Author Archive for patricia

Alexander Armstrong: Bad Manners

In their lighthearted “Q&A” feature every Saturday the Guardian Magazine asks a notable or famous person the same set of questions, from “What keeps you awake at night?” to “If you could bring something extinct back to life, what would you choose?”.

Yesterday’s magazine featured Alexander Armstrong (of the Bafta winning comedy sketch show, the Armstrong & Miller Show) and his answer to the following caught my eye:

What is the trait you most deplore?

Bad manners, which extends from people dropping litter to people trawling the hell out of the oceans.

Ah! Remind you of anything? Alexander gets it – perhaps he’s been reading SuperForest?

And here’s a sweet one, from David Mitchell (author of Cloud Atlas) a couple of weeks back:

What does love feel like?

Like having found the right key by touch alone and in pitch darkness.

Have a perfect Sunday SuperForest.

Love

P

Dick Van Dyke Saved By Porpoises!

Evening SuperForesters!

I couldn’t resist sharing with you what is at the very least a contender for Best. News Story. Ever.

Yes, let’s savour that headline one more time: Dick Van Dyke, Saved by Porpoises.

Artists impression

The Guardian reports that the 84 year old star of Mary Poppins, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and, of course, Diagnosis: Murder, was rescued by a pod of porpoises after dozing off while out paddling on his surfboard:

“I woke up out of sight of land,” the 84-year-old actor told Craig Ferguson on his TV chat show. “I started paddling with the swells and I started seeing fins swimming around me and I thought ‘I’m dead!’

Van Dyke was wrong. “They turned out to be porpoises,” he said. “And they pushed me all the way to shore.”

Say it with me now, in your best worst “cockney” accent:

Gawd bless you, Mary Porpoise!

Love

P

Patricia’s Journal: Postcards for Elizabeth Too!

Hey all

I was really moved by Aaron’s post, launched into lunchbreak craftiness by Jackson and his triplets - and, most of all, inspired by Elizabeth McClung.

My postcard, winging its way to Beth now.

If you haven’t yet, please do read Aaron’s post.

You can send Elizabeth a card at this address:

Beth McClung

PO BOX 2560

Port Angeles, WA 98362

 

Love!

P

Le Ballon Rouge: A Love Story Between a Boy and His Balloon

The 1956 short (just 34 minutes) film, directed by Albert Lamorisse, Le Ballon Rouge (The Red Balloon) tells the story of Pascal and his growing friendship with a red balloon. Beautifully shot and starring Lamorisse’s son Pascal as ‘Pascal’, the film won the Grand Prize at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival and Lamorisse an Oscar for best original screenplay. The credits, charmingly, thank “Des Enfants De Ménilmontant et Des Ballons De La Région Parisiénne” (Translation: With the assistance of: The Children of Ménilmontant and The Balloons of the Paris region.)

It’s really a beautiful film and a touching story – I love it and think you might too. AND I think you can check it out on Youtube – here’s a taster:

Love

P

NPR Rap: My crew is small but unstoppable like Terry Gross

Morning SuperForest

I love public radio – here in the UK I regularly tune into the awesomeness that is Radio 4. As SuperForester Mathew has shown us this week, NPR showcases some incredible music – turns out it also inspires some incredible …enthusiasm ;)

This brought a smile to my face – and I liked the shout out to the BBC at the end.

Love

P
(via)

A Thought from Rabbi Hillel

(image via)

If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? If not now, when?

Rabbi Hillel (c.110BCE-10CE)

Love

P

Making Meaning – Mapping Your Worldview

Hey SuperForesters

I’ve been thinking about maps recently and thought I would share with you my cartographical noodlings. I’ve always liked maps in the way that I think a lot of people find them fascinating as children – from ‘here be dragons’ to maps of hidden pirate treasure – as previously uncharted territory of the imagination.

I remember being particularly enthralled by a global map of the ocean floor – the blue depths looked like mountain peaks and the relatively small amount of landmass was suddenly apparent.

Maps can be beautiful objects, feeding imagination and curiosity as well as teaching us the shape of our world – but what shape do we see?

