Category Archives: nature

The Hunt, the new bedroom, and other catching up

So the exciting news is that I’ve passed the draft of my research (10 years! phew!) on to co-authors and so we not only get family time, but a little time to blog too.  🙂  Our experiment is going well.  Some of the things Wendy and the kids have been doing for homeschool have been so heartwarming.  The Easter hunt and Potluck they organized was fantastic!  I only took a few pics, but if anyone else took some pics and want to share please do so in the comments or even in a guest blog.

Maia found the Dinosaur Egg!

And we’ve rearranged the house, we decided to move their bunkbed into our bedroom, and move our computers into theirs…  This is supposed to help with Elijah’s nightmares and keep them from wanting to come into our bed at night.  It is also a taste of a more traditional tribal living,  the kids LOVE it.

The Father in me says, “Good work Son”, the Boy in me says, “You gotta be kidding!” 🙂

Meanwhile, Emerakaya is growing fast!  When I came home from work yesterday I gave everyone a quick kiss, but she was having none of it.  She got super fussy, and when Wendy was holding her Emerakaya was craning around Mom to watch me walking to the fridge and the kids etc. It was flattering and touching and so nice to then come over to a big smile and take her into my arms.

Some of our moments together have been such magic. She is even more adorable and heart-fluttering in person than in pictures.

The ducks and chickens are happy too and producing lots of eggs, (anyone care for fresh eggs for trade or sale?)

The kids are in baseball class, and love it. I’ll be organizing games in the summer. Contact me to be put on that e-mail list.

My Sister Annie with Emerakaya at 2 weeks. (We downlaoded our little camera, some real gems.)

Including this one of the girls.

and this one of My Love and New Love

Wendy has been doing an amazing job.

I had a hard time choosing which pics to post, others that you’ll like more no doubt are in the slideshow.  Some of you are in them too.  You can download any of the pictures.

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The Choice

Today I write about an exercise in getting to know yourself, sustainability, and growth.

But first, a mini-update. We had a wonderful Christmas, and a Happy New Year.  Interspersed was an unplanned trip to Santa Cruz.  Fortunately, everyone is doing well now.  It was a good trip, so much could be said about it, but probably only interesting to close family..

The Truth about the Mayan Calendar

One conversation that comes to mind is with Marilyn Bacon, Chris’s mom.  She has been making great movies, and recently is focusing on indigenous rights and cultural diversity.  She was in Costa Rica on 12/21 and got to watch a Mayan Ceremony, interpreted by an Apache.  The overarching theme is that the end of the Mayan Calendar is not the end of the world,  but instead a much deeper message.  The time is about a transition to a new consciousness.  This corroborates all that I have read and heard about it in recent years (from credible sources, that is).  ( we wathed 2012 The Odyssey and 2013: Timewave)  (A key point is that the end of the Mayan Calander is not an exact date wither, but the age we are living through now.)  (Note: I think Marilyn’s trip was associated with the UN resolution mentioned in this related blog, but I’m not positive.)

Why the Misinformation and Ridicule?

My editorial is that we are at a great fork in the road in which the majority of people on this planet want the transformation.  Unfortunately, the powers that be, and the TV/Movies/Commercials/Newscasts they create, don’t want significant change.  They want to keep kicking the can down the road until they are dead.  Sometimes it is frustrating that (U.S.) Americans are such a small percentage of the world, but such a huge influence on it.  (I’ll admit, I am writing without proper nuance because time is tight, please forgive me.)

So this  led to the exercise I thought up while doing the dishes tonight.  It is a way of testing yourself.  The only right answer is your answer, if you don’t share it you can be more honest about it….  I’d love to write it into a short story, complete with recollections of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation’s Universe, but no time.

The Choice:

Hypothetical:  Assume that reincarnation happens, but it is limited to your species.  Imagine it is 7 lifetimes from now.  What is life like?  How about 700 lifetimes?

