Tuesday, October 11, 2011

EARTH ~







Where I am working every day on this spit of an island along the river bucking up whole trees brought down by Hurricane Irene, I can watch the river change color.

It's changing by what is happening up river.

The river all comes down from Marlboro, Vermont and the uncountable small tributaries in brooks, creeks, streams and springs fed on both sides of a rock faced forest covered terrain. The real place. The real stuff. Not yet domesticated and ruled.

So yesterday we traveled up river to have a look for ourselves to see what's been mucking this water for weeks on end since the big storm. It's not yet back to its green river look, but more a muddy soiled sometimes creamy gumbo; and it no longer wanders like it did for decades on end in the shape of a long shoelace left on the floor. The flood straightened it out but good; took out the kinks, so it runs swifter, and louder, and the rapids look delightful where they play. I miss my old river, but what are you going to do? All old gets brushed up and moved along somewhere down the line. We included.

Up river we found house size excavators smack dab in the river planted and working. They're there because it's the only position one can be in to rebuild a river bank and thus the road running right alongside. It's all day, all week, weeks swiveling these machines and lifting tremendous rock and making a road that moves people. The river stays mucked until this gets done. It's another law of nature.

The woodlands in Halifax, up river from Guilford where these excavators are churning, was hit hard by the flood. The valley narrows there and the river gorges more and a flood has nowhere to go but through. It took everything in its path. Trees in the hundreds woven into mammoth baskets that would take an army of workers to maneuver into firewood and maybe 300 cord at that. A flood has no room to exaggerate, all it does is exaggerate to a precision. Go up river another half mile and find another blasted basket of trees formed up with dimensions way past man's ability and there's another stockyard of firewood. If you're game.

Back at home I'm nearing the end of bucking up and splitting my own smaller basket of trees. I'm into the easier basswood/poplar now, after days of tough red oak, which splits green with some ease. I took down a few thick poplar logs and with my chain saw carved out two chairs and set them sturdy on the island, and then Sweetheart quietly mentioned "a table". So I sworded one out while I was at it. Then left her a note, where she'll see it at dawn, telling her the two chairs and a table are waiting for us.

By a river that never sleeps.




photo "red oak" © bob arnold
EARTH ~
(roads open / roads closed after the flood)






Sunday, October 9, 2011

FIX-A-FLAT ~






Who they sent out looked like someone
I never liked because he never wanted
To work and this guy doesn’t either —
He has every excuse for you: they sent
Me first north to Putney on a wild goose
Chase and now I’m here past quitting time
And those lugs won’t budge. Susan catches
Him throwing his tire-iron back into his truck
From a good distance off. Did he bring a
Long bar to help crack the lugs? Nah.
Did he have a box of sockets? Nah.
I could string out a cord from the woodshed
If he had his drill? Don’t bother.
He usually carries with him a can of
Fix-a-Flat but not today. Scowling at the
Troubled tire he predicts the lugs
Will need to be torched and even then
They could snap and he wants nothing
To do with that. Goodbye.


His truck is pint-size and
He can’t wait to leave.
He does a comb-over on his hair
Which I could do but don’t.
Every second he is reminding
Me of a son-of-a-bitch I know.
It’s a half-hour drive back into
Town but it isn’t 15 minutes since
He has left and the agency we
Call tells us we’ve been charged by the
Jerk for a job well done. Imagine that.
Now, imagine what we said.


The next day the agency sends out a flatbed wrecker
From a different company and with a different guy.
A wide body bruiser with an equal size wife.
They push open the doors to the wrecker but
Sit there a moment as if sniffing over this piddly job.
Watching the guy finally roll out I can imagine
Him lifting the back end of my truck with one
Hand while changing the tire with his other.
He almost does. No excuses. Done in a flash.
He’s already heard through the grapevine about
Our visitor yesterday, says with a grin,
Don’t send out a boy to do a man’s job, right?
Something both our fathers told us.
Something, one day, you have to live up to.
Within seconds we are talking about firewood,
Mutual people we happen to know; his wife is
Complaining to my wife about how the agency only
Calls them when everyone else bails out.
They reek of bad attitudes, pissy luck and hard work.
We tell them we will be going back inside
To call the agency at Triple-A
To make them famous.



for Finn Wilcox





photo © susan arnold
from : yokel (longhouse, 2011)


Saturday, October 8, 2011

EARTH ~










"The webcam operates from 6:00 am to 6:00 pm Nepalese time (0015 to 1215 GMT) from the Kala Patthar summit, recording stunning images of 8,848-metre Mount Everest as well as the South Col."






