In and Around Kendal

Henry Enlightens Us All

Photo by Edward Kasinec

Henry Greenberg held his audience in rapt attention as he explained the practice and process of scientific exploration in clinical trials.

Lightening the Drive around Fulton

The night-time drive around Fulton just got easier. Traffic reflectors have been embedded in the roadway. Stay tuned for more illuminating news.

Photo by Joe Bruno

Kendal Bird Watchers Watching Bird Watcher Ann Swaim Watch Birds

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

A Lovely Day in the Park

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

Ominous

Is the world trying to tell us something?

Photo by Philip Monteleoni

Spectacular!

Photo by Amanda Slattery

I Never Knew That

How Did Salt and Pepper Become the Two Most Common Seasonings?

Spices have been central to human history since antiquity, influencing trade routes and economies along the way. But despite the rich array of flavors that have traveled the world, salt and pepper have emerged as the most popular seasonings in the Western world. Salt, an essential mineral, was once coveted for food preservation; pepper, a spice derived from dried peppercorn plant berries, used to be worth its weight in gold. Their popularity and ubiquitous inseparability have even led to their names being used as an adjective, as in “salt-and-pepper” hair. Here’s a look at how necessity, global trade, and culinary innovation helped salt and pepper become the two most common food seasonings.

A Dash of Salt

Salt’s journey to dinner tables is rooted in its importance to human life. The natural mineral is crucial for maintaining hydration, nerve function, and muscle control in the body, among other things. Given salt’s essential role in survival, it’s no surprise that humans developed a taste for it. Early human diets were heavy in meat and naturally provided sufficient salt. But as nomadic hunter-gatherers settled into agricultural societies and diets started including more grains, supplementing salt became important. The resource, though naturally abundant, wasn’t always easy to obtain, and it became a highly sought-after commodity throughout expanding civilizations. 

In ancient Rome, the production and transport of salt evolved into a major industry. Salt was highly valued and was even used as currency, with soldiers sometimes receiving their salarium, or wages, in salt—a practice that gave rise to the English word “salary.” (Sal is the Latin word for salt.) As European empires expanded and trade routes grew, so did salt’s reach, though it largely remained a necessity of food preservation and was used as a seasoning only by the wealthy. Throughout the Middle Ages, upper-class hosts even made sure their guests of honor were seated next to elaborate, expensive salt cellars at the dining table.

A Pinch of Pepper

Around the same time, black pepper was experiencing peak popularity in medieval Europe. Native to India’s Malabar Coast, pepper was used in local cooking as early as 2000 BCE, but as trade networks expanded, the spice became highly prized in the Roman Empire, where it was as valuable as gold. Like salt, it remained a top commodity and a luxury for centuries throughout Europe due to difficulties importing it from tropical regions—as well as for its supposed medicinal properties. Black pepper was believed to aid digestion, ward off diseases, and treat ailments such as arthritis and gout.

By the mid-17th century, however, these medical beliefs were waning, and the spice trade shifted significantly as new imports such as coffee, chocolate, and tobacco entered the scene. Food preferences also changed, reflecting refinements in regional cooking, especially in France.

Source: historyfacts.com

Contributed by Jane Hart

Art by Hart

Twin puppeteers Al and Dora had their hands full

Emily carried quarters in case she saw any hungry parking meters

It was the Hendersons’ ongoing conflict: she was very sensitive to the sun, but he “needed” the beach

They’d rented a golden retriever for the first Fall meet-and-greet

Elsa June repurposed her old Venetian blinds into a cute 1920s flapper outfit

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around Kendal

Another Beautiful Day in Rockwood

Photo by Philip Monteleoni

How to Tell It’s Friday at Kendal

Pizza, anyone?

How a City Kid Becomes a Goat Herd

Step one: Live at Kendal

Step two: Live at Kendal in the spring/summer

Step three: Live at Kendal in the spring/summer when some of the wilier goats jump the fence and lead the others to freedom

Step four: Live at Kendal in the spring/summer and take a walk in Rockwood Park when some of the wilier goats jump the fence and lead the others to freedom—as did the Abramovitz.

