Mar 3, 2011

At the Zoo

Somewhere in the dark corners and overlooked crevices of my mind is part of the lyric of "At the Zoo".  But I can't recall any more of it that those three words. I did go to the zoo recently and a great zoo it was.  The Phoenix Zoo opened in 1962 and comprises 125 acres with 1300 animals.  It is also the largest non-profit zoo in the country.  I was fortunate enough to attend with my travel bud, Claudette, and her son Patrick. Patrick, having visited before, was our guide. As usual on our travels time is of a premium and having a guide insured no lost time.

The zoo is laid out according to trails.  There is the Arizona, Africa, Tropical, and Children's Trails. I found the Arizona trail quite interesting because it was the Sonoran desert like the land around the zoo.  The native animals were big horn sheep, pronghorn antelope, javelinas, Mexican gray wolves, Gila monsters, and other animals, reptiles, and birds. After several trips to the southwest I finally saw my first roadrunner without a coyote lurking nearby.





The African Trail had what you would imagine, African animals.  The part of this trail I liked the best was the African plain exhibit.  We sat on a park bench and watched the giraffes, elands, Maasi cattle, and other animals feed in front of us. Patrick kept us informed about the animals we were watching and pointed out those that were less obvious.  I could have sat there for hours watching each animal. Elsewhere in the exhibit were warthogs, elephants, and rhinos.  One thing of note: this zoo was once home to Ruby, the famous painting elephant. Ruby died as the result of childbirth and is no longer the artist-in-residence.

Komodo Dragon
The Tropics Trail had the primates, and if memory serves, the Komodo dragon.  Wow! What a big lizard! There was also a large fenced area which you enter to watch the monkeys play in the trees overhead.  Part of the nationally recognized primate exhibit was closed for renovation.

We also saw the cats big and small, including lions and bobcats.

The Children's Trail includes a petting zoo.  We did not participate.

More information and photographs are at these links as well as directions to the zoo. A word of warning: avoid school field days!
As a closing thought, when in Phoenix visit the Phoenix Zoo. It's a great way to spend a day.

Mar 1, 2011

Bringing Home Future Memories

During our travels I take a lot of digital pictures.  I chose to take still photos as opposed to movies because of conveinence.  To capture good video you need a tripod and other equipment and it's time consuming.  Still photos can be taken quickly.  However, most still photocameras can be used to take video as well.  I like the large capacity of the digital cameras.  A 2 gigabit card can store over 600 photogrraphs.  My current digital camera is a Canon PowerShot SD960 IS.  It is a great "point and shoot" camera.  It doesnot have the sophisticated optics, lenses, of a 35mm style camera.  And indeed lacks some of the quality of the interchangable lense cameras, but it is good enough for my shots. Unless you are going to get in the commercial photography business or need the sduperior sharpness of expensive optics a "point and shoot" such as the Canon PowerShot is all you need.  The Canon PowerShot has almost all the adjustable features that expensive film cameras do including shutter speed and exposure control.  There are other features that only digital cameras can have such as a cropping feature right in the camera. It is also very compact measuring only 3.85 x 2.12 x .87 inches. This is very important to someone who travels with a carry-on bag only on airlines.  I'm sold on this camera.  It has served me well on my travels as well as around the house.

Video shot with Canon PowerShot
The harbor at Oban, Scotland, photographed with a Canon PowerShot

In closing I use a "point and shoot" camera to get the pictures I want with a minimum of fuss.  

Feb 24, 2011

Fatboy and the Stew

Just the other day I was thinking that some good old fashioned catfish stew would be quite tasty on a cool February evening. As I looked through the pantry for the makins
I thought of my fishing for catfish many years ago.  They were pretty easy to catch and would bite almost anything except live or artificial bait.  I was fishing with some old chicken livers for bait at a farm pond accompanied by my grandmother's dog, a dachshund named Fatboy. Fatboy made an ideal fishing companion.  He was quiet and patient.  He did have one problem, at least for me it was a problem. Fatboy liked to eat fish, especially catfish. When I caught a fish and pulled it to the bank, I had to get to it before Fatboy did. Once I was not quite quick enough. I pulled a little six inch cat to the bank and Fatboy pounced on it. In his ferocious attack on the fish he got the fish hook caught in his mouth.   Can you imagine trying to hold a squirming dachshund while trying to remove a fish hook from his mouth?  It was not a pretty picture and Fatboy never went fishing with me again.

T. Texas Tony's Famous Catfish Stew.
  • 8 oz. can tomato sauce
  • 3 small potatoes 1/2 in. cubed
  • 1 onion diced
  • 1 clove garlic diced
  • 1 bottle beer
  • 1 lb. catfish
  • 1/2 cup frozen corn
  • 1 #2 can tomatoes
  • 1 cube chicken bullion
  • 1 tsp. Old Bay seasonings
  • 1 tsp. cumin
  • 1 tsp. black pepper
  • Hot Sauce (your favorite)
Saute onion and garlic in a little oil.  Add potatoes and beer. Be sure to sample beer to insure that it is good enough to cook with. Cook until potatoes are about half cooked.  Add tomato sauce, tomatoes and 8 oz. of water.  Bring to a boil and add fish and seasonings.  Let simmer until potatoes are cooked and fish flakes.  Add hot sauce to taste. 

Cornbread waffles go real well with this dish.

Fatboy has been long gone to doggie heaven and I think I'll try to cacth some catfish this weekend.

Feb 13, 2011

I'm out of toothpaste!

