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12/25/12

At Home

Over the past couple of months, I've been trying to answer the question, "who are you?" in one-thousand words or less, accompanied by ten to twenty slides of visual work.

All I can think of is that every time I sit in a place, I start to trace the outline of the window, the parallel patterns on the blinds backlighted by the sun that turn the surfaces concave then convex then concave again. Tracing down a quarter of the way and to the right of the window, the shelves divide the wall into an even rhythm going down. The shelves are lined with books of tall and small, thin and wide, interrupted once in a while by a lone figurine or a medium stack of flat square jewelry boxes from Robinsons May. The sunlight coming through the pattern of the blinds casts bright and dark lines at an irregular angle coming down the opposite wall and across the carpet. Ten minutes later, it's no longer on the carpet, only on everything between the flat plane of the window and the wall. Ten minutes after that, it starts to make its way back toward the window, across the side and the ceiling. The rest of the room is backdrop to the moving light and shadow. An hour later, the sun sets and the room is in an even greyscale, objects eventually compounded and silhouetted in the corners. There is a line of yellow-white light coming through the bottom of the door from the other side where someone is not sitting and watching the shadows as they have shifted across the room over the past hour or so. They are probably reading a book.

I thought I was supposed to be an ecologist or a horticulturist or whatever. I think I may just be obsessed with texture, light, color, shape, and rhythm. That is why I like plants and things. That is why I want to spend hours and years indulging in the patterns and relationships that make up space in all its detailed senses. At home, on the train up the coast, at work raking leaves, after work watching wave after wave after wave, in my nightmares of color underground.

Anyway, Merry Christmas! May your year be full of texture, light, color, shape, and rhythm.

 

12/16/12

Aloha Friday, but today is Sunday

FUN Holiday Ice Skate

11AM to midnight everyday $15 in Downtown San Jose. Aloha Fridays mean $10 admission with Hawaiian shirts on Fridays. Aloha, San Jose, I'll be missing you. 

12/11/12

12/8/12

Podocarpus

I LOVE aesthetic pruning

Pruned a Podocarpus macrophyllus in Aptos, CA. The best part is in the shadows.

12/5/12

psychosocial environment

AUDIO impacts of the psychosocial environment from Dr. Gabor Mate

Listened to a lecture on the radio tonight by Dr. Gabor Mate, a medical doctor who specializes in addiction and child development. He illustrates the connection between social, economic, and political (non-individual) stresses with psychological and physical diseases such as addiction and diabetes, citing every claim with current medical studies. It comes down to how one's psychosocial environment empowers or oppresses an individual with control, meaning it's not my fault or your fault, but rather the fault of us all..

11/27/12

The Only Place

MUSIC The Only Place by Best Coast



Home for the holidays this past weekend. I heart LA but I hate the traffic. When I get bored I like to stare at the mountains and the trees, definitely.

11/9/12

Wendell

QUOTE from Wendell Berry

The primary motive for good care and good use of the land-community is always going to be affection.

11/8/12

Trip

TRIP San Jose to Seattle to Spokane to Philadelphia to New York to Boston to San Jose

General purpose: develop connections and opinions in the world of cities and landscapes
General theme: 'collaboration' and 'diversity'
Modes of transport: plane, car, taxi, bus, train, subway, bike, foot
Events: Society of American Foresters Convention/Spokane Convention Center, Demystifying Design/UPenn, A Japanese Lesson for Progressive School Design/NYC American Institute of Architecture, Open House/Harvard GSD.
Parks: Olympic Sculpture Park, Belltown P-Patch Community Garden, The Rodin Museum and GardenCentral Park, The High Line (from below), Charles River ReservationBoston Public Garden
# of Starbucks encountered: at least 25
Best meal: $9 pork confit hash breakfast from Sante in Spokane. Local bacon, duck egg, potatoes, collard greens, pepper confiture, parmesan, baguette.
Fanciest drink: The Bartender's Choice from the Ranstead Room in Philadelphia
Favorite neighborhood: West Philly
First hurricane: Sandy
Most unexpected scenes: Manhattan in the dark, Northeastern frat party, revolutionary war re-enactment troupe
Coziest room stay: Irving House in Cambridge, bed and breakfast, in a little room with a big window, with free tea and cookies, with a book I took called, A Short History of a Small Place, by T.R. Pearson.



