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The theme for Burning Man 2010: Metropolis. The idea? To show the world what we can do, how we can live, what a metropolis can be where people walk, bike, share rides on art cars and buses. Where a street full of strangers becomes a community of friends.Just in case you need a reminder of WHY we all go to Burning Man, I’ve posted a few photos from the gallery of Burning Man 2009 shots by Scott Hess, a member of the official Burning Man Documentation Team. http://bit.ly/ CALS2
We are the Metropolis. We make the Metropolis. If you want to experience the Metropolis of Burning Man, tickets go on sale Weds. Jan. 13 at 10am. Tickets start at $210 dollars for a life full of amazing experiences: August 30 to September 6 2010.

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BURNING MAN 2010 TICKET INFORMATION http://tickets. burningman. com
Tickets start at $210 and go up from there as each tier is sold out. Burning Man org suggests ticket buyers on Wednesday at 10am remember: Read more…
One hundred or more professional stone masons from around the world are converging on good old Ventucky, my home sweet home, to build something MASSIVE and WONDERFUL up at Grant Park aka “The Cross” and to teach and learn more about the ancient art of stone stacking and stone walling as well as stone carving.
Even the Big Monkey’s cousin Scott from Washington showed up, more or less out of the blue, with his significant other, stone mason Janine Hegy from Sequim Washington. This is the third Stone Foundation Symposium Janine has attended. She
‘s been doing stone stacking for over 15 years, and a jeweler for many years before that; now she’s wanting to move more into stone carving and so she’s here to take an architextural carving workshop with Colleen next week. Pictured is an example of her boulder stacking–beautiful, isn’t it? I know I’m ready to hire her to do something here! Also pictured is bench project of hers.
This week, the emphasis of the 2010 Stone Foundation Symposium is on wall building. Several Japanese masters, with generations of experience, are in town, and have been for a few days. Yesterday morning they had a tea ceremony, then began building two walls and a staircase. Lots of friends from Art City crowded around the sire; my nephew Kyle, fresh from UCB with an engineering degree and no job in sight is helping out.
In stone stacking, walls and other structures like ancient castles and places like Machu Pichu are built without mortar. In a dry stack, everything is fitted together in such a way that in shifts in earth, water, other natural forces work with the wall to stay stable for centuries whereas mortar cracks. Stacking is a more green method of building because it doesn’t take anything: no chemicals, no mortar. It’s the oldest style of building on earth and examples abound because the structures have lasted. It typically uses locally sources rock; the project here will feature all local rock local sandstone.
Next week will feature an architextural stone carving workshop with an emphasis on flora and fauna by Colleen Wilson, and then the symposium of lectures will complete the two week event.
Each year, the Stone Foundation Symposium takes place somewhere around the world and they build and carve and socialize as well as learn. In previous years, my new friend Janine attended the Hood River OR Symposium then spent several weeks in Spain, then went to Berry Vermont. Last year they made this giant scrabble board with 10″ x 10″ letters!
“It’s just such a pleasure to be around like minded people,” she said. “The learning that is occurring is so nice. It’s all the conversations, and a way to interact with your mentors. Alan Ash is here,” she continued, “and he’s into restoration so he’s looking at restoring a fireplace from 1854 in the Dalles OR. To be in contact with him– it’s like a door is opening so it’s very good for my career.”
Primarily she builds dry stack rock walls, benches, and patios, but she wants to expand her skills so she’s come to study with Nathan Blackwell (pictured here with Janine at a previous Symposium) who teaches lettering and Zack Zacovy from Boseman Montana who she met in Spain and has studeued with several times since, most recently in the previous month. Zacovy will lecture on his Meditation Garden and Stone Door (pictures by Janine). Janine also gave him design ideas for one of the segments of the Garden. Zacovy’s over work includes public art as well as private commissions including this “Waterfall Arch” at Great Falls Library where a sheet of water flows and kids can ride under it on their bikes.
Fun and games are also planned–lithobolos (like bocce ball but with stone balls), the Famous Wheelbarrow Steeplechase, and drinking a special brew “Rocknockers Ale” at Anacapa Brew Pub.
So if you’re local, drive on up to the cross. Park just below and walk up to see the progress. I’ll try to post regularly about the project here–and I’ll let you know more about the Anacapa Brewery Rocknocker’s Ale too!