“Let’s get outta here!”

Discussing consequences of actions with Dr. Abramovitz.

Though city-born-and-bred, he seems a natural in goat-herding.

Photos by Mimi Abramovitz

Ya Gotta Have Faith in Rockwood Park

A praying mantis, minding his own business: praying

Having achieved his freedom, an escaped goat achieves foundation-top and pauses to kneel . . . in a prayer of thanksgiving, perhaps?

Photos by Rich Dooley

Another Beautiful Days Comes to a Lovely End

Photo by Philip Monteleoni

Mystery Barge on the Hudson

A big red ship has been hanging out for several days on the Hudson River—right in our sight line. What is that thing doing? Joe Bruno has found the answer: it’s a cable-laying ship, laying a cable beneath the Hudson.

But what is it for? Its goal is to transport electricity from Canada to New York City.

Want to know more (note: pictures are included)? Click below.

I Never Knew That

What Did People Use for IDs Before Photos?

Names (and the Trouble With Them)

A name was the most basic marker of identity for centuries, but it often wasn’t enough. In ancient Greece, to distinguish between people with the same first name, individuals were also identified by their father’s name. For example, an Athenian pottery shard from the fifth century BCE names Pericles as “Pericles son of Xanthippus.” In ancient Egypt, the naming convention might have reflected the name of a master rather than a parent. 

But when everyone shared the same name—as in one Roman Egyptian declaration in 146 CE, signed by “Stotoetis, son of Stotoetis, grandson of Stotoetis”—things could get muddled. To resolve this, officials turned to another strategy: describing the body itself.

Scars and Silk

Detailed physical descriptions often served as a kind of textual portrait. An Egyptian will from 242 BCE describes its subject with remarkable specificity: “65 years old, of middle height, square built, dim-sighted, with a scar on the left part of the temple and on the right side of the jaw and also below the cheek and above the upper lip.” Such marks made the body “legible” for identification.

In 15th-century Bern, Switzerland, when authorities sought to arrest a fraudulent winemaker, they didn’t just list his name. They issued a description: “large fat Martin Walliser, and he has on him a silk jerkin.” Clothing—then a significant investment and deeply symbolic—became part of someone’s identifying characteristics. A person’s outfit could mark their profession, social standing, or even their city of origin.

Badges and Insignia

Uniforms and insignia served a similar function, especially for travelers. In the late 15th century, official couriers from cities such as Basel, Switzerland, and Strasburg, France, wore uniforms in city colors and carried visible badges. Pilgrims and beggars in the late Middle Ages and beyond were also required to wear specific objects—such as metal badges or tokens—that marked their status and origin. Some badges allowed the bearer to beg legally or buy subsidized bread, offering both practical aid and visible authentication.

Seals, Signatures, and Letters

Seals also served as powerful proxies for the self. From Mesopotamian cylinder seals to Roman oculist stamps and medieval wax impressions, these identifiers could represent both authority and authenticity. In medieval Britain, seals were often made of beeswax and attached to documents with colored tags. More than just utilitarian tools, seals were embedded with personal iconography and could even be worn as jewelry. 

In many cases, travelers also had to carry letters from local priests or magistrates identifying who they were. By the 16th century, such documentation became increasingly essential, and failing to carry an identity paper could result in penalties. This passport-like system of “safe conduct” documents gradually started to spread. What began as a protection for merchants and diplomats evolved into a bureaucratic necessity for everyday people. 

As written records became more widespread in medieval Europe, so did the need for permanent, portable identifiers. Royal interest in documenting property and legal rights led to the proliferation of official records, which in turn prompted the spread of literacy. Even as early as the 13th century in England, it was already considered risky to travel far without written identification.

The signature eventually emerged as a formal marker of identity, especially among literate elites, and was common by the 18th century. Still, in a mostly oral culture, signatures functioned more as ceremonial gestures than verification tools.

