Monday, August 31, 2009

Seeing Stripes

The Grevy's Zebra from the African Savanna at the Toronto Zoo. IMO the best pictures I took on the visit. They were so close to the fence you could hear their breathing.





Grevy’s zebras are the largest of the zebras. Grevy’s zebra has a long narrow head, broad, rounded tufted ears and a relatively short, strong neck. The eyes are large round and heavily fringed. Grevy’s zebra has incisors that they use to clip grass and numerous cheek-teeth that grind their food.

Zebras rely largely on their sense of sight and hearing. Large eyes set far back on the head give a wide field of view. The large ears can rotate to pick up sounds from many directions. The zebra’s stripes are used as a camouflage to hide the zebra from its predators. The stripes on a moving zebra serve as a disruptive pattern, confusing a pursuing predator. Long legs and hooves help the animal to run fast.

A zebra can run up to 64 km/h. Speed is its only defense from predators (lions, cheetahs, and hyenas) whom it can outrun over long distances. As a response to the sparse plant life in their habitat, Grey's zebras usually do not form stable herds and only congregate during periods when they must migrate to find grazing or water. Mature males will defend fairly large breeding territories (5.75 sq km) for many years and stay in them even when living conditions become very harsh.

The zebras are endangered because of hunting for skin and meat and loss of grazing habitat and access to water, due to competition with increasing herds of domestic livestock. Additional threats are due to reduced river flow, due to irrigation, and uncontrolled tourism in reserves, which causes disturbance and destruction of vegetation

Friday, August 28, 2009

Mr. Pig

"You talking to me? You talking to me? They call me 'Mr. Pig.' Ahhh!"

Red River Hog from the African Rainforest.

Warthog from the African Savanna.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Project Runway - Episode 1

I am a huge fan of Project Runway and I am so thankful it is finally back on the air after a much-too-long hiatus.

There were some legal issues when the producing company tried to switch PR from Bravo to Lifetime. Thankfully, it has since been settled and now I can watch Tim Gunn, Heidi Klum, Michael Kors, and Nina Garcia.

Last week was the premier of Season 6.

The winner was Christopher Straub, from Minnesota, who created this "runway look" challenge without any formal design/sewing training. This "cute and edgy" look could have "done with less ruffles," as the judges said and I would have like to also see the ruffles with a brighter pop of color. But this look was fun with an attitude, perfect for a young Hollywood starlet.


Johnny Sakalis, who brought the drama to the last episode with his crying breakdown, is a recovering addict and who came in second in episode 1's challenge with his flowing, red number.

The first designer to be kicked off the show was Ari Fish. This avant garde designer didn't sketch her design, but rather did yoga and meditation to come up with her "space suit" look. Auf Wiedersehen!

Perez Hilton's lookalike, Mitchell Hall, did not get kicked off, but his nearly naked look earned him no fans on the judges panel. Maybe his design could have looked better, but his model's measurements were wrong and he had to begin from scratch after she tried on the look.

What was your favorite look?
Did Designer Fish deserve to go home?
Will you be watching the show tonight?

Monkeying Around

Some of the many monkeys at the Toronto Zoo.

Mama and baby baboons.

Another baby amusing itself.

Moon from the Olive Baboons!

Baby Sumatran Orangutans playing around.

And another monkey (can't remember its name) just chilling by the water.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Ain't I a Woman?

Today, August 26, we celebrate the 19th Amendement's adoption.

Many women fought for our right to vote, but few had the courage to speak at meetings.

One speech that inspired me is "Ain't I a Woman?" delivered extemporaneously by Sojourner Truth at the Women's Convention in Akron, Ohio in 1851.

I also love this first-hand account before Sojourner took the stage.

As we celebrate 89 years of voting privilages for women, please read her speech. The following is rendered in a modern dialect (since Sojourner's first language was Dutch and the dialect is difficult to read):

Well, children, where there is so much racket there must be something out of kilter. I think that 'twixt the Negroes of the South and the women at the North, all talking about rights, the white men will be in a fix pretty soon. But what's all this here talking about?

That man over there says that women need to be helped into carriages, and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place everywhere. Nobody ever helps me into carriages, or over mud-puddles, or gives me any best place! And ain't I a woman? Look at me! Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me! And ain't I a woman? I could work as much and eat as much as a man - when I could get it - and bear the lash as well! And ain't I a woman? I have borne thirteen children, and seen them most all sold off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief, none but Jesus heard me! And ain't I a woman?