Wine Blogging Wednesday #65: what do you drink with snow?
What would you pair with a side of snow?
This month’s Wine Blogging Wednesday’s host Wine Girl asks:
“Even if you’re in warm sunny Florida or Los Angeles,” writes Wine Girl in her announcement of WBW #65, ” I want you to look out your window and imagine Snow. Snowmen, snow balls, igloos, snow trucks, snow … cold, cold snow. Then I want you to imagine what that makes you want to drink. Do you want to curl up in front of your fireplace with a port? Maybe you want to pull out a cabernet sauvignon or a big juicy zin and then put on your snowsuit. Are you a glutton for punishment and you’re pulling out a chilled riesling before heading out to build a snowman? Are you inspired by vintners who are braving frigid temperatures to make icewine? In this particular instance, I’ll even allow you to branch a little away from wine if you want. With a valid story behind you, there’s no reason you can’t pop open a cognac, a brandy, or even bourbon. Imaginary “bonus points” for anyone with a wonderful Snow Day story of their youth, a great photo of snow and wine, or even a Snowman and wine!”
Too cool for school if you ask me! I just wish I’d known LAST weekend when we broke into two different bottles of port and we could have tried a third I brought to snowy Flagstaff. Fortunately, we’re heading to the snow again this weekend to celebrate my birthday–now certainly with some fortified wines! I’d love to find an excellent madeira or sherry which is really tough around here, but I will likely do some ports–maybe one each from three continents–Europe, Australia and here: I have a tempting Kachina port that was in the gift bag at the Wine Bloggers Conference last summer.
Want to take part in WBW 65: Snow Day? It takes place Weds. Jan 20. Send links to wbw65@wine-girl.net.
Green Drink
s Ventura County, the local Ventucky gathering of this international green group of eco/green oriented businesses and individuals, meets the second Wednesday of each month at a different location somewhere in the county. On January 13, from 5:30-7:30pm, Green Drinks meets at a brand new downtown Ventura business’s green design showroom, EcoLogic Life; Main Course California Catering brings the goodies! Here’s the Green Drinks link.
Green Drinks Thousand Oaks/Ventura County was started in August 2008 to bring together people with a common interest in sustainability issues. The popular monthly event offers networking, socializing, informal information exchange, and mini-topic panel discussions. The event fosters connections, raises awareness, and catalyzes the movement toward a more vibrant and sustainable Ventura County.
More on this month’s hosts: Read more…
LA County Natural History Museum’s First Friday music and art series runs from Jan. 8-June 4. This Friday, January 8 the series starts up again with a spider themed night; next month, when we’re on the Tweed Ride, the lecture will ask Where in the World Will Our Energy Come From? with California Institute of Technology professor, Dr. Nathan S. Lewis:
What would it take for the world to get away from fossil fuels and convert to renewable energy? The dirty secret is: It’ll take more than a Prius in the garage and solar panels on the roof. If we want to use wind, solar thermal and electric, biomass, hydroelectric and geothermal energy, it will take planning and willingness on the part of governments and industry. It will take R&D investment, a favorable price per unit of energy to get anyone to produce alternative energy, and plenty of resources. Nathan Lewis will discuss these and other hurdles — technical, political, and economic — that must be overcome before the widespread adoption of renewable energy technologies.
A great topic, I know! I just wish they’d hold the series on the SECOND Friday of EVERY month so we could go but no. They hold their event when we’re out on the First Friday ArtRide! Except in JANUARY! Which means we should all go THIS Friday, January 8, 2010 –tickets are only $9!

Tour (5:30 pm): Meet the Silk Makers with Brent Karner: an arachnid tour Living Collections. Discussion (6:30 pm and 7:00 pm): Spiders: The Miracle Engineers with UC Riverside biology professor and MacArthur Fellow, Dr. Cheryl Y. Hayashi
In this talk, Hayashi introduces the basic biology of spider silk, and shares recent research on its genetics and biomechanics. Despite their gossamer appearance, spider silks have incredible mechanical properties, ranking among the strongest and toughest materials on the planet giving us directions on how to create biodegradable fishing lines, medical sutures, and protective armor cloth.
