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Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts

Monday, 10 August 2015

     

Maintaining a complicated life
is a great way
to avoid changing it.

Elaine St. James

Artwork by Lorraine Blasor

EL CAMINO DE SANTIAGO      



Photography by Billy Ramirez

A true journey is a leap into the unknown (or the less
known), hardly one that accommodates every personal comfort
and ties every minute of the day to a tour guide operator's tight
schedule.

Its motivations can range from the prosaic to the sublime.  One
thing is certain: any long voyage, especially if undertaken alone,
is bound to lead to some sort of reckoning with one's self.

Thus, even the most prosaic journey can end in self-awareness, a
spiritual revelation, an epiphany.

This certainly rings true to people who, in the custom of Middle
Age pilgrims seeking indulgence for their sins, walk the Camino
de Santiago, the evocative Spanish name for St. James' Trail, a
pilgrimage route leading to the shrine ofSt. James in the Cathedral
of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia (Northern Spain) where,
according to tradition, the apostle was buried.

San Juan Architect Billy Ramirez Castellano is one of these people.
Spurred by a weariness with the ordinary, he recently devoted a
month to walk the trail.

"I needed to break my daily routine of many years. Break it in a
significant way. I realized this as I was walking and it helped
me a lot to place things into perspective," said Ramirez, the
author of the photography book, "Mirando Pa' Arriba," which
invites visitors to Old San Juan to look up and discover the
marvels of the old city that are not at eye level.

Actually, there are many different trails leading to the shrine but
Ramirez chose the French trail (leaving from Pamplona, Spain),
because it is popular and offers more lodging options along the way.
These include rooms in private homes or cafes, hostels, hotels and
paradors.

"You don't have to make reservations though you can for private
hotels. If you know of a good place you make a reservation and
there is no need to hurry. " Depending on the time of year, hotels
fill up and you have to keep looking until you find one that's
available, he said.

The pictures that Ramirez took as he walked along the way
show bucolic scenes of agricultural fields and thickets of trees,
charming old villages, antique bridges.

El Camino is wonderful and it is tough, Ramirez said.

"For me the hardest part were the descents from the mountains
because I had a bad knee. But aside from that, the monotonous
zones are hard because they are boring but there were few of them."

At one point, his bad knee forced him to take a few days off
to heal but he never gave up. If he were to do it again, he said, he
would take fewer, lighter clothes. "But I would add a pair of
light shoes in addition to walking boots. There are zones with
a lot of loose rocks where boots come in handy and there are
paved zones where lighter shoes serve you better."

He also recommends carrying vaseline to rub on your feet,
china-jell for pain relief, socks with no stitching (for comfort),
two folding hiking poles, a sweater, a lightweight raincoat,
and a towel.

In return for all his effort, Ramirez found the answers he
sought.

"I learned that I am a very lucky person and that I have
everything I need. I can live with little.

"I learned to know my body, my mind and my heart."

Along the way he met a lot of people from all over the globe,
including fellow Puerto Ricans.  By the end of the trail,
he ended up with four "very good Spanish friends."

The four agreed to meet up at a point ahead of Santiago so
they could arrive to the cathedral together.

Once there, "we hugged, cried and reflected for a while. After
the mass we sat at a bar on the street and said hello to other
pilgrims arriving in Santiago with whom we might had shared
a look or a coffee or part of the way.

"You greet them as if they had been lifetime friends. With hugs
and kisses."


Cathedral and the town ©UNESCO


El Camino de Santiago is one of UNESCO's World Heritage 
Sights. For more information, read an up-to-date copy of 
John Brierley's "A Pilgrim's Guide to the Camino de
Santiago."

You might also enjoy watching "The Way," a film by
Emilio Estevez in which he shares the screen with his
father, Martin Sheen, in a moving story about loss,
community and faith.

Artwork by Lorraine Blasor


More than at any time in history,
mankind faces a crossroad.
One path leads to despair and
utter hopelessness, the other
to total extinction.
Let us pray that we have the wisdom
to choose correctly.

Woody Allen

A SIMPLE TIP : The Handy Crate



Wine crates make excellent storage space for music CDs. You
can line up your CDs in two straight columns and keep things
neat and easily accessible. And you can probably get the crates
for free at your friendly neighborhood wine store.