Well, when we’re creating our own maps, we give them our meaning. In a 1976 study, Stanley Milgram found that maps we draw are distorted by places of special significance for us. We use maps as meaning making devices – giving us a visual framework to think within. Mental maps are:

imaginary diagrams people use to navigate through physical space (neighborhoods, cities or countries). These are simple images of “where things are” or “what places should be avoided.” Although resembling to a certain extent physical geography, mental maps are often inflected by preconceptions, values and emotions. In mental maps physical distances are distorted, being under or over estimated according to the subjective importance of the destination point. In addition, geographic spaces are “colored” in people’s mind according to what people believe about the inhabitants, reputation or other social characteristics of those geographic spaces. For example, desirable areas might appear as “green”/”no problem” spaces, while feared areas might appear as “red”/”don’t go” zones.

(this is one of the reasons I loved SuperForester Chris’ wonderfully purple election map)

We reflect what we feel in the personal maps that we make – but do maps in turn shape our worldview? I think the answer to this must be yes – have you experienced how jarring it can be to see a global map showing the true relative sizes of landmasses (as opposed to the traditional but distorting Mercator projection we were (or used to be?) brought up with as standard)? Or how disorienting it is to see the world “upside down”?

So if at least a part of how we visualise the world is based on the images we carry in us from the maps we see, then we can choose what maps we use and perhaps shift our perceptions accordingly!

If you haven’t done it before, check out World Mapper’s truly eye-opening maps, distorted to reflect hundreds of varied criteria – such as this one of meat imports:

Or this map of the blogosphere - showing our very real interconnectedness, regardless of oceans, timezones and distance:

And if none of these grab you, there’s a world of awesome maps out there with the ability to tilt your angle of perception.

Now for the treat that got me thinking on this train: For US SuperForesters (or for all of us, when thinking of our US brothers and sisters), maybe not for navigating your cross-country trip, but next time you look out the window and imagine your fine nation, why not think of it like this?

Another print by Beauchamping, this map, ‘States United‘ (where states appear to scale and unrotated) was “created as a learning tool for kids without the normal division of east, west, north or south. it’s a way to see the entirety of a nation not based on location, but rather it’s individual parts with the heart as a metaphor for completeness.”

What would a map of SuperForest look like?

Love

P

Beauchamping’s Relativity: The Space We Share

Hihi SuperForest

Check out this lovely print by Beauchamping:

(click to biggify!)

Gregory Beauchamp, who sells his wares on Etsy, has created this little beauty, as he explains:

I remember in high school taking physics. Our teacher would begin each class by reading a few pages of a Ray Bradbury story which would unlock a little more of the puzzle. One day he held up an orange, and with his hand, circled around it and said, “This orange represents everything that we know. The space around it represents everything we still don’t.” That kind of blew my mind as a kid. He then said, “and the orange is not solid…and neither are you.” Strange, because i had always thought i was, which i guess is all relative.

From me to you, everything to a mystery.

Love it,

Love

P

A Little More Freedom: Aung San Suu Kyi’s Release

Hey SuperForest

I thought I would take a moment to share with you the news that on Saturday, after spending the last 7 years under house arrest (and in some form of detention for much of the last 20 years  because of her efforts to bring democracy to military-ruled Burma [Myanmar]), pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi was released by the Burmese military authorities.

The daughter of General Aung San, who was key in bringing about the end of British colonial rule in Burma and was assasinated in 1947 six months before Burmese independence, when Suu Kyi was just two years old, Aung San Suu Kyi grew up in Burma and India. This was followed by studies at Oxford, where she met and married an academic, settling down to family life.  But in 1988, when returning to Burma to be with her seriously ill mother, Suu Kyi witnessed the horror of the shooting dead by the military of thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators on the streets of Rangoon and decided she must do something

Inspired by the non-violent campaigns of US civil rights leader Martin Luther King and India’s Mahatma Gandhi, she organised rallies and travelled around the country, calling for peaceful democratic reform and free elections.

