Friday, January 24, 2014

Urbex Lite

United Crushers, Dinkytown, Minneapolis
Recently, a friend and I "walked the Green Line," a light rail line between Minneapolis and St. Paul which starts service in June. Along the way, many structures caught our attention, including the "United Crushers" grain silos in Dinkytown, Minneapolis.

The silos have been disused for years. There is no "United Crushers," this is not a division of ADM (the Archer Daniels Midland Company); this is carefully applied graffiti.

Later, I fixated on the pictures in a blog entry describing a visit to the top of this abandoned structure. This type of exploration is clearly illegal and dangerous, but I find the whole idea quite exciting. Behind the facades of our cities, there are new layers to be explored, exposed, and explained.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Frozen Lakes and Lost Places

Frozen Lake of the Isles, Minneapolis
Kilauea caldera, Hawaii Big Island

"Why do you live in Minnesota?--The winters are too cold. You should move."

I hear this from a person who brought up a family in a Minneapolis suburb. When her husband retired, they moved to a new subdivision in the Arizona desert. There is no good response because I was presented with a false dilemma. Any response would only sound defensive or absurd.

I was pondering that dilemma yesterday. With Arctic air building, I walked across a frozen Minneapolis lake thinking about walks across frozen lakes in warm places.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Art for Everyone

Spoonbridge and Cherry (Oldenburg), Minneapolis Sculpture Garden
Today, on my walk to The Wedge Co-op to pick up some groceries, I popped into the Walker Art Center to catch their Claes Oldenburg exhibition before it ends its run in January. Afterwards, it struck me there were learning moments for my nephews (5 and 6). This blog entry is for them.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Our Traditional Tree

Life, Phase 3, is an opportunity to simplify. Simplification will become a necessity when, one day, we move from our current home to something more manageable.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Japan's Islands off Islands

Sakurajima, active volcano off Kagoshima, Southern Japan, March 2013
The winter is setting in, and won't budge for another four or five months: it's time to think about travel to warmer places like Southern Japan.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Selling LEGO


As LEGO Technic creations go, this vehicle is as basic as they come. For me, it represents a point in a process I've been following with my two nephews (5 and 6): I'm trying to discover if they have the potential to be interested in LEGO.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Travel Gear: Handheld GPS

Eurostar, Northern France, heading straight for the English Channel at 183 MPH
If I could only bring one piece of electronic equipment when traveling, it would be my handheld GPS.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Artful Living

Who reads this stuff?
Here's some random quotes from Artful Living magazine:
Where your stay is part of defining who you are.
You can join the crowd, or you can leave it behind.
Eat. Shop. Sleep.
Own Chicago. Know the right people.
Make a statement with every second.
"I never thought I would receive so many compliments every day."
As unique as you are.
Who needs this stuff?

Friday, October 4, 2013

Decoding a Crane

What are we thinking?
I'm in Japan. A lone crane swoops low over a large, exquisitely landscaped pond. There are two other bystanders; they smile contentedly as the crane reinforces a common bond, evoking fragments of mysticism, national treasure, longevity, good fortune, origami, the number 1,000, childhood memories, and current dreams. I'm seeing a crane swooping over a pond and feeling contented, too.