Author: Emmett O'Connell (Page 48 of 177)
1. I could’ve mentioned this in the last update, but Terrence Knight (remember “The Sitting Duck?”) is back.
Remember when he left? I wasn’t too impressed. I’m still not all that impressed, his website is pretty bad. Needs some work. Like, its not 1999 sort of work. It seems like it would be harder to update html page like the one he’s working on than update a wordpress.com page like the one he has set up here.
But, the videos themselves (shooting ordinance, Jim Lynch reading) and this article deserve praise. Good effort, but help your readers and get the with the times.
2. Olympia Food Bloggers Bake Sale! For the Food Bank! Tomorrow (Friday, April 27) Both the Plum Palate and Pure Hunger are pointing this one out. Get yourself down there.
3. Its spring time, so its then time for Griffin Neighborhood to talk all about Scotch Broom.
4. And, shoot, everyone listen to this: a pilot podcast from David Raffin. Technically speaking Raffin does have podcast already, but its typically short clips from comedy shows.
But, this one is a proper podcast, with Raffin and a straight-man, topics and the whole thing. Its still very much David Raffin, but its the sort of long form podcast that I wish he’d do more of.
And, this is just me talking, but if Mathias Eichler were to start some sort of Maximum Fun podcast empire, this sort of long form Raffin is something I could get behind. Mathias is a busy man already, though.
Its not my fault they were around 14,000 years ago.
This is very close detail of a map of the spillways of the Puget Lobe from this amazing document:
Sarah from McCleary Chronicles brings us the backup pipe dream of a shipping canal that would’ve passed through McCleary. The problem with the Puget Sound to Grays Harbor/Columbia River canals was always a lack of water and a lack of a good reason. Railroads and then highways sufficed.
In 1907 the Corps of Engineers pointed out that there just isn’t enough water (sans glacier) for such a canal system to be realistic:
The quantity of water required at the summit would probably be nto less than 300 cubic feet per second, if the canal were used at all, and the problem of finding that quantity of water during the dry season would be a rather serious one. There is no stream of sufficient capacity in the neighborhood and a feeder would have to be brought many miles. While the percipitation in tehis section of the country is large, there is annually a dry season of two or three months, during which the streams become very low, and ample provision for water, either by storage or by a long feeder, would be required.
But, if you add one ice age with spillway rivers flowing through the Black River, Chehalis and Moxlie Creek basins, you suddenly have three entire waterways connecting Puget Sound (now as a glacial lake) with the Pacific Ocean. And, McCleary sitting almost dead center as a axis of trade. In this case, sight sears to the big glacier.
The joke of this is that if Portland had a baseball team…
Well no, that’s not the joke. The joke is that urbane Portlanders’ understanding of sport in general (and baseball in this case) is closer to that of theater or the arts than of actual baseball or sports.
Its also a slight nod in the direction of the off again, on again fascination some have had in Portland to bring a MLB team to Portland. Horrible idea, by the way, if you’re a Mariners fan. It might also be a nod to the city losing its minor league baseball team, in effect because the city went all in for soccer.
That said, it isn’t like there isn’t baseball already in Portland. Baseball in there in the form of not one, but two independent wood bat adult baseball leagues.
- The Northwest Independent Baseball League (awesome name, by the way) plays in two divisions across greater Portland and will be starting its fourth season this summer.
- The West Coast Collegiate League also has an outpost in Portland, with the WCL Portland. This is a similar set up to our own Puget Sound Collegiate League where a collection of teams play in one or two locations.
1. Rock show at the library. Isn’t exactly a rare thing, but man, only in Olympia, right? Snazzy Bouquet: Now I want a donut.
2. Happens so rarely, but this blog has something worth linking to. Thurston Pundits: Honoring local greatness
3. Steven Willis, of Evergroove Fame, goes back to Evergreen for a lecture. This sort of thing, when a local Evergreen alum connects back to the campus, happens too rarely. Morty the Dog: Evergreen Lecture.
4. Rare thing that a local business (thanks to Mathias) comes up with a blog posting idea that isn’t just “hey look at this not so interesting project. Eyes of South Sound.
This is cool too me especially because for some reason I’ve been the guy in my family that was sent up on the roof for chores. Those roof shots are super cool.
5. And, something that doesn’t fall into the rare theme at all, Janine Unsoeld writes an exhaustive post about the Scott Yoos thing. Little Hollywood: Scott Yoos Trial Scheduled For August 13
Happy Friday the 13th!
Somewhere in the bowels of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Department of Ecology, there is a long running conspiracy. Hoods, nocturnal rituals and numerology.
The evidence is plain to see and the goal is some sort of curse on Olympia and nearby communities:
- For the marine waters around Olympia, they are know within the state government as “Marine Area 13.”
- For Olympia’s freshwater basin (the Deschutes): “Water Resource Inventory Area 13.”
- And, for the wildlife management designation, we have fittingly the mark of the beast: “Game Management Unit 666.“
1. A blogger comes to Olympia, visits friend, enjoys self, spends money downtown. Please, visitor and business folks, peruse this post and look for clues to get more people to Olympia to spend money.
