Name That Snake
June 16th, 2011Does anyone know what type of snake this is? Found in a wood pile in Ulster County, NY.
Thanks;
Jim
Does anyone know what type of snake this is? Found in a wood pile in Ulster County, NY.
Thanks;
Jim
It hailed the night before last – a fairly unusual event here in the foothills of the Catskills. It is a prodigious sound event. Yes, we recorded it and may even post it on this blog at some future date. The question that arose is an old one.
Do you let in the moment in all its glory or do you pay the price of putting the recorder between you and the experience? Photographers must also ask themselves this question all the time. The hail was brief, furious and loud! I couldn’t help but feel that I had, in the interest of recording it, sacrificed something more important.
Jim
Attention SF Bay area fans of Pulse of the Planet! I’ll be presenting at at Science Cafe hosted by KQED/Quest, Tuesday, May 10th. Hope to see you there. Note that space is limited and an RSVP is required: Here’s the official announcement:
Ever wondered what extraordinary things the earth might say if we took a moment to listen to it? Here’s your chance. Join Jim Metzner of “Pulse of the Planet” to listen to some amazing audio, and to talk about the science and the journalism behind it.
WHEN:
Tuesday, May 10th, 2011
6:39 – 7:00 PM Refreshments
7:00 – 9:00 PM – Audio Salon & Science Café
WHO:
Jim Metzner,
Award-Winning Audio Producer and Host of Public Radio’s “Pulse of the Planet,” Sponsored by the National Science Foundation
WHERE:
KQED Public Media
2601 Mariposa Street
San Francisco, CA 94111
RSVP REQUIRED:
http://soundsofscience.eventbrite.com/
What’s behind the strange and disorienting booming sounds in the Gobi Desert? What’s the purpose of the high-frequency cry of the Tiger Moth? What does the call of a single bird, like the Scarlet Macaw, tell us about biodiversity?
No one has captured the sounds of the planet and explored the science behind them like Jim Metzner, the award-winning host and producer of public radio’s “Pulse of the Planet,” one of the longest running programs about science and the environment.
A science journalist for more than 35 years, Metzner has explored the world by conducting audio expeditions to remote locals such as the Australian Cloud Forests, the Pantanal Wetlands south of the Amazon, and the Gobi and Sonoran Deserts, among other fascinating places. He has interviewed hundreds of scientists and researchers along the way, developing a comprehensive grasp of current innovation in science, as well as a healthy respect for the cycles and rhythms of nature. His work is both timely and timeless.
Can audio make science more accessible? In this Audio Salon & Science Café, Jim will play some of his rare, evocative recordings, and we’ll discuss story, science, audio and life on earth.
Join us for beer, snacks, listening and conversation. Space is limited.
Presented by Stacy Bond & AudioLuxe
Co-Sponsored by KQED’s QUEST and the SF Bay Area Journalists Association
It was like stepping back in time. For a thousand years, Mount Athos on the tip of a penninsula in Southern Greece, has been at the heart of the Eastern Orthodox tradition. There are twenty main monasteries here, plus numerous sketes, smaller communities affiliated with the monasteries. About 2000 monks live on Athos, and although it’s a difficult place to get to, pilgrims from all over the world do come here, especially at Easter time.
On Pulse of the Planet, we often focus on the rhythms of life, and on Mount Athos, each monastery has a definite rhythmic structure to its day. In cenobitic monastaries, the monks follow a rigid calendar, waking, eating, praying, working at set times. In ideorhythmic monasteries, the monks – under the direction of their abbot – decide day-to-day to follow their own schedule based on the needs of the moment. Besides the daily pulse of the monastery, there are the calendric holidays like Easter – often based on a lunar calendar – which all the monasteries obey. On the midnight cusp between Saturday and Easter Sunday, you are likely to hear bells all over Mount Athos. However each monastery often has its own subjective take on what time it is! The formula for determining when Easter occurs in the Orthodox calendar is fairly complicated. Officially it is the first Sunday after the full moon (the “Paschal Full Moon”) following the northern hemisphere’s vernal equinox. By decree, Orthodox Easter must take place after Passover.
One over-riding impression of the monks of Mt. Athos is their openness and warmth. Theirs is the way of the heart. In witnessing their relations with each other, in conversations with them, in breaking bread, you begin to feel the penetrating influence of their good-will.
Another impression – this one in sound, not words, as a treat for the readers/listeners of this blog, for a limited time. These are the bells of St. Andrew’s skete, recorded on Easter Sunday.
Click on this link to hear the recording:
Bells, St. Andrew Skete, Mount Athos, Easter
***
On to San Francisco, where I’ll be doing a Science/Audio Cafe at KQED Quest on the evening of Tuesday, May 10th. Details to follow.
When we arrive at a new city, we come seeking something that lies a little deeper — the essence of a city, whatever it may be. Typically something older, something that traces its routes to this places’ origins. We walk along the banks of the Aegean sea to Thessaloniki’s White Tower, a 15th century edifice given this name when during its history as a jail – it was whitewashed by a prisoner who supposedly was given his freedom after performing this deed. We read this story on sign out in front of the tower, but on the journey to the tower, we’re stuck by the city’s personality – it’s veneer – the kiosks, the street vendors, the traffic, the parade of humanity, all the distractions of life.
I’m heading to a place with fewer (of different) distractions. The monks will be fasting; it’s Lent. There will be no electricity, no blogging or cell phones. There will be no women – a fact which one invariably associates with the Holy Mountain. I’m on the way.
…marketers, and they’re very good at it. This somewhat sobering insight came while helping to judge entries of the Kids’ Science Challenge – our nationwide competition for third to sixth graders. Yes, there were plenty of wonderful, imaginative, creative, insightful ideas. And at the same time, there’s overwhelming evidence of the influence of advertising on our children. Kids often opt for a sales pitch, “It’s the new model 5000!” with more hype than substance, and it’s just a reflection of what they hear, day in and day out. We’re creating a generation of advertising reps. Your thoughts?