1st Night STL – 2014

Anne and I had Joanie over for a New Year’s Eve supper. Anne made a really good kale salad topped with parmesan chips. We also had smoked salmon and oysters and various snackerals. After dinner Anne and I went to first night at Grand Center. We missed it last year and got there late this time. We only saw the following two acts, instead of the half-dozen we normally see. You see I had gone bicycling in the afternoon and got too tired and wanted to go home at 10:30. Every party has a pooper that’s why I invited me, party pooper. Here is a synopsis of the two acts that we did catch.

  • Kim Massie is one of the most recognizable vocalists in the Midwest. Her ability to sing not only blues and gospel, but rock, pop, country and R&B have earned her two Best Female Vocalist of the Year and a starring role in a Black Repertory Theater production of “Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues”.
  • Dizzy Atmosphere performed some light-hearted arrangements of holiday fare that featured traditions of Hanukkah, Christmas and Kwanza musical expressions, all delivered with a touch of insouciance.

We watched the ball drop in Time Square and struggled to stay up long enough to see it drop again. Then we trundled off to bed. Happy Hew Year everybody!

Blog In Review – 2013

Flowers for Mom

Flowers for Mom

At the end of every year, WordPress provides me an annual report on this blog. Frankly, this year’s report is a little disappointing. Hits are down from last year, only 41K, down from last year’s 50K. Another disappointing aspect of this report is that all of the most popular posts are from past years. The suggestion form WordPress is to revisit these topics.

Happy Birthday to Me

Happy Birthday to Me

The busiest day of the year was May 12th (Mother’s Day) with 1,227 views. The most popular post that day was M Is for the Many things she gave me … If you Google this song, then you’ll find this post is number one on the search list.

Angry Birds

Angry Birds

These two animated GIFs ( Are they pronounced gifts or jiffs?) are both somewhat derivative, in that I’ve taken and modified someone else’s work. I fashioned the Angry Birds GIF in PhotoShop using graphics from the game. It was paired with a Youtube video entitled Angry Birds Over Libya in this post. I think that it is so popular, because Darrell Issa must be clicking on it all day.

Swing Low, Sweet Chariot by John McCrady, 1937

Swing Low, Sweet Chariot by John McCrady, 1937

Thanks are again offered to Kayak Woman over at Ababsurdo, my biggest referer, even beating out Google+. I don’t get near enough comments, but I should thank Jane, my top commenter. Wait, stop the presses, I just realized that DogMomster and kkfin are the same person and if you sum those two then I find that we have a perfect tie for top commenter. Wait, wait, we have a tie breaker, today, after the WordPress tabulation and before the end of the year DogMomster put in a tie breaking comment and is the top commenter!

Brrrr-iding

It wasn’t really that cold today, but not because of the temperature and accompanying wind chill factor. It didn’t feel all that cold most of the time, because mostly we were seated in our heated car. We also dressed warmly for the weather. Any car makes a pretty good bird blind, but a Prius moving in electric vehicle mode is exceptionally adept at this task. Although, for maximum avian stealth, you need to turn the heat off, because that will cause the gas engine to run, this makes more noise. That’s how we snuck up on the kestrel and almost on the Red-tailed hawk.

Anne and I spent the day bird watching at the Riverlands. Trumpeter swans were the most common species there today. We must have seen over a hundred. They are the largest bird in North America. There was a sign at the Audubon Center that said that in all of 1991 five Trumpeter swans were seen at the Riverlands and in one day last week 590 swans were sighted. That’s a lot of swans-a-swimming! That is also quite a comeback, especially when you consider that in 1993 we had the great flood and all of the Riverlands was inundated. It also begs the question, how do you count 590 swans? It is not like they sit in one spot all day. They move around a lot. They do roost on water at night, so if you have enough spotters and can watch all of their likely sites, then you can count them all at dawn’s early light.

The Riverlands is a bird sanctuary and during the winter almost all of its trails are closed to visitors. Years ago, when we first started visiting the Riverlands, we were ignorant of these rules. We traipsed back into the sloughs, where we were not supposed to go. I did make my most popular YouTube video out of the experience, but I would not dare to repeat it again. You do not want to mess with birdwatchers that are willing to get up before dawn and stand for hours in a freezing bird blind. Not them or the rangers that they surely have on speed dial.

There is a bird blind that is still open to the public. It is on the western edge of the sanctuary, but is a little difficult to find. We went to it again today, but got lost on the way. I recommend that you get directions at the visitor’s center. This bind is quite something. All that it is missing is heated seat warmers and flush toilets. Just kidding, it was colder than hell, being all metal and concrete. I like my Prius way more. It’s new this year and was designed and built by WashU architecture students. I was able to capture the harrier (new species) who was hunting in the tall grasses. The bird was only fifty yards outside the blind, but those buildings in the background are in Alton, IL, about a mile away.

Next weekend is the official kickoff of eagle watching season, but we saw more than a few today. I suspect that only the most mature pairs have staked out their nesting sites. Most of the one that we saw were kind of wandering about. Soon though, they’ll all be staking out their stretch of the river and woe be it to any trespassing bird. It is a felony to harm an American Bald eagle, unless you happen to be one too. The most el primo eagle watching pair is already open for business. They are on the east side of Illinois Route 3, across from the Mel Price Lock and Dam. We could easily see them both along with their huge nest, from the Missouri side of the river.