Stunning Landscapes

San Diego Natural History Museum
Balboa Park
May 19, 2019

On the spur of the moment, we went to see the 50 Greatest Landscapes exhibit at the Natural History Museum in Balboa Park, because we saw an article about it in the San Diego Union Tribune that morning.  Fifty of the best landscape photographs published in National Geographic magazine are displayed in the museum’s fourth floor gallery.  They are arranged by season.

All of the photos were striking.  Among the Winter photos, we particularly liked one that showed a dusting of snow in Monument Valley and another that showed the Norway sky lit up by the Northern Lights.  In the other sections we liked an interesting time lapse photo of firefly trails at night; autumn frost on trees in a Romanian forest; and chinstrap penguins on a blue iceberg near Candlemas Island in the remote southern reaches of the Atlantic Ocean.  The landscape photos will be on display through June 23; after the exhibit closes, a similar collection of National Geographic wildlife photos will open June 29.

Admission to the museum was included with our annual Balboa Park Explorer pass.  Regular adult admission to the museum is $19.95; there are discounts for seniors, children, students, and military.

Looking out from the fourth floor we could see a bird’s eye view of the giant fig tree next to the museum.  We remember years ago, when we could walk under the tree and climb on its roots and lower branches.  Now, for the protection of both tree and park visitor, there is a fence all the way around the it.

Desert Interlude

Borrego Art Institute
Borrego Springs Natural History Association
Borrego Springs
May 5, 2019

We took a Sunday trip out to Borrego Springs to meet up with some high school friends of Meredith‘s for a picnic lunch.  Their school was in Palo Alto, and just one classmate lives out in the desert, but several others came from different parts of southern California and two friends from further away.  It was a nice gathering.

We arrived in town early and puttered around for an hour before meeting up with the group.  Our youngest daughter jokes that our super power is that we can find a museum anywhere, and sure enough we found two different educational offerings to while away the time.

We very much enjoyed the Borrego Art Institute gallery.  The exhibition was summer themed and featured local artists’ paintings and photographs with mostly desert scenes.  It is a gallery, not a museum strictly speaking.  The art is offered for sale, but the Institute is a nonprofit organization and runs classes as well.  There was no charge for admission.  We put a donation in the box by the door.  There is an excellent restaurant next to the gallery – Kesling’s Kitchen — which is owned by the Institute.

We had a little time left before the friends gathered so went across the street to the Borrego Springs Natural History Association.  They operate a bookstore, and there is a garden behind that building with a variety of native plants.  We enjoyed strolling around.  They had a lovely stand of about eight or 10 native palm trees.  There were several butterflies in the pollinator area, but we did not see any hummingbirds.  Maybe next time?

We first visited Borrego Springs in 1986 when our oldest daughter was a baby.  We went in the spring to see the desert flowers.

We have been back several times since.  The desert landscape is stark, but beautiful.  The most memorable trip was probably our worst experience – when the three girls were very little, we drove there and back (about 2 hours each way) with two small children and a baby in the back seat of Bob’s compact Toyota Tercel.  Nonstop complaints of “she’s touching me” spurred us to trade the Tercel in for a minivan; spread the kids out so no one could touch anyone else!

Daley Ranch

Daley Ranch
Escondido
February 17, 2019

We had fun exploring a new (to us) place to hike, the Daley Ranch in Escondido. We had originally planned to hike out in East County, at Mountain Palm Springs in the Anza Borrego State Park, a place we had enjoyed exploring a year or two ago, but there was a high wind advisory. We figured that although our low-profile sedan could get us there safely, it wouldn’t be fun to hike in the desert with high winds blowing sand in our face. Another time!