Friday, October 7, 2011

EARTH ~




ai wei wei




"In 2006, even though he could barely type, China's most famous artist started blogging. For more than three years, Ai Wei Wei turned out a steady stream of scathing social commentary, criticism of government policy, thoughts on art and architecture, and autobiographical writings. He wrote about the Sichuan earthquake (and posted a list of the schoolchildren who died because of the government's "tofu-dregs engineering"), reminisced about Andy Warhol and the East Village art scene, described the irony of being investigated for "fraud" by the Ministry of Public Security, made a modest proposal for tax collection. Then, on May 28, 2009, Chinese authorities shut down the blog. This book offers a collection of Ai's online writings translated in to English — the most complete, public documentation of the original Chinese blog available in any language."


( the blog was hosted on sina.com.cn )




MIT Press
edited & translated by Lee Ambrozy






photo: peter parks/Getty





Thursday, October 6, 2011

LIBRARY ~






http://peopleslibrary.wordpress.com/





email:
owspeopleslibrary@gmail.com

Mail Books to:
The UPS Store
Re: Occupy Wall Street
Attn: The People's Library
118A Fulton St. #205
New York, NY 10038




Wednesday, October 5, 2011

GUITAR HERO ~




Bert Jansch
3 Nov, 1943-5 Oct, 2011



"He completely reinvented guitar playing and set a standard that is still unequalled today," former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr told the Telegraph (U.K.). "Without Bert Jansch, rock music as it developed in the 1960s and 1970s would have been very different. You hear him in Nick Drake, Pete Townshend, Donovan, the Beatles, Jimmy Page and Neil Young. There are people playing guitar who don't even realize they've been influenced by him one step removed."








quote:
Rolling Stone







SECOND CHANCES ~





Dorianne Laux




What are the chances a raindrop

from last night's storm caught

in the upturned cup of an autumn leaf

will fall from this tree I pass under

and land on the tip of my lit cigarette,

snuffing it out? What are the chances

my niece will hit rock bottom before Christmas,

a drop we all long for, and quit heroin?

What are the chances of being hit

by a bus, a truck, a hell-bound train

or inheriting the gene for cancer,

addiction? What good are statistics

on a morning like this? What good

is my niece to anyone but herself?

What are the chances any of you

are reading this poem?

---------------------------Dear men,

whom I have not met,

when you meet her on the street

wearing the wounds that won't heal

and she offers you the only thing

she has left, what are the chances

you'll take pity on her fallen body?



Dorianne Laux
from
The Book Of Men
(Norton 2011)



Monday, October 3, 2011

CITY & COUNTRY ~




Wall Street Gets Advice




The New York City General Assembly
http://jameswagner.com/

30 September 2011

The following statement was published today by the General Assembly of #OccupyWallStreet. It has explicitly not been presented as an official statement of any organization, nor is it an official list of demands of any organization.

Details and updates of the occupation in New York City and across the country can be tracked at the following:

http://www.occupywallstreet.org

http://www.occupytogether.org/

jameswagner.com


A set of excellent photos of occupation activities in New York City and San Francisco can be found here:

http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2011/09/occupy-wall-street/100159/

------------------------------------
Declaration of the Occupation of New York City

As we gather together in solidarity to express a feeling of mass injustice, we must not lose sight of what brought us together. We write so that all people who feel wronged by the corporate forces of the world can know that we are your allies.

