In Praise of Imperfect Conditions

Training Journal

If you’re riding a horse, you’ve already won.

 
I hate my riding ring.

I can’t half-ass my way around the downhill turns. I have sit up, sit centered, steer, prepare early, sit chill, not grab with the reins, be zen when it falls apart, then go around and do it again. and again. and again.

If we had a lovely, level, graded ring with a fence, it wouldn’t matter if my steering was occasionally wonky or if I wasn’t absolutely accurate in my position.

My riding ring is good for me.

I can’t half-ass my way around the downhill turns. I have sit up, sit centered, steer, prepare early, sit chill, not grab with the reins, be zen when it falls apart, then go around and do it again. and again. and again.

If we had a lovely, level, graded ring with a fence, it wouldn’t matter if my steering was occasionally wonky or if I wasn’t absolutely accurate in my position.

What is beneficially imperfect in your life?

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

Mood On Monday, When?

Thoughts

 
Awareness of the Outside World. New York Cliche: Stop-and-Frisk Story Time with Guest Blogger Andrew Sanford
~~~
 

 
When will I be a tourist again? Top of the Rock 2019

 

 
When will I be a foodie again? Blue Ribbon Sushi

 

 
When will I stroll down the street, soaking up the weirdness, again? Hippo Ballerina

 

 
When will I see family again? Roosevelt Island

 

 
When?

[NYC Archives]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

Horse Stamp, Rearing Stallion, Alexander Calder

Celebrating Art

 

The Stamps
Commemorative stamps issued March 25, 1998, the 100th anniversary of Calder’s birth. Designed by Derry Noyes. Manufactured by Stamp Venturers, Inc. Smithsonian, National Postal Museum, Arago: Alexander Calder Issue

U.S. #3198-3202
1998 32¢ Alexander Calder
Issue Date: March 25, 1998
City: Washington, DC
Quantity: 80,000,000
Printed By: Stamp Venturers
Printing Method: Photogravure
Perforations: 10.2
Color: Multicolored
Mystic Stamp Company: 3198-3202 Sales page, June 2020.

The Designer
Artsy: Postal Service Art Director Derry Noyes Turns Famous Artworks into Stamps By Abigail Cain, Feb 20, 2019.

The Cachets
” ‘“Silk’ First Day Covers produced by Colorano were introduced in 1971 with the America’s Wool issue … Each color illustration is printed on satin-finish fabric, fastened to the cover and surrounded by a luxurious gold embossed border … They have no additional information about the stamp subject.” Mystic Stamp Company: Different Kinds of First Day Covers

Multiple stamp cachet produced by Artmaster, Louisville, KY.

“cachet – Any textual or graphic design which has been applied to a cover … A first day cachet should be related specifically to the stamp on the cover.” American First Day Cover Society: FDC Terminology

The Artist
Alexander Calder
Calder Foundation

The Sculpture
Alexander Calder (sculptor)
Rearing Stallion
c. 1928
Wire and painted wood
Overall: 57.8 x 34.3 x 24.8 cm (22 3/4 x 13 1/2 x 9 3/4 in.)
On view, National Gallery of Art: Rearing Stallion

Other Calder Horses
MoMA: The Horse
Whitney Museum of American Art: Horse
Red Horse and Green Sulky, Photo

Awareness of the Outside World
Consider funding, volunteering, or otherwise supporting an arts program in your area. To put money where mouth is, I sent off a donation to Desert Island Supply Co. [Blogging Goals]. Is this the best place to start? Yes? No? Maybe? Dunno. Start somewhere.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

Life Event, Dead Phone

Thoughts

 
As with my tripping post, this is one I want noted for the record. [Gotta Hand It To Myself, That Was Stupid]

A few weeks ago, my phone died. Blinked a few times and turned into a brick. Due to the shutdown, I wasn’t in a screaming hurry to get a new one. I could Internet from my desktop. Family had a way to contact me in a crisis. I knew I’d need one eventually. At least, when/if I started going abroad in the world again. Took me three weeks. Here’s what I learned.

Bought a Samsung A50. Went in to get the wifi card working. The dude at the phone store took one look at the age and condition of our phones and recommended a budget model.

BTW, after four months, hands all better. Knee no longer hurts. Toe still stiff. Weird.

What I Missed Right Away
The crossword puzzle at night. Do puzzle. Go to sleep. Without the former, I had trouble with the latter. Pavlovian. [Totally Off Topic Brag]

Looking up random facts. Song lyrics. Plots, when I want to know what happens but don’t care enough to finish the episode/book. Where did I see that actor?

Photo of a barn snake eating a rat. Really cool. Don’t worry, I would have put it behind the jump.

Reading in bed at night. Reading in the barn aisle. Both dark places, therefore reading from a screen is more convenience than arranging a light to fall upon the codex.

Blog pix.

What Grew On Me As Annoyances
When I did call, I used our landline. Therefore, I was tethered to my desk. How 20th century!

Lack of a flashlight. We have others. I missed having one to hand.

Gossip. Some things ya just don’t commit to print. Firm believer in the adage, Never email (or text) anything you don’t want to see on a billboard on your way to work the next day.

Lack of videos. I watch more videos than I realized, particularly lately. The Mid-South show was on livestream. I had to pester husband in order to watch classes the barn was in. In fact, my calm acceptance of missing a horse show *might* have been contributory to us going out and getting my new phone that weekend. [Show Today, Yet I Languish At Home, Is It The End Of An Era?]

Instant books. I want to read that book. Now.

No one emails any more.

Being unable to access the blog email [Ride Away With Me, Virtually].

Getting online during a storm, when the desktop was powered down. Party for entertainment, partly for weather checks.

Using the map locater to know where husband was once he started going back to work.

Phone calls. Apparently I do talk to a few people in the course of a month.

Overall, the loss of a phone had more impact than I thought it would, in many small ways. Of course, my timing sucked pond water. Isolated lifestyle that is not my perfect fit > pandemic > cutting off even more contact.

Awareness of the Outside World
Will look into a responsible way to recycle/ditch my old phone.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

In The Footsteps of the Inca, Guest Post

Fit To Ride

 
As promised yesterday, a guest post from a traveler who has done Machu Picchu both virtually and IRL. Welcome fellow blogger Been There, Done That. Previous guest post [Safety Doesn’t Have to Be Ugly: Helmet-Hat Debut]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

