In and Around Kendal

Sharing Kendal’s Spaces

A young buck checks out the neighborhood, by Ed Lannert

You need to look down as well as out and over, by Steve Price (via Jane Hart)

Artist Speaks to Artists

On a regular basis, an Art Committee member comes before his or her peers to discuss his or her work. The latest talk was from Maggie Limburg (with the help of Linda Edwards) whose work spans a broad spectrum of materials and subject matter.

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

A Hudson Storm

Before, by Greg Lozier

After, by Greg Lozier

And a bonus, by Maria Harris

Albany-Bound?

Headed up river, by Maria Harris

Out and About

Nothin’ Fishy Here

Donna Nye and Mike Jeffers recently braved the wilds of the West Branch of the Delaware River.  Both inveterate anglers, they sought the elusive rainbow trout. And—dream come true—Donna achieved her goal! An 18-inch rainbow trout! Mike recorded the mighty battle for posterity.

A joyful 20-minute battle between woman and fish.

The triumphant winner—and guide Bob (in the green)—and her adversary (in rainbow color).

In good sport-fishing tradition, it was catch-and-release. The fish lives on to fight the good fight trout-wise.

Photos by Mike Jeffers

Channeling Frank Lloyd Wright

Kendalites travelled to Usonia recently for a view of the neighborhood that Frank Lloyd Wright (and the school thereof) built. The van wove in and out of the Pleasantville neighborhood, viewing the houses. Last stop: the home of Roland Reisley. Reisley was front and center when the neighborhood was built. He worked directly with Wright on his house’s design. Reisley is now a 102, but spry as they come. He loved to describe significant features of the house, its design, and working with Wright. And Kendalites loved to hear it.

Hildegarde Gray and Mike Kornfield enjoy the exterior of the house and its surroundings. Photo by Ursula Hahn.

Members of the trip joined Reisley on the patio for stories of Usonia. Photo by Janet Sawyer

At 102, Reisley still enjoys showing the house and speaking of working with Wright. Photo by Janet Sawyer.

Trip members were able to see up-close-and-personal the signature features of a Wright house. Photo by Janet Sawyer.

What So Punny?

I once worked at a cheap pizza shop to get by. I kneaded the dough.

My friends and I have named our band “Duvet.” It’s a cover band.

I lost my girlfriend’s audiobook, and now I’ll never hear the end of it.

Why is “dark” spelled with a k and not c? Because you can’t see in the dark.

Why is it unwise to share your secrets with a clock? Well, time will tell.

When I told my contractor I didn’t want carpeted steps, they gave me a blank stare.

Bono and The Edge walk into a Dublin bar and the bartender says, “Oh no, not U2 again.”

Prison is just one word to you, but for some people, it’s a whole sentence.

Scientists got together to study the effects of alcohol on a person’s walk, and the result was staggering.

I’m trying to organize a hide and seek tournament, but good players are really hard to find.

I got over my addiction to chocolate, marshmallows, and nuts. I won’t lie, it was a rocky road.

 Contributed by Don Butt

Bears Repeating: Important Zoom Presentation on Avoiding Scams

Yes, we put it in the website last week. And, yes, Jean mentioned it in the Residents Council meeting. Still, it’s important enough to plop it in place this week, as well. Monday, June 15—be there or be vulnerable!

I Never Knew That

James Joyce Used Crayons When Writing His Novels

James Joyce didn’t just write some of the most acclaimed novels of the 20th century—he did so using crayon. Though it sounds like a quirky affectation on the part of the Ulysses and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man author, it was actually a medical necessity. Because Joyce had trouble with his eyesight and was nearly blind by the time he wrote Finnegans Wake in the last few years of his life, “the large crayons thus helped him see what he was writing,” according to culture writer Maria Popova. Joyce was farsighted as a child and had severe issues with his eyesight by the time he reached his 20s. These problems only worsened after a bout of rheumatic fever left him afflicted with the condition iritis.

Fortunately for readers, Joyce was as adaptable as he was brilliant. He began writing while “lying on his stomach in bed, with a large blue pencil, clad in a white coat” that reflected more light back at the empty page at night. This process became even more elaborate during the editing phase, when Joyce relied on crayons of varying colors (namely orange, blue, red, and green) to underline and circle individual words or sentences and even cross out entire pages. Finnegans Wake in particular remains one of the English language’s most difficult and inscrutable works some 85 years after it was written, but at least there’s no mystery as to how it was written.