As one people, united, we acknowledge the reality: that the future of the human race requires the cooperation of its members; that our system must protect our rights, and upon corruption of that system, it is up to the individuals to protect their own rights, and those of their neighbors; that a democratic government derives its just power from the people, but corporations do not seek consent to extract wealth from the people and the Earth; and that no true democracy is attainable when the process is determined by economic power. We come to you at a time when corporations, which place profit over people, self-interest over justice, and oppression over equality, run our governments. We have peaceably assembled here, as is our right, to let these facts be known.

They have taken our houses through an illegal foreclosure process, despite not having the original mortgage.

They have taken bailouts from taxpayers with impunity, and continue to give Executives exorbitant bonuses.

They have perpetuated inequality and discrimination in the workplace based on age, the color of one's skin, sex, gender identity and sexual orientation.

They have poisoned the food supply through negligence, and undermined the farming system through monopolization.

They have profited off of the torture, confinement, and cruel treatment of countless nonhuman animals, and actively hide these practices.



They have continuously sought to strip employees of the right to negotiate for better pay and safer working conditions.

They have held students hostage with tens of thousands of dollars of debt on education, which is itself a human right.

They have consistently outsourced labor and used that outsourcing as leverage to cut workers' healthcare and pay.

They have influenced the courts to achieve the same rights as people, with none of the culpability or responsibility.

They have spent millions of dollars on legal teams that look for ways to get them out of contracts in regards to health insurance.

They have sold our privacy as a commodity.

They have used the military and police force to prevent freedom of the press. They have deliberately declined to recall faulty products endangering lives in pursuit of profit.

They determine economic policy, despite the catastrophic failures their policies have produced and continue to produce.

They have donated large sums of money to politicians supposed to be regulating them. They continue to block alternate forms of energy to keep us dependent on oil.

They continue to block generic forms of medicine that could save people's lives in order to protect investments that have already turned a substantive profit.

They have purposely covered up oil spills, accidents, faulty bookkeeping, and inactive ingredients in pursuit of profit.

They purposefully keep people misinformed and fearful through their control of the media.

They have accepted private contracts to murder prisoners even when presented with serious doubts about their guilt.

They have perpetuated colonialism at home and abroad. They have participated in the torture and murder of innocent civilians overseas.

They continue to create weapons of mass destruction in order to receive government contracts. *


To the people of the world,

We, the New York City General Assembly occupying Wall Street in Liberty Square, urge you to assert your power.

Exercise your right to peaceably assemble; occupy public space; create a process to address the problems we face, and generate solutions accessible to everyone.

To all communities that take action and form groups in the spirit of direct democracy, we offer support, documentation, and all of the resources at our disposal.

Join us and make your voices heard!





*These grievances are not all-inclusive.





photos:
foreignpolicy.com
new york daily news




EARTH ~




Javier Sicilia



Sunday, October 2, 2011

EARTH ~







the glade where we hike each day and where I've been cutting all summer










pine eyes










cherry wood cache










palm










golden










bark mulch & timber
(gifts)










chalkie










wash in the river (me in them), dry on sun baked metal









it ain't summer w/o a
hula hoop










what grows & flows










where ice melts







photographs taken
to & fro
on one morning hike



photos © bob arnold



Saturday, October 1, 2011

A SATURDAY NIGHT SONG ~





Townes Van Zandt










STORMING THE GATES ~





The Poetry Foundation has visitors



read more:

http://www.montevidayo.com/?p=1946






Friday, September 30, 2011

EARTH ~







One of the most beautiful songs ever written (by Woody Guthrie) or sung, at least to me right now (awakening from a nap) — you know how that is.

The film
Jesus' Son was just finishing with that most beautiful of all endings in the world: this song, and Billy Crudup's character walking away in full flop clothes and heart into the sunshine and the mountain range ahead.

I hope this is possible for someone, someday, again.












Thursday, September 29, 2011

EARTH ~




Hurricane Irene in our river and our road



Yes, it's come to pass — it's getting hard to believe one's eyes & ears.

