|
|
---|
Monday, February 28, 2011
Volt Panned
Consumer Reports says GM's Chevy Volt isn't worth the money. It's not clear whether it means the $41,000 sticker price or the $25 billion we already paid to bail GM out.
Wisconsin Budget Battle
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker will announce deep layoffs for state workers in his budget address this afternoon. But Walker will be hiring more cleaners to get the smell of those protesters out of the state capitol.
Hu's Our Daddy?
China now owns $1.16 trillion of U.S. debt. Luckily, the Obama administration has a plan to pay it all back by imposing a cocaine sales tax at Charlie Sheen's house.
Bell Latest
An administrator for the city of Bell, California says she didn't think there was anything illegal about the huge loans she authorized for other city officials. She also says she saw nothing strange about the face that they all asked for the money to be placed in unmarked bills underneath a loose floorboard at City Hall.
Gomes Dies
Harvard Chaplain Peter J. Gomes has died at age 68. Naturally, Harvard is replacing him with Ozzy Osbourne.
March 1st
1700: Sweden introduces its own Swedish calendar… which is the same as every other calendar, except it has pictures of hot Swedish chicks for every month.
1966: The Ba'ath Party takes power in Syria… but the number of Syrians actually taking baths remains at extremely low levels.
2002: The peseta is discontinued as official currency of Spain and is replaced by the far more valuable cheeto.
Dia de Andalucia - an ordinary Bank holiday
Today we have celebrated the Day of Andalusia. It has only been an ordinary Bank Holiday for the people down here, but closed banks, shops and supermarkets for us, have given some challenges.
Lots of people at the Paseo Maritim when we performed our daily exercise so it was good to have some experience in slalom from the winter activities. Congratulations to Marit Bjørgen btw.
The Andalusian Flag is green, white and green as seen on the photo together with the Spanish and the EU-flag
The wind wavered the flags but even harder the palms in our pool-area.
I can also gratulate a visitor from Cuba to my blog. At least he or her became the newest country (163) last Wednesday.
Lots of people at the Paseo Maritim when we performed our daily exercise so it was good to have some experience in slalom from the winter activities. Congratulations to Marit Bjørgen btw.
The Andalusian Flag is green, white and green as seen on the photo together with the Spanish and the EU-flag
The wind wavered the flags but even harder the palms in our pool-area.
I can also gratulate a visitor from Cuba to my blog. At least he or her became the newest country (163) last Wednesday.
West Dean Gardens
I'm fast forming the opinion February is one of the best months for garden visiting. There's less crowds, the reward in the tea shop afterwards is far more comforting and there's a delicious sense of being let outdoors when it really isn't allowed.
Earlier this month I had a gallop round West Dean Gardens following my day's course there and despite the rain, what I saw was enough for me to be smitten instantly. Who can't help but fall in love with a garden boasting features such as a crinkle-crankle wall with matching hedge, plus a dear little hobbit-like building built into it?
When the borders lack flowery fireworks the attention is drawn to the garden's 'bones' instead. West Dean has particularly fine ones and as you can see I was rather taken with the brick and flint contrasts I found there as they add texture as well as visual interest.
West Dean is noted for its walled kitchen garden and I now have severe glasshouse and cold frame envy. Old tools such as watering cans and lantern cloches were posed around the garden to good effect. Even bare earth can be made to look attractive in my view. It was good to see proper rhubarb forcers in action and I now realise I'm far too mean with the amount of manure I use around mine. A good layer a few inches thick is what's needed!
February is the best time to see just how fruit should be pruned and the multitude of different ways in which it can be trained. There's a masterclass of techniques on view here and over at Sign of the Times, I've already displayed the perfect arch. Whilst I was there I met a number of the garden's volunteers plus the garden manager and his wife. They are all truly proud of the place they have under their care.
This pergola was designed by Harold Peto in the 1890s and is a promise of things to come out in the main part of the garden. I'm already planning to return for a his and hers weekend: The Weald and Downland Museum next door for NAH and a much more leisurely stroll around here for me :)
This pergola was designed by Harold Peto in the 1890s and is a promise of things to come out in the main part of the garden. I'm already planning to return for a his and hers weekend: The Weald and Downland Museum next door for NAH and a much more leisurely stroll around here for me :)
If you're not reading this on vegplotting.blogspot.com, Blotanical or your own web reader such as Bloglines or Google Reader, then the website you're using is a blogpost feed scraper. Why not go straight to the source instead? That's vegplotting.blogspot.com
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Politics is Odd
...especially in the next town over.
I have no idea what this is about, but it does bring interesting images to mind.
The link in the sidebar will take you to the Odd Shot Monday details.
Link your odd shot here and visit other odd shotters.
