Blog Flux Directory Subscribe in NewsGator Online Subscribe with Bloglines http://www.wikio.com Blog directory
And, yes, I DO take it personally
Mandy: Great blog!
Mark: Thanks to all the contributors on this blog. When I want to get information on the events that really matter, I come here.
Penny: I'm glad I found your blog (from a comment on Think Progress), it's comprehensive and very insightful.
Eric: Nice site....I enjoyed it and will be back.
nora kelly: I enjoy your site. Keep it up! I particularly like your insights on Latin America.
Alison: Loquacious as ever with a touch of elegance -- & right on target as usual!
"Everybody's worried about stopping terrorism. Well, there's a really easy way: stop participating in it."
- Noam Chomsky
Send tips and other comments to: profmarcus2010@yahoo.com

And, yes, I DO take it personally

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Last photos from the Hebrides and Scotland

i've been delaying posting these last photos from scotland, an avoidance i now see calculated to defer putting closure to a most remarkable trip... so, one week after returning, here they are, taken over the period 18-21 may... the photo titles say where and what... i'm not providing any additional commentary because i don't have the words...

Photobucket
Sands of Uig, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides

Photobucket
Bernera Beach, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides

Photobucket
Scottish coast, from The Minch, near Ullapool

Photobucket
Leakey's Bookshop Cafe & Gallery, Inverness

Photobucket
Edinburgh Castle, Edinburgh

Photobucket
Dean Gallery, National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh

Photobucket
Edinburgh skyline, Edinburgh

Labels: , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Monday, May 17, 2010

Photos from the Isle of Lewis in the Scottish Hebrides

once again, i must say, this trip through the outer hebrides has been one of the most amazing trips i have ever, ever taken...

believe it or not, the photos below were only from yesterday...

Callanish Stones

Construction of the site took place between 2900 and 2600 BC, though there were possibly earlier buildings before 3000 BC. A tomb was later built into the site. Debris from the destruction of the tomb suggests the site was out of use between 2000 BC and 1700 BC.[1] The 13 primary stones form a circle about 13 m in diameter, with a long approach avenue of stones to the north, and shorter stone rows to the east, south, and west (possibly incomplete avenues). The overall layout of the monument recalls a distorted Celtic cross. The individual stones vary from around 1 m to 5 m in height, with an average of 4 m, and are of the local Lewisian gneiss.

Photobucket
Dun Carloway broche

Dun Carloway (in Scottish Gaelic Dùn Chàrlabhaigh) is a broch situated in the district of Carloway, on the west coast of the Isle of Lewis, Scotland. It is a remarkably well preserved broch - on the east side parts of the old wall still reaches to 9 metres tall. In places there are also more modern repairs to the east wall. Dun Carloway was probably built some time in the 1st century BC, and radiocarbon dating evidence from remains found in the broch show that it was last occupied around 1300 AD. At the base the broch is around 14 to 15 metres in diameter and the walls around 3 metres thick. It has a circular plan and hollow walls and was built without mortar. It probably had wooden floors, internal partitions and a thatched roof, necessary to make it habitable, but the only remaining evidence of this are post-holes. Together with the roof, the narrow passageway presumably secured by a wooden door, were the most vulnerable points of the building, especially to fire.

Photobucket
Shawbost Norse Mill and Kiln

Shawbost Mill was first restored in the late 1960s, but the current restoration dates back to 1995. The high quality path was added in 2003.

The building you see on your right as you approach is the kiln. It isn't immediately obvious how this worked, but half the floor area comprises a raised stone platform within which is set a circular stone-lined pit. This presumably contained the fire that heated and dried the grain spread out around the remainder of the kiln.

The mill is more immediately spectacular, though here much of the workings are set in a chamber below floor level. Water from the nearby burn was led into a mill lade some way upstream from the mill. It was then channelled to the top of a mill race just behind the mill itself. From here a steep chute directed it down onto one side of a circular set of paddles, set horizontally in a chamber directly beneath the mill.

The water turned the paddles, which caused the upper of the two millstones in the mill itself to turn, which in turn ground the grain. Part of the mechanism joggled the wooden hopper located above the millstones, which ensured the flow of grain into hole in the centre of the stones. The flour which was produced was gathered by the kerb stones around the lower millstone and gathered in front of it.

Shawbost Mill is not the largest or best known of Lewis's visitor attractions, but a visit does provide a fascinating insight into away of life once very common on the island.


Photobucket
Port Ness Lighthouse and Butt of Lewis

Here you find an intriguing little harbour, the entrance to which is through the gap between a cliff face and a large rocky islet. One end of the harbour merges into an extremely attractive east-facing beach.

[...]