Then they talk about this thing in the head; what's this they call it? [member of audience whispers, "intellect"] That's it, honey. What's that got to do with women's rights or negroes' rights? If my cup won't hold but a pint, and yours holds a quart, wouldn't you be mean not to let me have my little half measure full?

Then that little man in black there, he says women can't have as much rights as men, 'cause Christ wasn't a woman! Where did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from? From God and a woman! Man had nothing to do with Him.

If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world upside down all alone, these women together ought to be able to turn it back, and get it right side up again! And now they is asking to do it, the men better let them.

Obliged to you for hearing me, and now old Sojourner ain't got nothing more to say.


Sojourner Truth isn't the only woman we have to thank for this right.

There were so many other inspiring, brave ladies who fought tirelessly for the simple ability to be able place a name on a ballot.

Thank you to: (Links are to wikipedia entries if you would like to find out more about their importance to the suffrage movement.)

Susan B. Anthony
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Alice Paul
Lucy Burns
Lucy Stone
Lucretia Mott
Mary Ann M'Clintock
Alice Stone Blackwell
Rachel Foster
Julia Ward Howe
Josephine Ruffin
Carrie Chapman Catt
Anna Howard Shaw
Julia Ward Howe
Josephine Ruffin
May Wright Sewall
Olympia Brown
Julia Ward Howe
Hannah Tracy Cutler
Maud Wood Park
Lydia Chapin (Taft)
Frances Wright
Ernestine Rose
Paulina Kellogg Wright Davis
Abby Kelley Foster
Virginia Minor
Victoria Woodhull
Belva Lockwood

Add Some Roo

Kangaroo at the Toronto Zoo.





While we all were standing on the path with other zoo visitors watching this cute animal hope around and roll on the ground, Kate says, "Mmm. And they taste so good."
So wrong.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Back

The students have returned...


Watch out because I'm playing! Pedestrians worth 10 points.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Monster Monday: Creative Unemployment

This article offers advice not just for the unemployed but also people who are looking for ways to make or save a little extra.
Young Workers Find Creative Ways to Cope with Unemployment, Hard Economic Times
By Matt Villano, Monster Contributing Writer 

When Erik Moser was laid off from his job in public relations in January 2009, he improvised to keep his finances afloat.
He scaled back on eating out. He picked up a few odd jobs, like babysitting for his sister and dog walking for friends. He even got out of the lease on his Chicago apartment and moved back in with his parents. “Is the situation ideal? Not by a long shot, but desperate times call for desperate measures,” he says. “I’ve done what I’ve had to do to live until I can get back to work.”
Moser, 26, isn’t the only person getting creative with money these days. As more and more Americans find themselves underemployed or out of work -- at last check, 14.5 million were unemployed -- growing numbers of people are resorting to similarly creative methods to pay the bills.
For some, many of these coping mechanisms revolve around second or third jobs, as well as light work for family and friends. Others, however, have adopted less conventional strategies. See if any of their ideas could also work for you.
Teach What You Know
While working as a technical director for a small theater company in New York City, Matt Klan has generated “a good amount” of income by teaching small classes in different stage techniques.
So far, Klan has taught two-day classes in Wisconsin, Maine and North Carolina. Most of the classes focus on stage combat (i.e., stunt fighting). Klan, 33, advertises the workshops on Facebook, Craigslist and other Web sites and gets deals on rehearsal spaces for about $10 to $25 per hour.
“The classes don’t generate a ton of money, but it’s enough to travel a couple times a year,” says Klan, who has another side job working in the engineering and construction management field. “I also get the chance to hone my craft [and] introduce people to new things.”
Klan also benefits from the networking involved. In the last few months, he has been asked to teach the classes at a number of universities as well.
Can’t Make Rent?
It’s Party Time Another creative option for making ends meet is the rent party, in which guests chip in to help the host pay his rent.
Historically, rent parties, or “skiffles,” were social occasions in vogue during the 1920s and 1930s where tenants hired musicians or bands to play, and passed the hat to raise rent money. Cary Wintz, author of Harlem Speaks: A Living History of the Harlem Renaissance, says that as African Americans moved to the city from the South, they needed help paying the rent on their high-priced apartments.
Some of the original rent parties were legendary, with musicians such as Fats Waller and Speckled Red playing regularly.
Nowadays, the names of the performers at these events aren’t quite as big. And aside from booze (of course), entertainment isn’t required. Indeed, many party-throwers unabashedly bill their cover charges as nothing more than a way to help pay the rent.
In April 2009, Zandile Blay, market editor at Paper magazine, held a weekend rent party at her apartment in Hoboken, New Jersey, to fund one month of her $2,400 rent. Blay didn’t have a minimum cover charge; instead, she simply asked partygoers to give whatever they could.
“Everyone, and I mean everyone, knows that you are broke,” she wrote in a recent email, adding that in many cases, friends who can help are more than happy to do so.
The first night of the party was a smashing success, while attendance on the other two nights was a little “disappointing,” she said. While the party earned Blay some money -- she declined to say how much exactly -- it wasn’t enough to make ends meet.
Still, she had a happy ending: A former mentor who couldn’t make the party wrote her a check to cover her rent for a month.
“It was a loan with no time limit,” she explained. “It totally shocked me and inspired me to pay it forward -- after I pay him back, of course.”
Making the Best of It
While many of these strategies represent proactive steps toward coping with the current economic climate, most people admit they are simply making the best of a bad situation.
Back in Chicago, for instance, Moser notes that income from babysitting and dog walking has enabled him to pay his bills, but he says that if he didn’t have the “luxury” of moving back in with his parents, he might still be struggling.
He adds that living with Mom and Dad again has had its ups and downs -- a situation that requires everyone to be patient and keep a positive attitude about the future.
“Free rent, few expenses -- through other people’s eyes, my situation seems like it should be pretty good,” he says. “The truth is that after [five] months of unemployment, I just want a job so I can feel like I am earning my keep.”

