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Lactarius deliciosus



I found just one of these mushrooms today. I believe it is likely Lactarius deliciosus, known as the saffron milk cap. When I saw it, I thought it might by L. thyinos because I couldn’t see any staining. However, this mushroom did stain when handled. Last year, I collected a number of L. thyinos, which were a brighter orange with very bright orange milk. Both are edible but L. thyinos is better. Still, good to know there are milk caps in this forest.

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Sunday Afternoon in the Forest of No Return

Not long ago, I posted a sneak peak into the Anchovy Can, my little studio located in a cave deep beneath Anchovy World Headquarters. There was a reader request to see a better shot of the new painting, so today I snapped a couple photos.

Hey, Jacques, get out of there!

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Last Night

Last night I found myself out on a boat cruise in Toronto Harbour. Here’s a view of the city from the lake…

I was there to support my nephew Luke who is a guitar picker in a band called Slaves 2 Debt.

That’s Luke over to the right, rocking out on guitar. As it turned out, I snapped this photo at the exact second the singer was being abducted by aliens. Imagine that. It’s not often you get a good shot of an alien abduction.

It was a fun evening, even if this crusty old anchovy did stay up way past his bedtime.

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Writing and Painting

For some time, bit at a time, I’ve been attempting to write a novel.  I’ve been thinking of it as a long term project. The core of the thing has been floating around my little brain for years and perhaps a year ago, I started organizing my ideas. While I do plenty of writing, my experience writing a book is limited to a small and unpublished manuscript called One Finger Gloves and Violins, which, written through the stories my father told me over many years, is I suppose, both a tribute to him and a story about our relationship in his later years. I’m considering publishing that manuscript as a serial on this blog sometime down the road.

A novel is another kettle of fish. I did a lot of planning up front. I tried to organize my thoughts using mind maps. I made some character outlines. I made a plot outline, and so on.  I know there are writers who can go through those mapping processes, build up outlines and then based on all that perfect planning, crank out a manuscript. Oh, if life were just that easy.

I’ve been making paintings for many many years, and my work has always developed during the process of painting, or out of the process of painting. I lay down an idea, destroy it, build it up again, it leads to another idea and I try that one on for size and so on. I recall reading something Philip Guston wrote that has long resonated with me. He talked about painting, and excuse me if I paraphrase poorly here, as being like bashing at a brick wall with a sledge. Each day you bash away at it and all that happens is little chips of brick come off. Then one day, you hit it just right and the entire wall crumbles and all that’s left to do is clean up. It’s like that for me and painting. Increasingly, my paintings require time. A fishished painting, if there is such a thing, offers up this history of ideas that somehow miraculously come together in a way I wish I could understand, when suddenly the painting seems to have a life of its own. It doesn’t need me messing with it anymore.

It turns out that for my attempt at novel writing, I have to struggle with a similar process. My story has shifted around many times. I’ve killed off and brought back characters. I’ve re-written chunks of it several times. As I’ve done this my characters are becoming more and more real to me. I’ve even found myself changing storylines because I’ve realized that certain characters would never do what I intended them to do.  There’s still a long way to go. Curiously enough, along the way I’ve created a few short short stories too, unrelated stories that I hadn’t considered writing, and even more curiously, I’ve hatched another seed that could eventually develop into another novel.

Of course, if I ever do complete this thing, I have no idea what to do with it. I don’t know anything about the publishing world at all, but I guess I can worry about that later.

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What’s made Milwaukee Famous

All good things must come to an end, include my little list of drinking songs. I hardly scratched the surface really, but hopefully you enjoyed the ones I selected. For Drinking Song #50, I’ve selected The Killer performing What’s Made Milwaukee Famous (has made a loser out of me). This was recorded at the Holiday Inn in Memphis in 1969.This wasn’t actually my first choice for #50. Back in the 80s we used to enjoy going to performances by Sneezy Waters and his Excellent Band. Mr. Waters recorded a song many years ago called You Got Sawdust on the Floor of Your Heart. I still recall some of the lyrics:

I used to court you proudly
Without regret or shame
But now each and every honky tonk in town knows you by name
Your hard liquor drinkin’ is tearin’ us apart
And you got sawdust on the floor of your heart.

However, I couldn’t fine a version of that tune on the inner-nets, so I went back to the drawing board and remembered this tune by Jerry Lee Lewis…

You may recall that I called this list Drivin’ Nails in my Coffin. As a bonus, I’d like to go out with the most excellent Ramblin’ Jack Elliott singing that tune…

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I did it again… #youdidwhat?

Just about every time I visit my dental hygienist I fall asleep while she cleans my  teeth. I realize it only when she nudges me and patiently says, “Open up please.” This time it wasn’t going to happen. Of course I did it again. I fell asleep in the dental chair.

 

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It’s Quarter to Three…

Here’s Frank, singing One For My Baby (Drinking Song #48)

This song was written by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer for the 1943 musical The Sky’s the Limit. It was first performed in the film by Fred Astaire but popularized by Frank Sinatra. This song has been very well covered over the years by such performers as Perry Como, Chuck Berry (!), Etta James, Lena Horne, Iggy Pop (!!), Frankie Laine, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Lou Rawls, Marlene Dietrich, Marvin Gaye, Sammy Davis Jr., Tony Bennett, Bette Midler and many more. There are in fact a few performers since 1943 who have not recorded this song. I might have to do a little research to find them.

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A search and a question…

Somebody entered, “are late night talk shows dead?” into a search engine and landed abruptly here in paradise. Allow me to provide the answer. Yes, they are dead and they stink to high heaven. But then again, I thought Tom Snyder’s Tomorrow Show was good television so who am I to talk.

Here’s Tom Snyder interviewing Alfred Hitchcock. This is in several parts and the others are there on YouTube waiting for your visit.