I live in a state, Vermont, which is now declaring, after parts of the state was creamed by Hurricane Irene, that the flood damage to the state will reach 1 billion dollars. A lot of money. A drop in the bucket in a war economy (roughly the cost of one specialist aircraft, but never mind). And, of course, there will be those who will wish to fight against this flood relief for our state because: it is helping people. Regular people. Like you and me. Tax paying, paycheck to paycheck people. Fibrous threads that make a nation. Those who are against the relief will never admit they are against helping people, but yes they are against helping people.

How people think. We need to look at it.

We have neighbors, a fine couple, new to the region the last few years who have had to get used to the fact they own a somewhat known swimming-hole that sometimes gets used and even abused by one or two of an extended family. The family of sun bathers and swimmers do not live on our road, or from what I can tell, even close by. Sweetheart and I have bicycled past this swimming hole many summer afternoons only to see this family literally spread out in every sort of floating contraption, including deck chairs that sit in the river where you sit in them, doing nothing. Sometimes reading. For hours. Sweetheart and I wondered when our new neighbors ever got a chance to cool off themselves in their own swimming hole. A place almost private except for what this family has overtaken. I thought our neighbors were being quite tolerant, at a point of being almost too passive.

Then a letter arrived to us from these neighbors explaining what they were up to. They had contacted every neighbor about this plight, and then thought they would also write to us; we who abut their property and also have the other swimming hole on this road on our property. One would think we might have some experience dealing with swimmers with good manners and bad manners, and indeed we do. The neighbors’ letter was quite long and detailed and especially being careful at approaching this subject on the use of private land and public access to a waterway. Sweetheart and I thought it was a very good letter because it was mainly dealing with common decency to private land, misuse by some of the public, and how we have to come together as a community and protect what we have one with the other. These neighbors were posting their swimming hole "Private".

End of story? It’s never the end of the story.

This letter arrived before Hurricane Irene. In a week or less I'll be posting on the Birdhouse some short films I took at the zenith of the flood. One will be of this very swimming hole, which of course weathered it all okay. Our road was beat up and for awhile we were all stranded without access to & fro; many weren't sure if our covered bridge was safe to cross; utility poles were busted in half or washed completely away; lines were in the drink; no power; no phone; no guru. It was good to see some take to action themselves and rebuild access, help get power restored, buck up fallen trees and move rock, let others use a utility if they were without (thank you Noela and Michael, Eleanor), and basically stay civil and available.

I watched someone wreck up his tractor rebuilding rough road. I bet I could find this same individual and same make tractor in almost every town smacked by Irene. I've always seen this individual and worked with him. Usually happy-go-lucky just enough. They used to make them better, but they're still pretty good. At the end of almost a month of bulling and tearing they have real financial woes at repairing the machines that have repaired the roads. They don't work for the town, they just work for themselves and don't mind lending a hand.

I watched this all go along as I worked in a whole other mode and venue — on a small island on the river, just down from our house and a jump across the road and over the bank down to the river. Often I can ford the creek that is a side bar running off the main river in my tall rubber boots. When I make the time I build a stone crossway and get across over that. I've been building stone crossways on this river for forty years. You all know I even built a stone stairway to get up from the river to the road and loading logs I carry on my shoulder and toss into a pickup truck. It was the only practical way at this very slow and methodical way of cutting and lugging vast trees that were flattened, damaged and wupped by the flood. Lots of logs got cut up, lugged, and I must have climbed this stairway now 300 times. I'm a living woodland example of Stair Master.

I've been on this island working now for three weeks steadily, no day missed. Sweetheart is there to join me and always brings a jug of cold water and a Sansa apple. I've lugged out nearly three cords of firewood on my back, 4 foot logs, and made a jungle of proper brush piles that will rot back into the island. I still have whole trees, huge ones, laid up horizontal oak and maple and basswood framed there like a natural Oldenburg sculpture. I could slowly take it apart but I may keep it there as both a reminder of Irene (full testament), and as a blockade of sort for the next flood. There will always be a next flood. It could divert massive water from washing the island totally away. We had extensive damage as it is.

