deponti to the world

my 2 cents

The Segway Tour in Forest Park
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[info]deponti
The

St.Louis Science Center


offers

Segway rides in Forest Park

and very expensive they are, too!

Here are some people on the Segway tour:


segway tour in forest park 080809



Here

is the Wiki entry about the Segway.

Frankly, I cannot understand, if just taking a ride in the park is so expensive, why on earth did Time magazine made

such a big deal

of this.

I hardly see the Segway being used as public transport...at most, it's used as a mode of transport inside airports.

Sriharsha Ganjam....
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[info]deponti
Harsha is someone I got to know through INW and I have also found him to have a great sense of humour, so we often exchange both images and a few lines of laughter!

So it was nice to see that one of his photographs has been chosen as a Photograph of the Week, but Nature's Best Photography magazine.

Here's the magazine page:

http://www.naturesbestmagazine.com/index.php?nav=contests&subnav=potw#

And here's the image:


http://www.naturesbestmagazine.com/potw.php

Lovely image of a raindrop on an Ixora flower. with another image in that raindrop...


Congrats Harsha! I do like it when my friends' talent is recognized.

However, I must say, that in my opinion, the prize only means that he must shell out more cash for the magazine subscription!

The Photo-Shoot Shot....
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[info]deponti
I got a call from Prasad , a freelance photographer who has moved to Bangalore from his native Hyderabad, and we fixed up 11am on Sunday as the time for the photo shoot. Prasad was very punctual indeed, but I don't think he was prepared to be photographed in his turn!

Here's Prasad with his brother, who is visiting from Hyderabad...


prasad pro photographer 120409


Youu can see my LRT (Little Rattle Trap)in front, with the useful and uncool basket!

Prasad carries a variety of equipment, including a Canon 450D, a Nikon D70, and various lenses, filters, flash and diffusers. Here he is, getting ready to shoot:


prasad getting ready to shoot 120409


Once he took out his equipment, he asked me to cycle around the Mini Forest (which I was rather reluctant to do, as I don't think cycles are allowed there) and started shooting.

120409 prasad shooting


As the bushes nearly hid my little LRT from the camera view, we went back to the road, and it was very funny indeed to go cycling on the same stretch, back and forth, as he got his shots; I had to wait if there were other people or vehicles in the frame!

We also tried a couple of shots within my apartment building, but I refused to cycle on the lawn, and anywhere else wasn't suitable.

I got them both "thimble chai" from the nearby vendor, and promised to look at his photo site, which I did...and I am properly impressed!

I do not know when the article will appear in "Harmony" magazine, or what it will say...but being interviewed and photographed was fun!

I did ask him to send me a few images, and he agreed, but nothing in the email so far.....perhaps they are all the property of the magazine!

Aha..someone's interested in ME!!
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[info]deponti
I think (I am not sure) I had mentioned a few months ago, that "Harmony", a magazine for Senior Citizens, had asked me if they could interview me about my cycling....and today, a sweet-sounding (they always sound sweet if they allow me to talk about myself!) Rajashri Balaram called me up from Mumbai to ask me about how I cycle.

I felt a total fraud because a. I am not (technically, being 54) a Senior Citizen and b. for the past two months, on doctor's orders, I have been off cycling, and so am not, technically, a cyclist...but she said that since I have been cycling for about 17 years now, and I am over 50, I qualify!

So I shot my mouth off (hopefully, not too badly)...and their photographer, Anuradha Joshi, will be coming to take a photograph of me on my little Ladybird-with-a-basket....soon....

Oh, I forgot to ask her if this magazine is online, too...stupid oversight! :)

But I got to talk about myself, which I can normally do only on LJ....I talked about cycling, quizzing, music, activism, wildlife, photography,writing.... I only hope the poor young woman was not as flooded as I was last week!

I must compliment her; she conducted a conversation with me, not a dry interview; that means, she was very good!

Looking forward to see how I am quoted (or misquoted)...watch this space!

Not been able to upload my photographs of the Lalbagh Heritage Walk last Sunday, or the lovely birding morning I spent with Madhusmita on Tuesday (How lucky can one be, to go birding on a weekday morning!!)...so those posts will wait awhile....but let me give you a little taste of it, with this picture of the gloriously blooming CANNONBALL tree (nAgalinga marA) in Lalbagh...

