Well, this got serious all of a sudden!

Not only this website, but now I have roles on Eastrose.org (webmaster aka digital goddess) and participating in Lyceumoftrees.org in various capacities. I always need to be learning something new, and this seems to be the current opportunity for learning.
My goals for the eastrose site are to stick with wordpress and the UUA theme without doing any custom code, and to keep the information current and alive.
So these digital opportunities come with Facebook responsibilities, too. Oh Joy!
What did I used to do for a day job? I can hardly remember!

OMG – has it been that long?

Yep, a long time.

So much has happened. The biggest is the arrival of a guy named Will in my life, and then the dog Lucy. Combining households, camping, traveling to Africa again, and working as a volunteer at my church implementing the PowerChurch accounting system and entering 2015 and 2016 data. 

Goals *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+

1: make a market link on this website so you can see and buy the jewelry and art that I’ve got in my collection.

2: To make links to the groups I am part of now — Oregon Power and Light, Lyceum of Trees, Eastrose, and Nadaka Park.

3: To become adept at word press while I assist Eastrose in updating and keeping their website current.

4: CAMPING in my new Tin Tent! 

 

Who are the bad guys in Mali?

The Tuareg “rebels” have once again signed a peace agreement with the Malian government in Bamako. I would be oversimplifying and an armchair quarterback if I pretended to be an expert on the “bad times” in Mali.

However, (you knew that was coming!) I am reminded of playing “Risk” and ganging up on the loser to shorten the game. I hope that with this agreement the good guys can gang up on the terrorists and rebuild the Mali that is famous for friendliness, tolerance and hospitality. Perhaps the establishment/government of Mali can send some resources north to help the northerners feel the attachment to the nation. Sometimes “golden handcuffs” can be helpful to unify the nation, instead of all the riches staying in the south.

Rebuilding the road to Timbuktu would be a great symbol of caring and concern now that “Team Mali” is forming up again. If the road and the airport were back in use by mere mortals, the next step? Restore the Festival in the Desert!! Please!

Brussels, Bamako, and Beyond

I was making a face for the camera at the time, but at the moment it is more like how I feel about this trip!

I was making a face for the camera at the time, but at the moment it is more like how I feel about this trip!

So today I found a foreign language collection of tapes for the widespread Maliian language Bambara. (Maybe I can leave the French to Kathie?) And I’ve survived the yellow fever vaccination reaction, and my passport has the Mali Visa ready to go. More and more it feels like a real trip. When I visit with people who have travelled to Africa, they are glad for us going to Brussels for a few days first. That means we’ll have a chance to adjust to the time zone change before we land in the capitol city Bamako for the 16-day tour.

Brussels at Christmas should be a destination all by itself though. Chocolate and lace, beer and old Europe, altogether a great start. I found an apartment very close to the Grand Place and with a kitchen we don’t have to eat out all the time. Might have a side trip to Bruges or anywhere else, and we have to make our way to Charles de Gaulle airport to fly to Africa.

Here’s the tour itinerary:
Mali Mystere 16-day tour : From the River to the Desert
Bamako, Djenné, Dogon country, Mopti, Niger River, Tombouctou and the desert, Ségou, Bamako.

Day 1: Saturday – Bamako
Upon arrival at the airport in Bamako , your guide is there to welcome you and accompany you to dinner. Overnight at the hotel Tamana.**

Day 2: Sunday – Bamako to Djenné
Morning departure from Bamako to Djenné via an air-conditioned 4×4. We will pass beautiful mud villages and meet with villagers who will explain the tradition of millet and the traditional costumes made from bazin. Lunch en route. Dinner and overnight at an encampment/hotel.** You will enjoy breakfast in the lovely shaded terraces.