We took out our Coast to Cactus book, a guide compiled by the Canyoneer volunteers of the San Diego Natural History Museum, and looked through it for something new. We had only vaguely heard of the Daley Ranch before; we found out that it offers a variety of hikes, of differing lengths and levels of difficulty. There are over 20 miles of trails.  We elected to hike the Pond and Lake View Trail, a four mile loop that offers a glimpse of Dixon Lake and then meanders past Mallard Pond, Middle Pond, and a couple of unnamed smaller ponds. We saw a coyote on the verge of one of the ponds, eyeing some ducks who were too smart to swim close to him. Ultimately he gave up, and we watched him saunter off on one of the many game trails. We saw many birds in addition to the ducks and a profusion of lilac bushes, which the guidebook told us are Ramona-lilacs (Ceanothus tomentosus).

The Daley Ranch used to be a working ranch. Robert Daley settled there around 1869 and built a small cabin. The over 3,000 acre property was slated for development until the City of Escondido purchased it in 1996. It is now a wide life refuge and open space park. A short history of the ranch can be seen on the city’s website here. Someday soon we would like to go back and try the Stanley Peak hike, which is longer and steeper than the pond trail we hiked this time.

The ranch house which currently stands on the property was built in 1925 and is open for tours on some Sundays from 11:00 am to 2:00 pm. (The city’s website says the second Sunday of the month, but a recent calendar posting listed a tour on March 24, the fourth Sunday, so check ahead of time.) The ranch house was not open when we were there; something else to go back for!

Knights of Columbus

Knights of Columbus Museum
New Haven, Connecticut
January 26, 2019

We went back to New Haven at the end of January for the annual gathering of a student group we both belonged to when we were students at Yale. While most of our time was spent socializing with fellow Old Blues and current undergraduates, we took a little time for – what else? – checking out some local museums.

We had found information online about the Knights of Columbus Museum, when we were looking up Sunday Mass times at St. Mary’s church near campus.  The Knights were formed in New Haven in 1882, at St. Mary’s parish by Father Michael J. McGivney, so it is appropriate that their museum is located in that city.  We were impressed with the museum.  It is large, newly built, and well furnished.  We had not realized how big it was when we planned our visit, so spent our limited time viewing mostly the special exhibitions.  We left the permanent collection for another time.

There is a gallery near the museum entrance devoted to Father McGivney. When we visited, a relic of St. John Paul the Great was also on temporary display in the McGivney gallery, namely a piece of the cassock the pope was wearing when he was shot in 1981.  We spent a few minutes in silent prayer then moved on to the other exhibits.

We were particularly interested in the special exhibition on World War I, which will continue its run through April 14.  It offered general information about the causes of the war and other general information, but most of the displays focused on the experience of the soldiers.  There was an excellent video playing with archival footage near the entrance.  In another area there were replica uniform jackets and helmets that visitors can try on, which we did.  Near that was a sample pack visitors can lift, to get an idea what infantry soldiers had to carry when they were on the march.  Actual historic uniform jackets, helmets, and caps were also displayed.  One room was designed as a sample trench, and it gave a good idea of the height and dimension of an actual trench.  It was clean and dry, though – not at all like the miserable muddy and vermin infested reality the troops had to endure.

Other display cases contained a wide range of personal items once carried by soldiers, such as books, playing cards, a sewing kit, soap and other toiletries, and musical instruments, to name just a few.  There were also several pieces of trench art – some soldiers carved bullet and shell casings during their waiting time in the trenches, making pieces like the scrimshaw carved by sailors in earlier generations.  One soldier had carved the Knights of Columbus logo on the wall of a limestone cave, and a cast of that piece was on display.

Near the end of that exhibit was a large display devoted to Father John B. DeValles, the “Angel of the Trenches.”  Father DeValles was born in the Azores in 1879 and immigrated to the U.S. with his parents as a young child.  He served as a parish priest in New Bedford, Massachusetts.  When the war began, he was appointed as the Knights of Columbus chaplain attached to the 104th Regiment of the 26th Infantry Division and was one of the first K of C chaplains to arrive in France.  Later he was commissioned as a chaplain in the regular U.S. Army.  He often entered No-Man’s Land to search for wounded and dying Allied and German soldiers.  Father John, as he was known to the troops, risked his life on many occasions.  Once, he did not return to the trenches, and searchers found him unconscious and wounded next to a dead soldier whom he had been trying to help.  His injuries damaged his health, and although he survived to return to the U.S., he died from complications of his wounds in May 1920.  He was only 41 at the time.  He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Croix de Guerre, and the Legion of Honor.  General Edwards, who presented the Distinguished Service Cross posthumously said that he had known men as brave as Father DeValles but not braver.  Photos and a summary of his service can be seen on this video of a recent Massachusetts National Guard ceremony honoring him.

