called non-sectral. Hummingbirds, with their four cones, can see a lot more of them, including UV-red, UV-green, UC-yellow (which is red + green + UV), and probably UV-purple (which is red + blue + UV). At my wife’s suggestion, and to [hummingbird researcher Mary Caswell “Cassie”] Stoddard’s delight, I’m going to call these rurple, grurple, yurple and ultrapurple. Stoddard found that these non-spectral colors and their various shades account for roughly a third of those found on plants and feathers. To a broad-taled hummingbird, the bright magenta feathers of the male’s bib are actually ultra-purple.
(Random House, 2022), 97
Friday, August 12, 2022
Thursday, August 11, 2022
Preventing the Eremocene
Concretions
Wednesday, August 10, 2022
华人同志天主教徒故事
Tuesday, August 09, 2022
Monday, August 08, 2022
Sunday, August 07, 2022
Cliff crumble
Saturday, August 06, 2022
Cliff fall
Friday, August 05, 2022
Vampire Figaro
Thursday, August 04, 2022
Destijidas
At the recently reopened Timken, the little jewel of a western art museum in Balboa Park, I was delighted to learn about a Mexican painter who works here in San Diego named Marianela de la Hoz. Entitled "Destijidas (Unwoven)," the exhibition takes Homer's Penelope as its muse, who weaves and unweaves to maintain her freedom. De la Hoz completed this painting, "The Hands of Penelope," while in a residency here. The show's small egg tempera works celebrate women of myth and history, allowing each to "unweave" herself from patriarchal stories. You can see the works (with a little more context than was provided in the show itself) here!