f/k/a archives . . . real opinions & real haiku

August 25, 2005

the mosquito’s feast

Filed under: pre-06-2006 — David Giacalone @ 6:56 pm

 

 

sheets

on the clothesline

the wind curves

 

 

 







 

breadwine neg

 

 






porch dinner

a mosquito feasts

on my date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

summer twilight

the red barn’s roof line

sags with age

 

 

 

 

 









Milky Way –

carefully she spreads

the quilt

 

 

 

 

barnG  Yu Chang 

“Milky Way” & “porch dinner” – Upstate Dim Sum (2001/II)

“sheets” –   A New Resonance (1999); South by Southeast 3:4

“summer twilight” – A New ResonanceModern Haiku XXVII:3

 

 







 

backyard bocce –


tonight we’re

the noisy neighbors

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

grandpa’s smile

vanishes —

one flattened tomato plant

 

 

 

dog black

 

 

 

 


 

 

the red ball is closest —

sunset distracts

the green team

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 





twilight 

not even the dog

can find the pallina

 

 

 





 

 





girls against guys —

who knew

white wine improves your aim?

 

 

[Aug. 25, 2005]

                                                                                    

 

potluck


wrong way smN Not In My Vista! Most of my friends are thoughtful liberals.  They take for

granted that wind energy is a very good thing.  Although they would scream like hell

if someone wanted to put a Wal-Mart (or another Starbucks) in their neighborhoods,

they seem to have no problem with windfarms being located next door to their country

cousins.  Because my brother, Arthur J. Giacalone, represents a number of clients who

would prefer to keep noisy and unsightly masses of windmills and wind-turbines away

from their rural homes and out of their vistas, I’ve thought about this more than my urban

friends.   This article from today’s Buffalo News — “Sheldon residents sue town over

turbines” (Aug. 25, 2005) — tells of one suit brought by lawyer Giacalone, and suggests

some reasonable provisions that would allow the wind energy industry to grow, while

protecting the rural character and the scenic vistas and viewscapes in the countryside.




  • Aren’t there a lot of mountain tops and ridges that have

    already been ruined by strip-mining?  Why couldn’t we

    focus major wind-energy projects in those areas?

tiny check I was amused this evening to find my post on Kinky & Callahan at the top

of the Topix.netKinky Friedman News” page.  I also found a number of interesting

articles about Kinky, including this one from CBSNews (with details of a Lee Cowan

interview dealing mostly with Kinky’s politics and his former band), and this one from This

Week News, which describes Kinky’s 17th mystery novel, Ten Little New Yorkers, (which

looks like the end of the line for his Kinky Friedman doppelganger character) and explains

that Richard “Kinky” Friedman is really serious about being the governor of Texas, even if

humor is his main weapon.  As Kinky explains:


“kinkyMug”  getty photo    “Make no mistake, just because humor is the weapon

that I  use to joust at the windmill, that doesn’t mean I’m not going to knock it down.

Will Rogers and Mark Twain were very important cultural leaders in this country,

even though they weren’t in politics. So humor is just a device for sailing as close

to the truth as you can without sinking the ship.”

 

                                                                                                                          bocciN

the mosquito’s feast (and bocce feats)

Filed under: pre-06-2006 — David Giacalone @ 6:56 pm

sheets

on the clothesline

the wind curves

 

 

 

 

breadwine neg

 

 

porch dinner

a mosquito feasts

on my date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

summer twilight

the red barn’s roof line

sags with age

 

 

 

 

 

Milky Way –

carefully she spreads

the quilt

 

 

barnG Yu Chang

“Milky Way” & “porch dinner” – Upstate Dim Sum (2001/II)

“sheets” – A New Resonance (1999); South by Southeast 3:4

“summer twilight” – A New Resonance; Modern Haiku XXVII:3

 










backyard bocce –



tonight we’re


the noisy neighbors









grandpa’s smile


vanishes —


one flattened tomato plant





dog black









the red ball is closest —


sunset distracts


the green team














twilight


not even the dog


can find the pallina















girls against guys —


who knew


white wine improves your aim?




[Aug. 25, 2005]




potluck



wrong way smN Not In My Vista! Most of my friends are thoughtful liberals. They take for


granted that wind energy is a very good thing. Although they would scream like hell


if someone wanted to put a Wal-Mart (or another Starbucks) in their neighborhoods,


they seem to have no problem with windfarms being located next door to their country


cousins. Because my brother, Arthur J. Giacalone, represents a number of clients who


would prefer to keep noisy and unsightly masses of windmills and wind-turbines away


from their rural homes and out of their vistas, I’ve thought about this more than my urban


friends. This article from today’s Buffalo News — “Sheldon residents sue town over


turbines” (Aug. 25, 2005) — tells of one suit brought by lawyer Giacalone, and suggests


some reasonable provisions that would allow the wind energy industry to grow, while


protecting the rural character and the scenic vistas and viewscapes in the countryside.


  • Aren’t there a lot of mountain tops and ridges that have

    already been ruined by strip-mining? Why couldn’t we

    focus major wind-energy projects in those areas?


tiny check I was amused this evening to find my post on Kinky & Callahan at the top


of the Topix.netKinky Friedman News” page. I also found a number of interesting


articles about Kinky, including this one from CBSNews (with details of a Lee Cowan


interview dealing mostly with Kinky’s politics and his former band), and this one from This


Week News, which describes Kinky’s 17th mystery novel, Ten Little New Yorkers, (which


looks like the end of the line for his Kinky Friedman doppelganger character) and explains


that Richard “Kinky” Friedman is really serious about being the governor of Texas, even if


humor is his main weapon. As Kinky explains:



“kinkyMug” getty photo “Make no mistake, just because humor is the weapon


that I use to joust at the windmill, that doesn’t mean I’m not going to knock it down.


Will Rogers and Mark Twain were very important cultural leaders in this country,


even though they weren’t in politics. So humor is just a device for sailing as close


to the truth as you can without sinking the ship.”



bocciN

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