Day 3: Monday – Djenné
Morning tour of the city and its rich history, with the largest and most beautiful mud mosque in Africa and the world. Monday is the day of the colorful weekly market, where you can find lovely traditional fabrics. You will walk through the narrow alleys to explore the majestic Sudanese-style mud buildings. Behind each door a warm welcome awaits you. Djenné is the ideal setting to enjoy the great variety of ethnic groups that inhabit the Niger River Valley and the inland delta. Lunch in a local restaurant; the afternoon is free to enjoy the market; dinner and overnight at an encampment/hotel.**

Days 4 – 7: Tuesday to Friday – Dogon Country
Morning departure for Dogon country via the Bandiagara cliffs. Lunch en route. Change of scenery for 4 days, amid Dogon villages with their unique cultures and long-held traditions.

Hike along the cliffs to meet the villagers and ancient dwellings of“Tellems.”?You will discover the Dogon traditions of weaving cotton to make bogolan (mud cloth) as well as carving wooden masks and fertility statues. Each village hosts its Tougouna, a place of exchange that welcomes all village elders, called the “house of words.” Discover Dogon cliffs, plateaus and plains through trekking. Nights are spent in safe, comfortable encampments in the village.

On the seventh day, we return to the 4×4 and depart for Mopti.
Guided tour after lunch: the crossroads of trade on the Niger River. Observe dugout canoes and pinasses being built. You will be surprised by the elegance and unique colors of each pinasse; this is how the city of Mopti gained the prestigious name “the Venice of Mali.” Dinner and overnight at the hotel “Ya Pas de Problème” [the quaintly named, There is no Problem Hotel]**. Do not deprive yourself of capitaine skewers, a succulent white fish and local Mopti specialty!

Days 8: Mopti – Tombouctou by Pinasse
Morning departure via a fully equipped, motorized pinnase along the Niger River . Three days and two nights to experience the tranquility of the river:?meeting Bozo fishermen, visiting villages and witnessing the smoking of fish, roaming livestock, and petty trade; crossing Mali ’s largest lake, ” Lake Debo ” where many species of migratory birds reunite; and swimming with our friends the hippos! Every night at sunset, we reach beautiful places to camp along the riverbanks in complete safety. Somehow the river will make you work up quite an appetite for fresh-caught fish, eaten sitting around the campfire under a brilliant sky of stars.

On the tenth day, arrive in Tombouctou in the afternoon and overnight at the hotel Ya Ka Seme or Colombe **.

Day 11: Tuesday – Tombouctou
Morning tour with a historian who will unveil the rich cultures and traditions of this most famous, mysterious city. Discover its mosques, the center of 16th century manuscripts, the houses of early explorers, the museum, the traditional spice market, and witness the creation of handicrafts and silver jewelry. During lunch with a Tombouctou family, (Note: someone on trip advisor says this is our tour guide’s mother!) you will taste a local specialty with 12 spices. In the afternoon, depart for a camel ride in the desert. You can savor the beauty and total silence of the desert. Meet my friends the Tuaregs and their leader Ibrahim who will tell you the legends of the Sahara under a star-studded night sky by the fire. We will partake in traditional Tuareg meals and tea, and spend the night under the dazzling stars or in a Tuareg tent.

Day 12: Wednesday – Tombouctou
Return to Tombouctou by camel; free afternoon in the city of 333 saints.
Dinner and overnight at the hotel Ya Ka Seme or Colombe**.

Day 13: Thursday – Tombouctou to Mopti
Morning departure by air-conditioned 4×4 where you will have the pleasure to enjoy magnificent scenery.
Picnic en route. Arrive Mopti in the early afternoon. Dinner and overnight at the hotel “Ya Pas de Problème.”**

Day 14: Friday – Mopti to Ségou
Morning departure to Ségou. You will marvel at the giant, luxurious baobab trees lining the roads, as well as Bambara and Bobo villages. We will stop briefly to admire the mosque in San. Arrive Segou in the mid-afternoon; dinner and overnight at the hotel Esplanade.**

Day 15: Saturday – Ségou to Bamako
In a morning tour of Ségou, you will have the opportunity to discover the pottery made by a cooperative of women in the market, and the dye house where everyone can paint a bogolan. Lunch on the restaurant then depart for Bamako for 3h30min drive; enjoy the afternoon at leisure; dinner is at a local restaurant. Overnight at the hotel Tamana**

Day 16: Sunday – Bamako
Morning tour of the city: the home of artisans, the market with fruit and spices, the National Museum. Lunch is at a restaurant; the afternoon is at leisure; finally, transfer to the airport with the help of your guide.

