comment 0

The 27th Street Book box needs a few good books

Most of the time, the book box out in front of our place is self-sufficient. People take books. People drop books and it exists in a nice balance. Lately, it’s looking a little depleted.

IMG_8283.jpg

There are still some good titles in there, but as you can see from the picture, there is room for an infusion half a dozen books. If you’ve been thinking about dropping off a good book or two, this would be a great time to do it.

The 27th Street Book Box is located on lower Twenty Seventh Street, in front our out place at 15 (where all the mosaics are).

For all of you who have supported this little community project, thanks so much! It has provided lots of good reading around these parts for a few years now.

As a side note, I’m planning on giving the book box a new coat of paint this summer, maybe in the next week or two.

comment 0

Ke Jie vs Alpha Go

Late last night (our time) the number 1 ranked human Go player, Ke Jie, played the first of a 3 game match against super-bot Alpha Go in China. This was a much-anticipated match in the Go world, after Alpha Go won 60 online games in a row with top pros over the winter. If you’re got 6 hours or so to spare, you can watch the whole game with commentary. There will be all kinds of analysis on YouTube in the coming days. Jonathan Hop was quick off the mark and has already published a half-hour commentary.

Screen Shot 2017-05-23 at 8.39.57 AM

Hajin Lee and Andrew Jackson providing commentary

I watched close to 2 hours of the game last night, but was unable to stay up for more of it. I googled the result this morning to find out the bot defeated Ke Jie by a narrow margin.

The game was marked by an unusual opening in which Ke Jie as black played the 3-3 point in the top left and soon after invaded into the 3-3 in the bottom right. Much more often pro players begin the game playing on 4-4 or 4-3 points. Ke Jie’s early strategy was to take territory at the expense of influence.

It was a fascinating game to watch – I caught up on more of it this morning. The sophistication of the bot’s play is so remarkable.

Filed under: Go
comment 0

Chinquapin

Here’s some wonderful Ramona Jones fiddling for a Sunday morning. It’s called Chinquapin on Crooked Stovepipe.

Is chinquapin a word in your vocabulary? I only know it from old time music. I think a chinquapin is another word for a chestnut. Is that how you use it?

There is another oldtime tune called Chinquapin Hunting – a different tune. Bruce Molsky does a nice job of it.

comments 2

All day gardening

First thing this morning I trundled off to Eglinton Flats for the annual Roselands Horticultural Society garden sale. This sale offers a good selection of perennials and annuals at modest prices. It’s a fun event and we try to visit each year.

This year’s visit to the plant sale came with an awesome bonus. Our friend Jennifer grows some of the best tomatoes you can imagine, and she offered us some plants for our garden, which I picked up when I saw her this morning.  We have a shady backyard and for tomatoes it is marginal at best. Up front though, an opportunity has presented itself. The builder next door suggested removing the barberry hedge along our south property line, and we agreed. They also removed a larch in the front yard of that property, and what remained was a strip of lawn at our place between our walkway and the neighbour’s drive. What’s more it gets pretty good sun, and I’m confident it gets enough for tomatoes.

IMG_8242.jpg

The result is that this year we’re going to try growing some tomatoes (ok and one jalepeno plant) in containers up front. Jennifer grows heirloom varieties and she gave me tomato plants that came with great names like The Mortgage Lifter, Pine Apple, Green Zebra, Yellow Pear and Mennonite Orange.  I’ll be very happy with a fraction on the success Jennifer has with her tomatoes, which are nothing short of spectacular.

I also cut a new garden today, just behind the book box, and began populating it with a few plants I purchased at the Roselands sale today.

IMG_8244.jpg

Cutting a new garden means removing the grass, hoeing up the hard-packed soil which was under the sod, and adding some quality garden soil. It’s a job but it is rewarding. Each season I try to add a new garden or expand an existing one. While I have nothing against grass, I prefer a garden to a lawn any day of the week.

