First Fridays in Oakland

These free monthly street festivals in Uptown are so cool. Lots of people representing Oakland’s diversity and vibrancy: Art, music, dancing, food, just hanging out and mingling. The five-block festival was started by a local co-op called Rock Paper Scissors, one of the many small, non-profit community organizations in Oakland. It grew beyond their capacity and was taken over by the city about five years ago. And, it’s a 10 minute walk from my place in Adam’s Point. IMG_0657e

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Oakland, California

“I said I was a Panther – let me correct that. I am a Panther.”

He had slowly walked over and sat across from me in the afternoon sun, wearing long sleeves and suspenders, sports coat and hat. “Have you lived in Oakland a long time? I asked.

“Oh, you could say that. I graduated from Alameda in 1953.”

“So you were in Oakland during the days of the Black Panthers?” I started the conversation.

“I was in the same congregation as Huey Newton. I was a Panther,” and then he briefly reminisced about his trip to Chicago where he had met with the Blackstone Rangers after Huey had called ahead and told them to treat him well.

His daughter came out with lunch, they moved to the shade, and that’s when he corrected himself. “I am a Panther,” he said. One week from today the distinguished Black Panther turns 79. We need the Black Panthers more than ever, and the Gray Panthers, too!

Yeah, Oakland. My first trip to the East Bay was less than five weeks ago, looking for a place that was a real place with more life and history and future than the Valley of the Sun. It happened faster than expected but I’ve been living on Lake Merritt, Adam’s Point to be exact, just over two weeks. I’m circulating – coffee houses, bookstores, cafes, shops, parks, galleries – trying to see and feel Oakland. I went to a party celebrating Oakland Indie awards and felt Oakland excitement and vitality and pride; I watched a basketball playoff game in a sports bar where I was a minority of one.

For 20 some years I lived eight miles from downtown Chicago in Oak Park, a diverse town, yes, and filled with professors and professionals. Then I moved to Scottsdale, not diverse and definitely not cosmopolitan even though downtown with a beautiful library, performing arts center, and many bars and shops was a short bike ride away. My job ended April 5 so I could go anywhere in the world. The logical options for me were California, Ecuador, Barcelona, maybe Portugal. My brother in Kabul suggested looking at Vietnam or Thailand. In the end, I looked at one city, one spot, went back to Arizona, packed and drove away.

I might be done moving now; I might be home.

Chiricahuas, perfect camping and hiking

Incredible rocks and hoodoos, beautiful skies, clean air, night-time temps in the 50s, and no mosquitoes – this is a great, powerful place. We drove through Willcox (the people there might be very nice but the town is zero except for the excellent coffee shop) and then put the convertible top down to drive through the valleys and mountains to the Chiricahua National Monument campsite. Few real trees grow in the Valley of the Sun, so seeing the Apache Pines, Oaks, Arizona Sycamores and Madrones, and Alligator Junipers, even these twisted dwarf versions, was a refreshing change of pace. (Two days later we drove to Jerome and saw giant pines and other trees at 7000 feet.)

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Geronimo, Ft. Bowie, Gila Monster

In the southeast corner of Arizona, the Chiricahuas are one of the mountain ranges and valleys inhabited by First Nations for centuries before the Europeans. Fort Bowie was established close to Apache Spring to attack Apaches led by Cochise and then Geronimo. (The “official” history portrays Fort Bowie as protecting settlers and travelers but we can read between the lines.) In any case, here are pics of a two-foot+ Gila Monster at Apache Spring, the grave of Geronimo’s son, and the fort’s ruins, its decay accelerated because locals looted it for wood and other materials when it was disbanded a century ago.

The Fort Bowie ranger said she’d only seen two small Gila Monsters in her 18 years on the job, so seeing this big monster was unusual and very lucky.

Gila Monster

Gila Monster

Fort Bowie in a beautiful valler

Fort Bowie in a beautiful valley. Click for larger version.

Full Moon, McDowell Mountains and Sonoran Desert

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MIddle Beach Lodge, Tofino, BC

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Land of the Yuu-tluth-aht people. Article coming soon.

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Great Arizona Picnic, reason #many to spend time in the Valley of the Sun

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Scottsdale – A beautiful afternoon at the Great Arizona Picnic. This annual event is one of many at the Scottsdale Civic Center Mall: 21 acres of trees, flowers, water, and a manicured lawn surrounded by restaurants, cultural and civic centers; in short, an unlikely spot in the middle of the desert, but then the same can be said of Scottsdale overall.

Sunday afternoon, 88 degrees, and the fiesta is a 15 minute bike ride. I straddle up the Bianchi and float, north west, lock up and pay the ten buck admission donation. Four hours later, I feel great, unworried about retirement or unemployment thanks to a couple snacks, great people watching, and rock-and-roll memory bands that cover everyone from Johnny Cash to southern rock to Adele and those other Irish and English bands old folks recognize.

April is the heart of the spring festival season here. Everyone is outside and many of us are enjoying free or inexpensive weekend events. The Great Arizona Picnic is part of the Scottsdale Culinary Festival, and this casual, un-ironic event is packed but never crowded.