Friday, August 21, 2009

GNO - Girls Night Out

Today marks the second bachelorette weekend of the summer.

Nikkie is getting married in less than a month and we are taking her on a secret girls' weekend (secret only to her).

But per her request, we made new matching shirts. Here's the decal:

(I bought these at A.C. Moore for $1/iron-on.)
With our rocking shirts, we are going to hit the town in style. What town you wonder? Stay tuned. Next week, after we reveal the location to Nikkie, and celebrate her upcoming wedding, I will post about our trip.
I am really looking forward to the location. I hope she likes it too!

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Bye Bye, Miss American Pie

Hello, Miss Blueberry Pie.

Last week my mom delivered a lunchtime treat to me at work.

Homemade Blueberry Pie a la mode. (My Favorite!)

So Yummy! Is your mouth watering? Cuz mine is.

Thanks, Mom!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Acronyms

I think I must be getting older. I am discovering many acronyms on the internet (whether on Twitter or Facebook or other sites) that I am unaware of the meaning.

Here are some new ones: (basically this post is for my own personal use, so I can refer back to this it when a following acronym is used).

SMH - Shaking My Head
FML - F*ck My Life (This one is a bit less recent, but still I had to Google it to find out it meaning)
FTW - For The Win
LAWL - Laughing Aloud With Laughter
TNF - Totally Not Funny

What other acronyms have sprouted up recently?



...And while we are on the subject of acronyms, how many of them do you use in normal conversation? I use quite a few they are:

BRB
WTF
IMO
BTW
CYA
JK
OMG
And the oldies but goodies: FYI, ASAP, and RSVP.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Lagoons - Take 2

This weekend I went for my second kayaking adventure in the Lagoons of Presque Isle.


This time I went with a couple of the girls, Amy and Staci.

On what felt like the first sunny, warm day of the summer, we definitely made the most of it.

So did the turtles. (Although I'm sure their sunbathing did not result in a sunburned back, like mine did.)

What a gorgous, relaxing, fun day!

Can't wait to go back to the beach again! This time with SPF 50.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Monster Monday: Branding Yourself

New Feature on my Blog, Monster Mondays, will feature interesting stories found on Monster.
Build Your Brand
By Barbara Reinhold, Monster Contributing Writer 

Who makes your favorite shoes or outfits? What beverage calls your name when you need a pick-me-up? Whose movies won't you miss? Whose help do you seek when you want a project done right, at home or at work?

All of these questions involve your reactions to a particular brand -- a collection of assumptions about quality, appeal and reliability that you've made in response to repeated experience with a variety of possible products, people or services. Here's the important thing: Whether you like to think about it or not, right now there are people thinking about your very own brand of whatever you are and do, and they're deciding if they want to make it one of their favorites.
International branding strategist Robin Fisher Roffer, author of
Make a Name for Yourself, suggests eight steps to help women develop and project their own brands.