IMG_8246.jpg

There is still plenty of room for more garden in behind the book box. I think the next step will be to extend the new garden back along the south side of the Froggy Train, behind the tomato planter boxes, connecting to the existing patch of garden. Eventually, this whole strip will be mostly garden. I may keep the small triangle of grass in front of the book box.

Meanwhile, I’ve had the veggie garden out back going for a while already. There are still a few things to plant but I’m off to a good start. Although there is not enough sun for tomatoes or peppers back there, a good selection of herbs as well as spinach, lettuce, onions, kale, peas and beans all do just fine. IMG_8236.jpg

It’s a modest veggie patch but each year it gives us plenty of greens through the summer.

I still have lots of work to do out back, including a seating area in the little woods at the back of the property, but Rome wasn’t built in a day. It seems I usually have more projects on the go than I can handle. When I left the work-a-day world behind, it gave me lots more time, but somehow the number of projects also multiplied. I’ve put some other things on the back burner for a while so I could get the gardens well-established before the heat of summer.

Tuffy P was out working in the front garden today too. While I cut the new gardens, she does much of the front garden maintenance, and she’s really the one responsible for making our front garden look great all season. When we were chatting about the front garden this afternoon she said one of the joys of working in the front garden is you get to talk to people who are wandering by, both neighbours and visitors to the neighbourhood.

comment 0

The paintings of Mary Tillman Smith

IMG_8228.jpg

Mary T. Smith was a self-taught African-American artist from Mississippi. She lived from 1904 to 1995. She was a prolific artist during the years in which she painted. In her yard, she apparently created some outbuildings where she painted and installed her work. Smith’s work was well-collected (her paintings can be found at the Met and in the Smithsonian for instance) and although she sold a lot of paintings, she died penniless, as she was not able to paint during her last few years.

She didn’t start painting until the late-70s. She often used found materials like plywood or corrugated tin as a ground. The works I’m familiar with typically have one or more figures, arms raised up, painted in one or two colours. Many of her figures are similar and very purposeful. Often she used very unusual colour combinations.  I’ve wondered if she sometimes bought paint returns from the bargain bin at her local hardware. Some of her works contained hand-painted text, often religious in nature.

Powerful, transfixing work.

There is an interesting essay about Mary T. Smith written by William Arnett, who championed her work. The painting in the photo above hangs in our home.

comment 0

Mosaics on the brain

Sheila Gregory and I are excited to be taking part in The Brain Project for the Baycrest Foundation. Baycrest is doing awesome work changing the future of brain health. For this project, they have provided us with a cast brain ready to be transformed. We’re working on a butterfly mosaic mounted on the raw brain casting. Here’s a couple process shots. We still have a lot of work to do!

IMG_8213.jpg

This mosaic is being made with Italian glass (smalti) tiles. Once all the tiles are in place the mosaic will be grouted. There will be 5 monarch butterflies, including one on the underside of the brain.

IMG_8204.jpg

We have been creating mosaic projects together for several years. You can see what we’ve been up to on the Long Branch Mosaics pages. We do all kinds of custom mosaic-work and we’d be happy to talk about future projects big or small.

comment 0

A big night for banjo enthusiasts

In a rare Toronto appearance, Bob Carlin played a great show at the Dakota Tavern tonight with our own Lonesome Ace Stringband.

IMG_8202.jpg

Bob is a master clawhammer banjo player. I’ve previously met him and taken some of his workshops at Midwest Banjo Camp. He learned his craft from some of the best old time players including the late Joe Thompson and the late Tommy Jarrell. He is also an old time music historian, and has written an excellent book published last year called Banjo: an illustrated history.

Here’s Bob Carlin from 2014, performing a Chris Coole song called Old Dog. Carlin and Coole performed this one together tonight.

Carlin played a solo set tonight followed by a set with the Lonesome Ace Stringband (Chris Coole, John Showman and Max Heineman). Together they played a set of tunes Carlin used to play during his 6-year tenure with John Hartford’s band.