290309 lalbagh cannonball tree nAgalingA flowers 20D

some more photos )

Finally, this lovely Australian tree, called CAREA ARBOREA, which Karthik had pointed out to us earlier, also charmed us by its beautiful blooms...


carea arborea flower lalbagh 290309


But meanwhile.... a group of us are going tomorrow morning to the Bannerghatta beyond-the-quarry area...so more pictures (hopefully)!

I have not yet got my MLC back, though the projected bill is 7.7K!!! :((((




Meanwhile, you lot, have a great weekend! I have the feeling of the sands running out as I prepare for the "paati animal" trip....

[info]shivakumar_l in the Deccan Herald today
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[info]deponti
Here's an article I really enjoyed reading in the Sunday Herald, which is the Sunday supplement of the Deccan Herald:

http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/May182008/sundayherald2008051768487.asp

All these people post their photographs regularly on INW

But Shiva, especially, has been very, very helpful to me about photography and post-processing (though I have decided not to do much of post-processing on my photos.)...and this was well before he met me personally.


However, Shiva had this comment to make:

"The press guys have messed up a lot with the content....
something and all they have written -- compared to what we told them....'Bar headed geese @ TGHalli'... what the neck band ?!?!? It was supposed to be Somanathpura!"

Accurate reporting or not....great going, guys! :)

Honest Ad, like the Honest Ed who sells cars in the US....
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[info]deponti
Been working feverishly to post pics to Flickr, check on friends' blogs (haven't got past LJ to Blogger posts yet!) and deal with all the other stuff that has to be done, while I have the internet connection up and running...

It is very irritating not to know just WHAT is wrong, and whether the problem will recur at any time (it could....) it could be BSNL, it could be my modem, it could be interference (latest diagnosis from Chandan ) from a newly-bought-by-neighbour-mobile-phone....or of course, Internet Explorer and Outlook Express are NOT the greatest pieces of software...

That's why this lovely, unintentionally honest ad by Microsoft caught my eye today.


microsoft turkey time mag 7 jan 08


That was in the 7th Jan (Putin is Person of the Year) issue of Time Magazine.

Microsoft IS a turkey, and they're not chicken enough to hide the fact! :)

Words of Pain
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[info]deponti
My daughter was very close to someone, until the other girl suddenly moved on.....I stood by, watching my daughter suffer. She had to go through this on her own, and grow by the experience. (We had tried to warn her about the other girl's selfishness, but she wouldn't hear a word, loyal friend that she was.)

This was published in Target, the children's magazine, so I can reproduce it. It was February 1995; she was all of sixteen...


I was always there for you
Whenever you needed someone
Through trying times and trouble
When you were in pain...
To share your sorrows....
I don't understand now
How you can forget that I'm there
And run off to someone else
Passing by me as though I don't exist.
So you need me only in times of strife
That I may comfort you
But when it comes to sharing happiness
It's not me you want
When I need someone--where are you?
Not with me...you don't even know
Nor do you care about what I feel
When you are with me, you are so full of yourself
And your problems that I try to help you with
That you never stop to notice my thoughts...
I never did matter, I suppose;
If I go away, would you miss me?
Or just find someone else?
You couldn't miss me for what I am
Because you don't know what I really am.
What I *am* is your friend..but it's not *friendship* we share...
For *that* is a two-way street.

My daughter's Shakespeare verse....
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[info]deponti
When she was young, my daughter regularly wrote for a children's magazine called Target, which was a very good magazine (however, it later became very urbanized and westernized and I wonder if it still exists... I know Tinkle is one magazine that is still going strong here.)

Here's her effort to write like Shakespeare..that's the page, followed by the text...this was written in August 1995, when she was fourteen years old...



Tragedy of Education AM poem Target Aug 1995 231107


Everyone is familiar with Shaekspeare. In fact, students studying for the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education and the Indian School Certificate have the pleasure of studying one of his plays.

As an ISC student, I was forcing myself, during the holidays, to stay away from the sun and the cloudless skies. Tying myself to my study table, I began my attempt at making sense of "Twelfth Night". Each line I read only confirmed my belief that the great man found time to pursue his literary activities just after either his daily exercise (which must've included standing upside down) or after his weekly "Headbanger's Ball", both of which would ensure that the contents of his head were not quite in perfect order at the time.