2. Then this other blogger comes to Olympia, walks around, entertains himself with portable technology and doesn’t buy a damn thing. What’s his problem? Again, visitor and business sector folk, please look for clues to why this guy didn’t spend any money.
3. And, the plumpalate reminds us that this really is the time of year for shellfish. The Oyster Light season is quickly coming to a close, so before the sun starts shining too much and the water is too warm, get yourself some bivalves. From plumpalate:
Something spontaneously good may worm its way forward and that’s when you snatch it up. That’s what happened at Olympia Seafood last week. I went in to get last week’s smoked salmon and came out with something else besides. Something slightly intimidating: mussels and clams. I’d never made shellfish before. But Tony, the owner, told me these were collected that very morning at Totten Inlet. This was not a moment to resist.
So I didn’t know what I was doing. But the recipe he gave me sounded so easy, I thought I couldn’t mess it up.
4. Its probably worth the effort to watch Walt Jorgenson’s videos (one, two and three) of the SPEECH media roundtable last week. I watched mostly through the intros, then got distracted. Hopefully, I’ll pick it back up in a few days.
I pointed a week or so back that a new book was coming out that had the name “Olympia” in the title, which always gets me excited. Turns out there is a lot more to this story than what I first saw.
First, here’s a podcast I listened to earlier this week in which Andras Jones, the author of “Accidental Initiations: In The Kabbalistic Tree of Olympia” explains the story behind the book.
Merywn Haskett, who plays a part in the book and took one for the team writes his review: A Narcissistic Misogynist with a Persecution Complex.
From the review:
The book goes back and forth between Kabbalistic mumbo-jumbo, and an autobiography where he never admits fault, where he gets bullied or fired everywhere he goes (which, apparently, is why he doesn’t make movies anymore) and where his fear and/or hatred of women is probably the most honest thing he writes. He idolizes his deceased father, a college professor who had numerous affairs with his students.
Merwyn (check) not a fan. By the way, it is worth looking at the responses to Merywn’s review, which he cross-posted to Amazon.
So, then Jones posts up a response to Haskett’s review on his own blog. The post is frustratingly titled: A Narcissistic Misogynist with a Persecution Complex. Come on guys, someone pick a new blog post title.
From Jones’ response:
Don’t get me wrong. I would still like to punch him in the face. I just don’t allow myself to gnaw on that particular brain bone for very long before breathing it out.
Not a breakout of a mutual appreciation club by any means.
And then, Haskett’s counter, yet to be title “I wear women’s glases.”
At the bottom, this sounds like a very personal fight between a handful of folks, which is becoming more public because one of them wrote a book and two of them have blogs.
But, not to ignore the fight (other than pointing it out, I have nothing really of substance to say about it), but here are a few independent thoughts about the book.
1. Isn’t it interesting, how the cover seems to stretch the Olympia brand?
2. Part of the book seems to deal with a tree in Sylvester Park that holds some significance. According to Jones, Olympia has been shaped to intensify this significance. At one point in the podcast, he seemed to imply that there could be a secret movement of city fathers to make these changes happen, specifically inside Sylvester Park. He commented something along the lines of “if I was on the city council,” implying it was the city making the changes.
Of course, Sylvester is a state park, so depending on your perspective, making the force behind the changes more vast and creepy.
3. Also, the idea of a shadow history and geography of the city is sort of fascinating. Not that my fascination has any bearing on the argument above or calling people “boring haters.”
1. Bus Driver appreciation day? Sure!
2. Speaking of books (lots of books last week), Wolf Tales blog has a new book too!
3. Mark isn’t signing up for the planning commission again. Hopefully this means he’ll be blogging about non-planning commission things now.
The OPC, just like the other groups I mentioned, does impact our lives, though those impacts aren’t often apparent to the casual and sometimes even dedicated observer. Even when one is interested in the instrumentalities of community governance, there is a huge learning curve. Thus, the job of someone writing about a planning commission as a piece of the larger context is exceedingly difficult, but that is a challenge I intend to undertake. As you’ve seen by now, I’m interested in the theory as well as its applications and I’m not sure exactly where we’ll end up. At least we can take pleasure in the knowledge thatinterminable deliberations like the SMP have not dissuaded me from moving on to subjects of interest in the meantime.
4. Bike hut at the westside co-op. Thank goodness this hut isn’t replacing a patch of grass or dirt, because the westside would have a problem with that.
5. And, “Self-Titled” is a hipster video.
O’Bee Credit Union reconnected with its roots by coming out with a credit card that attempts to bring the Olympia Beer brand back to its local roots. O’Bee is of course the old brewery employees credit union, so its pretty fitting that they’d launch an Olympia Beer themed card. O’Bee as in O.B. as in Olympia Brewery.
But, bringing back a local brand to its roots? Sure, they stopped brewing Olympia Beer here years ago, but the brand itself hardly left.
I started collecting examples of the use of the Olympia Beer font last November (well, I only have three so far), but they range from the local Bonneville Power Administration to a burger place on the westside. And, of course there is Olympia Lowlife and the Oly Rollers.
That brand hasn’t gone anywhere, its practically the most popular way to put the word “Olympia” in print.