(Note: somewhere else indicates the ** have a meaning about the lodgings. Mostly that a 5 star “western style” hotel is out of the question, that the best lodgings in Mali would be more rustic, or words to that effect.)

For the 16-days tour: The cost: 1940 Euros
Included:
The rental of a the car and driver throughout the stay;
The fuel,
The pinasse (boat) rental;
Overnight stays in hotels and encampments
Three complete meals per day for the entire trip;
Tourist taxes; hotel taxes; the accompanying guide
Not included:
The international flight, drinks

Responsible travel: Cultural tour of Mali

Community
We work hard to ensure positive impacts to the local communities and surroundings that we encounter, and encourage travellers to contribute items that are inexpensive and easy to pack, such as pens for schoolchildren and recycled clothing.

Our group sizes typically range from 5 to 9 people, which we believe minimizes impact to the environment and allows our travellers to gain more insight into their surroundings through more individual attention from our guides. We derive ultimate satisfaction from teaching our guests about Malian culture and keeping our traditions and heritage alive through carefully-planned, sustainable, developing tourism.

We employ 100% local guides, drivers and cooks. Guides are selected who already have special knowledge about the areas they will introduce to tourists, have numerous local contacts, and constantly seek to increase their knowledge and have a passion for teaching tourists about their environments. With visits to local fruit and spice markets, a local women’s cooperative selling pottery & eating in local restaurants, this trip helps to stimulate the local economy.

Environment
In Mali, key tourist destinations are spread far throughout the country, and we plan tours carefully so as to maximise ride sharing. We make sure to arrange transport that accommodates maximum capacity while still maintaining comfort for our guests. Mineral water is safest for tourists and we always offer empty bottles to children and adults along our journeys who will continue a long cycle of re-use for the bottles. Mali currently is working to reduce large amounts of plastic bags that are not properly disposed of throughout the land, and travellers are quickly made aware of this and encouraged to individually do their part to dispose of any waste in designated facilities.

What’s this Net Neutrality thing?

So, this web site is sort of a playground right now. The swings are up, and there is some sawdust on the ground. I hope to make it a more robust site, possibly using it to FTP files to  my freelance customers, maybe do a little private selling of jewelry and art, perhaps posting my photo collections in some organized fashion.

Just recently, I managed to upgrade my internet access to “real” internet, not the Verizon piggyback Jet Pack. It’s great to get unlimited internet access at a reasonable monthly cost. Now that I’m semi-retired, it is also great to get services like Netflix and YouTube without paying very much more.

The point is that the internet is a tool in my toolbox to help me make a living and communicate with people and businesses. In my neighborhood, the internet access is already a utility. I hope that the FCC hearings produce a set of rules with wisdom and preserves the ease of access to the internet we now have. You can support net neutrality by sending your comments to the FCC at this email address: openinternet@fcc.gov 

The FCC is posting over 1 million comments received in a gigantic data “dump” for research and analysis. Anything you send to them will remain part of the public record. Just cuz we can’t seem to get anything useful from the House of Representatives doesn’t mean we cannot share our thoughts with the FCC! Of course, calling or writing your congress person works, too!

Net Neutrality completely leaves out those who are economically unable to afford a computer and wireless service. Or at least a smartphone — although it’s very difficult to apply for a job on a smartphone. My neighborhood has so many people newly arrived in the US and working so hard to get by. I have to remind myself that people don’t always live and work on the internet.

Leaving my soapbox now. ‘Bye!

