Pictures and Words

Friday, March 30, 2007

Firey Profile

During the Appalachian Studies Conference, we took off Saturday evening to the Berrys' little spot of land. We had a campfire there and as I stood there watching the flames rise up, I noticed that one of the students was positioned just right for me to get a profile picture of him against the night and flames. This is how it turned out.
Muzi's Profile in Fire

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Appalachian Music

I will always enjoy music (no, love music!) and so I have decided today's video will be one I just saw on AppalShop's YouTube page. The text below the video is by the musician. I will let it all speak for itself.

"My name is Michael Garvin, I'm twenty-two years old. I live in Greenup County, Kentucky, in Flatwoods, and I've been playing fiddle for four, going on five years—learning a lot of old-time fiddling from my local area, part of Eastern Kentucky. There's a lot of musicians in my family. My grandparents played music. There's a lot of instruments around the house, so I picked 'em up when I was young. Started playing guitar when I was about ten years old, learned many different guitar styles—loved the Earl Travis, thumb-picking Kentucky style of music, there. That was my first love. I liked promoting that kind of guitar playing, too. Here in the past few years, I've really been obsessed with learning fiddle tunes.The music up around that area, there's a lot more bluegrass, there's a lot less old-time. Though there is a lot of bluegrassers up in that area, I enjoy that kind of music, too. But there's not many programs for traditional music in my area, and really I think down here in Whitesburg, they've got the biggest old-time thing in Eastern Kentucky. It's a small community. You know, Flatwoods is not highly populated. Still out in the country—kind of grabbed up a bit of country and city. I've experienced a little bit of both. That's kind of a privilege—I've been on a farm and I know what it be like, but I never had to do it, never had to be a farmhand, so it's good.It's great to have a tradition to hold on to, and I'm glad that there is a lot of kids interested in that nowadays. There'd been a generation gap of fiddlers for a long time, and I think it seems like in this new millennium, or something, all these traditions are being revived. And fiddling is one of them. I've seen a lot of good fiddlers, it impresses me a lot, makes me want to keep trying harder, to keep the old-time in its place, too. I try to keep on these old-time tunes so I can show them to another generation. It's hard to keep 'em all in your head, though. "
Appalachian Artist: Michael Garvin

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Manipura collage



You may also like to view the pictures from this collage. They are collected in the same Flickr album as the others.

Other videos:
Muladhara
Swadhisthana
Manipura
Anahata
Vishuddha

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Mountaintop Rescue

Editorial
Mountaintop Rescue
New York Times
Published: March 29, 2007
A federal judge has inspired hopes that the destructive nonsense of mountaintop mining can be brought to a halt.


Mountaintop mining is a cheap and ruthlessly efficient way to mine coal: soil and rock are scraped away by enormous machines to expose the buried coal seam, then dumped down the mountainside into the valleys and streams below.

Mountaintop mining has also caused appalling environmental damage in violation of the Clean Water Act. According to a federal study, mountaintop removal has buried or choked 1,200 miles of Appalachian streams and damaged hundreds of square miles of forests.

No recent administration, Democrat or Republican, has made a serious effort to end the dumping, largely in deference to the financial influence of the coal industry and the political influence of Robert Byrd, West Virginia’s senior senator. But the Bush administration has gone out of its way to shield the practice. In 2002 and 2004, the Environmental Protection Agency — confronted with complaints that mountaintop mining violated regulations prohibiting the dumping of mine wastes in streams — simply changed the regulations to allow it to continue.

Now a federal judge has inspired hopes that this destructive nonsense can be brought to a halt. In a case argued by two advocacy groups, Earthjustice and the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment, Judge Robert Chambers of Federal District Court halted four mountaintop removal projects on the grounds that the Army Corps of Engineers — which issued permits for the projects — had failed to demonstrate that the damage would not be irreversible. He also said the corps had failed to conduct the necessary environmental reviews.

Local residents who have watched the destruction of their landscape hope the ruling will lead to tighter regulation of other mountaintop mining proposals. The greater hope is that the government can be persuaded to stop the practice altogether.

Follow this link for the NYT website of the article.

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Statues of Resilience



1. Hope, 2. Strength, 3. Joy, 4. Peace

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Music Mosaic

Monday, March 26, 2007

Swadhisthana Collage



For photos of the collage, visit my Flickr album for all the collages so far:
Laura's Chakra Collages

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Protest

I traveled with others to Washington, D.C., Saturday morning to join the March on the Pentagon. People were there in droves, mostly war protesters but there were a few pro-war protesters there. We walked through them on the sidewalk shortly after arriving. I have some video of that. I have a lot of video and pictures from the entire trip. I have the pictures uploaded to a Flickr album. Leave comments as you please.

I want to state this, though: Most, if not all, anti-war protesters are expressing their anger towards the current government administration, NOT at the soldiers who are serving their country. And while pro-war protesters shouted insulting remarks at anti-war protesters, ranging from insults on sexuality, gender, "get a job," (which I don't understand because many, if not all, DO have jobs!) and others, anti-war protesters did not shout anything back of such volatile language. Instead, they held their posters higher, chanted louder, and walked on.

U.S. Out of Iraq NOW

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Friday, March 9, 2007

Patty Griffin - "Rain"

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Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Major River Systems With Headwaters in the Mountaintop Removal Region


Major river systems such as the Susquehanna, Tennessee, Cumberland, Ohio and Mississippi have their headwaters in the region where mountaintop removal is happening. These rivers provide drinking water to millions of Americans.


