January 25th, 2007 · Comments Off on Nanzen-ji mosses
Just last week, in southern Chile, we visited a Patagonian national park that celebrated different kinds of moss and bryophyte as “Chile’s miniature forests.”
Here in Kyoto, Japan, different kinds of moss are displayed as artistic resources whose uses have been known to garden designers for centuries.
Art?
Science?
Just plain moss?
You decide…
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 25th, 2007 · Comments Off on Kyoto stone walls, NH stone memories
Left to itself, the earth of NH produces glacial rocks, year after year, eroded up out of our topsoil by rain and snow. NH farming — and just 100 years ago, NH was almost all farmland –meant dragging the glacial rocks to the edge of your field, where they could be piled up into New England stone walls.
New England stone walls — I’ve even built one myself — don’t need any mortar. You start with a ground layer of your heaviest boulders. Self-protection dictates this, because higher layers of the wall are made of rocks that you have lifted and dropped!
Once you set the ground layer, a matching process begins between rough rock and odd-shaped crevice. Two big rounded stones sitting side by side on the ground create an implied empty space between them into which one of your left-over rocks will fit better than any of your others…
I’ve been admiring the different ways that Japanese stone walls get built from the same kinds of rough, gray glacial till…
Tags: New Hampshire!
January 24th, 2007 · Comments Off on Remembering Bohr and his horseshoe in Kyoto
After waiting in line behind two little Japanese girls and several grown-ups, I shook my fortune stick out of a wooden box today in Kyoto, at Fushimi Inari Taisha, a beautiful temple devoted to Inari spirits.
The number on my stick was “32”–not that I could read it, because the number was written in Japanese. With the help of Kyoto physicist Taichiro Kugo, I got the relevant printed fortune, which turned out to predict “Great, great fortune”! If I am sick (I’m not) then I will get well. If I want to build a house, it’s a good time to start. If I have a dream, that dream will come true. And if I want to go on a journey, it will turn out well. With so much good fortune, I think it must be shared by Frank and me and Taichiro, all three of us!
Not all of the fortune numbers promise good fortunes. Some predict bad ones. But if you get a bad fortune, you can fold the paper up narrowly lengthwise and tie it onto a tree branch or a long string–then the fortune no longer applies to you. If, on the other hand, your fortune is good, then you make it come true by…folding the paper up narrowly lengthwise and tying onto some landmark the very same way.
So I folded my paper and tied it up with great pleasure, remembering the story of Niels Bohr’s office, where he kept an old horseshoe on display. One secular visitor challenged him–“Surely you don’t believe the superstition that a horseshoe will bring you good luck!”
“Of course I don’t believe it,” said Bohr. “But they say it will bring you good luck, not just if you believe it but also if you don’t.”
Update–and here’s photographic evidence…
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 22nd, 2007 · Comments Off on Kyoto jetlag outside the sushi restaurant
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 22nd, 2007 · Comments Off on From Kyoto, where it is and isn’t 10:30 p.m.
That is, the clocks in Kyoto say 10:30 p.m.
The clocks in Boston say 8:30 a.m.
My common sense says it’s time to sleep because tomorrow will be a busy day.
But everything is so interesting and so new!
The vending machines in the airport were all different, the sushi arrived on a tiny conveyor belt, the hotel “bell boy” was a young woman in a chic top hat. Guest services include not just massages and messages but something called “takkyu-bin” that provides paper bags for your packages.
It’s going to be so hard to wait for the sunrise!
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 21st, 2007 · Comments Off on Five minutes to taxi time…
… because 24 hours is plenty of time to do all the laundry and email and family lunchtime while simultaneously re-packing from Chile/Antarctica to Kyoto, Japan.
Sleep is something we plan to do in the airplane!
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 19th, 2007 · Comments Off on Frank and Betsy, in our Aquiles lifejackets
Here we are, ready to leave our Chilean battlecruiser in a small wooden boat for a closeup of some Patagonian glaciers. En route, we bumped into and crunched over many tiny icebergs but didn’t tip over.
Still, these lifejackets were of great use as extra raincoats.
Lots of adventures on our battleship voyage up and down to Tierra del Fuego, but no Internet access. We saw blue glaciers up close, touched a blue iceberg, met glaciologists, learned how to date ice cores, and slept for four nights in narrow Navy-ship bunk beds.
Now we’re in Miami airport, on our way home. More photos on Flickr!
Tags: Wide wonderful world
January 14th, 2007 · Comments Off on View of a Foucault pendulum..
Ahhh! The Centro Estudio Cientificos is well and truly launched, with a wonderful party, some short but poetic speeches, and the symbolic smashing of a Champagne bottle by Michelle Bachelet, who Is Chile’s new President.
There are more great photos of related events over at my Flickr pages. Now I have to run to a breakfast, a bus, a plane, and a three-day boat trip. More when we next land in Internet-capable places!
One of the launch events was snipping a ribbon to release a giant Foucault pendulum. You can see it in the lower right corner here. Foreground, two Nobel laureates. Background, 200 photographers.
Tags: Blog to Book
January 12th, 2007 · Comments Off on Two sides to everything, even to imaginary lines…
…like the Equator.
Here in Chile, January is mid-July.
The hotel doors open wide to admit all the lovely fresh and flowery air from outdoors. Lots of sunshine making everything bright.
Best of all, to this refugee from Boston January–all this sunshine is still on view at 7 p.m. No sign of a sunset. And, lovely as sunsets are, I am in no hurry.
Tags: Science
January 12th, 2007 · Comments Off on Valdivia’s riverside market…
…looks a lot bigger than I remember it in 2001.
In our hotel now–and the dinner plan is to take a boat from the hotel’s dock to Claudio Bunster’s party.
Did I mention that Valdivia has lots of water?
More coherent blogging after I get some sleep…
Tags: Wide wonderful world