Performances (8:00 pm – 10:00 pm)

In the diorama halls are Tune-Yards and Atlas Sound: The Tune-Yards’ electronic folk nucleus is Merrill Garbus, who started as a one-woman show with ukulele, and a human beat box of a voice. Atlas Sound is the solo project of Bradford Cox, the striking and eccentric vocalist for experimental indie rocker act Deerhunter.
DJs (7:00 pm – 10:00 pm)

Resident DJ, Them Jeans (a.k.a. Jason Stewart) and headliner, DJ Spider:
Though his roots stem from a deep love for hip-hop, Spider has cultivated his sound to include an eclectic mix of cuts that transgress nearly every genre of music. He’s been known to take timeless hits such as “Sexual Healing” by Marvin Gaye, mix in the newest club-banger, and blend into an Aretha Franklin classic. It is this variety and originality that makes Spider one of the most coveted DJ’s across the globe today. With musical tastes spanning from hardcore punk to dancefloor-friendly hip-hop, post-rock to ambient electronic, Them Jeans never fails to deliver a set with the perfect mood for the gathering.
Art Installation

Art Installation: Gerard Minakawa
We’ve seen the work of bamboo artist Gerard Minakawa at Lightening in the Bottle and Burning Man. For this event, he’s created The Big Bamboo Spider. The giant bamboo timber used in its construction comes from both the Amazon basin and the jungles of Indonesia. Bamboo typically reaches maturity between 5-7 years, does not require re-seeding, and is one of the planet’s top carbon sequesters. Gerard Minakawa, a New York City native and graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, is a professional artist and designer based in Los Angeles, California. His first exploration into bamboo occurred in 2001 and, together with his company Bamboo DNA, he has since dedicated his career to creating large-scale bamboo structures and educating the public about the world’s most gigantic and versatile grass.
Just as DARE’s “Just Say No to Drugs” campaign belittles the struggles of drug addicts and avoids the greater cultural and economic challenges that lead to drug use, so does the simple “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” approach to dealing with global warming lack substance as well as any significant signs of success.
Here’s the Inconvenient Truth: no matter how much or how often you personally ride your bike, hang your clothes on the line, bring your own bag and cup, recycle everything, etc, it’s JUST NOT ENOUGH to stop climate change in its tracks and save life on earth as we know it.
Nope. What has to happen is much much greater than an individual’s actions at home and work. While the common over-consumption and the wasting of resources (sending functional items and reusable materials to landfills and behaviors like driving short distances instead of walking or riding a bike or using 6% of a household’s energy for drying clothes) is WRONG, what has to happen to save life on the planet as we know it requires political will and pressure. Right now we are choosing to sacrifice thousands of species and many many thousands of human beings, especially those species and humans which live on the continental margins.
Just how much will the Earth’s surface warm up over the lives of our children? NASA’s APOD answered it thus on April 21, 2009: 
No one is sure. Compared to the past 100 million years, the Earth is currently enduring a relative cold spell, possibly about four degrees Celsius below average. Over the past 100 years, however, data indicate the average global temperature of the Earth has increased by nearly one degree Celsius. Few disagree that recent global warming is occurring, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has concluded that we humans have created a warming surge that is likely to continue. A future temperature increase like that shown on the above predictive map may cause sea levels to rise, precipitation patterns to change, and much pole ice to melt. The result could impact many local agricultures and the global economy. Geoengineering projects that might include artificial cloud creation might reduce the amount of warming sunlight that reaches the Earth‘s surface.
To save life on this planet as we know it, WE must quit using carbon based fuels. Even more specifically, WE must PHASE OUT COAL EMISSIONS IMMEDIATELY.
Who am I to recommend you change your life radically by joining us in taking on this task? After all, I’m just a blogger. (And an activist. And I have a college degree in environmental studies if that matters to you.) And I have been following climate change since I took a class on it in the 1980’s with Dr. Bob Curry at UCSC, and writing about these issues since I started blogging. A year ago, I blogged about a NOAA report which predicted that the climate change we’ve already experienced will take 1000 years to reverse itself:
“The policy relevance is clear: We need to act sooner … because by the time the public and policymakers really realize the changes are here it is far too late to do anything about it. In fact, as the authors point out, it is already too late for some effects,” according to Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis National Center for Atmospheric Research.
