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radiantfracture

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radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Robot Love)
Look at this delightfulness. (Click for bigger ducks.)



This funnysweet card full of good wishes came courtesy of [personal profile] kenjari. Thank you so much! The white wafer below the card is called an opłatek, and [personal profile] kenjari explains it thusly:

Polish people traditionally share them on Christmas Eve, and also send them to friends far away. It's a wafer made from wheat flour and water, meant to be broken into pieces and eaten.


I sent out a round of solstice cards the other day, but I still have a few blank ones. If you like getting cards in the mail (mine is just a generic sparkly card with either a buck or some weird snow penguins on it), DM me your address. I believe I've sent one to everyone who asked in the first round.

I'm listening to CBC Ideas' "How to Save an Island: Film-makers and Fishers in Fogo". It's so nice to listen to these distinctively Newfoundland voices, and to hear all the room that's in a good piece of radio. It makes the house, the evening, feel at once more intimate and more spacious. A good old feeling I don't get much lately. It's fitting for a program about deep listening to a place and its communities.

Here's the synopsis:


Fifty years ago, while the rest of the country was celebrating Canada's Centennial, the friendly folks on Fogo Island — most of whom were fishers — were ordered to abandon their homes and resettle in larger communities on the larger island of Newfoundland. Memorial University's Extension Department invited the National Film Board of Canada to visit Fogo, and interview people about their future. At the end of what is now called The Fogo Process, they voted to stay put, form a cooperative, and take over the fish plant. It became a model for alternative democracy around the world.


It smells nice and cold outside.

{rf}
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
I had a dream last night that L. was feeding baby wolves and I thought it was a bad idea. Very early this morning I skimmed an illustrated post about lycanthropy.

A little bit later, though still far too early, my creative co-worker gave me a ride to my 8:30 am class (heated seats!) (in the car, not the classroom). She told me about the resort where her son works in the summer, which resort shares its remote island with a family of wolves.

She said the island was once a station for something I had never heard of called LORAN. LORAN was a hyperbolic radio navigation system (so the Internet tells me) implemented during WWII and continued in a confusing series of forms (well, A, B and C) [Edit: I had the date wrong here] Loran-A went off the air in North America in 1980, but apparently Loran-C was in use until 2010.

This island station was paired with one in southern Alaska. It was stood down1 in 1977 “after a fire in a generator room,” according to the labour-of-love website on which I found this information.

But what if it was really the wolves?

I sense a rabbit hole gently caving in under my feet.

Talk of mysteriously defunct signal stations reminds me a little of the CBC holiday tradition of playing Fireside Al's gripping rendering of "The Shepherd" on Christmas Eve, in the Dickensian tradition of eerie Christmas stories.


{rf}

1. That usage seems awkward, but that's how the site puts it.
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