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View From The Bluffs


 Wednesday With TED 5
 

A very short TED video this week, just 4 minutes in length.

Leonardo Da Vinci's life and work is well known -- but his face is not. Illustrator and activist Siegfried Woldhek used some thoughtful image-analysis techniques to find what he believes is the true face of Leonardo. Here, he walks viewers through exactly how he did it.



TED is an elite event where world leaders in Technology, Entertainment and Design gather to cross-pollinate ideas and gain inspiration from presentations on the latest developments in sciences and the arts.
Posted by Anexplorer at 4:43 AM - 22 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Guided Missiles and I
 

V1 Rocket

I celebrated my first birthday on April 3, 1944 in the London suburb of Mitcham, close to Croydon. In June of 1944, the first V1 Rockets began to rain down on England's capitol. I really don't think they were out to get me personally, but you can never tell.

I slept through most of it.

My father was a Staff Sargent in the Canadian Army and he was posted overseas in North Africa. My mother had moved back home with her parents for the duration of the war.

The skies of London were filled with barrage balloons, looking suspiciously like the craft of invading Martians from War Of The Worlds. Eventually some 2,000 barrage balloons were deployed in the hope that V-1s would be destroyed when they struck the balloons' tethering cables. Only the Germans had fitted the leading edges of the V-1's wings with cable cutters, and fewer than 300 V-1s are known to have been brought down by barrage balloons.

My grandfather, a WW1 Captain, was a Street Marshal and when sirens sounded he herded the people from his street indoors or into their shelters and made certain no light could be seen from any window, before rushing home himself.

Up to this point, the biggest explosion on his street had been to the backyard of the home next to his. It was ironic, the neighbhour had build a backyard shelter capable of withstanding anything but a direct hit. His wife refused to use the shelter, insisting on staying in the house. And when the bombs came they hit the shelter directly, leaving the home and the wife intact. There was a large crater now where the man in the shelter had been.

My grandparents, my mother and I huddled in the pantry. I was placed in my pram under the stairs. Everyone kept low.

Almost 30,000 V-1s were made. Approximately 10,000 were fired at England; 2,419 reached London, killing about 6,184 people and injuring 17,981. The greatest density of hits were received by Croydon, on the SE fringe of London. Mitcham wasn't that far from Croydon and the guidance systems of the V1 were primitive to say the least.

The V-1 lacked the primary points of vulnerability of conventional aircraft: pilot, life-support, and a complex engine. Hits to the pilot, oxygen system, or complex reciprocating engines of a piloted aircraft by a bullet or small shell fragment destroy its fighting capability, but the V-1's Argus pulsejet provided sufficient thrust for flight even if damaged. The only vulnerable point of the Argus was the valve array at the front of the engine. The V-1's only one-shot stop points were the two bomb detonators and the line from the fuel tank, three very small targets buried inside the fuselage. A direct hit on the warhead by an explosive shell from a fighter's cannon, or a very close anti-aircraft shell explosion, were the most effective forms of gunfire.

As my family huddled in their skullery, they could hear the distant explosions but what they were listening for was the sound of the V1 engine. As long as you could hear the engine you were fine. But when it stopped, it meant it was coming for you and the silence was ominous.

And on this particular day, they heard the engine sputter and stop and waited in the deadly quiet.

Suddenly the rocket exploded with a deafening roar directly across the street from my grandparent's home, window's imploded and shrapnel ripped through the walls of their house while they lay on the floor.

I slept through it all and lived because I slept. When they came to check on me, the hood of my carriage was sliced to pieces from shrapnel. Had I been sitting up, frightened by the noise, I would have resembled the carriage hood.

There is perhaps a lesson in there for coping with very bad times.

Just sleep on it.

London Blitz
Posted by Anexplorer at 5:24 AM - 16 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Let's Take A Walk Together
 

Up to this point my voice has had no accent, because the voice in your head is accent free. It's that voice in your head you hear when you read these blogs. For you, it's the rest of the world that talks funny.

Up to this point I have no particular appearance. I'm only a background concept in your mind that is vaguely male, vaguely mature and I may bare some resemblance to the explorer icon I use.

You can leave things that way if you wish. Just don't click on the video below.

But if you don't mind having that image shattered, if you want my voice to become accented, my age and weight and height and appearance to become evident; if you want me to become someone in particular, if you want to come join me for a walk with Lindsay at the bottom of the Scarborough Bluffs, then just click on the video, take my hand, and prepare to experience the strong cold winds of late March and the waves crashing on the beach.

Just watch you don't trip on the logs left strewn about by the winter storms.



Through some strange alchemy, my youngest brother also decided to take a video of him walking his dog, at the same time I was walking Lindsay. Neither of us had spoken to each other about our plan so this is totally serendipitous. The videos were shot at roughly the same time only he was walking Jasper through their neighbourhood. Here you can see the accumulation of snow still left here in Toronto.