Source: historyfacts.com

Art by Hart

It seemed to Rushnell that the world was upside down

Simon couldn’t remember whether or not you’re supposed to answer a dear John letter

Only Aunt Betsy knew how badly Chicken wanted a watermelon costume

It seemed to Fiske that all the affordable beach condos were under water

With no set vacation plans, the Whitmores hopped an Amazon truck, destination unknown

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around

A Rose by Any Other Name

Photo by Edward Kasinec

Early Morning Visitors

Photo by Ed Lannert

Photo by Jane Hart

A New Point of View

Photo by Lynn Brady

The High Point of Rockwood Park

“'Tis sweet to trace the setting sun
Wheel blushing down the west” George Moses Horton

Photo by Maria Harris

Photo by Maria Harris

Photo by Lynn Brady

The Best Offence Is a Good Defense

What’s So Punny?

1. I once worked at a cheap pizza shop to get by. I kneaded the dough.

2. My friends and I have named our band “Duvet.” It’s a cover band.

3. I lost my girlfriend’s audiobook, and now I’ll never hear the end of it.

4. Why is “dark” spelled with a k and not c? Because you can’t see in the dark.

5. Why is it unwise to share your secrets with a clock? Well, time will tell.

 6. When I told my contractor I didn’t want carpeted steps, they gave me a blank stare.

7. Bono and The Edge walk into a Dublin bar and the bartender says, “Oh no, not U2 again.” 

8. Prison is just one word to you, but for some people, it’s a whole sentence. 

9. Scientists got together to study the effects of alcohol on a person’s walk, and the result was staggering.

10. I’m trying to organize a hide and seek tournament, but good players are really hard to find.

11. I got over my addiction to chocolate, marshmallows, and nuts. I won’t lie, it was a rocky road.

 Contributed by Don Butt

A Civic Duty Realized: Election Examinations

Arriving at Kendal: Four of the five Democrats running to win the June 23 Primary for New York 17th District’s seat in the House of Representatives. Why? To provide us with their thoughts and platforms on the issues of the day. Hildegarde Gray moderated. The candidates did not hesitate to speak their minds. A riveting evening!

From left to right: Mike Sacks, Beth Davidson, Effie Phillips-Staley, Cait Conley.

Photo by Harry Bloomfeld

I Never Knew That

The Debut of the Shopping Cart

“Can you imagine, wending your way through a spacious food market without having to carry a cumbersome shopping basket on your arm?” Sylvan Goldman, through a Standard Stores advertisement, asked readers of the Oklahoma City Advertiser that very question this day in 1937, inviting them to try the new shopping carts (“the latest device conceived by the mind of man”) and experience a new way to “shop with an ease never before known” in his supermarkets.

Goldman, the son of Jewish immigrants, learned the grocery trade from his father and uncles who owned stores in Tulsa. He and his brother eventually owned their own stores in the Standard Food Market and Humpty Dumpty supermarket chains, where necessity collided with Goldman’s ingenuity.

In 1937, in the midst of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl, Goldman needed a way to boost his stores’ sales. He noticed that once shoppers filled their arms or a handheld basket, they stopped shopping. So one night, assisted by a mechanic friend, Goldman fused together a folding chair, a platform, two baskets, and four wheels, and voilà!—capacity doubled and shoppers had a free arm for more groceries.

Goldman’s invention arrived at a moment brimming with technological innovation, cultural change, and great opportunity: Supermarkets were booming. Refrigeration let stores stock more food, the rise in American car culture let shoppers haul more home, and home refrigeration and freezers allowed Americans to keep their purchases fresh longer. Convinced he had a winner, Goldman submitted a patent application for a “combination basket and carriage”—the first patented shopping cart—a month before debuting it in his stores.

Alas, customers were initially doubtful. Women already pushed carts around (albeit ones with babies in them) and were tired of doing so, and male shoppers thought the cart made them look effeminate. Goldman was confident shoppers just needed convincing (and a smidge of peer pressure), so he hired attractive models, both male and female, to push his carts around his stores. The gimmick worked: The shopping cart was a success. The first national convention of the Super Market Institute was held in September 1937, and there Goldman’s Folding Basket Carrier Corporation shared Goldman’s innovation with the nation, and grocery shopping was revolutionized.

 

Source: Britannica Today in History, Britannica.com

Art by Hart

The Hacklefords both loved arugula-flavored bubblegum

Small as it was, Richie’s was the place to be

Unable to select a shelter pet, Steele came home with five

Clelia’s new home hair dye was a disappointment

The kids enjoyed helping Aunt Prudence with her Tai Chi

Art and photos by Jane Hart