gaeln9796: (icon personal_us)
...whilst bike riding, Aaron decided to explore.He ventured down a path that skirts our Guadalupe Parkway, a river park that runs through San Jose that was designed by the US Army Corps of Engineers as a flood control project starting back in the 1960's. It runs through downtown, by the Children's Museum and the Performing Arts Center, and is more city-like, wide and controlled like this first photo I snagged off the internet or the second I took a while back that's right next to the.

Out here, though, in the suburbs in runs a bit more wild like these three photos of Aaron's which are actually the whole point of this post :) He took many many and I asked for the three, one selfie and two more he liked best.


Pretty California :)
 
gaeln9796: (icon art_month_october_brushes)
From: Atlas Obscura
The new posters pay homage to the 1930s originals.

America’s national parks have been enthralling visitors for over a century. The very first park to be established was Yellowstone, which was described by Ferdinand Hayden in his 1871 survey as a ”land of wondrous beauty.” There are now 58 national parks around the U.S., covering an astonishingly diverse 84 million acres of land. It’s not hard to understand why some ambitious tourists make the effort to visit every single one of them.


Want to see more lovely lovely posters. Go here.

***
Also, from Mental Floss_A weekly show where knowledge junkies get their fix of trivia-tastic information. This week, John takes a look at some of America's great National Parks!



***SaveSave
gaeln9796: (icon art_camera_2-365)
A few days ago, our Arizona friends, from left to right --Jason, Joanna skip skip skip, Regina, Todd, and James-- came for their yearly bay area visit with us. Also pictured are our San Jose friends, Jimmy and Cindy, plus my son, Aaron in the middle. Jason, being from Utah, hadn't seen Redwoods so, instead of our usual trek over the Santa Cruz Mountains to the coast, this year we delved into the Santa Cruz Mountains to the Redwoods, hike, hike, hiking up wooded paths and down, lunching along the way.
          The first pic is of Opal Creek which really is opalesque in color. The second is Traditional, the third just strange, the fourth twisted.

everyone.jpg

***
gaeln9796: (icon place_SJ)
we did not go to a march or a volunteering opportunity or anything political at all!
Instead, we went downtown, to The San Jose Museum of Art for a tea ceremony and it ws terrific.
From the museum's site:
The age-old eastern tradition of tea preparation and service encourages participants to focus with careful, slow attention on the color, form, aroma, and taste of tea, as well as the look and feel of the tea cup. Join Edward Gui, director of NanHai Art, to enjoy tea in a small group and share thoughts on the exhibition Your Mind, This Moment: art and the practice of attention.

Mr. Gui preparing. He first uses heated water to warm the cups and the pot. He then rinses the potted dry leaves. He uses a Cusinart deal-y to heat the water because each of the six kinds of tea -green, white, yellow, oolong, red, and black- are best served at different temperatures.  A different pot and cups is used for each variety of tea.
We were served a green, an oolong, and a black tea.

This is Mr. Gui daily lunch routine which takes him about 30 minutes. I can imagine how, especially with a stressful job, this 30-minute medative break would set a better course for the rest of the afternoon. Oh and, naturally, he only uses loose-leaf tea from China. We do tea a couple of times a week and I can see how our 'routine' is probably going to be undergoing a couple of changes. That Cuisinart deal-y is very cool :)

***
gaeln9796: (icon month_july_globe)
Anyone who knows me well from this journal knows that I am not religious but I nonetheless find this man's devotion inspiring and I think you will too.

Article taken from  Atlas Obscura

What does true belief mean? What is the difference between delusion and the divinely inspired?

Twelve miles north of Madrid in Mejorada del Campo, a 90-year-old man is working to finish his life’s work: a grand cathedral. It is a cathedral with no trained architect, no government approval and no benediction from the Catholic Church. It is either the work of a madman or that of a prophet.

Justo Gallego Martínez was a born a farmer to a very religious Roman Catholic mother. At the age of 10 he saw the effects of the Spanish civil war and witnessed communist forces shooting priests and ransacking the church. This left him with a distrust of government and a desire to enter into the service of the Catholic Church.