10/25/12

Society of American Foresters 2012

CONVENTION Society of American Foresters 2012 in Spokane, Washington

The clouds are misting and the leaves are turning. I'm currently in Spokane, sitting in on lectures, panels, and presentations around the topic of forests. This year's theme is RESILIENCE. Today, I can say that I'm proud to be a member of the Society of American Foresters because I agree that bottom line - diversity, complexity, and evolution, in the realms of both ecosystem management as well as societal change, are values that are totally necessary in obtaining resilience as we face future uncertainties (i.e. economic hardship, climate change, political revolution).

The Convention is addressing issues greater than trees; they are working in context - within economic, social, and ecological systems, evolution, revolution. Go, foresters.

10/20/12

Time Lapse

TIME LAPSE Farm & Garden

Last night, I attended the 2012 Farm & Garden Apprenticeship graduation ceremony. It served as a reminder of the big picture, and of the little things that are essential in making the big picture. One year out, looking back, I hope to stay on a path where there are *flowers to pick and marvel at:



 2011 Time Lapse









































*literally

10/16/12

10/14/12

Energy Efficiency in the San Gabriel Valley

INFOGRAPHICS Energy Efficiency in the San Gabriel Valley

Metrics: Electricity, gas, greenhouse emissions, vehicle miles, waste























The San Gabriel Valley is home to 31 unique and exciting cities, each with its own energy use and greenhouse gas emissions profile. This report contains 2010 per capita activity data and overall greenhouse gas emissions data from all 27 cities that participated in the San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments Energy Action Plan project. - PMC

10/8/12

Apocalypse Talk

POEM A Song on the End of the World by Czeslaw Milosz

This past year, I've found myself in a good lot of conversations that have somehow wandered into the subject of post-apocalyptic scenarios. Maybe we're already there, maybe apocalypse is all the time. Rest assured.

On the day the world ends
A bee circles a clover,
A fisherman mends a glimmering net.
Happy porpoises jump in the sea,
By the rainspout young sparrows are playing
And the snake is gold-skinned as it should always be.

On the day the world ends
Women walk through the fields under their umbrellas,
A drunkard grows sleepy at the edge of a lawn,
Vegetable peddlers shout in the street
And a yellow-sailed boat comes nearer the island,
The voice of a violin lasts in the air
And leads into a starry night.

And those who expected lightning and thunder
Are disappointed.
And those who expected signs and archangels' trumps
Do not believe it is happening now.
As long as the sun and the moon are above,
As long as the bumblebee visits a rose,
As long as rosy infants are born
No one believes it is happening now.

Only a white-haired old man, who would be a prophet
Yet is not a prophet, for he's much too busy,
Repeats while he binds his tomatoes:
There will be no other end of the world,
There will be no other end of the world.

Warsaw, 1944

9/23/12

Spider eats Paper Tigers

ARTICLE Paper Tigers by Wesley Yang in New York Magazine

I just finished reading 'Paper Tigers,' by Wesley Yang, a very thorough and candid article published in New York Magazine last year on the unique challenges of young Asian-American professionals in all realms of life (why it's so long).

In the end, I agree with the author's personal opinion that it is not necessary to apologize - for being too quiet, too loud, for imposing, withdrawing, for being both Asian and American. The most complimentary thing anyone ever said to me was that I was like a spider: quiet, patient, and ready to make my kill. Okay, sure.

9/18/12

By the Peonies

POEM By the Peonies by Czeslaw Milosz, 1945



























The peonies bloom, white and pink.
And inside each, as in a fragrant bowl,
A swarm of tiny beetles have their conversation,
For the flower is given to them as their home.

Mother stands by the peony bed,
Reaches for one bloom, opens its petals,
And looks for a long time into peony lands,
Where one short instant equals a whole year.