After the World War I exhibit, we strolled through the Christmas in Poland exhibit.  There were some beautiful creches of a type known as szopka, commonly made in and around Krakow. They are shaped like miniature churches, often with multiple floors, and contain nativity figures and other scenes inside them.  Some looked a bit like dollhouses, open to show the rooms and figures inside.  In addition to szopkas from Poland, the museum also displayed many made by local Connecticut students, as part of a competition sponsored by Polish cultural groups.

The museum is free, and it offers free parking under the building.  Donations are welcome, of course.  It is fully accessible.  Staff were numerous, cheerful, and helpful.  We really enjoyed our visit, and to any Knights who read our blog, we say thanks for supporting this excellent facility.

Art Sampler

San Diego Museum of Art
Balboa Park
January 6, 2019

Our first museum trip of 2019 echoed our 2018 start. We used our Balboa Park Explorer passes to visit the San Diego Museum of Art. This time we concentrated our attention on two temporary exhibitions. The first showcased World War I propaganda posters; the second featured early 20th century prints that are not often displayed, due to light sensitivity.

We also spent some time in the permanent collection, viewing the gallery with European devotional art. El Greco is one of Meredith’s favorite artists, and his painting The Penitent St. Peter hangs at the entrance to that room. Further inside the room we got into a spirited discussion with a fellow enthusiast, comparing notes about the historic St. Nicholas, 4th century bishop of Myra, whose legend has evolved in odd ways to become the modern Santa Claus.

Family Holiday

Timken Museum of Art
Balboa Park
December 28, 2018

We closed out 2018 with a trip to our favorite local museum, the Timken. It was a banner week for us because all three daughters, our son in law, and our new grandchild all visited together, overlapping by several days.

We first bought lunches from food trucks and ate out on the Plaza de Panama.

We then strolled through the Timken Museum lobby, looking at the hand made holiday decorations which were hanging both overhead and on the large tree at the back of the lobby.  They are an annually recurring exhibit, Jewels of the Season.

We next viewed the special exhibition of Rococo art.  (It closed a few days after our visit.)

We then dispersed to enjoy the permanent collection, particularly the Russian icons and San Diego’s only Rembrandt, “Saint Bartholomew.”  He is back in town after being loaned out to museums elsewhere.

The Timken offers free admission, so it is a great option for the thrifty or an easy add-on to other activities in Balboa Park.  Donations are welcomed and encouraged, however.

The next special exhibit at the Timken will be Metonymies: A Dialogue with 20th Century Works from the Sonnabend Collection, which runs from February 8 through April 28. We plan to visit again soon.

Opted Outside

Batiquitos Lagoon
Carlsbad
November 23, 2018

We took part in the REI “Opt Outside” movement, and hiked the Batiquitos Lagoon on Black Friday morning.

The outing gave us a chance to practice with our digital camera, but the photos posted here were taken on Meredith’s iPhone for convenience.

The hike out to the end of the trail, which runs along the North side of the lagoon, is almost entirely flat. The total distance out and back was three miles. We saw a snowy egret and a great heron, and many smaller birds. We stopped in the small visitors center at the West end of the lagoon when we returned, and found good displays about local wildlife and indigenous people of the area.

Speed!