The military government called national elections in May 1990.  Aung San Suu Kyi’s NLD [National League for Democracy] convincingly won the polls, despite the fact that she herself was under house arrest and disqualified from standing. But the junta refused to hand over control, and has remained in power ever since.

Appearing after her release this weekend outside her home in Rangoon, she spoke to the thousands of gathered supporters about moving forward:

I don’t believe in one person’s influence and authority to move a country forward. One person alone can not do something as important as bringing democracy to a country.

We all have to work together. We will have to find a way of helping each other

People must work in unison. Only then can we achieve our goal.

What happens next in Burma is anyone’s guess, but Aung San Suu Kyi is an inspiration and her release something to celebrate.

Love

P

How to Survive a Bear Attack

Monday Morning, Superdudes!

What can I say? This just really made me giggle:

But if you’re more concerned here’s some guidance on how actually to avoid a grizzly encounter.

Love

P

SEGlet: Connecting Rooftops

Hi SuperForest

I recently posted about some great developments in solar investment on a grand scale, but – as SuperForesters we know that – changes are not just made on an institutional scale, but also (and just as, if not more, importantly) on an individual level. Well, I recently came across a website that, like a Craigslist of underused roof space, aims to put roofholders in touch with roofwanters to facilitate a win-win partnership for both:

SEGlet provides a service where building owners or lessors can list their currently barren rooftop space, and people who have a use for such space can search for it, particularly for solar or agriculture uses – which, particularly in cities where groundspace is at an incredible premium, seems like a great idea. As SEGlet say:

A SEGment can be any piece of a property that is useful for partial property leasing or partnering. For example, a rooftop. If you have large useable rooftop space, it may be useful either for lease structures or for partnerships.”

The idea being that if you have an unused or underutilised rooftop space, you can find a local individual or organisation that has both the desire and wherewithal to make great use of such a space – whether for gardening, solar panels or something completely new! AND (and this is, I think, important) they provide links to information on, and those professionals who can help in, enabling the legal framing of the relationship that is, for better or worse, an essential part of making such partnerships practically possible.

We have so many resources at our disposal, and so many who can use those things that we don’t see or can’t give effect to, the use to – wouldn’t it be great if we could join up all those dots?

Do you have a roof? Do you use it? Me, I love mine ;)

Love

P

SuperForest DIY: Getting Your Halloween Moustache On

Hey hey SuperForest!

I hope you’re all having excellent Thursdays! As I’m sure you’re aware, Halloween is coming up this weekend – so I decided to take SuperForester April’s excellent advice, get silly, and share with you my evening’s test-running of my failsafe, foolproof, low maintenance Halloween ‘costume’. Yes, SuperForest: the eyeliner moustache.

The timing is fortuitous as we’re just a few days away from Movember - the month where many gents raise awareness for testicular cancer by way of their attempts to raise a flourishing and manly moustache. And I see no reason why the XXs among us shouldn’t join in the fun should the spirit move us!  Behold, your toolkit:

The only equipment you need for this is an eyeliner kohl pencil (or I’m sure liquid eyeliner would work just as well – and, frankly, if you’ve the hand eye coordination to use it I suspect you’ll have more artistry than me!)

Then consider your inspiration. There have been many famous moustachiod gents, including Salvador Dali, Hercule Poirot, Zorro, John Waters, Burt Reynolds, Guy Fawkes, Biggles and many more!

After that, it’s up to your imagination and a steady hand!

Apes is so very right: being silly makes you happy. And would it be so very wrong for me to admit that I think some of these are pretty fetching?

the hotness puts hairs on my chest

Love, in silliness

P

People are Awesome, Gravity Defying

Hey hey SuperForest

I thought I’d share with you a couple of videos I came across today that spotlight some of the awesome (and gravity defying) feats folks can perform – put a smile on my face.

There’s a few fakes in there (consensus seems to be LeBron James, girl-through-hoop and the water-running) but there’s still plenty of real-life jaw-droppers. My favourite may be the little girl drift parking her trike – so smooth!

And I know there’s a bajillion or so climbing videos out there, but SuperForester Michael dropped this one into my inbox this morning:

Whaaaa…So cool!

I really need to learn how to run up walls.

Love

P