In my page Warming 101, I quote a June 2008 article where NASA’s James Hansen says that to cut emissions, “coal-fired power plants that don’t capture carbon dioxide emissions shouldn’t be used in the United States after 2025, and should be eliminated in the rest of the world by 2030.”
Burning fossil fuels like coal is the chief cause of anthropogenic greenhouse gases. Hansen said the Earth’s atmosphere has got to get back to a level of 350 parts of carbon dioxide per million. In May 2008, according to the article, it was 10 percent higher: 386.7 parts per million. “The thing that I think is most important is to block coal-fired power plants,” Hansen told the luncheon. “I’m not yet at the point of chaining myself but we somehow have to draw attention to this.”
“If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385ppm to at most 350ppm,” writes NASA’s James Hansen (2008).
James Hansen’s la
test attempt to call attention to the dire consequences of our continued use of coal is the recent publication of his book, Storms of my Grandchildren: The Truth of the Coming Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity. Susan Salter Reynolds reviewed his book Sunday Dec. 27, 2009 in the LA Times.
According to Reynolds, Hansen is propelled by three forces:
1) Being asked by his grandchildren why he didn’t do more to stop global warming: “I suspect one day your more perceptive grandchildren will say that you let the politicians lie to you.”
2) Disgust at greenwashing: “I believe the biggest obstacle to solving global warming is the role of money in politics.”
3) Changes in his own understanding about climate change and the importance of reducing carbon dioxide to 350 parts per million. According to Hansen, if we shut down all coal plants in the next two decades, we have a chance to bring current levels of CO2 in the atmosphere down from 387 to 350ppm. The challenge? 50% of the electricity in the US comes from coal; in China, it’s 80%.
Reynolds writes that “Hansen is not big on personal emissions reductions, efficiency and recycling efforts, ore renewable lifestyle choices. He applauds the effort but does not feel it will do the trick.” What will is a “linear phase-out of coal emissions by 2030” which means emissions cut in half by 2030. To make this happen will require a revolutionary resolution as far as I am concerned. I agree with Hansen that we can’t count on government to make this radical change without our forcing it on them.
As Hansen points out, the politicians, driven by special interest groups “are pursuing policies to get every last drop of fossil fuel, including coal, by whatever means necessary regardless of environmental damage.”
“I’m 68 years old and I am fed up with the way things are done in Washington,” writes Hansen.
So if you’re fed up, what can YOU do? What will I do? It is still important to REDUCE REUSE RECYCLE REPURPOSE RECREATE because it is still WRONG to just trash everything. But it’s not enough. We have to take James Hansen’s advice and figure out ways for the government to just say no to coal.
I don’t know how that’s going to happen so I’m going to just keep on learning. There’s lots of info out there. I’m going to watch for opportunities to have an impact on the way people think and join groups like 350.org that call attention to the need to get back down to 350 ppm. I’ll visit http://www.worldviewofglobalwarming.org/ documents climate change through a rephotographing project. And I’ll be prepared to counter myths about global warming with facts, but I won’t waste too much breath, energy or time in trying to convince others who have closed their minds.
10 MYTHS about Global Warming Read more…
Poetry from the 3:15 Experiment 8/26/09: compassion & the spider
The daddy long-legs
has his spot on the wall.He waits. He watches.
His legs stretched out
he is ready to pounce.He knows it would take little
to wipe him off the face
of the earth to break his legs
to crush his body.c. Gwendolyn Alley aka Art Predator
August 26, 2009 3:15am
I wrote this poem last August during the annual 3:15 experiment where poets from around the world awake at 3:15am to write. Earlier in August, I wrote this 3:15 Experiment poem about this spider which I dedicated to Walt Whitman and posted one of his poems there too.
I’ve been slowly but surely transcribing my 3:15 poems from 2009. This one from August 26 just happened to be the next one in the journal. Interesting how it connects with the previous posts about compassion. It is so easy and common to just squish the small creatures that surround us, the ones we don’t appreciate or understand…
For more 3:15 poems by me, you’ll find them under that category in “What I’m Talking About” in the sidebar. Here’s where you’ll find more participants in the Monday Poetry Train.
“Kindness is more important than wisdom, and the recognition of this is the beginning of wisdom.” — Theodore Isaac Rubin
Last night when I returned from Flagstaff, an email from Danika Dinsmore, the Accidental Novelist was waiting. In it, she encouraged me to contact Andy Smallman and join his On-Line Practice of Kindness class. After reading up about Guan Yin, the Compassionate Rebel, how could I say no to committing to a Practice of Kindness each week?