Be careful what you pray for!

View from the bench at the north end of the future play area.

View from the bench at the north end of the future play area.

Nadaka Park is undergoing quite a face lift. I took pictures of the park today to document the “before” and I hope I can match the pictures in November to have the “after” views. A shelter, restroom, community gardens and a nature-based play area will all be installed on roughly 3 acres of the 12-acre park between now and then. And the park Community Festival is Saturday, September 27! Hot Dogs gratis while they last.

This project has been an imagination-fueled community activity for many years. It’s been a decade or so since the city of Gresham purchased the original 10-acre forest that was formerly the Camp Fire Girls day camp: Na Da Ka is “Nature Day Kamp” in campfire girl speak. (Valley Girl speak being an entirely different language.) Of course today it is Campfire Boys and Girls.

August is a tough month for the park. Our fellow human beings who are without homes and sometimes without sobriety use the park to camp. Often they leave messes behind that are difficult to clean up. There is a sadness to seeing this detritus. We don’t often encounter such poverty of spirit in our regular days. The messes left in the forest remind us that some folks in this world are having a very tough time.

The only way to make the park safe and enjoyable is to have enough people using the park every day that it no longer feels isolated and empty. In the process we might lose that feeling of grandeur and solitude we’ve enjoyed for many years. The payoff will be the community involvement in growing food, family and educational events in the shelter, and watching children grow and play in the new playground — nature-based rather than a mechanical wonderland.

Blessed Be!

Must have been a rainy spring!

Incredible Queen Anne’s Lace field in Gresham

Or somebody forgot to mow this field earlier. At any rate, this is the field where I get Queen Anne’s Lace to make jelly. The jelly is the most delicate pink, and smells a bit like grapefruit. It is quite simple to make, and definitely exotic to eat. The first time I made the jelly, I was really hunting for flowers. They were few and far between, and I had a couple of places, including this field, that I scrounged for flowers. It takes about 250 flower heads to make a batch of 5 half pints of jelly. Driving by this field this summer drove me nuts. Not making a batch when the field is so beautiful seems like a failure to me. The field is a solid mat of flowers, and I hardly had to move to get what I needed. The photo is an added bonus, taken with the phone no less.

UPDATE: Aug. 22, 2014

Drove past this field last week and it had been completely mowed. Not a flower in sight. I’m so glad I got there first!!

 

How ’bout taking a summer off?

This time last year I was planning to travel to N. Idaho for my oldest brother’s memorial service and a weekend campout with family. All systems normal, work is great, life is good, and I was looking forward to my first visit to the Portland Highland Games in July.

Now, 2014, well, the good news is I’m retired as of today. It was difficult and I still get hiccups sometimes if I think about it too hard. In May, I was told my position was eliminated. Sorta like lightening, you never think it will happen to you!!!

I’ve planted a garden, acquired a federal Tax ID and a Mailbox for a potential home-based business, and cleared out the blackberries in the back yard to make room for a woodshed.

akimbra bc symbol blue

NOT QUITE A LOGO — more a symbol of inspiration and new growth. Originally this was an African symbol in a family of symbols called Adinkra — a t-shirt company says it means, “Excellence, Genuineness, Uniqueness.” I modified it to show growth and imagination as well.

I want to work again, but not full-time. I can do anything — really! It’s almost like getting out of high school again, with the infinite possibilities laid out like a giant what-should-I-do-now buffet! June was a month of taking time off, going to lunch with friends from work and vendors I’ve worked with, and basically hanging out. Today, July 1, I want to start completing some of the projects I’ve been playing around with — the wood shed, the kitchen floor, the yard (there’s a retaining wall to build — curved and on a slope no less), fix my bike, clean the garage, etc. With the gift of my brother’s inheritance, I’ve set aside the money to plan a trip to Africa — a trip I’ve wanted to do for over a decade.