San Diego Air and Space Museum
Balboa Park
November 12, 2018

We took advantage of the Veterans Day Monday holiday, which Bob had off work, to visit the special exhibition at the Air and Space Museum, Speed: Science in Motion. We had been alerted by a Union Tribune article to the fact that the original Bullitt Mustang would be on display there, just from November 4-19. Meredith is an avid Mustang fan, so this was a “must see” for us.

Two different Mustangs were used in filming the 1968 Steve McQueen movie. The one used in the stunt jumps was damaged in filming and sent to a salvage yard. The “hero” Mustang used in other scenes was purchased by a private party and only recently rediscovered. We found a bonus when we arrived at the museum. Next to the Bullitt Mustang was displayed a beautifully restored Dodge Charger of the same vintage as the one seen in the movie’s chase scene. We had not actually seen Bullitt until that weekend; we made a point of streaming the movie a few days before our visit, so we would appreciate what we saw.

Although Steve McQueen’s Mustang has moved on and is no longer on display at the museum, the Speed exhibit remains. It is displays what the museum describes as “an exciting lineup of the fastest planes, jets, rockets, cars, motorcycles, boats, bicycles in the world.” We saw the land speed record setting bicycle ridden by Denise Mueller-Korenek behind a pace car to a world record of 183.9 miles per hour, and a Formula One race car, among other high speed vehicles. There are hands-on displays, such as a model differential, a video timing reflexes, and model cars that can be sent down tracks. The school kids who were enjoying the day off were entranced by the hands-on activities and could not have cared less about the Bullitt car.

After leaving the Speed exhibit, we walked through the rest of the museum. The PSA area brought back memories for Meredith, who used to fly PSA between the Bay Area and Los Angeles in the 1970’s.

We were wearing our memorial Veterans Day poppies, as we had been for several days. When we were in Canada for Remembrance Day four years ago we were struck by how poppies were everywhere, on every lapel. Since then we have tried to do our bit to revive the poppy wearing custom in our country, distributing Buddy Poppies obtained from the VFW to our friends and acquaintances.

We lingered in the World War I area, reading about the primitive planes used in that war and the men that flew them, then moved on to the World War II displays.

Our Balboa Park Explorer passes were sufficient for museum admission, but we had to pay an extra $5 for admission to the Speed exhibit.

Woolsey Fire

Paramount Ranch
Santa Monica Mountains
November 11, 2018

Once again Santa Ana winds are driving devastating wildfires in California. The Woolsey Fire started in Thousand Oaks, jumped the 101, and spread south and east, all the way to Malibu and West Hills. Meredith’s alma mater, Taft High School in Woodland Hills, is being used as an evacuation center. Friday brought the news that a place we had been with Margaret — Paramount Ranch’s Western Town, in the Santa Monica Mountain Nature Reserve — was destroyed.

Many films and television shows have been filmed in the area from the 1920’s on, not only on the Paramount Ranch property but also in nearby areas once owned by other studios. Films shot at least in part on the Paramount Ranch included numerous Westerns, especially in the 1920’s and 30’s, the Marx Brothers’ Horse Feathers (1932), Beau Geste (1939), The Love Bug (1968) and its sequels, and more recently American Sniper (2014). The Western Town part of the ranch included about 20 wooden structures built as a movie set in the 1950’s. That set was used for various productions for several decades, including the current HBO series Westworld and the television show Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman in the 1990’s.

We took Meredith’s mother Margaret there in 2015. It was a little challenging pushing her wheelchair on the uneven ground, but fun to walk through the “town” and see the set buildings up close. Our earlier post can be seen here.

The destruction of some movie sets, however historic, is trivial compared to the loss of lives and homes, still to be tallied up, but it makes the fire’s effect more real somehow, to know that a place we visited has been obliterated.