So I emailed Andy and signed up for the Winter Term 2010 online Practice of Kindness class being hosted by the Puget Sound Community School (PSCS) in Seattle, facilitated by Andy Smallman, founder/director of PSCS. About 100 people from North America, Europe and Australia have signed up but he expects the class to grow in the next week. Maybe after you learn more, you will join in also!
Here’s a Seattle Times story from just after Christmas and links to last Sunday. Local TV station channel 13 did a brief TV story (http://tinyurl.com/kindnessQ13 & http://tinyurl.com/KindnessQ13-Take2). Deepak Chopra retweeted info about the class and it showed up as the “Idea of the Day” on bestselling author Dan Pink’s blog (http://tinyurl.com/y8goczb).
Here’s how Andy describes it: Read more…
2009 on Art Predator: The Blog That Was
What do I mean, the blog that was? Well, 2009 is over and https://artpredator.wordpress.com will be over soon also!
No, I am NOT leaving blogging. And I am not abandoning you, dear reader!
After all, this has been one bang up year! I mean, gosh, I went to PORTUGAL as a blogger thanks to Enoforum Wines and Jo Diaz at WineBlog.org! That’s absolutely the best thing that’s happened to me as a blogger if you don’t count all the wonderful people I’ve met via blogging like Jo Diaz and other wine bloggers and people I haven’t met yet in real life but know on-line like Australian poet Paul Squires aka Ginga Tao and Indian poet Gautami who conducts the Monday Poetry Train and so many more…
Over the course of the past year, I posted at least once a day (except for December when I took some time off!) ranging from 30-47 posts a month. Around the first of the week I typically posted about literary arts, on Mondays I almost always posted poetry, Wednesdays I often posted about wine, and near the First Friday I wrote about arts, cycling and environmental activism. I tried to keep up on interesting astronomical and astrological events as well as political ones. Quite the eclectic mix, if I may say so myself!
Overall, in 2009, among other activities I
–blogged about Macworld in January (7,128 page views) on a press pass,
–submitted a video application to blog about the Great Barrier Reef in February (8,282 page views),
–kept rolling in March (10,986) and April (9,071) including a trip to Yosemite
–attended WordCamp SF in May (9,571),
–submitted a video application to blog as the Murphy-Goode Lifestyle correspondent in June (9,370)
–attended the Wine Bloggers Conference in July (7,548),
–helped people prepare for Burning Man in August (12,970) ,
–went to Burning Man for the 17th time in September (16,701) and blogged about tastings I held there with wines from Michel-Schlumberger, Twisted Oak, Bonny Doon, and Vino V (watch for another blog post about this escapade soon!)
–attended the European Wine Bloggers Conference in Portugal in October (15,161) thanks to Enoforum,
–blogged about the Alentejo region of Portugal in November (9,459),
–and kept on keeping on in December (11,356)!
All that adds up to 127,603 page views for 2009 after 41,936 stats for 2008 which shows some wonderful growth as far as I’m concerned. And this doesn’t include RSS page views or subscribers.
Some of the most highly viewed posts connected with the zeitgeist and hundreds or thousands of people read them, like my Burning Man posts last August or my winter solstice activities post. Other posts, for example, most of my Monday poetry posts, only have a few dozen page views. That doesn’t mean I’ll stop posting poetry or only write about Burning Man!
In 2010 you can expect Art Predator to continue on in the same eclectic vein as always: art, poetry, politics, wine, environmental activism, adventures, crazy bike rides…
What will change then? My address! Sometime in January, as a birthday present to myself, I will switch over to http://artpredator.com.
Yes, you will still be able to find me here. But you will also be able to find me THERE. But not yet! At least not now as I post this on the day after New Year’s Day.
So, here’s a toast (with a nicely balanced brut J cuvee 20–a not sweet, fresh crisp gently bubbling Sonoma County sparkler from the Russian River Valley!) to the New Year, a new blog URL and YOU! (Because without YOU, it would get rather boring just sitting here writing to myself…!)
And here’s what you’ve been reading–The Top 15 posts from the last 30 days and the top 15 posts from 2009: Read more…