There is always something strange about.
(That is a bedsheet BTW in case you can't tell on the small screen.)
(That is a bedsheet BTW in case you can't tell on the small screen.)
Celebrating 137 years
Yesterday we celebrated Gerd and Arne´s 137 years birthday as we did last year.
After a delicious late lunch at Restaurant Terraza Acqua at the harbor, we walked slowly back home along the beaches. The sunny and warm days are inviting lots of people to the sand and salt water, and next week there is a holiday coming up starting with Dia de Andalucia on Monday F28.
After a delicious late lunch at Restaurant Terraza Acqua at the harbor, we walked slowly back home along the beaches. The sunny and warm days are inviting lots of people to the sand and salt water, and next week there is a holiday coming up starting with Dia de Andalucia on Monday F28.
Oscar Winners
"The King's Speech" won the Best Picture Oscar and three other Academy Awards. But most movie fans are awaiting the 3D version.
Gates vs. Teachers Unions
In a new editorial in the Washington Post, Bill Gates bashes teacher seniority... and all the teachers who didn't intervene when he was beated up every day in high school.
JPMorgan-Twitter
The bad news is that JPMorgan Chase has bought a stake in Twitter. The good news is that the bank's earnings reports will now be 140 characters or less.
Parker Leaves
Kathleen Parker has left the CNN show "Parker/Spitzer." CNN has decided to make the show less confrontational by replacing Parker with Charlie Sheen.
Moon over Hollywood
The Middle East is falling apart, but UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon spent the weekend in Los Angeles asking Hollywood to do even more to advance the green agenda. It's an outrageous fact, especially when everyone knows the Moon should have been demanding some real nude scenes with Scarlett Johansson.
February 28th
1928: C.V. Raman discovers the "Raman Effect," which apparently has something to do with what happens to broke college students who eat noodles three meals a day.
1940: Basketball is televised for the first time, allowing dozens of illegitimate children to finally see their deadbeat dads.
1953: James D. Watson and Francis Crick announce to friends that they have determined the chemical structure of DNA... and found the cutest design for their new bedroom complete with paisley throw pillows.
February 27th
1844: The Dominican Republic gains independence from Haiti, finally giving it the freedom to cultivate an entire nation of utility infielders.
1939: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that sit-down strikes violate property owners' rights and are therefore illegal. Organized labor blames the ruling on the as-yet unborn Koch brothers.
1964: The government of Italy asks for help to keep the Leaning Tower of Pisa from toppling over. The Tower immediately gets international advice telling it to stop drinking.
Blogger's Block and a Buoy
I have had this Blog for about five years, and now I find that I have not made a post for several weeks. Am I suffering from "Blogger's Block"? According to The Urban Dictionary, Blogger's Block can be defined as:
Since I write very little in these posts, it can't be that. Sometimes it is just that one has other things to do, no photos that must be shown :-) etc etc. Lets face it: Blogging takes a lot of time and sometimes one has to reassess one's priorities. That does not mean that I will stop blogging, but that I (for a while at least) will just post the odd photo I like and skip the memes, themes and such things.Inability to think of anything to Blog about.
The first break in the block is a buoy I found "floating" in the ice last Sunday.
Great Gardens of Italy: Book Review
This is the book to accompany the soon to be broadcast TV series of the same name. Monty Don takes a personal journey to 30 of Italy's major gardens. Most of these are clustered around major cities such as Rome, Florence and Naples. Top photographer Derry Moore had the enviable task of capturing each garden in photographs.
After a brief introduction where Don explains his journey and how Italian gardens have shaped and informed his own gardening activities, there then follows 6 chapters dividing the gardens by region: Naples, Rome, Viterbo, Tuscany, Veneto and The Lakes. Don's journey was made south to north and the chapters reflect the direction of travel.
Each chapter is prefaced by an introductory essay describing the regional setting in which the gardens reside. There then follows a 'word-scape' for each garden where Don describes his visit to the garden and his own impressions of it, the historical context, who looks after the garden today etc etc. After each essay there follows a number Moore's photographs to give the visual details. Each photo has a detailed caption linking back to the previous text.
I'm sure the intention is to let the words and pictures speak for themselves with an equal voice. Personally I found the result a little disjointed and would have preferred them to lie side by side as they do in the general introduction. The larger text used for the regional introduction added to the disjointed feeling for me. Much as I admire Monty Don's writing, I found it quite tempting to skip straight to the pictures. I resisted the temptation by limiting myself to reading one garden at a time, rather than trying to read straight through. I would have liked a plan to accompany each garden too, as it's hard to gauge from the text and photographs their size, shape, layout etc.
