pic o’ the day: Golden Bug Hot Spring, Oregon

From the 2005 winners of the National Geographic Photography competition, by Ying-Chen (Julia) Lin

Golden Bug Hot Springs, Oregon

 

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panic in Latvia!!!

Boar-ing!Citizens in Riga, the capital of Latvia reported that a “wild boar” (a very bristly, scrawny, runty-looking kinda pig) had escaped from its pen, that’s how wild it was, it lived in a pen – I guess it’s wild the way Christopher Hitchens is Jewish – and was marauding through the Lavian countryside and even cityside, trotting happily through back lanes, parking illegally, scaring lapdogs, and poking its snout into people’s yards.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking, but where does Metro come into this?

Right here: regardless of his claims of Celticism, he must in fact be Latvian, since his reflexes so perfectly mirror those of these obscure Balkananianses: they called the SWAT team.

From Yahoo via Fark.

RIGA (AFP) – A police SWAT unit was called out to a gas station in the Latvian capital early Friday after a wild boar was spotted wandering around the facility.

“We received a call at about 2:00 am (0000 GMT) and sent out special operations unit ‘Alfa’,” state police spokesman Aigars Berzins told AFP Friday.

“The boar was about three years old and had wandered in from a wild animal yard,” he said.

Such yards are becoming more and more popular in Latvia, and are often set up in wooded suburban areas near big cities.

“The wild hog had broken the fence and got out. It was not afraid of humans at all,” Berzins said. [but not, apparently, vice versa]

Without using either special weapons or tactics — the first letters of which give SWAT units their name — the elite police unit rounded up the boar and took it back to the yard.

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the fudgsicle of doom! #1 in a series of jobs you do NOT want

The Golden Spruce, yoIn the presumably long list of Jobs You Do Not Want, Seriously, the job of backwoods logger looms large, or should. Why? Allow me to tell you the story of Hal Beek, heartlessly stolen from John Vaillant’s excellent book The Golden Spruce. I love books like this which are loaded with scientific trivia and anecdotal illustrations while looking at what a particular incident says about our culture at large; the best of these is Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm, some factoids from which I can still recite from memory.

Also, Junger is purty.

Some background material, just to put things in perspective: logging towns are known to post signs listing how many days the mill workforce has gone without injury, and double digits are cause for celebration. Woohoo! For one clue as to why, Vaillant lists one logger’s typical breakfast: 17 boiled and peeled eggs and one cup of Cutty Sark.

Under ideal conditions, chainsaws function like noisy butter knives: one can buck up a large tree using only the weight of the saw and the pressure of one’s trigger finger. But they will also take off a man’s limbs as fast as a tree’s. Given the right combination of opposing forces, they can behave like Ninja helicopters, and their tremendous power encourages a dangerously casual attitude toward smaller trees. A faller named Hal Beek discovered this in the worst way imaginable while working a setting on the west coast of Vancouver Island in 1998. Unlike second-growth tree plantations, which are usually monocultural groves all the same age, most old-growth forests contain trees from every stage of life; in between the giants are other aspirants of various sizes, including hundreds of saplings. As he travels from one big tree to the next, a faller will often use his saw like a slow-moving machete, swinging it back and forth in front of him – motor by the hip, blade angled toward the ground – to clear a path for himself. However, by cutting these smaller trees on a bevel rather than flat, the faller leaves a trail of “pig’s ears” – pointed stumplets – behind him. Beek had cut a trail through a stand in order to get at a windfall cedar about two metres in diameter, and while standing atop the fallen trunk, he reached over and cut off another nearby sapling, leaving behind a pig’s ear about a metre and a half high. It was raining (as usual) and while Beek was bucking up the cedar, he slipped backward on some moss and impaled himself on this living spear; it entered through his rectum and didn’t stop until it reached his spine. At that point, his toes were just touching the ground.

