summer adventures ’12 part 8: BKLYN

After a few false starts, I finally made it to Brooklyn to hang for a good portion of the summer! I have two weeks at a friend’s apartment in Crown Heights as she is at a conference in Utah…sweet! I have done a TON of walking…especially those couple days before I got a key to the building. I didn’t want to trouble the neighbors too much.

I am playing for a wedding on Saturday, so I brought my entire rig into town so I could practice and head right from the city to the gig on Saturday. Almost immediately, my amp started acting up. Today I finally brought it to a friend of a friend for repairs. Hopefully I’ll get it back tomorrow and be ready for the gig! But, this detour proved fortuitous, allowing me to park in Williamsburg for the day and walk across the Williamsburg Bridge to Manhattan and to meet up a former advisee for lunch! We had a fun afternoon wandering around the lower East side. Speaking of walking, I think I have walked at least 4mi. a day since I have gotten here. It is far to hot to go running, but I’m still getting in a good workout!

Highlights so far include attending Celebrate Brooklyn in Prospect Park to see the Dirty Projectors, Wye Oak, and Purity Ring (with photographic evidence), connecting with friends, and living the city life. Tomorrow I intend to see my friends Rusty Belle play at Pete’s Candy Store. Then, it is back to CT bright and early Saturday for the wedding. Next week I will be back in Brooklyn for a bit, soaking it all in.

bridges walked across: Brooklyn, Williamsburg

bands seen: 3 (1 more pending)

difficulty finding parking spots: mild

summer adventures ’12 part 7: epilogue

Well, I stopped posting for a bit there, but I made it back to CT unscathed and mostly un-sunburned. I’ve been cold! The return to CT’s temperate and low-humidity air was rather surprising. What normally passes for a perfect day now seems a little lack-luster after my travels. Oh well, things will get back to normal soon enough I’m sure.

My last couple days in Key West saw me exploring the island by bicycle, eating delicious food, observing the sunset, and taking lots of photographs. Derek showed me excellent Mexican and Cuban food, both slightly off the tourist path and both tasty. Even though I think that one Cuban meal met my sodium quotient for the rest of the year! The highlight of my final night might have been the great conversations I had while at The Porch, a quieter, funky, local watering hole. What a great vibe, and the group from Ohio State was fun!

My big project so far has been finishing up “The Swamp” by Michael Grunwald. This excellent book traced the history and the politics of the Everglades from the days of the Spanish conquest, through the Seminole wars, up to the present day. It was rather eye-opening to read how extensively the Everglades have deteriorated in the last sixty years, all due to human intervention. Contrasting the sprawl of Homestead and the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale metropolitan area with the apparent abundance of wildlife in the Everglades, it seems like the book was heavy-handed in environmental dooms day scenarios. However, it is really clear how the wilderness of the glades transitions unnaturally to urban sprawl as soon as you leave the park. If this is environmental decline, a fully functioning Everglades must have been truly awe-inspiring! Nature does find a way to recover, but I believe it is best to leave nature alone and enjoy it on its own terms, not call the Army Corps of Engineers in to resuscitate the environment through more building. I wonder how bad things will need to get for everyone in South Florida to agree to take the steps for real sustainability in the region. Perhaps my country upbringing has biased me towards appreciating nature for nature’s sake. After four days of peaceful contemplation and exploration in the Everglades, re-entering the urban sprawl and four-lane highways, complete with homogeneously boring humanity, was rather shocking. I do hope that the multi-billion Everglades restoration project is able to overcome political hurdles and score a win for nature.

I agree that the National Parks were and continue to be America’s best idea, and I hope the future generations will be able to explore nature in all its grandeur through them. I’ll just have to make it a priority to visit as many of them as I can as soon as I can, before we mess things up too badly. It is interesting that the Blackstone Valley Heritage corridor is being considered for inclusion in the National Parks system as a monument to American industrialisation…a park dedicated to humanity’s ingenuity over nature, and a direct contrast to the other parks’ focus on natural wonders!

summer adventures: prelude 2012

I am getting ready to kick off another exciting summer! The highlights:

Tomorrow, I am finally seeing Radiohead in concert. It’s about time…they are local-ish and not all the tickets were bought by unscrupulous scalpers stub-hub.

Then, exam week and student move-out.

Then, faculty meetings.

Then, travel to the Everglades for 4 days of beach camping. Then Key West for 4 days at the Marquesa.

Then Brooklyn, NY for a bit.

Then, CT for a bit to witness the crazy Pomfret summer construction project. The school is converting from oil burners and steam heat to natural gas burners and forced hot water. For the entire campus. While summer camps are happening. To be completed before students return and the winter cold sets in. Consequently, I spent the last week and a half packing up the music room and my office.The music room looks very sad all cleared out for the summer.

Then, camping in Acadia National Park for a few days before my family arrives in Bar Harbor for family vacation. I’ll hang with them for a day or two before getting back to Pomfret for faculty meetings.

THEN, I am off to Saratoga, NY to take a sabbatical replacement teaching gig for the fall semester at Skidmore College.

Eventually, things will settle down a little so I can actually finish my master’s degree. Let the comment writing commence!

20120528-220334.jpg