Then lets the flower go. And what she thinks
She repeats aloud to the children and herself.
The wind sways the green leaves gently
And speckles of light flick across their faces.


9/15/12

Pinned up




Pinned up clothes to dry on the clothesline in the backyard today, then brought it inside.

9/13/12

Gardening


RANT Gardening is hard.

The track I have pursued in the past year as a professional gardener has been a difficult one. For one, the value of money has become sort of a ridiculous fact for me; I don't take it seriously. I can't. Also, my hands have become *rough enough to smooth down the splintered ends of freshly cut pine.

Anyways, I don't regret it. Being a gardener, when I get to just prune a camellia or rake up the stray bits off a gravel path, it lets me be someone I won't regret being. I get to care for a place and make it perfect, so my soul can stay intact.

Although there is surely a gap - a source of constant pressure and self-doubt - between my definition of living and the general expectations of a standard of living, I think I'm better off as a gardener or something like it because maybe that's who I am and changing for the sake of fitting in would be **awkward. I'm a gardener and I'm good at it. Time to pull ivy and pick up leaves for as long as I live.


*like sandpaper 
** or tormenting



9/11/12

Radio XY

RADIO XY by DJ Chaos

Indie radio stream. Been listening to this guy's show on my way to work off 103.3 KSCU (Santa Clara University). Makes my driving experience slightly less infuriating.

9/6/12

"Urban Farming is an Urban Myth"

COMMENTARY "Urban Farming is an Urban Myth" on Ag Professional

Urban farmer : Production farmer
Stamp collector : Postal person

In this commentary, the author expresses a concern for how urban farming can at times be hyped without question. Being very much in love with urban gardens myself, I admit that these concerns should absolutely be thought about - topsoil conservation, water efficiency, and knowledge requirements. Rural farms and dedicated farmers exist for a reason.
























This year, our 'stamp collection' produced 25+ crops(!):

Artichoke
Basil
Beans
Carrots
Cherry plums
Cherry tomatoes
Chives
Chrysanthemum greens
Cilantro
Cucumber
Fenugreek 
Grapefruit
Golden beats
Heirloom tomatoes
Japanese bunching onion
Kale
Mustard greens
Parsley
Peppers
Pumpkins
Strawberry
Squash
Sugar peas
Sunflowers
Thyme
Zucchini


9/3/12

Jiro Dreams

HAPPY Labor Day

Labor skill passion repetition.



Watched Jiro Dreams of Sushi tonight.

9/1/12

Cottage Food

LAW The California Homemade Food Act,  AB 1616

Passed through the state senate, awaiting governor's approval:



"On behalf of all the bread bakers in Los Angeles and throughout California, I strongly urge you to vote in favor of this rational approach to helping launch micro enterprises in communities across the state while providing these communities with a wonderful new source of locally produced foods that are as safe as they are delicious." - Mark Stambler, Los Angeles Bread Baker

8/28/12

Gift

POEM Gift by Czeslaw Milosz (Berkeley, 1971)

A day so happy.
Fog lifted early. I worked in the garden.
Hummingbirds were stopping over the honeysuckle flowers.
There was no thing on earth I wanted to possess.
I knew no one worth my envying him.
Whatever evil I had suffered, I forgot.
To think that once I was the same man did not embarrass me.
In my body I felt no pain.
When straightening up, I saw blue sea and sails.


Dzień taki szczęśliwy.
Mgła opadła wcześnie, pracowałem w ogrodzie.
Kolibry przystawały nad kwiatem kaprifolium.
Nie było na ziemi rzeczy, którą chciałbym mieć.
Nie znałem nikogo, komu warto byłoby zazdrościć.
Co przydarzyło się złego, zapomniałem.
Nie wstydziłem się myśleć, że byłem kim jestem.
Nie czułem w ciele żadnego bólu.
Prostując się, widziałem niebieskie morze i żagle.