Ghostly Inheritance

Inheritance
University of California, San Diego
October 26, 2018

On the Friday before Halloween, we went to see the second performance of a new chamber opera, Inheritance. It was timely for the season and the political debates of the day — the story revolves around Sarah Winchester, the widow of a scion of the Winchester Arms’ Winchesters, who MAY have been haunted in her life by the ghosts of those killed by Winchester rifles, or perhaps the spirit of the baby daughter whose death she mourned. The focal point of the piece, the “inheritance,” is the famous Winchester Mystery House, in San Jose, California. The house is an oddity, with a “door to nowhere,” useless staircases, and other weird spaces. Mrs. Winchester kept building for years, and the question arose as to what was she doing: seeking to atone, distracting herself, or trying her hand as an architect in a time that did not allow that of women? The opera explores a couple of these ideas.

Neither of us approaches modern art with a lot of enthusiasm; we love to quote Charles Ryder’s dictum that Modern Art is “great bosh.” We were pleasantly surprised that we enjoyed the music as much as we did. We had just seen a preview piece about the world premiere of the opera in the San Diego Union Tribune the Sunday before. We thought we would take a chance on it.

The composer is Lei Liang, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. The production was staged in the Experimental Theater space in the Conrad Prebys Music Center on the campus by ArtPower, an organization that promotes the arts at UCSD. The producer of the show also sang the lead role. Susan Narucki teaches at UCSD. She gave a fine performance in a role that called for strong singing and declaiming—the monologue at the end of the opera was movingly presented.

The other singers were also very good. They played roles that drifted back and forth from the real world to the ghostly, as modern day humans leading or taking tours of the house and as spirits confronting or communing with Sarah. The “tour guide” was strongly portrayed by Josué Cerón , who also did a nice job interpolating some cliché “guide humor” in his tour. The two supporting role female vocalists, Kirsten Ashley Wiest and Hillary Jean Young, who are both graduate students working with Narucki, were very good in their roles as well, as tourists, ghosts of the slain, or at one point the dead child of Sarah.

The rest of the production was also gripping and interesting. Visually, there was great reliance on scrims. Bob has not liked scrims very much when we have seen them used at San Diego Opera in the past, but here they were quite effective. The singers moved them from time to time, to frame the story or redefine the space. They were also used as backdrops for projected images. Almost all of the lyrics were projected on the scrims, which is helpful even in English language opera. Bob particularly liked the textile-like wallpapers that appeared on a couple of occasions. We also saw the Mystery House and lots of falling objects, particularly chairs. That aspect had an air of the Terry Gilliam Monty Python’s Flying Circus animation about it, but it emphasized Sarah’s potential motivation, of the piling up of guilt over the death of gun victims. Aurally, the musicians did a terrific job with a complicated and somewhat improvised piece. The percussionists under the stage were quite busy, shouting the numbers of the dead as well as playing the many instruments called for by the composer. The wind players alternated clarinets and bass clarinets, and the guitarist had opportunities to display his fine Spanish-style guitar skills. The artist on the bass violin seemed to be having lots of fun slapping and plucking and bowing and sawing his instrument, with a couple of virtuoso improvisations.

The opera was performed only three times; we hope it is revived so more people get a chance to see it.

A review of the world premiere performance from the Union-Tribune can be found here.

For those who are more interested in the building and its backstory than in the new opera, we recommend the coverage on 99 Percent Invisible. Roman Mars writes:

The widely accepted narrative about Sarah Winchester, and the one that the current owners of the house are selling, is that she was haunted by spirits. But not everyone is buying it. Historian Mary Jo Ignoffo explores alternative theories about Sarah Winchester in her book, Captive of the Labyrinth.

Ignoffo found no evidence supporting the idea that Sarah Winchester communed with spirits. She believes that what drove Sarah Winchester to build was her desire to be an architect.

Sarah Winchester lived at time when it was highly unusual for women to be architects. She wasn’t licensed, so her own home was the perfect place—and the only place—where she could practice architecture.

Whatever her motivations were, Sarah Winchester built a house with more than 150 rooms, 2000 doors, 47 fireplaces, 40 bedrooms, 40 staircases, 17 chimneys, 13 bathrooms, six kitchens, three elevators, two basements, and one shower. She spent nearly all of her life being an architect.