Sunday, August 30, 2015

Bear Mountain 2015


Last weekend I volunteered with the New York/New Jersey Trail Conference NYNJTC , I took a class on Building Stone Crib Walls (Trail U 1005). It was tough work.
The class and work project took place behind the The Bear Mountain Inn, shown above. Rooms go for 216USD per night (AAA/AARP rate)
A closeup of some Bear Mt. Inn stonework.
This was the view from the work project location. It was a beautiful weekend and there were lots of families out enjoying the great weather. This photo was early Saturday morning before the hordes descended. Even with lots of people in the park, it didn't seem over crowded.
This is some of the work done by the experienced volunteers. The Bear Mountain Trails Project will demonstrate all the different kinds of stonework one may come across on trails such as steps, stepping stones across small streams or marshy areas, retaining walls, waterbars, etc..
Another view of their work, a retaining wall.
This is some of the section of wall I was given to build, I didn't get very far. We were given instructions, some handouts detailing terms and proper technique and a lot of hands on training. It was a 2 day commitment and way too much thinking for me to do on my day off. Not to mention that rocks are heavy. I was so tired at the end of each day, I was sorry I had given Gina (the chauffeur, you met her here) the weekend off.

Current Blooms:
These are from the Rain Chain Garden.



Then and Now Photos of the Heathers, planted in 2013.
The Bayberry(right rear above) has died and been replaced with a Red Twig Dogwood. The Erica x watsonii "Truro" (center in below photo with mauve flowers) has exceeded expectations, but the rest of the plants are just fine. So far early spring pruning has worked out well. There is a purple Echinacea to the left that has done so well I may move it and back-fill it with another dwarf heather.

Beers in the Fridge:

Sixpoint Brewery's Resin is a very hoppy and very strong can of Imperial IPA at 9.0 % ABV and 103 IBU (bitterness scale). Not my cup of tea.

Meanwhile the Woodchuck cider is not a beer, but it is very good, sweet yes, but not bad when your in the mood for it. Very subtle raspberry flavor.



Saturday, August 15, 2015

Favorite Movies


The NY Times has a list of their 1000 best movies here. I ran across it as I was trying to find movie synopsis from the NY Times TV schedule for some of my favorite movies because some of their quips are a scream.

Here are some of my favorite movies that I just reeled off the top of my head. I could watch these movies anytime. While looking up the dates of the movies, I was reminded of the other movies made by the major actors in the films, I could have made this list so much longer.
  •  Charade (1963) Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn. Enjoyable theme music, lots of funny lines, witty dialog and suspense.  TCM says "everything you'd expect from a Hitchcock film except the famous director's name above the credits" Directed by Stanley Donen.
  • The Fifth Element (1997) Bruce Willis, Chris Tucker. Sci-Fi Shoot-em-up. Chris Tucker is a hoot, Bruce has tons of funny lines too.  Spoiler Alert: Bruce saves the day.
  • The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer (1947) Cary Grant, Shirley Temple, Myrna Loy. The Uncle did it. One of the better bits of dialog is listed here.
  • The Maltese Falcon (1941) Humphrey Bogart as Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade. Lots of big stars.
  • The Big Sleep (1946) Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall. Bogart as private eye Phillip Marlow created by Raymond Chandler. There was a 1978 remake with Robert Mitchum playing Phillip Marlow, as the NY Times might say in their TV Schedule "miss it"
  • The Princess Bride (1987) Directed by Rob Reiner. Tons of memorable quotes. Inconceivable!
  • Houseboat (1958) Cary Grant, Sophia Loren. Cary is rude to Sophia, Sophia slaps Cary, Sophia becomes nanny to Cary's kids, they live on a tiny houseboat, everyone gets the wrong impression, and then surprisingly they fall in love.
  • Hot Fuzz (2007) Simon Pegg, Nick Frost. Just now noticed that Bill Baily is in the movie. FYI a Comedy. This one came up while I visiting my mom.
  • The Last Samurai (2003) Tom Cruise, Ken Watanabe, Billy Connely. Tom plays a Civil war hero who travels to Japan to train soldiers, gets captured by a band of Samurai and eventually is accepted because of his warrior spirit.
  • The Third Man (1949) Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, zither music, gritty post-war Vienna and a chase through the sewers. Shot on location, the Ferris wheel is still there and you can go on a Third Man tour that include a tour of the sewer and a visit to the museum. I'll have to add that to the list of things to do in my Vienna post.

Saturday, August 8, 2015

August Doldrums


Things have been pretty humdrum since coming back from our adventure. Though compared to some other real adventurers, our trip was just a walk in the park. I just finished reading Death in the Sahara by Michael Asher, a French expedition's attempt in the late 1800s to cross the Sahara ends in the death of almost all the expedition team. They were surveying for a railroad that was to go from Algiers to Timbucktoo and were harassed by Tuaregs there and back. Now I am reading The River of Doubt by Candice Millard, recounting Teddy Roosevelt's South American tour and exploration of an uncharted river. Teddy would have poo-pooed our Peruvian Trip, his only instructions to the man in charge of putting together his South American tour was that he refused to be the "thousandth American to visit Cuzco".

Current Blooms:
 Dwarf Coreopsis in one of the troughs
Another Coreopsis, this one at the edge of the Peony Garden, not a dwarf, but shorter than the yellow specimen we have in another garden.
 Japanese Sedum in a trough with Mountain Rock
 Thyme and Dwarf Campanula (white flowers) in a hollowed out rock

Beers in the Fridge:
 Nice and crisp, can't decipher the aroma, once rinsed sweat sox? Great on a summers evening reading the paper.
 Wasn't planning on buying a Peruvian beer, but earlier in the summer the store on my way home just happened to have a case of Cusquena blocking the aisle and I felt obliged to partake. The bottle caps have a drawing of Machu Picchu and the bottle has interlocking Inca stonework on it. It is not bad, just a tad sweet for me.  The Hofbrau Original is very good and reminds me of our trip to Munich.
Also have Sweet Action on hand, currently my favorite summer brew.

What I took on my Summer Vacation:
 Most of these items went in my North Face large duffel. There is a Bill Bryson book there, but I didn't actually take any of his. I took Travel with my Aunt by Graham Green, Monsieur Pamplemousse by Michael Bond and 2 books by Georges Simenon. I pretty much used every item of clothing except the bathing suit. I also packed a pair of approach shoes which took up some space. It was neither as hot nor as cold as I had expected it to have been, but I was prepared for both.
In my day pack I took the first aid kit, our medications, gadget wires and chargers, snacks which I took too many of, a point and shoot, my iphone and the rain jacket.