8/21/12

Five Borough Farm

BOOK Five Borough Farm by the Design Trust for Public Space

























Found it on the couch: a collection of urban agriculture case studies in New York City as a practical model and guide for ecological, social, economic, and health development in cities. The website offers a clean graphical explanation of urban agriculture and what it offers to the urban landscape and its people.


throw caution into the wind

8/14/12

The History of Love

BOOK The History of Love by Nicole Krauss


It took me just about six months to finish. At 252 pages, that averages to roughly 1.5 pages per day from February to August. Little doses taken in one at a time, of sweet in the saddest way.

Nothing was spelled out in this story. Artifacts of various sizes and qualities were presented - diary excerpts, novel passages, dialogue - to piece together love in its many forms, which makes The History of Love the perfect book to have read very slowly. At least that's my excuse.

8/8/12

some proverb



If you 

DON'T MAKE
 
MISTAKES

you

DON'T MAKE

ANYTHING


!!!

8/7/12

Things that are soft

THINGS that are soft





1. friendly pug named Kobe
2. summer grasses
3. Kalanchoe beharensis 'Fang'
4. Kalanchoe beharensis 'Fang' aka Feltbush
5. cat named (Mr.) Mau Mau

7/23/12

Little Otsu

LITTLE PUBLISHING COMPANY Little Otsu


Planners. Calendars. Journals. Books. Cards. Paper Goods. I love paper goods. 
Mini store at Rare Device on Divisadero and Hayes in SF, I think they call that area NOPA?






7/19/12

movement in many parts

ON EXHIBIT Movement in Many Parts 

Presented by Kearny Street Workshop (KSW) and the East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation (EBALDC). From my inbox:


Exhibition Dates: July 13 - September 28, 2012
Gallery Hours: Mondays to Fridays 9 AM - 5 PM
Asian Resource Center Gallery
310 Eighth Street
Oakland, CA 94607

Movement In Many Parts explores systems of human infrastructure — through the architectural, ecological, biological, political, industrial, and fantastical — and the way we organize ourselves as a society. Composed of units, these diverse systems chart cycles of utopia, failure, change, and ultimately, evolution.

7/10/12

What is 'Obamacare'

PANEL DISCUSSION UC Berkeley Experts Assess Impacts of the Supreme Court's Landmark Decision on the Affordable Care Act

I'm not sure what it is, so I'm watching this video overviewing the issues surrounding the Affordable Care Act. Let's see.




"... the case is fascinating because it involves everything almost." - John Ellwood





7/7/12

6/30/12

invisible backpack

INSIDE Backpack

I found my invisible backpack today. A dog brought it to me, held between its teeth. Opened it up, surprised, and found that it's been quietly collecting a number of things for some time now.

Familiar bits and pieces that have been picked up over the years, packed into this backpack I had never seen before. Confused, I turned to find my visible backpack still sitting on the table where I set it just minutes ago. It is plain and sturdy, carefully constructed to endure the climate. I looked inside, surprised again. Little boxes and gift wrap. Packaging materials, in patterns and colors that perfectly coordinated with each item in the invisible backpack. 

Slightly horrified, I start a small fire. 






quiet
non-threatening
feminine
apolitical
childish
obedient
benign
weak
cute
industrious
capable of science only

6/16/12

little quote

LITTLE QUOTE from Oscar Wilde

Do you really think it is weakness that yields to temptation? I tell you that there are terrible temptations which it requires strength, strength and courage to yield to. 

6/7/12

Everett Family Farm

GARDEN Everett Family Farm CSA Garden

Sky, Zoe, and David run Everett Family Farm in Soquel, CA. They are the coolest young good-looking skilled organic farmers around. This Saturday afternoon, we'll be building an herb and flower garden exclusively for their CSA program members - a place for members to access a fully-stocked garden with rosemary, lavender, blossoms, and other useful plants that necessarily define, in my opinion, a higher quality of life. Come for a visit. 

CSA Garden Work Party
6/9 Saturday 2:30-5:30PM @ 2111 Old San Jose Road in Soquel

Farm stand, honor system-operated. Opened Tuesday through Sunday, 9AM-6PM.



CSA garden - site. Persimmon orchard in the background.

CSA garden - draft plan. Stuff in my head -> work work work -> real place. Hopefully.