"I can't believe this!," I said to my travel bud.  We had spent the night in Vernon, France, near Monet's Giverny Garden. And I needed to get the taste of the Russian army marching through my mouth overnight brushed away.  I was able to get a little, no more than the essence of toothpaste, out of the old Colgate tube and that had to do the job. And it did, sort of.  Normally I'd have gone down to the local Wal-Mart and got a new tube.  But, no...this was France and no Wal-Mart. I was sure we could find some somewhere. We asked the lady of the bed and breakfast at which we were staying where to go and she said there was a store nearby.  At least I think that is what she said.  My travel bud understood the particular version of the English language she was speaking much better than I did. 
So away we went in our search for toothpaste.  The sign over the storefront said, "Villafrance Marche", and through the windows I could shelves of neatly stocked goods.  I found a selection of things in toothpaste like tubes.  Upon one of the tubes was the word "dentifrice", I thought this probably had something to do with teeth and unless it was adhesive for dentures, I was in luck.  I had horrible thoughts of getting hemorrhoid medication by mistake.  We picked up a few pieces of fruit and headed for the checkout counter. After paying for the goods, which was a lengthy process due to my ineptness in counting Euros, we found that the store did not provide bags for your purchases.  Later, we found this was not the case in all stores. Service was friendly and courteous at Villafrance Marche.

Actually, this emergency, if it can be called that, allows insight into local culture. Only by doing things the locals do can you gain any insight into their culture. Many times we have seen tour buses with loads of tourists stop at an attraction, tour it with their guide and leave after a visit to the gift shop, of course.  They never see anything except what they are shown. We, on the other hand, tend to get of the trodden path.  In non-English speaking countries we rarely eat at a restaurant that has a menu posted in English. We haven't eaten anything unrecognizable, yet, but the food in the Dominican Republic was debatable!

We traditionally use bed and breakfasts for lodging.  The homes seldom have more than three rooms for guests and this leads to a closeness with your fellow travelers. Breakfast conversation is always interesting.  An Israeli doctor extolling the virtues of Minnesota's Mayo Clinic or why it's extremely dangerous hunting mountain goats in the Alaskan mountains.  We've found our hosts to be founts of knowlege on local lore. We would never have seen the Durham, England cathedral had it not been for one of our hosts. Nor would we have found the site of Hadrian's Wall. Unfortunately, no one told us to be aware of sheep dung.  Sometimes there is an immediate connection to our hosts. Once our hostess was a widow lady who shared her experiences with my travel bud (aka wife) who had experienced the same loss. And I can ne'er forget enjoying a breakfast of kippers overlooking a loch in Scotland while our host presented his collection of musical instruments that he played.

While our favorite mode of transportation in rural areas is the automobile, driving in large cities in the British Isles or on the continent can be a less than good experience.  We favor public transportation in metropolitan areas. Buses, trains, subways, and trams are for us.   Not only are these methods less expensive than taxis, but you get to meet interesting  people that way.  On the early morning train from Paris to Vernon we saw a band being formed.  At each stop another musician with his instrument would get on board.  Eventually there was a group made of two accordions, a saxophone,and a trumpet.  They played in the doorway, and a girl in her early twenties slept through the entire performance.  While on a bus in Edinburgh, I found myself seated beside an elegant elderly woman who extolled the virtue of Barack Obama at great length. Although she was charming and I delighted at her Scottish brogue, I bit my tongue for fear I would cause an international incident. And another thing about the city bus transit, you can get a really good tour of a city if you find the right bus. One caveat, beware of extremely crowded conveyances, I once found a twelve-year-old's hand in my pocket on the Paris Metro.

Travel seems much richer when you get a bit off the beaten path and get to know the local folk a bit. Unusually meaningful and lasting experiences can be found there.  And yes, I have missed some opportunities, such as not dancing with the natives in Homer, Alaska.  But maybe next time.

Feb 8, 2011

M I M




Jake Shimabukuro's tenor ukelele is displayed in the Artist Gallery.  This Gallery Displays instruments made famous by specific people or events.  Here you'll find guitars played by Eric Clapton, Dick Dale, and Carlos Santana as well as a drum set of the Black-Eyed Peas.  The is a drum from the Olympic Games held in China and the piano used by John Lennon when composing Imagine.


M. I. M., the Musical Instrument Museum of Phoenix, AZ, uses unique wireless technology to inform you about exhibits.  As part of the ticket price is an electronic device, about thesize of a cell phone you wear around your neck.  The device is activated  when you come near an exhibit.  Not only to you see the instrument, you hear it as well.

The carved head
of a sitar

A thumb  piano,
a mbira.


Almost every exhibit has a flat screen video display about the instrument you are viewing. Some show the actual manufacture by primitive methods of the instrument. And of course there are many performances by native people and ethnic groups.


The museum has other galleries designated Geo Galleries which is to say therein are the instruments for music making from various countries of the world. It is fascinating to see some other instruments of primitive cultures hand crafted with primitive tools. In

 one instance the manufacture of a thumb piano begins with the felling of a tree in an African forest. All parts are fabricated by hand with crude tools.  A video of guitar manufacturing from the Martin Guitar Company shows modern manufacturing methods used to produce musical instruments. In these Geo Galleries are also displays by musical instrument manufacturers such as Fender, Martin and Steinway as well as providing insight into cultures from around the world.
The Experience Gallery allows visitors to gain first hand experience with some instruments. There are guitars, drums, harps, xylophones and other instruments to play.  The gong is always a favorite. I suppose the loud sound feeds some primeval need in young boys and old men.


Chinese Gong

Also in this 190,000 square foot complex there is a special exhibition area, a music theater, classrooms, gift shops, and cafe. It is not a place for a quick visit. We spent the afternoon there and felt we should have planned on a longer visit.



Vielle a roue (wheel organ)

Rouen, Upper Normandy 18th c.
 There are more photographs or the Musical Instrument Museum here.
Check out the M. I. M. on line and the National Music Museum