Fallers who have lost limbs to saws and shearing trees generally describe the experience as feeling like a “bump”; the real pain tends to come later. But an injury such as Beek‘s is different; the pain he felt was instantaneous and indescribable. Every motion, even his attempts to call for help, would have been an agony unto itself – the kind that would make most people pass out. Making matters worse was the fact that his legs were already fully extended: there was no way to free himself, and every movement risked driving the stake in further. Fallers generally work in pairs for safety reasons, and it is now customary for partners to call out to each other if they don’t hear the other one’s saw running, but Beek‘s partner was of the old school and he was oblivious; he heard neither Beek‘s shouts nor his emergency whistle. Beek realized that if he couldn’t save himself, and quickly, he was going to bleed to death. Somehow he found it in himself to restart his saw, manoeuvre its thirty-six inch bar behind him, and cut himself free – without amputating his feet, or collapsing back on the sapling or the saw. Then, with the metre-long stave still inside him, Beek crawled a hundred metres up an embankment, through heavy brush to a logging road. By the time the helicopter came, his friends were calling him Fudgsicle. After three months spent attached to a colostomy bag, and another three in rehab, he went back falling.

Hey, a man’s gotta make a living, eh?

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Princess Mulan speaks

Princess Mulan

It’s not easy being a princess (tell me aboudit), particularly when one is a Disney Princess. We all know the rigors that American Imperialism can subject one to when one is, say, Iraqi or Navajo, but I beg you to indulge me as I lay out for you the innumerable small sufferings that are the lot of the Disney Princess.

I met her at a Christmas Eve dinner. She was young, she was beautiful and she was no longer, although she had been, Princess Mulan on a Disney Caribbean cruise.

She was still in recovery.

Naturally, the world is in thrall to the glamour of cruising through the Caribbean; however, when asked to describe the crew’s living quarters she paused thoughtfully and long. Eventually she sighed and volunteered that they resembled “some kind of internment camp, really.”

Talk about living the dream.

For two hours, twice a day, she was a Princess, and for the rest of the time she was a dangerous free radical that had to be contained in the belly of the ship, lest she blow up some poor, chubby, suburbanite’s kid’s dream.

And so…

When the ship docked, which was often, Caribbean islands being accustomed to company and clustering together for immoral support, the passengers would go ashore. And so would the entertainers, having no-one left to entertain but the skeleton crew, and as anyone knows, skeletons are not easily entertained, particularly when they’ve seen your “Milton Bearle as Ace Ventura, Pet Detective” routine a hundred times already.

But…

If you are known far and wide on the ship as Princess Mulan, you can hardly be seen sneaking ashore hung over, wearing a ratty death metal t-shirt and cutoffs, leaning on the arm of some stevedore you picked up last night at closing time. Little Timmy’s dreams, and more importantly, Big Timmy’s dreams, must be protected. Because we all know who pays for those gowns, sweetie.

So, every time the ship docked, Princess Mulan would layer on more pancake makeup than Marlene Dietrich, don a wig that would shame a drag queen, plop on dinner plate-sized sunglasses, wrap her throat in a scarf, and hope to sneak ashore looking totally unremarkable, like a five-foot-nothing Asian replica of Greta Fucking Garbo.

Still, every damn time some smartass parent would ask, “So, aren’t you Princess Mulan?”

A Downtown EastSide Christmas

Ho, ho, hotels all over the Downtown EastSide keep Christmas in their own unique ways. Unlike the Chinese restaurants that simply layer new tinsel over the old and leave the whole spangly mess up all year round, the hotels and flophouses, to be fair, do try to get into the spirit of things at the time, each in its own way.

The Patricia, flyer of the Red Ensign, bastion of respectability, old-fashioned refinement, microbrewed house beer, and sad old run-down gentlemen who still stand when a lady walks into the pub:

The Patricia, Ho, ho, ho!

 

The Drake, a somewhat different establishment:

The Drake and its hos.