“Always carry a camera. It’s tough to shoot a picture without one….”
Einstein on simplicity
“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough….”
The Third Annual Winter Film Festival: Ski Priority 3-The Pivot
Edgework: Changing directions is one of the core essential skills in skiing. You have to change directions not just to go where you were you want to go, but to also to avoid going where you don’t want to to (like into a tree or another skier ). Also…a change of direction is a great way to scrub off some speed if you find yourself moving too fast for your comfort zone. Here’s the Third Installment of the Ski Priority Series from the very adept BASS Network, this one on the ins-and-outs of the Pivot. Kick it to the flat screen and take it, and then take it to the slopes and tune up your game.
The Fine Print: Embed courtesy YouTube (thanks, guys). Posted by BASS Network. All rights belong to their respective rights holders. Thanks for sharing and ski safely.
The Third Annual Winter Film Festival: Ski Priority 2- Changing Edges
Edgework: Skiing is about edges. It is the edge of the ski cutting into the snow which enables the turn. The speed at which you can change edges is important: do it fast enough and you’re probably a slalom racer. If you don’t do it fast enough-or with enough confidence–you can find yourself in trouble in a hurry. Here’s the second in the BASS Network’s Ski Priority series (No. 1 is on Centered Balance), and this one is on the big one: changing edges. Sharpen up your technique by giving it a look. (Insider tip: if you really want to master changing edges, you are encouraged to seek out a slalom course and devote a day–or two, or three or an entire season–to running gates. Not only will you sharpen up quickly, it’s great and very disciplined run.
The Fine Print: Embed courtesy YouTube (thanks, guys). Posted by BASS Network. All rights belong to their respective rights holders. Thanks for sharing and ski safely.
lippmann on community
“There can be no liberty for a community which lacks the means to detect lies….”
The Snow Weekend Concert Series: Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival 2004
The Hunt For New Music: It’s a winter weekend. Maybe you’re stuck inside because a blizzard is raging outside. Maybe you don’t want to watch the NFL playoffs. Maybe what you want to watch is a little blues, a lot of Eric Clapton, a bunch of good music played by very accomplished musicians—each of them a guitar ace. That your wish? Here’s your answer: Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival, 2004. The festival was started by Clapton to fund the Crossroads Center a drug treatment center in Antigua; the very first concert was in 2004. Who will you listen to: Clapton, Buddy Guy, James Taylor, Jimmy Vaughn, Robert Cray, Steve Vai, Joe Walsh, ZZ Top, Carlos Santana. Just listen to the darn thing..you’ll get it. As always, kick it to the flat screen (CHROMECAST works really well), punch the audio through your stereo system(we use big McIntosh amps and Wilson Audio Speakers) and get engaged. A wonderful way to spend an evening or a snowy Sunday.
The Fine Print: Embed Courtesy of YouTube. Posted by Remy Tena. All rights reserved by their respective artists. Thank you for sharing.
The Snow Weekend Concert Series: Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival 2004
The Hunt For New Music: It’s a winter weekend. Maybe you’re stuck inside because a blizzard is raging outside. Maybe you don’t want to watch the NFL playoffs. Maybe what you want to watch is a little blues, a lot of Eric Clapton, a bunch of good music played by very accomplished musicians—each of them a guitar ace. That your wish? Here’s your answer: Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival, 2004. The festival was started by Clapton to fund the Crossroads Center a drug treatment center in Antigua; the very first concert was in 2004. Who will you listen to: Clapton, Buddy Guy, James Taylor, Jimmy Vaughn, Robert Cray, Steve Vai, Joe Walsh, ZZ Top, Carlos Santana. Just listen to the darn thing..you’ll get it. As always, kick it to the flat screen (CHROMECAST works really well), punch the audio through your stereo system(we use big McIntosh amps and Wilson Audio Speakers) and get engaged. A wonderful way to spend an evening or a snowy Sunday.