I can't really say whether the chosen gardens are the 30 'best' ones or if they're the most well known. I'm sure every expert will have their own list which may coincide or wildly differ to this selection: I'll leave the arguments on that score to them. A quick look at other books on the market on the same subject reveal quite a few differences in some and similarities in others.
One feature I liked very much is the Chronology tucked at the back of the book showing where each garden fits in terms of style, date and major events of the time. Thus Emperor Hadrian's Villa Adriana in Rome is rooted in the 2nd century AD's Classical times and Torrecchia is the youngest: a Modern garden from 1995-2010.
I was rather surprised the end section didn't contain a bibliography for further reading: Don refers to the odd text used during his research, so I would have liked to see these (and others?) gathered together in one place. Nor were there details of how to go about visiting any of the gardens which take our fancy. However, I believe these are notoriously prone to change, so perhaps it's understandable these details have been left out.
We owe a great debt to many of these gardens as they have formed and shaped many of our own in the UK. For instance, I now can clearly see how the gardens at Blenheim were influenced by places such as Villa Lante, Giardino di Boboli and Villa Torrigiani. However, after a while I found myself wanting to get away from the masses of topiary, enclosed box hedges, statues and walls these gardens contain.
It's the more unusual gardens which have stayed in my mind and now form my fantasy shortlist to visit: Ninfa for its romantic emergence from the ruins, Villa d'Este at Tivoli for its terrace of Hundred Fountains, Sacro Bosco for its giant mossy statues which made me laugh and Isola Bella for its giant fantasy wedding cake effect.
It'll be interesting to compare the TV series with the book to see if my list changes.
Note: I received a review copy from the publisher, but the review and opinions of the content are my own. I don't know yet when the series will be broadcast.
After a brief introduction where Don explains his journey and how Italian gardens have shaped and informed his own gardening activities, there then follows 6 chapters dividing the gardens by region: Naples, Rome, Viterbo, Tuscany, Veneto and The Lakes. Don's journey was made south to north and the chapters reflect the direction of travel.
Each chapter is prefaced by an introductory essay describing the regional setting in which the gardens reside. There then follows a 'word-scape' for each garden where Don describes his visit to the garden and his own impressions of it, the historical context, who looks after the garden today etc etc. After each essay there follows a number Moore's photographs to give the visual details. Each photo has a detailed caption linking back to the previous text.
I'm sure the intention is to let the words and pictures speak for themselves with an equal voice. Personally I found the result a little disjointed and would have preferred them to lie side by side as they do in the general introduction. The larger text used for the regional introduction added to the disjointed feeling for me. Much as I admire Monty Don's writing, I found it quite tempting to skip straight to the pictures. I resisted the temptation by limiting myself to reading one garden at a time, rather than trying to read straight through. I would have liked a plan to accompany each garden too, as it's hard to gauge from the text and photographs their size, shape, layout etc.
I can't really say whether the chosen gardens are the 30 'best' ones or if they're the most well known. I'm sure every expert will have their own list which may coincide or wildly differ to this selection: I'll leave the arguments on that score to them. A quick look at other books on the market on the same subject reveal quite a few differences in some and similarities in others.
One feature I liked very much is the Chronology tucked at the back of the book showing where each garden fits in terms of style, date and major events of the time. Thus Emperor Hadrian's Villa Adriana in Rome is rooted in the 2nd century AD's Classical times and Torrecchia is the youngest: a Modern garden from 1995-2010.
I was rather surprised the end section didn't contain a bibliography for further reading: Don refers to the odd text used during his research, so I would have liked to see these (and others?) gathered together in one place. Nor were there details of how to go about visiting any of the gardens which take our fancy. However, I believe these are notoriously prone to change, so perhaps it's understandable these details have been left out.
We owe a great debt to many of these gardens as they have formed and shaped many of our own in the UK. For instance, I now can clearly see how the gardens at Blenheim were influenced by places such as Villa Lante, Giardino di Boboli and Villa Torrigiani. However, after a while I found myself wanting to get away from the masses of topiary, enclosed box hedges, statues and walls these gardens contain.
It's the more unusual gardens which have stayed in my mind and now form my fantasy shortlist to visit: Ninfa for its romantic emergence from the ruins, Villa d'Este at Tivoli for its terrace of Hundred Fountains, Sacro Bosco for its giant mossy statues which made me laugh and Isola Bella for its giant fantasy wedding cake effect.
It'll be interesting to compare the TV series with the book to see if my list changes.
Note: I received a review copy from the publisher, but the review and opinions of the content are my own. I don't know yet when the series will be broadcast.
If you're not reading this on vegplotting.blogspot.com, Blotanical or your own web reader such as Bloglines or Google Reader, then the website you're using is a blogpost feed scraper. Why not go straight to the source instead? That's vegplotting.blogspot.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)