After little more than a page, the contents of my head seemed to me to be in very similar shape to those of his when he began writing the play. In other words, I was all set(like the great man himself) to pen my own deathless lines.

Taking inspiration from the Arden edition of Shakespeare, I wrote something for Target which includes references and footnotes. Without which, like the real thing, it would seem nonsensical...



AN EXTRACT FROM "THE TRAGEDY OF EDUCATION"

Act XII, Scene I


1 Marry, 'tis but the black pages
That keep mine hungry feet from
Th' element
4 O, but if mine wanton hands could but sense those curves of carrot hue
And soar 't above the eyes of all
For 't but to sink again
7 Semblative any piece on this greedy ground, compassed by the fishy circle
8 And the ring repeated till rest required



Footnotes:

1 Marry, 'tis but...: Yes/Alas

black pages: It is studies. Black refers to the colour of the print and the pun is on black being a colour of mourning or evil.

Hungry feet: longing/yearning (to set the feet upon), for wanting

Element : The earth, ground or the field

4 Wanton hands : As in hands that want

Sense: Hold, touch

Curves of carrot hue: Sphere of orange colour, i.e. basketball

Soar: Throw up high

Above the eyes: May refer to both "high up" and "with all eyes on it".

Sink : Fall

7 Semblative: OED (Old English Dictionary) definition as "similar to/ like"

Piece: Any object

Greedy ground: Alliteration. Reference is to gravity due to which the Earth lets nothing go (Rf. Greedy). "Greedy" may be a modification of the word gravity.

Compassed: Encircled by

Fishy Circle Refers to fishermen's nets..netted ring, i.e., basketball hoop

8 ring: Cycle/Process

Ring repeated till rest required: This fine piece of alliteration suggests that the process is repeated till it becomes too tiring to continue.


********************

It made me laugh then, and it makes me laugh now...

Something I am associated with...
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[info]deponti
I was supposed to have met Subbu Vincent and Meera K some time ago, at the last BarCamp....but the meeting finally did happen a few months ago, and since then I have watched them getting their new "baby" in shape and online...

It went online today; check out "Citizen Matters" at


http://citizenmatters.in/

And if you would like to contribute your mite, too, do get in touch with them,too!

The first article of mine on the e-magazine is about India Nature Watch....

Brings a smile to my face...
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[info]deponti
I have been struggling with writer's block for a few years, and have just recently been able to get back (partly because of the discipline of writing regularly for my blog) to writing "middles" and articles for the local newspaper. Ammu Joseph once told me to start writing for the magazines, but I didn't know how or where to send it in.

It was therefore a thrill to get this email today:

offer from the blue )

I am now looking like that strange species, the Uplifted Cheshire Cat-bird! It's as if you are wandering in the maze of mirrors and suddenly a way opens up! Perhaps a small joy, but a joy nevertheless....

Wish me luck everyone...

Birdwatching and me
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[info]deponti
I went to attend a Naturalists' Training Course where the focus was on birdwatching. Great, I thought, birdwatching is much better than trying to spot mammals...especially big cats in the southern part of India. For over 30 years I have gone to south Indian wildlife resorts and I have yet to see a south Indian tiger. Birds would be MUCH easier. They are not to be found only in the distant--and expensive--wildernesses; they are all around us; it doesn't take much effort to go and watch birds.

Or so I thought, until I went on the first nature trail. Karthik, who was conducting the course, told us to spot the bird, observe its colours, flight patterns and behaviour carefully, and then, instead of having him help out, to look the bird up in the book. Fine, I thought.

Then came the first rude awakening. We were in the early morning light, and there was this bird flying against the face of the rising sun. It was a black blob. This would not have been so bad it had been a black blob to everyone else taking the course, and they had all identified it as the Black Blob-bird. But no....they all yelled, "Coppersmith Barbet!" practically in unison. I looked again at the black blob...and it had already disappeared.

We walked on, and suddenly the whole group stopped, staring intensely into a nearby tree. I looked too. And looked. And looked.Thankfully the bird moved, otherwise I think I would still be there, looking. "What were the colours?" asked Karthik. "There was a crest!" cried one. "The vent was red!" said another. As far as I was concerned, it was the Moving Peepul Leaves Bird.

Things improved slightly over the next trail...I actually saw a bird (well, it was sitting on a dry branch and there was no way I could not have seen it.) I noted all its attributes carefully, and looked at the book...blankly. Where on earth was I to look in the book? Was it a shrike, a shikra, or a swan? (Something told me it might not be the last-mentioned.) Karthik took pity on me and opened the book to the right page. Huh! ALL the birds on the page looked pretty much the same to me! "Warblers do look alike," said Karthik kindly, and as usual, a kid less than half my age helpfully identified the bird for me.

Another bird. This had an easily identifiable red head, a white body.....but I had no clue what sort of bird it was. I had to have the book opened at the right page again. The only bird on the page that matched the one in the tree was the wire-tailed swallow. I looked at Karthik, who nodded. "But..but..." I said. "That bird doesn't have that long tail at all." "It's fallen off...that happens," Karthik said. How would I identify a wiretailed swallow without the wiretail? The others reuqired a camera, a pair of binoculars, and a bird-book. I required, in addition, a bird-book opener.

Then came the problem of the names. We saw a tree full of birds, and as usual, I seemed to be the only person who looked, and was, ignorant. All the rest piped up, "Rosy Starlings!" and "Rosy Pastors!" Apparently, both were names for the same birds, and I stopped looking for two different birds.

I spotted a bird with plumage that looked quite, quite different from its illustration in the book. "The feathers are growing out right now", explained one of my fellow-students. How did he know that? I didn't. Every bird that was being spotted was being identified by me...about twenty minutes after the others had moved on to the next bird. Why didn't God populate the Earth with only mynahs, sparrows and crows? Things would have been simpler.

I learnt about eclipse plumage, and this depressed me even more. I also found in my bird book such arcane, esoteric stuff next to the illustrations, as: "non-br", "br" and "imm". I am yet to muster up the courage to ask what these are. I am sure they are techniques birds adopt to disguise themselves from me. "imm" , to a bird, probably means, not "immature", but, "immediately change feather colours so that the lady below can't identify you".

When I thought I had spotted another bird, it turned out that it was the female of the last bird, or the male. Little rings with arrows and crosses on them began to dance before my eyes.

A couple of successes spotting the Pied Kingfisher and the Purple Sunbird led me on to further traps. "Look up!" said a youngster, at the birds swooping up and down. "Yes?" said Karthik."What colours do you see?" Colours? I thought it was the Black Silhouette Bird. "It has a red rump," said my co-students with great ease. As far as I was concerned, I was BENEATH the bird. How on earth could I see what colour its rump was? Unless it was going to fly upside down for me? Did these others have eyes on stalks that went out above the birds and spotted the colour of its feathers under and below the wings?

Then came the double names. The Drongo Cuckoo. The Magpie Robin. I started dreaming up my own combinations, like the Mynah Hawk, and the Swallow Woodpecker.

To top it all came the information that names of birds keep changing....and quite often, people name a bird the way they choose. But somehow I *know* that if I call a bird the Unfamiliar Plumagebird or the Lesser-Known Lookslike Atreebranch, those names are not going to be accepted by the birding community.

And the worst of these creatures is that they all seem to be Swifts, Swallowsand Splits...that is, they are swift to disappear, the sky or the greenery seems to swallow them up, and they are gone in a split second. I am just left standing there, with the open book in my hand and the usual huge question mark hovering over my head.

I now call myself the Utterly Green Bird-Spotter. I may soon give up birdwatching and go back to spotting trees, which at least don't suddenly flit off, and are there when you come back the next day with a friend. It might even be better to get back to tigers, which are at least never there for me to see. That's much less frustrating than these birds, which, "at a clap of our hands" (and in fact, even when I am standing stock-still trying to identify it) suddenly "lift into the air and vanish in their own natural world" where I, for one, cannot see them.

That's it. I am going to give up birdwatching. These creatures are too smart for me. But meanwhile...ooh, that lovely purple plumage! Is that the Indian Moorhen? Ah...well, then, maybe just ONE more attempt at spotting the next bird....! (1160 words, all of them copyright)

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