~~~

Last winter, I knocked two items off my bucket list: the Panama Canal and Machu Picchu. The Panama Canal merits six or seven blogs all of its own; the construction, the weather, the location, the birds, the weather, and the respect generated for the men who actually built the canal. It was winter, the weather was 85 with 90% humidity, and one couldn’t help thinking of yellow fever, malaria, cholera, and no air conditioning at the time. But that’s for another time.

Machu Picchu was amazing. Back to Peru in a minute – bear with me. The summer before the trip, I learned that an individual whom I detest does the Peachtree 10K. Peachtree 10K is the largest 10K in the country, run through Atlanta on July 4th, and has been for 75 years. The individual in question is, shall we say, fitness-challenged, and, in a moment of kindergarten bravado, I declared that if she can do it, so can I. No sooner said than done, I started training, found a training buddy and started entering 5K race-walks. This made my dance partner happy (staying in shape and fitting into my ballgowns). Buddy and I logged 5 total 5Ks. Then the lockdown. (Just another minute – bear with me.) [ed. For ballgown image, see BTDT: Dancing with horses, dancing with guys]

Buddy and I were looking for motivation, and Katherine pointed me at The Conqueror website. This is a virtual fitness challenge where one can earn medals for completing specified courses. The site offers satellite imaging so that you can actually see where on earth you really are. And you can track your progress across the landscape. Sounded interesting, especially since one of the challenges offered was the Inca Trails Virtual Marathon. (See, told you we’d get back to Peru.)

Buddy and I signed up for the Inca Trails marathon with another partner, thinking it would be fun. Following the trail with real images of the landscape brought back memories. When I hit the real-life Inca Trail, it wasn’t on foot. We rode the 26 miles to the trail-head (which is what the young and insane hike) in a luxurious train with a five-star lunch! The scenery is jungle, even though it’s at 12,000 plus feet. Green and vines and orchids and birds of every possible description. We crossed the actual Inca Trail (the Peruvian equivalent of the Appalachian Trail here, only shorter but much more vertical) on several occasions, watching the young and insane struggling along.

At the trailhead, you are dropped at the entrance to the actual site, and from there, it’s on foot. They have made several very intelligent changes to the routes the Inca actually built (the trail is still the one constructed in the 1300s and is beautifully preserved), the most impressive being that the trail is one-way only. For those of us who are of, shall we say, mature years, this is a definite plus, since we don’t have to deal with young bucks bulldozing down while we are struggling up.

The trail itself is a series of switchbacks; three miles of switchbacks with 2500 feet vertical gain – and you’re starting at significant altitude. Our guide was fabulous; she’d find something of interest to point out at the end of every switchback, discreetly waiting until we had stopped panting before taking us to the next switchback and finding something else to wonder at.

The climb was worth it. The view from the top is exactly like the posters. And it is spectacular. The Inca were master builders; the walls still stand in spite of earthquake and weather, and you cannot get a knife blade between the unmortared stones. The air is incredibly clean and it’s amazingly quiet. We were in the last afternoon group – apparently the major tourist rushes are for sunrise.

Everything is lush and green; again, even with the altitude, you are barely below the equator in tropical environments. Would have been really satisfying just to sit down and meditate on the builders; the site was abandoned in the 1500s and no-one really knows why. There are no major artifacts; everyone who left took their stuff with them. But it is spectacular.