More photos posted on Flickr by the National Memorial for the Mountains.

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Memory by Water

Five years old. Gulf Coast. The beach. Late afternoon. My sister walking along the water's edge, considering going in. Dad somewhere on the beach, talking with a friend. Mom reading a novel under an umbrella. I'm digging in the sand for seashells, the ones with scooped out centers left with indigo traces. My sister swims out in the water. Dad shouts, "Look out for jellyfish." I hear a scuffling in the sand near me. Looking behind me, I see a shelled creature scuttling across to the mound of sand I am creating. I move. He stops. His beady eyes must have noticed me now. Apprehensive. A sand crab. I stare enthralled with his shell, his little beady eyes, his legs in multi-hinged marvel. He is grey, white, pink, and carnelian. He inches forward when I move no longer - no signs of aggression. Excited with his comfortable visit, I scramble up on my feet, running to Mom, "There's a crab in my sand!" She laughs, tells me to sit with her a while. I sit, then boredom waves over me and I ask if I can go in the water like Beth. She reminds me that I don't know how to swim, to only wade on the edge, always stay where my feet can touch the ground. "Don't go as far out as your sister." I crash into the water, running, the salt gritty with sand in my bathing suit. My hair sticks in chunks on my scalp, slapping my neck and shoulders as I bounce with the waves as they come in from the Gulf of Mexico. There is no one else around us. Just a relaxing afternoon in 1981.

I had no idea of the Cold War, Reagan's politics, communism or neo-Nazism, the Atlanta child murders, Apartheid, Diana marrying Prince Charles, and the attempted assassination of Reagan. I did know of the Jackson's moonwalk dance moves, the space shuttle Columbia, Ronald Reagan as my President, The volcanic eruption of Mount St. Helens, the Olympic Games in Moscow, Voyager, Dallas, and Jesse Owens. I'd learn about John Lennon and his murder some time later. Dancing in the Powells' front yard to Madonna's "Lucky Star" and Michael Jackson's "Beat It" and "Bad" would come soon enough during my first year of elementary school. I'd learn about MTV as Dad got a chip for our satellite so we could get extra channels; many people were doing it this way. The Cars would echo a song in my head before I would bother thinking about a vehicle. Visiting my grandmother for evenings of black-and-white TV watching as my parents went out with friends. Family Ties and The Cosby Show in grey tones on a 15-inch screen, me sitting on a faded couch with a calico cat in my lap after she was no longer intimidated by my visit. Boo in her green recliner, a small woven footstool and a chair-side table -- locked drawer -- and cigarettes lit and burning ember to ashes as it lays idle. The trailer warm with the late afternoon sun's ever-lingering heat to late evening. I'd go to sleep curled fetal on the couch waiting for the morning.

I didn't mind the black-and-white television as I didn't see things in Black and White, but saw their Red t-shirts, the blush of Tina's cheeks when she came in flushed from soccer practice, Alex's conservative navy blue suit jacket, Elyse Keaton's blonde hair, or Rudy's orange barrettes, Vanessa's pink dress, or Theo's green sweat pants. Always in color no matter how black-and-white and gray it seemed: the world full of color.

Sitting on the couch watching television I'd wonder when would be our next trip to Pascagoula to enjoy the weather, the peacefulness in nature, the heron rising up in gray-blue splendor, droplets of water scattering like fireworks as he rose higher and higher, further away through pine trees to fade and disappear.

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Monday, March 5, 2007

Carbon Monoxide and Red Meat

Although this is old news, I only recently came across it.



But be sure to also read over these article links:
2006:
* FDA Is Urged to Ban Carbon-Monoxide-Treated Meat - WashingtonPost.com
* FDA Asked to Prohibit use of Carbon Monoxide in Red Meat - ConsumerAffairs.com
* "Carbon monoxide meat" still in the news - The Daily Table Blog
* Carbon Monoxide and Meat - Accidental Hedonist Blog (I like her last point.)
* FDA defends policy on allowing use of carbon monixide - Food Production Daily - USA.com
* Ban Carbon Monoxide in Meat - Food and Water Watch
* Supermarket Chains Refuse To Sell Carbon Monoxide-Treated Meat - ConsumerAffairs.com
* Keeping Meat In The Pink Without Carbon Monoxide - Science Daily

I cannot seem to find any articles on this topic for late 2006 or early 2007, nor anything that states if this has changed or has continued. While searching for a 2007 article I found this relating botulism, diced raw potatoes and carbon monoxide, among other gases.
"Dignan DM. 1985. Evaluation of the botulism hazard from diced raw potatoes preserved by gas exchange (sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide). Diss Abstr Int 46(4):1011B." It is on the List of References page of a report by U. S. Food and Drug Administration and the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, September 30, 2001, titled "Analysis and Evaluation of Preventive Control Measures for the Control and Reduction/Elimination of Microbial Hazards on Fresh and Fresh-Cut Produce."
Isn't that interesting, just what that dissertation title implies.

Really does make me wonder what happened to this issue. Is it being regulated and notated on the packages of meat in the supermarkets? Even if it is, there is no knowledge of what kind of meat is being used in fast food chains and restaurants.

My opinion is that if you're doing something to meat or produce simply to change its color for consumer appeal, then it is not worth it to purchase. The risk of long-term (and unknown) effects might be too high. And considering carbon monoxide is poisonous in all other situations, why would we insert it into our food?

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Mountaintop Removal in KY and WV

Berea sunset

Sunset Electricity

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Thursday, March 1, 2007

8 Wishes

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