The Fine Print: Embed Courtesy of YouTube. Posted by Remy Tena. All rights reserved by their respective artists. Thank you for sharing.
The Third Annual Winter Film Festival: Ski Priority 1-Centered Balance
Edgework: You have to have good technique to ski the backcountry, go helicopter skiing, or go off-piste. The back country is no place for amateurs and bad technique. So, coming up a series of six videos, all from the BASS Network, on the fundamental techniques of skiing. Watch the videos to refresh yourself before you head for the slopes and try to memory map the techniques you see. Let’s start with the basics: balance. Good skiers have good balance. Great skiers have incredible balance. Go for incredible if you’re going for the backcountry.
The Fine Print: Embed courtesy YouTube (thanks, guys). Posted by BASS Network. All rights belong to their respective rights holders. Thanks for sharing and ski safely.
Eagles Faster
“Faster, faster, the lights are turning red…..”
Norwegian Wood (Latvian actually, but it's a very good story)

“When I awoke, she was gone, this bird had flown,
So I lit a fire, isn’t it good, Norwegian Wood..”
–“Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) “, Lennon-McCartney (from the Rubber Soul album)
Paying Attention: Amazing what you can find out when you read a label. Caught without firewood last week on a brisk winter night(I had failed to make my annual seasonal firewood stop at the old wood shack where I have been buying wood for over three decades–the warm winter weather might have had something to do with it), I was forced to do the unthinkable (for me): buy pre-packaged wood. The type that comes in bundles with labels on it. Sometimes the bundle is as simple as just a few pieces of wood wrapped with heavy duty Saran-wrap type covering, sometimes it’s more elaborate and has a handle. Looking at Fresh Market I found a bundle with of wood with the above label on it. It was reasonably priced ($6.95) and very well packaged: a polyurethane orange fishnet web wrapped around the bundle, two synthetic straps (one on each end), pre-cut and split wood, and one more synthetic strap nailed into one of the pieces of wood to create a handle. All in all–a very nice package. Took it home, cut the fishnet webbing away, and pulled out the label(above). After the fire was going (it didn’t take long), I took a good long look at the label, dominated by a vaguely Peter-Sellers-As-Inspector-Clouseau illustration of the main man, “Simple Simon”. I soon got the impression that..really…this is educated wood.
The specs are impressive:
Premium Mixed Hardwoods
Kiln dried and heat treated at 160 Degrees for 75 minutes
Virtually mold, mildew and insect free (particular attention is made to insuring that plant pests don’t migrate from the firewood into your home).
Approved in New York and Florida and in California (naturally, California has a longer list of restrictions and warnings)
The company that produces this wood is called Essay Group and they’ve got it going on in wood. Check out their website.
Lots of interesting information for a pile of wood on the label but the thing that really caught my eye was this line: “Wood Origin: Latvia. Made in Latvia”.
When I saw that, I started to think about the processes and business model it took to get a pile of firewood to the United States and make it an attractive economic proposition for everyone.
Here’s the breakdown:
Find wood (in forest).
Cut it down
Cut into sections.
Trim and send to wood processing plant.
Put into oven (160degrees F for 75 minutes) to heat treat. (No chemicals added)
Prep for shipping.
(Now the next stage, packaging, could be done in Latvia or in the U.S…don’t know, but bet it’s cheaper to do it in Latvia)
Package the wood (bundle, wrap, strap, label, fishnet)
Ship to U.S.
Clear Customs.
To distribution warehouse.
To retail outlets.
On sale and into your home.
From just a business perspective, Essay Group must run an amazingly streamlined operation: look at all the steps, the prep, the processes, the shipping, and yet it’s economic and efficient enough for the final link in the chain, the retailer, to sell the Simple Simon wood and make a profit and you know Essay Group is doing OK as well. Absolutely amazing, the whole thing.
So, with full respects to Lennon-McCartney, we have to finish with this:
“Isn’t it good, Latvian wood….”.
And the answer is yes.
The fire, by the way, was superb. I’m buying more.