Down at the beach where I was walking the winds, waves and sun have melted all the snow away. Keith's home is about two kilometers from mine, call it a mile if you like.

Anyway, you can find Keith's video below.

Posted by Anexplorer at 6:00 AM - 29 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Earth Hour
 

Earth Hour

To reduce our footprint on the earth, we went together, three families in one van. We also all went together because I'm Scottish and its cheaper. Have you seen the price of gas lately?

My daughter and her family, my wife's brother, and Linda and I left for my Niece's new farm outside Barrie Ontario to join 10 other families for an Earth Hour celebration. My youngest daughter and her family also came up from Guelph to join us.

In case you missed it, Earth Hour was the Green movement's plan to sweep the globe with a one-hour wave of darkness, yesterday, March 29th

Toronto was among a dozen other cities worldwide that participated in Earth Hour with City buildings, Commercial properties and humble folk such as ourselves turning off lights and appliances for an hour at 8pm to symbolize our commitment to tackling global warming. We even shut off Blogstream for the evening.

However, being just a tiny bit competitive, we did them one better, with eleven family homes shutting off lights, computers and appliances for the entire evening and gathering together for a pot luck dinner at Legacy Farm.

Of course one hour of darkness won't stop the globe from warming, but the event was designed to get people to stop and think about what is taken for granted – electricity – especially when it's generated by carbon-belching coal plants, one of the world's leading causes of climate change.

We also had an alternative reason for being there. My niece's 13 year old daughter had just returned from South Africa where her Canadian Mounted Team had placed first in the Botswana International Mounted Games. It was our first chance to welcome her home after her 33 hour flight back from Africa.

Mounted Games is a branch of equestrian sport in which very fast team races are performed by young people on ponies.

The Games require a high degree of athletic ability, good riding skills, hand-to-eye coordination, determination, cooperation, a willingness to help one another and a strong competitive spirit.

Mounted Games were the inspiration of H.R.H. Prince Philip back in 1957 and has now spread world wide.

At eight o'clock, we turned off the lights, candles were lit and, as if by magic, out came three guitars. We sang and laughed in the dark for an hour. After a while even the electronic game deprived teens stopped twitching and relaxed into the evening. At 9 o'clock we went out into the blackened night to view a sky alive with stars.

Filled with the huge variety of foods that always comes with a pot luck dinner, we left around ten o'clock to head back to Toronto. And when we stopped to fill the van on the way, my son-in-law refused to allow me to pay for the gas. Could life have been any better?

Photobucket
Posted by Anexplorer at 7:08 AM - 23 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Somber Thoughts
 



It's warm enough to think.

Lindsay and I climb down the bluffs at the bottom of Coronation Drive until we're standing on a beach of sand frozen into a form of concrete. The winter storms have lifted up a number of tree trunks from the depths of the lake and have stranded them along its length as far as the eye can see, like abandoned landing craft from "D" Day.

Lindsay loves the beach. She takes off across the hardened sand reveling in the freedom of movement, the joy of working muscles. Excited beyond reason by the sights and smells and sounds.

But my way is blocked. The beach is narrow here and some of the massive trees have barred my passing. To get around, I either have to climb over their slimy hulks or walk knee deep into the frigid waters of the lake.

Instead I sit.

This winter has taken its toll on me in more ways than one. For years I've been able to use these walks with my dog as exercise. I tell people that Lindsay is my Personal Fitness Instructor. She won't let me forget when the time for a walk comes along. She may not be able to read a clock but she knows when its time for a run.

Or used to.

This year our runs have been fragmented by the weather. Icy roads too slippery for walking, great storms dumping snow too deep for passage, temperatures dropping below the level skin freezes. Thick cloud cover deepening the dark of our mornings and nights. I've cut her walks short or have abandoned them altogether.

And its taken its toll on me. My blood pressure is up, my weight is up and the test results from my latest physical aren't even back yet. I've had the benefit of a body that refuses to gain weight no matter how much, or what, I eat. I seldom get ill and if I do it never lasts much more than a day.

So, of course I've abused it. Like being given a Ferrari and never changing the oil or taking it in for a tune up. I've been negligent.

So I can't blame everything on the weather, although that is what Canadians do. Our national pass time. Americans blame politicians, we blame the weather.

But I have to own my own neglect. I have a lot of learning to do about how to eat right. And I have to get back to exercising. My wife and I have parents in the same retirement home and I think about my last visit. I've always thought about them living in the past, but now realize they are the future that awaits me.

Which will come sooner rather than later, if I don't start to make some changes.

So I get up off the log and climb over it, which proves not to be an easy task. Lindsay is far up the beach, dancing in a swirl of seagulls. I begin to run, burdened by winter coat, heavy boots and sand the consistency of cement. I have none of her grace, none of her freedom of movement, none of her joy.

My running is not at all a pretty sight. But its a start.
Posted by Anexplorer at 6:38 AM - 16 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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