Eight Essential Steps
1. Identify the primary "product" (service, resource, special ability, etc.) you have to offer others.
2. Identify your core values. What really matters to you?
3. Identify your passions. What things or ideas do you love?
4. Identify your talents. What have you always been recognized for (particularly as a kid)? What do you do better than most other people? What skills do people seem to notice in you?
5. From your hopefully long list of talents and qualities, choose the top five, the ones you do best and enjoy doing the most.
6. Weave the items on all your lists into a statement of your specialty. What are you particularly gifted at delivering?
7. Write a paragraph emphasizing your specialty and your five key talents, weaving in your most important values, passions and skills.
8. Now add a tag line to your brand.

The Tag Line Tells Your Story
A coach I know who consults by phone -- primarily helping six-figure earners work their way even further up the corporate ladder -- goes by this tag line: "A coach for successful people to help them be even more successful." A senior project manager working in the crossfire between the marketing group and packaging designers at a stressful manufacturing facility has developed this tag line: "An efficient problem solver who understands and enjoys both the creativity of designers and the practicality of marketers." My tag line for my counseling and coaching practice is this: "The permissionary -- a visionary realist to help you discover and manifest your dreams.

A tag line's shorthand helps other people remember a key point about you. At the Pioneer Valley of Massachusetts chapter of the
NAWBO (National Association of Women Business Owners) breakfast meetings, every member and guest stands up and introduces herself via her tag line, or verbal business card. In this organization, the women remember each other's tag lines as easily as their names, and after each month's meeting, hundreds of ripples go out about each of the women attending and what she has to offer. And it works for entrepreneurs and employees alike.

Get the Word Out
Once you've worked over your tag line and the other items on the list for a few days or weeks, it's time to take them public with someone you trust. Keeping them secret is a sure way to never act on them.

The road to career disappointment is littered with lists, dreams and goals never shared with anyone. So get your "brand me" musings out into the light of day to solicit support and constructive criticism from someone else. And you could be a brand advisor for that person in return. And it would be even better is you could get four or five women together regularly to encourage and critique each other's branding strategies and activities.

Creating and building your unique brand is an organic and ongoing process. So consider yourself and your career a work in progress, and reach out to get and give as much help as possible as your brand shifts and matures across the expanse of your career.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Burgh or Bust

Last weekend, I travelled to Pittsburgh for a long weekend.

Here's a quick recap:


Thursday night, I hosted a Penn State alumni concert and reception featuring YPC of Erie Summercamp.
Friday (first I watched KT get 14 inches chopped - and forgot to take a picture) and then we went to the Pirates game. In the 2 inning, the Pirates scored 2 homeruns - but those were the only fireworks during the game.
Saturday morning, I met college bud, Matt, at in the Strip for hotcakes at Pamela's Diner.
Saturday afternoon, Kt's family and I went to the Visionary Arts Festival, stood on Forbes Field home plate, and ate ice cream at Dave & Andy's.
Saturday everyone else joined us in Pittsburgh for KT and Mike's second wedding reception at the New Hazlett Theatre.
They had a photo booth, which made for lots of fun.
And an excuse for us girls to have fun with moustaches.

Great weekend in the Burgh! (Thanks to KT and Mike for letting me stay at their place for 4 days.)

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Runway Time

Project Runway is finally back!

Season 6 premiers in one week, Thursday, August 20 at 10 pm eastern on Lifetime.

Below is a trailer to tease:




And in case this video doesn't load for you, here is a link to watch it.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

No Longer Newlyweds

Two years ago, Staci and Shane got hitched.

Here are some pictures of their fun wedding and the beginning of their life together:

No PDA.

Cute.

Who Knows.

Squish.

Staci says "WTC?!"

Happy Anniversary, Staci and Shane!

You are no longer newlyweds. Congratulations!

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Another Day, Another Shower

Another one of the S.K.A.N.K.s is getting married soon. This past Saturday was her Bridal Shower held at the Sloppy Duck's back patio.

It was a lovely location and a beautiful day (one of the few we have had this summer). In the photo above the bride, bridesmaids, and maid of honor pose prior to the shower.

The gift from the girls was a pizza and cookies theme. Some of the things we got Nicole were:

An air bake pizza pan.
A piranha pizza cutter.


A cheese grater.
A nutrition food scale. (I thought the irony was funny.)


And, of course, something a little naughty wrapped inside an unused pizza box.
Congratulations, Nikkie! I can't wait to celebrate your wedding in a month!