As a young Trappist monk in the 1950s, Don Justo fasted more, and worked harder. Too hard. He didn't fit in. After eight years in the order—and just prior to taking his vows—Don Justo Gallego Martinez was asked to leave the order.

Heartbroken and determined to dedicated his life to God, Don Justo began laying the foundations of a great cathedral with his own hands on a plot of land bequeathed to him by his parents. For the last 55 years, Don Justo has been building this rogue cathedral, which aims to rival St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Everything has been done by hand, and, for the most part, by the hands of Don Justo. The stained glass is made with ground glass and glue. The huge dome is made from plastic food tubs. The pillars are concrete, cast using oil drums.

Today the frame of the cathedral, which has a 131-foot-tall dome modeled on St. Peter's, towers over the town of Mejorada del Campo. The interior is roughly half the size of a football field. Below the main building there is a crypt, a complex of minor chapels, cloisters, lodgings and a library. The total area of the church is over 86,000 square feet. The entire structure was built without the use of a crane.



Despite being 90 years old, Gallego Martínez usually begins his workday at 6 a.m. and works for 10 hours a day—except on Sundays. Though he worked alone for the first 20 years, he now has help from family and volunteers. Nearly all of the building materials are scavenged or donated. Looking around, one can see columns made of concrete-filled plastic buckets or air ducts and stairs whose lips are formed from coils of wire. Piles of building materials—concrete, brick, rebar, even newspaper—line every wall and fill every nook. Though many of the stairwells are partially blocked by stacks of pipes, it is still possible to get to the roof for the best view of Mejorada del Campo. Don Justo’s full vision for the cathedral includes two narrow spires to reach almost twice as high as the roof of the edifice.

Cathedrals take a long time to build—more than a lifetime. Sometimes more than many lifetimes. It is unlikely Don Justo's creation will reach completion during the life of its 90-year-old architect. What will happen to the building after Martinez's death remains an open question. No one has yet stepped up to take over the project.

Given his age, Don Justo expects he will soon be with his maker, to whom he has dedicated his entire life in the form of this massive cathedral. The former monk has said that if he had his life again he would start the cathedral over, but this time would build it twice as big.

***
gaeln9796: (icon month_july_globe)
Which can be found out about here!!
And I quote...

A Victorian cistern beneath North London. (All photos: Forgotten Heritage Photography)

'The word "cistern" conjures a rather humble image: toilet tank. But to residents of Victorian England, the term had another, much more majestic definition: a cathedral-like subterranean reservoir built to store rainwater.

Unlike the Basilica Cisterns of Istanbul, the disused cisterns beneath London and Leicestershire, located in the English Midlands, are not open to the public. But armed with a camera and caving lamps, Matt Emmett, the urban explorer behind Forgotten Heritage Photography, found a way in to three of these 19th-century reservoirs. These photographs reveal what he saw, but location details are scant in order to prevent a stream of visitors from following in his footsteps.

"All of these locations are not public access and from experience would not be possible via requesting permission," says Emmett. "In all cases we made our own way into them, photographed them and left without incident. I am of the opinion that they need to be photographed as part of their historical preservation."


The circular cistern above, located in London, "was built in 1844 to supply clean water to a large historic naval hospital," says Emmett. This part of the cistern, the central hub, is notable for its acoustic features. According to Emmett's experience, "standing at the curved outer edge, you could whisper and hear [what you said] returning to you seconds later."

The cistern above, built in North London in 1868 to store drinking water, has a dozen arched corridors identical to the one pictured. Each such passage measures about 120 meters long, or 394 feet. It, too, has marvelous acoustics.

"The echo in here had fantastic delay to it, my whoop coming back to me around four seconds after it left my mouth," Emmett recalls.

Assuming you don't shout, the vast space would be eerily quiet if not for the Tube line that runs directly beneath it. "Every now and again there is a rumbling that builds and then fades before the silence descends again," says Emmett.


The above reservoir, located in Leicestershire, about two-and-a-half hours' drive north of London, "was not used for storage of drinking water and so not technically a cistern," says Emmett. "Instead, this was part of a waterworks and served as a filtration mechanism." The structure was built in 1896.'

And I unquote. So so cool!!!

***

Profile

gaeln9796: (Default)
gaeln

September 2020

S M T W T F S
  12 345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags