UFOetry 3

A storm approaching Spokane
the lights began to flicker in my house.
...daylight with clouds )...
strong winds pushing...
birds scattering around.

a black shiny polished orb flies over
in a perfect trajectory flying S.E...
...in an orbit like the ISS.
Did not make a sound

((NUFORC Note:
We spoke via telephone with this witness, and
we found him to be both eloquent in his description
of the sighting event, and sincere. PD))

Sighting Report Occurred : 8/2/2014 18:22 (Entered as : 08/02/2014 18:22)
Reported: 8/2/2014 7:21:27 PM 19:21
Posted: 8/8/2014
Location: Spokane, WA
Shape: Sphere
Duration:30 seconds

UFOetry 2

Low rumbling...
hot air balloon pulling the gas handle.
Low rumbling sound
 like hot air balloon above my neighborhood

Occurred : 8/6/2014 04:30 (Entered as : 08/06/2014 04:30 AM)
Reported: 8/6/2014 1:02:47 PM 13:02
Posted: 8/8/2014
Location: Wichita, KS
Shape: Unknown
Duration:3-5 minutes

This is an edited entry at NuForc.org, a website committed to UFO sitings

UFOetry

 

Reflection light,
change direction...like golden light,
took picture looked different from what I saw.

...a comet coming towards earth,
the brightest golden light
when I snapped the picture  
it was a reflection of a light. 

Occurred : 8/1/2014 00:00 (Entered as : 08/01/14 0:00)
Reported: 8/2/2014 5:35:28 PM 17:35
Posted: 8/8/2014
Location: Murrieta, CA
Shape: Unknown
Duration:

 

Poetry from other places

I do not know where this has come from. I somehow ran into the NuForce.org site and found these amazing entries about ufo sightings and was struck by these simple, short stories--notations from plain, normal people who are trying to communicate something they had seen that they could not really understand as it is an "unknown". I found that by taking a little sharp knife to some of the hemming and hawing, poetry emerged that was sublime, simple and elegant. This pleases me to no end. So, I will continue to torture you with this new fun, Qproject.

Isn't manifesting itself in imagery (yet) but I am certainly looking at end of time illustrations from the middle ages, of shooting stars and other portents that earlier people used to describe things that they couldn't understand or rationalize during the time they were living. We often think of ourselves as being so smart, so superior, so scientific--but when it gets down to understanding or observing something that is not known, we waffle and try to make it make sense through science and vocabulary. But to those normal people, they liken these oddities to things they know and understand: nature, color, light, sound, speed. Don't get me wrong...as I have been falling down this UFO/ alien/ odd rabbit hole....there are things that are truly odd and to some degree both fascinating and frightening, I keep looking for answers that are not there...but to that, isn't it wonderful that today there are things that go beyond our knowledge--big things that we can only look and take it in. And puzzle.

I have learned about the Taos Hum, more broadly called The Hum. Lots of ideas of what it is and where it comes from, but the Hum emerges as related to UFOs. All I know is that its out there and no one can really figure it out. The Hum.info  defines the hum as: "strange humming or rumbling sound whose source they cannot find." There are the strange "end of times" groans that are heard in different locations from around the world

Then there is the Norwegian Spiral (sometimes called the Norwegian Spiral Anomaly (wiki)) (see above) which is another thing we have been trying our hardest to 'splain, but really, why does this spiral with a bright blue, twisted umbillical cord need explanation? Wikipedia tries in their set-up:

"The Norwegian spiral anomaly of 2009[1] appeared in the night sky over Norway[2] on 9 December 2009. It was visible from, and photographed from, northern Norway and Sweden. The spiral consisted of a blue beam of light with a greyish spiral emanating from one end of it. The light could be seen in all of Trøndelag to the south (the two red counties on the map to the right) and all across the three northern counties which compose Northern Norway,[3]as well as from Northern Sweden[1] and it lasted for 2–3 minutes.[3] According to sources, it looked like a blue light coming from behind a mountain, stopping in mid-air, and starting to spiral outwards.[4][5] A similar, though less spectacular event had also occurred in Norway the month before.[6] Both events had the expected visual features of failed flights of RussianSLBM RSM-56 Bulava missiles,[7][8] and the Russian Defense Ministry acknowledged shortly after that such an event had taken place on 9 December."

But you and I both know it's related to the aliens, and the man just isn't letting on. Right?
There is area 51 and the aliens, the autopsy aliens, the tall white aliens who confer with presidents and kings. There are marvelous light shows and ships, flashes and shapes that disappear in a wink. There are aliens that like vegetables, and ones that are not dependant on atmosphere and live underground. They can do anything and everything including build the pyramids, and act as our gods. Who is to say this is wrong or right? Maybe Joseph Smith had it right with Jesus being resurrected into the New World...and that the early American cultures were not primitive? 

Right now it's poetry for me.

Today's inspiration from NuForc.org

Red & green orbs in the sky defy aircraft movement over a field of ridge top windmills...

...they were sucking the power out of the windmills..
hovering over a field of windmills like bees hovering over flowers...


Occurred : 7/1/2014 02:30 (Entered as : 07/01/14 2:30)
Reported: 7/1/2014 1:35:44 AM 01:35
Posted: 7/4/2014
Location: Wyoming, PA
Shape: Circle
Duration:1 hour

 

poetry from my new favorite website

its was red orange and it changed its shape and just hoverd over the tree line

I saw the object over a tree line i dont know what it is i first thought i was the moon then i thought the moon doesn't rise in the west so i watched it for about 20 minutes. In the first 10 minutes its changed shape and i think i i saw the ground under in on a hill side flash for a second. And then after that it changed into a crescent shape and didnt do anything elts but sit in the sky at that spot for 10 more minutes. I eventually went to bed and when i left to go to bed it was still there.

 

Occurred : 4/16/2013 00:15 (Entered as : 4/16/13 0:15)
Reported: 4/15/2013 9:42:30 PM 21:42
Posted: 5/15/2013
Location: Johnsonville, NY
Shape: Changing
Duration:20 minutes

from the National UFO Reporting Center
State Report Index for New York

_________

Hovering steadily, burning like fire, starts to dim then disappears

Hovering mostly in one spot over a festival, burning very brightly like fire.

Then it started to dim and within seconds it was gone.

It was entirely silent.

 

Occurred : 7/12/2014 23:30 (Entered as : 07/12/14 23:30)
Reported: 7/16/2014 7:35:56 PM 19:35
Posted: 7/20/2014
Location: Saugerties, NY
Shape: Fireball
Duration:1-2 minutes

Reprise

There are quite a few things that are really wonderful about email and electronic communications like speed, ease, and regularity. Then, there are things like real communication which gets left at the doorstep as one cannot read anything into an email as there is no real time connection, no idea if things were flat or fabulous. It is all how you read the text and or read the entire context of the conversation. In my world, watching the client is key to really understanding what makes them tick. Case in point. The other newbie that sent me back to the drawingboard with an ad really LIKED the ads. Liked the attitude (a little smarty pantsy). Liked the graphics. And, she saw where it could go....so baby did not need to throw the poor baby right out of the bath water.

Let's just say, I was close to fist pumping and jumping up out of  my seat (pending my ankle cooperating) just in the sheer appeal that I had not missed it entirely. Phew.

And I quote the WSJ "The Finger Lakes region, where yogurt makers dot the landscape, has even been dubbed "The Silicon Valley of Yogurt."

 

New York's Boom in Yogurt Is Not So Sweet Yogurt in New York is Evolving From Sugar-Laden Fruit Flavors Toward Savory, Middle Eastern Flavors

By Nancy Matsumoto (direct link to the Wall Street Journal Online)
June 18, 2014 9:30 p.m. ET

 

At a SoHo cafe run by the yogurt maker Chobani, mini-iPad-toting servers take orders for unlikely lunches, such as plain yogurt topped with hummus, olive oil, a spice mix and lemon zest.

At the Chelsea Market stand of Sohha Savory Yogurt, diners customize their bowls of Lebanese-style yogurt with the likes of mint, olives, cilantro and spicy harissa oil.