Now, imagine we have a fork in the road right now, and you decide which way we all go.  On the left, is the triple bottom line, in which we pursue economic, social, and ecological sustainability.  On the right, we  pursue economic and technological growth.  Now, for arguments sake, you know that the human race would survive each fork indefinitely.  (The right fork becomes Asimov’s vision, in which Earth becomes the ghetto of the Universe with its “Caves of Steel,” but there are some gorgeous suburban planets that you can move to if you can afford the expense…)

Which fork would you take?

Don’t just choose my bias, think about it…If we take the left fork, your 7 lives, or 700, or 7 million, won’t be as easy or rich technologically.  For instance, my technological desire is to have an iThought that converts my thoughts to digital text and verbal recordings, (and that does not require me to plug in to the matrix).  That will be here in 7 lifetimes on the right fork> Meanwhile, it might take  70 lifetimes in the left.  Maybe, we’ll never get there, as we develop ESP and direct communication instead.

Come back to this later when you have time to think about the two worlds.

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In the meantime, I saw this on Transformation on Facebook and got a kick out of it…

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A few pics from the past Summer

Life is good here in Santa Cruz.  Wendy is 8 months pregnant, and we are very excited.  Natasha is an amazing little girl.  She is still not even 2 but is talking up a storm and loves to play and explore.  (The picture below is from June)

We posted some pics for the last 6 months:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgallo/ The 15 pic slideshow for the month in Oregon for field work is at http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgallo/sets/72157622641424674/show/ , best to hit the “view full screen” icon of arrows on the lower right corner.

On Fathers Day, 2009.  Oregon.    Camper Girl

Other pictures from the Oregon Trip, Annie’s Graduation, and the party at Jed’s are posted on Flickr.

 

Posted some pics for the last 6 months:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgallo/ The 15 pic slideshow for the month in Oregon for field work is at http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgallo/sets/72157622641424674/show/ , best to hit the “view full screen” icon of arrows on the lower right corner.

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Adventures in KwaZulu-Natal

The carboot sale is slow (see previos post), so I get to get into the latest blog entry…

I had the privilege of adventuring in KwaZulu Natal for four days after a conference. This is the edge of Malaria country, a no-go for Natasha. It is an area that I thought I was not going to be able to visit. This was a pleasant surprise, to say the least.

KwaZulu Natal (“Kay Zed En” in local parlance) is on the eastern edge of South Africa, and was the heartland of the Zulu empire. I got to hear many stories about Shaka Zulu, King Shaka. When I stopped in at Mtubatuba, I only saw a handful of other white folks there in over an hour. This province is refreshingly different from the Western Cape. By evening I was at Imfolozi Nature Reserve. The first nature reserve of Africa. In the late 1800’s King Shaka declared that only male antelope could be taken from that area.

The next day I met up with two zulu game rangers, three norweigens, a South African (recently married to Jorun the Norwegian), and two German doctors. One ranger with gun in front, a single file line, and a guide in back, and we headed into the bush. We had to be silent. And aware. We were heading into the land of the Lion. The Big 5 are the animals that kill humans, and we were entering into their domain. It turns out that rhinos are more dangerous than lions, and Water Buffaloe more dangerous than Rhinos. It is all about context. If you “bump” into one in the thick bush, you better get a tree between you and the animal. It becomes comforting that each guide has a loaded rifle.

After wading through the muddy river we found some Crocodile tracks. “Big one,” says Bheki, the head guide. I look at the river and then the rifle. We move on.

Despite the backdrop, I always felt safe. Or rather, that all was as it should be. Kind of like surfing in an area that is known to have sharks. Life has risks, and if your time is up, its up. (Don’t worry Mom, the mathematician in me is also calculating risk. I would not go shark diving and open the cage door…) I was also exhilarated. One of the big frustrations with the South African nature experience is that so much of it has to happen from inside the car. The backpacker in me was thrilled to get into the bush.

The next morning we saw a rhino at a distance. We were downwind, and managed to get pretty close. It was just about 80 m away on the other side of the river before it finally spooked.

Just ten minutes later we were cresting a hill and Bheki froze, then motioned for us to come slowly. A water buffaloe. It soon sppoked, but then we found it again, and the rhino, loving a mud hole.

Then the long hike set in. Hours and hours of hiking, in silence, as the temperature slowly rose to about 38 C (hot). We had a great lunch spot on the cliff overlooking the river. The picture I took of the river in the distance and thorn in the foreground is fitting. You can get what you need in Africa, but watch out for the thorns.

We took a shortcut back to camp, and were relieved to get into the river. It was almost hot tub hot, and shallow enough to allow a safe swim. (Note: crocs stay away from groups of people, which simulate one large animal.) Soaking in the shade of the cliff, spirits were high.

That night, the stars were amazing. I laid on my back, listening with half an ear for any hungry lions, and lost myself in the cosmos. The dark darkness next to the southern cross was especially nothing. Fortunately, Jorund decided to come out with his super flashlight and verify our solitude. The fireflies created their own version of shooting stars, and the crickets played their heartstrings.

Now back in Sedgefield, the carboot sale is winding down, so here is the skinny.

The next day we hit the trail early and saw a family of Rhinos from a distance. Great river overlook. Then we came across a water buffalo, complete with an oxpecker. You can sometimes find water buffalo by following the sound of these birds that eat the bugs off the big ox.

Meanwhile, I was scanning every tree we passed, looking for the leopard with a kill, but no luck. We came across some rhino in the thick bush, fortunately they were about 45 m away, and had a calf. They went the other way. Seeing that big eye, sizing us up through the brambles, was both unnerving and exhilarating.

We heard a few more stories about King Shaka (don’t hit a woman or else you’ll get impaled) and we were almost back at the cars. Fortunately, there was one more sight: a huge lion track in the trail, pads splayed.

We  all said our goodbyes, and who knows, maybe some of us will cross paths again someday.

Once back at the car I still had the drive out of the park, which was fantastic. When I came upon an animal, I turned off the engine, and pretended I had just hiked four hours to find it. (All pics after the group photo in the slideshow were on the way out of the park)

OK, that is all for now. All is good here. I hope the pictures for the rest of the trip and for the other trips speak for themselves. Hopefully I’ll get to make another post soon. Or else, maybe the next carboot sale…

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I did not teach her this, I swear


MVI_0381_Natasha_Brds

Originally uploaded by john_gallo

She just started doing it one day.  Chip off the ol’ block I guess. This was from mid-November.

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Filed under Indi, Natasha, nature, south africa

Natasha’s first concert

November 30. We walked allaround the Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden in Cape Town, and on the way back to the car stopped to check out the concert for a few minutes…Great place for a show.  Natasha loved it.

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The Little Karoo

Companion post to the below: One of the great perks of having visitors is that we get to check places out. A couple of non-work days in the Little Karoo (the study area) were especially nice. Again, the other pics are at Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgallo/sets/72157603843532817/ these are just a few:

Rock to Root

chillin with Mr. Frog

Getting checked out by the Baboon Family

(Note, two days later: I think the photo of the Patriarch and his fangs is better, gotta roll now though. It is on the flickr site)

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spring is in the air

Well here goes. My first blog post. Gonna start this out in chronological order, so this post is about the cool gull nests I found during the overnight bachelor party. This was right before our morning surf. I’m trying out the link to flickr, lets see how this thing flies.

These are nesting kelp gulls, and I thought this was especially fitting considering we have a baby on the way, and it was a bachelors party. the second photo shows the male in the background, hanging out. The last pic captured the feeling the best.   (And helped me distinguish the gull from the cape gull, which is identical except it has a dark eye.)test 2

kelp gull 2
kelp gull 3

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