Heraldry and Livery

For the European upper classes, heraldry functioned as a visual shorthand for identity and lineage. Coats of arms adorned not only armor and flags but also furniture, buildings, and clothing. Retainers wore livery bearing their master’s symbols, making them recognizable on sight. Even death could not erase this symbolism—funerals were staged with heraldic banners, horses emblazoned with arms, and crests atop hearses.

Yet heraldry could also be diluted or faked. By the 16th century, unauthorized use of coats of arms was widespread, and forgers such as the Englishman William Dawkyns were arrested for selling false pedigrees and impersonating royal officers. In time, heraldry gradually lost its power to function as a reliable ID system.

Memory and Proximity

In the end, one of the most effective early methods of identification was simply being known. In rural communities, neighbors kept tabs on each other through personal memory and observation. You didn’t need a signature if the village priest or market vendor had known you since birth.

But with the rise of cities and the disruption of industrialization, such personal networks broke down. The state stepped in with systems of registration, documentation, and, eventually, visual records. Identity, once rooted in familiarity and the body, became a matter of paperwork and policy.

Before the photograph fixed the face in official form starting around the late 19th century, people relied on a more fluid, and sometimes fragile, constellation of signs: names, scars, clothing, crests, seals, and simple familiarity. All were attempts to answer the same eternal question—who are you?—in the absence of a camera’s eye.

Source: historyfacts.com

Contributed by Jane Hart

Art By Hart

Ms. Poole was delighted to have a bee student in her class

The retirement home re-do looked great--except for the lack of signage

Kicky loved the vet-formula seaweed gummy treat

For a Monday, Mendelson spent a lot of time on his hair gel

The regulars on the 7/15 Chocolate Chip were a step ahead of the Market

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around Kendal

Roadside Dining, by Aruna Raghavan

We interrupt our regular programming of goats and such to concentrate on the most stupendous, amazing, fantastic (fill in the blank) feat of the week: the pouring of the Refresh concrete, including a quick video (under 20 seconds) of the pouring of the Community Room floor.

Concrete Evidence of Refresh Progress

Videos contributed by Beverly Aisenbrey

In the new Community Room: the inside scoop, by Ginny Bender

The outline of the new Terrace Room, by Ginny Bender and Joe Bruno

Photo by Ginny Bender

Photo by Ginny Bender

Photo by Joe Bruno

And Another Day at Kendal Comes to a Beautiful End

Photo by Philip Monteleoni

Take a Hike . . . With Henry Neale

What ‘cha doin’ this fall? Henry Neale has an idea—and it’s more than a walk in the park. How about a walk of the Old Croton Aqueduct trail? All 42 miles of it. From the New Croton Dam in Cortlandt all the way to Bryant Park. No not in one day, but in reasonable lengths on several days during September and October, enjoying the fall weather. Highly doable. Highly enjoyable. Take on all of it—or just some parts.

 Wanna go? Remember: You don’t need to do the whole thing. Companions for all or parts thereof are welcome. If you’re interested, get in on the planning now. Contact Henry either by phone (914-522-4609) or email (jhn10583@aol.com).

From the Master . . .

And now we take a break in all this frivolity for a bit of serious thought from Voltaire, one of the great historic masters of both wit and wisdom.

Think for yourself and let others enjoy the privilege of doing so, too.

Don’t think money does everything or you are going to end up doing everything for money.

No problem can withstand the assault of sustained thinking.

The opportunity for doing mischief is found a hundred times a day, and of good, once in a year.

Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.

If you want to know who controls you, look at who you are not allowed to criticize.

The longer we dwell on our misfortunes, the greater is their power to harm us.

Each player must accept the cards life deals him or her: but once they are in hand, he or she alone must decide how to play the cards in order to win the game.

It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong.

The mirror is a worthless invention. The only way to truly see yourself is in the reflection of someone else’s eyes.

Contributed by Cathie Campbell