Settlement in Nis is very dispersed, and you can think of Port Nis as being at the end of a single linear settlement that extends for over three miles back down the main road to Swainbost, Cros and beyond. It also extends south of the main road and, to the north, to Europie or Eoropaidh. Here you find the beautifully restored St Moluag's Church, on a site believed to have been consecrated since the arrival of St Moluag in the 560s.

North from Europie a minor road runs the mile to the Butt of Lewis lighthouse. This 121 foot tower was designed by David Stevenson and first lit in 1862. The tower is made of exposed brick, a surface that gives it an oddly unfinished air, but one which has served it well for over 140 years.


Photobucket

Photobucket

Labels: , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Friday, May 14, 2010

Trip of a lifetime

without meaning to overstate, this trip through the scottish hebrides has already been one of the most amazing, spiritual, thoroughly mind-expanding trips i've ever taken, and those very few of you who follow this blog know just how much traveling i do... i cannot even begin to say how it's impacting me and i doubt if i will have a clue until i've had a few weeks to process it once i have gotten back... meanwhile, check out these pics...

Photobucket

taken near berneray, island of north uist, scottish hebrides, 14 may...

Photobucket

view from sundown cottage, achmore, island of lewis, scottish hebrides, 14 may...


Photobucket

sunset, achmore, island of lewis, scottish hebrides, 14 may...

Labels: , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Off to Glasgow and the Hebrides tomorrow

the short time in london has been terrific but tomorrow the real adventure starts... we fly to glasgow, meet my daughter, pick up a car and head off for the outer hebrides... can't wait... the ash cloud is mostly impacting southern spain and morocco in north africa right now so there shouldn't be any volcano-caused flight delays, knock on wood...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Saturday, May 08, 2010

I'm outta here [UPDATE]

for those few who may be paying attention, you'll notice i haven't posted since last wednesday... i periodically lose motivation and/or momentum when i can no longer abide the dearth of good news... well, that's not entirely true... there's always good news when i bother to find it but it generally is good news on a micro, very personal scale... that doesn't make it any the less significant or valuable but, being the big-picture guy that i am, i'm looking for the BIG good news stories and those seem to be damn few and far between...

so, with the motivation and momentum problem, i'm now tossing in another reason for a lack of posting... this afternoon, my son and i are headed to london where we'll meet up with a london-based friend and colleague to spend a few days kicking around things like westminster abbey, the tower of london and other such tourist attractions... but the big deal starts on wednesday when the three of us fly to glasgow where my daughter and her roommate are flying in from the u.s.... there we pick up a car and set off to explore the outer hebrides islands of scotland for two weeks before swinging back inland through inverness and edinburgh... i visited the latter two cities many years ago and have very pleasant memories but i'm really pumped about the hebrides... something about the far northern latitudes, the long, long days and the spiritual quality of the air and the light i think will make it a most special time...

stay tuned for pics but pro'ly not very many posts...

p.s. the volcanic ash cloud spewing forth from iceland is currently causing transatlantic flight delays as planes are re-routed further north or south, adding as much as an hour to flight times... our route from san fran to london follows a far north route anyway so i'm not anticipating a problem at this point, but we'll see won't we...?


Photobucket

[UPDATE]

so much for "no problem"... the flight from san fran to london is on a 5-hour delay and that's on top of the 4-hour layover that was already built in to the original schedule... sigh... 9 hrs. sitting on our butts in san fran... guess we oughta consider taking the bart into town...

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Here's what SANE and CIVILIZED people do when faced with challenges that could tear them apart

they find ways to come together and to keep the forces of darkness at bay...
The terrorist attack that narrowly failed to inflict mass slaughter at Glasgow airport on 30 June 2007 has had a singular impact on Scotland's public life. A universal sense of shock was followed by vigorous official efforts to build bridges to the country's approximately 60,000 Muslims. A week later, on 6 July, the cream of Scotland's establishment gathered in George Square in the Glasgow's heart to offer them protection and reassurance. The institutions represented included the ruling Scottish National Party (SNP), the police, the Church of Scotland, the trade unions, and the vocal anti-war movement. Nobody wondered aloud about the religious dimensions of the violent ideology that had evidently motivated the would-be massacre. Indeed, Scotland's health minister and SNP deputy leader Nicola Sturgeon was explicit that "Islam is a religion of peace".

i find this one of the most heartening things i have read in a long, long time... THIS is the way genuine, well-intentioned human beings who are actually SERIOUS about living together in peace and harmony respond to potential catastrophe... but can't you just hear the nutcakes in this country commenting on this kind of reaching out...? i don't even want to speculate on the bile and viciousness that would greet such an effort...

Labels: , ,

Submit To Propeller



[Permalink] 0 comments