Nothing is hopeless;
we must hope for everything.


Euripides 





COPYRIGHT © 2015 LORRAINE BLASOR all rights reserved☂

 

Wednesday, 22 June 2011


THE JOYS OF THE GARDEN

tomatoes.jpg
BY DENISE BLASOR


 AT A RECENT friends' dinner, one of the guests contributed the bounty of her garden: a  cornucopia of cherry tomatoes, small round orbs of bright red color, some still attached to their wispy green shoots.  Once  you popped them in the mouth, you were met with a glorious explosion of intense flavor.  THE REWARDS of the garden: A small but memorable harvest. Not to mention the satisfaction of growing something  with your own hands and the delight of watching tiny seedlings burst out of the earth to make their way upward  toward the sunlight.  ANYONE with a little time and interest can start their own vegetable garden though, truth be told, some people seem  to be better at it than others. Still, it is an effort well worth trying and resources abound to help you get started. FOR ONE, there is the internet. A visit to any number of websites is sure to provide helpful advice. For example,  thegardenhelper.com suggests that you pay special attention in choosing the site location for planting. It should be a spot in your patio or garden with plenty of sunlight -- at least six hour's worth  of sunlight daily -- and it should have good soil, which one can also improve with compost and organic fertilizers. 

" Planting is only the third step of the three 'P's.                
         Planning your garden, Preparing the soil, Planting your vegetables."                                  
the gardenhelper.com                      

 OR, if you are really serious about the whole enterprise, you might want to get the advice of an expert. Agronomist  Lucas Noble, who trained at the University of Puerto Rico in Mayaguez, provides just such a service through his company Siembra Sustento which, in addition to selling organic compost and holding workshops on organic gardening islandwide, also makes house visits. He will not  only teach you how to start a garden but will even build it for you, if you prefer.  The visit, he said, is $30 while building a basic, four by eight-foot orchard comes to around $160 which includes materials, soil and plants.  NOBLE said gardening is an activity for people of all ages. As for gardens, they come in all sizes, it just depends on  what one wants to plant in it.  Easiest to plant are basil, oregano, cilantrillo, parsley, green beens, radishes, peppers and eggplants.   THOSE without a patch of green need not feel left out. In fact, Noble said people can set up a garden on their terrace or roof. The essential elements for success in growing anything, he said, are "sunlight, water and compost."  Siembra Sustento ( Sow Nourishment, in English) is now expanding its reach to hotels and restaurants. 

   siembrasustento@gmail.com or contact by phone: Metro area/East 787.203.0480; Central area/South 787.983.6474; North area/West 787.633.7951. 




Pigeon+statue+with+egg.jpg
By Denise Blasor


          Every life needs a little fiction in it. Too much reality   
                             is a very nasty thing."   -- Woody Allen  

                                                  

diario-2-1.png
CONCALMA GOES BIKING

ConCalma, the old San Juan-based retailer whose company name is an invite to live life with calm, is branching out into fashion. Add men's bikewear to the company's colorful line of cotton handbags, totes and messenger bags with the distinctive striped handles.

El Rayo Spoke is a line geared to men, especially men who are cycling buffs. "The line grew out of a suggestion from a client who had been following the development of ConCalma and liked its vibe," said Matilsha Marxuach, who started ConCalma as a business that would be easy on the environment and provide work plus a fair living wage to the women of the Utuado sewing cooperative that produces her products.  The new line, primarily manufactured in Puerto Rico, includes sporty polo shirts, jerseys, and button down shirts. The short-sleeved polos look cool and can be customized with reflective patches for night riding, Marxuach said.  Low on the back, a single pocket is perfectly situated to allow one to carry that ubiquitous water bottle and easily grab hold of it. Prices range from $45 to $85.The new line officially launches Thursday night (June 23) at the store with music and videos rounding out the activity which will run from 7 to 11 p.m.  (Photo: courtesy of ConCalma)

ConCalma  #207 San Francisco St. Monday through Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm
Sunday, 10 am to 4 pm.  www.concalmalinea.com



Artwork by Lorraine Blasor
Every spirit builds itself a house;
And beyond its house a world;
and beyond its world a heaven.    
Know then, that the world exists
for you; build, therefore, your
own world.  -- Emerson
                                                                             

          



Copyright 2011 © Lorraine Blasor All Rights Reserved