Which brings me back to our neighbors and their letter about those abusing their private land. It was only swimmers, but still, they can leave behind debris and over stay their proper stay. The other day, we were entertained by a neighborhood pesky flock who have never once in my three weeks working on the island ever stopped to say hello, or god forbid asked if I needed a hand. No, the ring leader of this flock just set his mind to organize whatever volunteers he could muster, and start where he elected, which happened to be on the far end of our river land, and storm the land with a chain saw and landscape tools, cutting willy-nilly however they wished on our land. Without asking.

Remember the swimmers and the outcry there?

These are now neighbors who I thought might know better, using whatever tools they wanted and at their own discretion, trespassing on our land, and doing what they wanted. I'm a stone's throw down the road working on the river. The ring leader and his wife have passed my truck, passed Sweetheart, I'm right there over the river bank, and with no intention on their part to stop and tell us what they are about to do. Sweetheart asks me, "Do you think I should go up and see what they are up to?" I said, "It's probably all right." I just saw a neighbor walking to the event with her little granddaughter, and it was the best example I could think of at showing the young what a good deed can be done. Thank goodness Sweetheart listened to herself and headed up and caught the flock at their play and menace. The ring leader actually had the gall to ask her, "Do you want our help or not?" after already trespassing and cutting, in a region we had already inspected a week ago and it was calling for no help whatsoever. A small circle of teenagers had snuck down on our land and found a sandy niche in a hollow to build a neat campfire setting, complete with flat rock seats and even back rests made of stone. I was impressed. Of course they never asked permission to do this, but it looked harmless, was close to running water, and no tree threat from a stray fire was evident. They were just recovering from a hurricane excitement in kid-council fashion. I liked their nerve. A bunch of Huckleberry Finns.

But some of this pesky flock is malicious, smug and self-serving. How effective a friendly apology from the ring leader could have worked wonders. Some in that group I know, know better, but they're properly tied up as hired-hands to a wealthier coterie. I've been there, I know the drill. When Sweetheart went up to see about the flock, and I must say I'm proud of her verve and determination at closing down this madcap citizenry with a single sweep "Wait! STOP!" with her arms; the ingenious ringleader informed her he had "No time to talk" to her (the landowner!) because they had a mission to accomplish. Anyone listening to this guy should have abandoned ship. The idea of cleaning up litter and debris along the road in trash bags is a neighborly grace. I commend anyone behind this service, and there were people in this work crew intent at performing just this service. It’s quite another thing watching a leadership take advantage of landowners, four long weeks after a flood, to get onto their property and take charge with a phony headline of “helping”. I’m just down the road slaving away at massive storm damage — be my guest, come and help. Come and talk. They wouldn’t think of it.

I've owned a truck full of chain saws in my time, more loppers and cutters and saws and implements of destruction to shake a rangy stick at, and I've cut in every position and angle and land mass and private and public property for customers and others in need, and I don't even want to think what I would deserve if I elected to one day visit anyone of those involved in this group and walk upon their land because I was "helping" and light up my saw and just begin to cut. Like I said, I didn't think it was worth Sweetheart being concerned — no one is cruel enough, after a flood, at taking issues into their own hands and exploiting other peoples land and sadness and actually avoiding any contact where the real work of help and assistance could be addressed.

The night before this flock arrived, a towering red oak toppled over on our land, taking a beech tree with it, and both fully crossed the river. A big chunk of the road followed suit. It's a mess. It happened at 10:30, in the hard rain, ground softening, loosening more and more, and when the trees fell it sounded like a head-on collision of two trucks. In the pitch black and rain and after the flood and all, I could only raise my head inside the house and guess. Whatever it was would have to hold until daybreak. After all the clean up work done on the nearby island, it's one more moral lesson on how mother nature just keeps on giving. When the river freezes over I can get down there on the ice and slowly work up the trees. I already scaled across the big oak to have a look and it's a mainstay bridge for any animal crazy enough to cross. In fact, just as I am finishing this paragraph, the town road boss has called and left a friendly message there may be a way to get down under those trees with machinery and work them free. If we all can, we all will.

Welcome to good times.




photo © bob arnold