Lunch with people from companies I’d like to work for is also on the list for July and August. A couple of companies are in my neighborhood and I have admired them from afar — can’t hurt to go visit. There’s a catch though — a jury summons early in July! Whoops! Guess I’ll wait and see how that works out first. There’s a vacant house next door too. It’s a mess inside and maybe someone would let me clean it out so that a “flipper” might actually buy it! So many possibilities.

Its been great to learn how to live on my own clock and honor my own preferences. Too many clothes! that’s a hobby I won’t need to continue. Yum, juicing in the morning! Watching Jimmy Fallon once in awhile. Getting a “real” internet connection. And I’ve been enjoying my time with friends and family. Took me an hour to get my Google calendar and my paper calendar lined up so I might not miss anything!

Nadaka Park is coming alive. The proposed community garden, picnic shelter, nature-based play area and other amenities will be constructed this summer. I have the masters of a walking map the MHCC SEED students made and I want to make a fold-up pocket map for the park. The annual Community Festival is September 27 this year — much later in the hope that the construction might be mostly done by then. It’s an amazing park and an unusual gathering of community volunteers and non-profit partners made it happen even while the City of Gresham struggles with Parks financing. I’m glad I can contribute to it. This week I made a coloring page for the Turtle Rock in the NW corner of the park.

turtle page jpg

The rock really is this adorable — right down to the eyelashes and the grin!

Oh and learning WordPress . . . that might take awhile too. And Meetups! 3-D printing meetups look SO interesting! So much to do. Granny called it “re-tired” and complained that there were no more holidays after retirement! All I know is every time I can hang out with my children and their peeps is Mother’s Day. That’s holiday enough so far. And there are many, many worse things in life than retiring at the beginning of summer. Not that I am particularly wealthy by American standards, however I am surrounded by riches in all other ways.

Aural Tetris

Yep, think about that. I’m in Symphonic Choir at lunchtime on MWF. The instructor is fabulous! And I get the opportunity to meet students and sing with them which reminds me why I work so hard on the support services at the college.

dance of the tides

dance of the tides

So we are learning a sighing lullaby for the Winter concert. You know how it is, learning something by rote before you are able to give it the “flow” it needs. We were working on a lovely phrase and getting the harmonies very correct. And he said we should work on smoothing the motion out, that we sounded like “aural Tetris.” What a great description!

I’m singing tenor, which is a new experience for me. Yes, on Beethoven’s 9th Chorale years ago, I sang some tenor lines, but in that choir (and all of my life) I’ve been second alto. I didn’t realize how much I am conditioned to be an alto. During rehearsal, when he calls on the altos to sing, I still sit up straight and take a breath! It’s reflex! The tenor part has the melody more often than the altos, and I’m enjoying singing with the basses — picking up the chords from them instead of from the sopranos.

This choir experience is a blessing, total blessing. The instructor plays our parts for us instead of insisting we sight read the music. After we’ve started work on a song and get the general idea, he’ll play a recording for us and tell us how he would like us to sing compared to the recording. And his humor. This guy is a firecracker. The last time I had an instructor with that much energy and constant good humor was Mr. Cobain in Algebra in 9th Grade at Salk Jr. High in Spokane. (That was just a couple of years ago, eh?) Our warm ups are fun, and they sound really good too. And we do a lot a capella, which I also love. Halleluiah!

 

Just a few short weeks

1400 miles touring Oregon, mostly east side, lots of good stuff at work, and a new niece . . . the daughter of my oldest brother. We lost track of her for about 30 years (family drama, yep, you betcha). Sadly, my my brother died in mid-June. I’ve been trying to gather pictures and family tree (thanks cousin!) and I’m looking forward to meeting her this weekend. We’ll see.

Another friend is moving to Portland, and I’ve finished my volunteer obligations at church. Feels good to be free of the obligation and the worry of having to deal with surprises related to the community.

I”m also checking out the finances of retirement . . . seems a shame to work if I don’t have to. Someone else might really LIKE my job!

Heatwave coming. Happy Summer!