And in Albany, legislators passed a bill this spring to make yogurt the official state snack.

New York is enjoying a golden age of yogurt, with the number of yogurt plants rising to 29 from 14 between 2005 and the present, according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office. The Finger Lakes region, where yogurt makers dot the landscape, has even been dubbed "The Silicon Valley of Yogurt."

At the same time, yogurt in New York is evolving from its adolescent infatuation with sugar-laden fruit flavors to a perhaps more mature phase that skews toward savory and Middle Eastern flavors.

And these latest yogurt offerings come from both large companies, such as New Berlin-based Chobani, and small startups such as Sohha, which is made in a small professional kitchen in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood.

Martin Simov, one of the employees at Sohha, makes a savory yogurt wrap for a customer. ap for a customer at Chelsea Market. Andrew Lamberson for The Wall Street Journal

"Yogurt has for too long been a sugar-delivery mechanism," said Siggi Hilmarsson, founder of Siggi's, which is made upstate in Yates County and sold nationwide.

When Mr. Hilmarsson arrived from Iceland to attend business school at Columbia University, he was stunned to find that some yogurts contain as much as 26 grams of sugar a serving. One of his first flavors was orange-ginger with an austere 9 grams of sugar in a 150-gram serving.

David Faulkner, London-based global market analyst with the market research firm Mintel, dates the beginning of the New York yogurt renaissance to the "massive growth" of Chobani, founded by Turkish immigrant entrepreneur Hamdi Ulukaya, who "blindsided everyone and launched the Greek yogurt boom."

Now, Mr. Faulkner said, "people are much more open to looking at alternate yogurts, like skyr [strained like Greek yogurt, resulting in a thick, high protein product], Lebanese styles and...kefir [a fermented milk drink]."

The savory, vegetable-based flavors produced by Blue Hill Yogurt, based in Pocantico Hills, such as beet, carrot and tomato, grew out of recipes at Blue Hill Farm's restaurants, Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns, said David Barber, president and co-owner of Blue Hill Farm. Mr. Barber's brother, chef Dan Barber, used them as condiments.

The grass-fed organic cow's milk and vegetables come from small family farms in the Northeast, including the Barber family farm in the Berkshires; sugar content ranges between 8 and 10 grams for a 6-oz. serving.

At the Chobani cafe on the corner of Prince Street and Broadway, regular Skyler Steward, director of analytics at the nearby ad agency Code & Theory, said that as an Arab-American, he was drawn to the café's "really authentic food," including a savory yogurt soup and the za'atar spice mix topping like the one his mother makes.

Besides yogurt in a bowl topped with cucumber, olive oil, fresh mint and sea salt, other popular savory dishes feature smoked salmon and dill or watermelon and feta, items, said Peter McGuinness, chief marketing officer for Chobani.

All of the items can be ordered on the Turkish analog of the bagel, known as simit. When the cafe opened in June 2012, its menu consisted mostly of sweet options. Since then, it has evolved to being close to 65% savory, said Mr. McGuinness.

Sohha grew from an award-winning business plan that co-founder John Fout wrote for his M.B.A. program in entrepreneurship at Baruch College in 2012. He and his co-founder, wife Angela, couldn't find yogurt that was sugar- and preservative-free like in Angela's native Lebanon, so they began making their own with mostly grass-fed cow's milk from a Poughkeepsie co-op called Hudson Valley Fresh, and selling it at farmers' markets.

The couple launched their business in May 2013 when they found a space in Sunset Park that would meet the strict hygiene requirements of the yogurt-making process.

Besides two kinds of yogurt—plain and tangy—dips and beverages, Sohha sells five toppings, including a za'atar blend of thyme, sumac and sesame seeds, and an "Everything Bagel" topping that mimics the classic New York bagel.

"My wife keeps adding toppings and I tell her to stop," says Mr. Fout, "but maybe it's good; people who come for lunch every day won't get bored." Angela Fout's latest topping combination: tahini, carob molasses and hazelnuts.