It was a treat to have Bob Carlin play in Toronto and I was happy to see a really good crowd out for the show.

**********

In other old time music news, a new recording by April Verch and Joe Newberry was released this week. It’s called Going Home. April Verch and Joe Newberry have played a quite a number of shows together in the past year or so. There are quite a few YouTube videos featuring the pair of them.

Here they are performing a Joe Newberry song called Jericho from the new recording.

I’ve been a fan of both performers for some time and it’s a treat to hear them performing together.

Recommended.

comment 1

Earworm

Ever get one of those nagging earworms, tunes that stick in your head and never want to leave? I’ve been playing Big John McNeil quite a bit on the banjo and it’s been rolling around my little brain since yesterday afternoon. Big John McNeil is of Scottish origin, but it is often associated with Canadian fiddling. I’ve read that in Manitoba this tune is sometimes called the Metis National Anthem. It’s a great tune, one of those I could listen to 100 times in a row and never get bored of it.

Here’s a lovely fiddle version by Patrick Ross, a fiddler from Vermont.

comments 4

Dinosaur

There was a time a few years ago, when I faithfully checked out a couple dozen blogs on a regular basis. In a way that was a heyday for blogging, and I really enjoyed my daily peek in to the lives of people doing so many interesting things in so many interesting places. Many of those bloggers have either packed in the blog-o-swamp completely in favour of the facebook or another of the social medias or for one reason or another aren’t at it as regularly as they once were. That’s totally understandable of course. People change, their lives and interests change too, and the discipline of keeping up a blog is not for everyone. These days, my little list of places to frequent has dwindled some, but I’m still pretty faithful to the ones I really enjoy.

I like all kinds of different blogs, often written by people who have lives and perspectives much different than my own. That’s part of the fun. I can’t begin to explain why I go back to some and not others.

I’ve even met some blog friends along the way, and though our in-person interactions have been limited, I feel like those folks are really good friends at this point, people I’ve hung with for a long time.

There are still plenty of blogs around, and I suppose I should be more active in discovering new ranges to ride, so to speak. Since those early days, I notice there are a lot more people using their blogs as an income stream, basically getting into the ad business, or selling some product or another. That’s fine, and there are a couple of those I visit from time to time – some are excellent – but I still like the idea of the personal blog, someone’s tiny corner of the grand swamp, something they do just for the helluvit, a place to gather a small community.

Here at 27th Street, I don’t get a huge number of visitors, and it has stayed more or less consistent over the years. I know certain types of posts always draw in more traffic and it’s always fun when that happens. I don’t get many comments either compared to other blogs I visit. I don’t know if that is because my posts are less interesting or because I’ve said it all so comments are unnecessary (you can choose). I have a few regular visitors who have been coming back for more of my nonsense for quite some time and, well, I love those folks!

2014 was my busiest year for this blog. The top posts for that year were both about mushrooms. One was “Preparing lobster mushrooms for the table” and the second most popular was a post I kind of regret creating called “No mushrooms in Southern Ontario”. It was an attempt at humour in which I suggested there are no edible mushrooms outside of grocery stores in Southern Ontario. I was responding to the fact that it was getting increasingly difficult to find spots to forage which weren’t picked through by somebody else first. As it turned out, plenty of people took me seriously, and several people took the opportunity to tell me how wrong I was. It is still one of my more popular posts.

Back when I had the old Mister Anchovy blog, the most popular post by far was one called Johnny Cash finger. I had shared the American Recordings poster featuring Johnny Cash flipping the bird to somebody at one of the prisons he played. Once I had a guest blogger who posted a picture of the Ikea dog the year they published a catalog that had a picture of a dog which appeared to have an extra-large schlong, and her post attracted hundreds more viewers than anything I ever came up with. C’est la Vie, eh.

So these days I feel a bit like an old-school dinosaur keeping up my little personal blog. That’s OK, I don’t mind being a dinosaur. ROAR.