The food I sampled was tasty: a deep fried quesadilla with beef picadillo from Distrito was three bucks and delicious. (I ate at Distrito once, a Catalan waiter and excellent meal, and left just when the tables were disappearing and the dancing was starting. I am the age for early retiring.) The jalapeño pecan pancake from Orange Table was another three bucks and another delicious. Good food always cheers me up, and the $4 cherry shaved ice cooled me down so I exited content. Ten bucks to enter, ten bucks for food. A little high for the fixed income world so I’ll scrimp tomorrow, rice and beans and maybe a banana! (Isaac told me to peel them bottom up like monkeys and apes, so that’s what I do now, when I remember.)

London, then slipping into memories

IMG_2474London, its celebration of empire, war, royalty, sickness, and gruesome death is incredible. I can’t remember – Does Madrid plode its history to the same extent? Does Madrid have anything like Enlightenment Hall in the British Museum? Spain’s world ended before the Brits’ did, but I’ll have to revisit Madrid some day to see how its great past has been preserved and commemorated. Britain’s imperial past has never ended in London.

Last month was Isaac and Jack’s first trip there. We skimmed the museums, St Paul’s Cathedral, Abbey Road, and the highlights of chilly, dry, central London. We rode the London Eye and a double decker hop-on-hop-off; we cruised the Thames, caught the Tube and walked walked walked, passing Big Ben several times a day.

On day two Isaac bought his 18 year old brother a mimosa, and Jack had a couple more at one of the best bars I’ve ever tippled, Montgomery Place in Notting Hill. Fish and chips were pushed everywhere, meh, but the South Indian vegetarian cuisine was memorable, and so were the Spanish joints. (The food and art of the other old empire parade throughout London.)

Our Doubletree hotel was next to the Tate Britain. We spent one afternoon there, so much to love from the regular displays to the Francis Frith photos and the video piece Simon Starling Phantom Ride. I returned twice without the boys and focused on the Basic Design and Looking at the View temporary exhibits. From the latter, Gillian Carnegie’s Black Square comes from Hampstead Heath in North London, but represented to me the forests of Northern California and Cathedral Grove, Vancouver Island that I cannot capture through photography. In the same display is The Nature of Our Looking by Gilbert & George, five very moving pieces that hint at some of the sadness and optimism of these artists. These two are new to me, and I’ll return to their work. (I know little about art and understand less.)

The photos below indicate challenges of visiting these huge museums: Even without crowds or lookers, the gigantic rooms filled with two rows of paintings are just overwhelming. My three visits to Tate Britain gave me three different perspectives, and it just deserves more time and reflection. Years ago I visited the Art Museum of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, a very different place whose small size and exquisite displays promote contemplation over awe. Uh, well, visiting and skimming is a good start.

So what did this London trip cost? 300K frequent flyer miles plus 600 bucks got us three first class tickets there (I’ve never done THAT before!), one business class, and two economy seats on the return. Pretty good for Jack’s first trip overseas. Careful preparation and luck on the hotel resulted in two rooms at about £130 per night so about $5000 slipped through my wallet, a lot more than my first trip 27 years ago. Back then I was very poor but hopeful from reading Orwell’s Down and Out in Paris and London.

My first trip to London was several days before and after a three week stay in Cromer with a group of Catalan students I was teaching. (Yes, the local toughs hassled the male students and hit on the girls. I met a Scottish girl and seldom understood anything she said.) After London I spent a month with my friend Francis in Dublin where his brother-in-law asked me, “How many pints can you drink?” I lied and said 4-5 but he told the truth, “I can drink 15.” That is a lot of piss, a lot. Central Dublin at closing time, racing for the last bus with scores of drunks, that was one of the most dangerous places I’d seen.

After Dublin I returned to London for a couple days and bought a ticket that said London-Paris. Man, a plain old Waukegan guy like me holding that, beyond anything I’d ever dreamed. In Paris I bought a ticket to Barcelona, staying in a windowless hostel with some Swedes who took me to the catacombs and around town. When I was down to a few francs, I dropped off my suitcase at the train station and spent a final afternoon outside Pompidou. A young massage therapist from Austria approached and we talked for several hours, wandering the streets and lighting candles. She invited me to her hotel, and I just could not, couldn’t. I had enough money for one sandwich on the train and a bus ride to my Barcelona apartment. Sad but I hit the road. On the train I met two Finnish girls and they spent a week in my apartment, but that’s another story. 1986. That was a long time ago.

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The big news today: Taxes are too complicated and N. Korea is a serious threat

NPR is on my radio all day so I hear the same news reports over and over. Going by NPR and cartoonists, including Dilbert, taxes are incredibly, unnecessarily complex and impossible to understand. For normal Americans whose income comes from wages, the 90%, taxes aren’t very complicated and tax prep programs make them even easier. My income last year included wages, restricted stock options, a company paid move, and a few deductions. Using a familiar tax prep program, my taxes took maybe an hour to prepare. It’s arithmetic and I didn’t do the calculations.  The problem isn’t a complex tax code, but an unfair one – sure wish news coverage focused on the inequalities of taxes (investments taxed lower than wages, etc.) rather than supposed complexities.

Fun fact: What president orchestrated the biggest American tax cut and when? LBJ and the Democratic Congress in 1964. Look it up

News two, North Korea and a nuclear threat. Umberto Eco (The Prague Cemetery) claims every country needs an enemy. That’s seems accurate for the USA, and every American enemy lately has had an unstable, psychotic leader with nuclear weapons. (The unstable part is important because a rational leader would never attack the most aggressive military of the past 100 years.) So we’ve heard this before about the leaders of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Panama, Venezuela, Cuba, the Philipines, Chile, Congo, Vietnam.  </end of rant>