The trick, I found, was going down. The Inca didn’t go in for hand-rails, and the stepping stones can be interesting. Fortunately, there were a couple of muscular young men eager to assist a “grandma” who wasn’t quite sure of her footing, and I made it down intact. There is a lovely little café at the trailhead which serves delicious coffee and pastry while one is waiting for one’s transportation, and you can even get your passport stamped with a Machu Picchu visa! The café, incidentally, shows up on the satellite imaging for the virtual marathon if you look carefully. The other images are true to the landscape and are a really fun way to remember a breath-taking (in more ways than one) trip.

Biking A Steep And Stony Path

Fit To Ride

 
Today. My experience with The Conqueror Virtual Challenges: The Inca Trail Virtual Marathon
Tomorrow. Guest post from a traveler who has done Machu Picchu both virtually and IRL.

~~~

For exercise and vicarious amusement, I “biked” the 26.2 miles of the Inca Trail. This was my first experience with virtual travel. I would go for a bike ride around my neighborhood. Very isolated, lots of social distance. When I got home, I would log in to the webpage and report my mileage. The site would then tell me where I was on a map. I could convert to streetview for a look at the trail.

Along the way, they awarded icons for finishing a percentage of the route. At the end. I got a digital finisher’s certificate and a hefty metal medal on a neck ribbon.

Day By Day
Started, April 5, 2020.
Finished, April 9, 2020.
Mileage by day. 10-8-5-8
Daily record. [Biking Virtually, Inca Trail]

Pet Peeve
People who say Machu Picchu was “discovered” in 1911 by Henry Bingham. People knew about it all along. Just not the right people. Mffph. The popularization of Machu Piccu, sure. But let’s use the right words.

“Bingham, of course, was not the first person to discover Machu Picchu. Peruvian farmers in the region had long known about and visited the mountaintop ruins. ”

Thank you.

“But he was likely the first to make a photographic record of the site. ”

Okay, legit claim.

National Geographic: These Stunning Pictures Revealed Machu Picchu to the World. Got this glimpse, then would’ve had to sign up to read more.

Awareness of Outside World
GVI: How to ethically hike Machu Picchu. I can’t speak to the backstory of the website owner beyond what they say about themselves. At least they raise good questions. Minimal surfing will turn up abundant commentary on the various issues: worker rights, animal welfare, sustainability, etc.

From The Bookshelf – Internet
Most blog posts about the Inca Trail were along the lines of Steep! Magical! I’m a travel blogger! Aren’t I clever! This one is was more approachable: Practical Wanderlust, Hiking Machu Picchu: Failure on The Inca Trail

My Google fu could not drag up an official Inca Trail site, a la US National Parks. Everything turned out to be a tour company. Please point me toward what I missed.

From The Bookshelf – Books
The Falling Woman
by Pat Murphy (Tor 1986)
Came up in Google search. Got all excited before I realized it was about Mexico rather than Peru. Read it anyway. Also recommend her book There and Back Again, a SF retelling of The Hobbit.

Warning. Not sure how to give alerts without spoilers, but I’ll give it a go. There are uncomfortable parts to the book. They are hinted at in the beginning. If you have triggers, proceed with caution. You are good to go with the Hobbit book.

Previous Posts
Intro [Virtual Bling]
Widget announcement post [Come Away With Me, Virtually]
Team invitation post [Ride Away With Me, Virtually] Join us!
Other virtual trips [Biking Virtually, New Zealand], [Biking Virtually, Route 66]

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott

3000 Dots

Blogging About Blogging

 
Leading off with an awareness of the outside world segment.

CGMadeit: Why I can’t “just knit”, The story of a black knitter during civil unrest. “The color of my skin still makes folks pause. I still have to remind people that ‘We Knit Too!’ ” Imagine people looking startled whenever you walk into a room of strangers who share your interest. Even if the strangers turn out to be lovely, charming people, seeing that moment of puzzlement has to be exhausting.

The New York Times: When 511 Epidemiologists Expect to Fly, Hug and Do 18 Other Everyday Activities Again. By Margot Sanger-Katz, Claire Cain Miller and Quoctrung Bui. June 8, 2020. Usually behind a paywall. I believe virus articles are publicly accessible. What it says on the tin. When can we see a doctor, travel by airplane, hug a friend. Answers: This summer, 3-12 months, 1 yr+.
~~~
 

 

Blog post number 3,000 today. One dot for every post.

Back in the 7th grade, I acquired – bought? awarded? gifted by the book fairy? history does not record – a book called One Million. It had 200 pages with 5,000 dots each. I remember leafing through it and thinking, ‘Wow, a million is a lot.’ A facile thought, but that was the point of the book. To bring home the idea that a million is a lot. I’m fairly certain it was an earlier edition of this book, One Million by Hendrik Hertzberg (Abrams 2009).

That’s all I got. No deep thoughts. Just lots of dots, er, posts.

post #1 [Begin] December 22, 2011.

Post #1000 [I Made It!] October 14, 2014.

Post #2000 [Letter Art: MM] July 9, 2017.

Stay safe. Stay sane.
Katherine Walcott