By the end of the year, Mr. Fout expects to be in 15 farmers' markets and several Brooklyn and Manhattan cafes and small stores, and to hit his plant's capacity of 1,000 pounds of strained yogurt a week.

Savory yogurt, he said, "is where the future's going to be."

Live from the electronic drawing board.

We are on to the next chapter and it still keeps coming. Got a call from a new client yesterday who needs ads for internet advertising on a very obtuse, "nerdy" product--and wanted to have a little zing! They need copy, cute headline (although cute may not be the word to fit the "nerdy" personna) and layouts for a meagre sum of money, but I took it as a new client walking in the door is a new client walking in the door. I forgot what it is to nurse these new clients into being older clients who we cherish and value for their work, friendship and the road time we have put in together.

It has been wild. All the farmers are needing things from my friend Melissa who is starting a new, big idea CSA to the local sheeps milk yogurt company who likes the label I did for them, but now wants it a bit rougher to make it more "artisan".  Another producer is on the front end of figuring out what he wants to do. The beer I rebranded is coming along....but more than the single hit they had started with but an entire program change, packaging and nomenclature approach. Slow. The wine I started on is coming to fruition with the client holding my hand on color and layout which, now as a content provider, feels very odd being told what colors to make things. I mean, I think I am the expert here....this is not buying carpet squares....But I will behave, be quiet and submit the bill (soon, I hope). A big local food manufacturer called me  (flattered) and I worked flat out last week on a project to find out that they were not communicating well and they wanted illustration (though during our meeting so the 28 hrs I spent on intense design work for a labelling system was for naught. I am wondering if I can charge them for the development fee (I should) despite their change in plans.  Time is money and their changing their minds is expensive. The meter was thrown. Bills need to be paid.

A depiction of  (example of Lubki illustration/art style)Солнце, Луна, времена года и двенадцать месяцев в виде знаков Зодиака. Лубок. Конец XVII -начало XVIII в.

A depiction of  (example of Lubki illustration/art style)

Солнце, Луна, времена года и двенадцать месяцев в виде знаков Зодиака. Лубок. Конец XVII -начало XVIII в.

I am working on the new Rongo. Quel fun. The Rongo, as you remember from way back, is a local watering hole known historically as The Rongovian Embassy to the United States. It's an old bar founded in political thinking and local "can do" with a mythological ethos, all sorts of fun talk about what is Rongovia--and an older following who want their bar back again. So, in the spirit of Ulysses, a group of motivated people have formed a group to fund and bring back the Rongo. I am gifting the branding and print work to retain essentially, the rich visual traditions and assets that the Rongo has, and revisit it / refresh it to reflect the new group and their hopes for this institution. It has been fun putting pen to the lion, the sun face etc. There is a fantasy map of this place which I plan to redraw in a very lobok / lubki manner (you remember Lubok! You don't?? fabulous, naive folk art from Russia-- take a look, you will get it).

The Carta marina (Latin "map of the sea" or "sea map"),[1] drawn by Olaus Magnus in 1527-39, is the earliest map of the Nordic countries that gives details and placenames. Only two earlier maps ofScandinavia&n…

The Carta marina (Latin "map of the sea" or "sea map"),[1] drawn by Olaus Magnus in 1527-39, is the earliest map of the Nordic countries that gives details and placenames. Only two earlier maps ofScandinavia are known, those of Jacob Ziegler(Strasbourg, 1532) and Claudius Clavus (15th century).

Detail, Carta Marina.

Detail, Carta Marina.

I also am taking inspiration from the celebrated map, Carta Marina (or the Map of the Sea) which features crazy wonderful sea monsters, great typography and a scale of some sort that turns corners (see upper left corner of the map). I love the palette, the randomness of the typography, the way the water is described and the funny mountains.  It represents a much happier world (imagine this map with nuclear silos, airforce bases, downed ships, UFO sightings, and McDonalds?) than this one now...and it appears that the world to this fellow, might not have been absolutely flat...but that is my two cents. Lets just say with the map of Rongovia, the Rongovian Crests and Rongovian history to create, there is plenty to do.

Gotta go. There are legends and fables to create.