Archive for April, 2008

City Lawn Signs

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

city street signs
I've always found these lawn signs hilarious in the city. They're stuck into chain link fences and 2' x 2' patches of dirt. I love them even more when candidates' lawn signs are stacked up in the same plot (bonus points for more than 1 sign per candidate).

I don't particularly like either of these two, but I will vote for one of them next Tuesday.

(I hope everyone's Tax Day wasn't too bad. After a lot of stressing out about it, I finally got my taxes done and came out on top a little bit)

Al Gore's TED Talk

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

A good way to learn about the world is to simply watch the TED Talks. This talk by Al Gore in February of 2008 is a good one, just like the rest. It's a new, shorter, slideshow. In the last version, there were two countries that did not recognize the Kyoto Protocol, the US and Australia. Australia recently had elections and their new PM has signed on leaving US all by its lonesome. Ugh.

This is just under 30 minutes and is well worth it. If you don't watch it now, you can download an zipped .mp4 or straight to iTunes.

Thank you Danie for sending this along.

Weekend Birthday Trip to NY

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

justin
Lady and I took a trip up to NYC this past weekend for my Mom's bday (age unknown, but between 60 – 70 somewhere) and my brother in law's 40th (actually today). My immediate family as well as my brother in law's father, aunt and uncle were there. There was also one in the oven with my 8 month pregnant sister looking 8 months pregnant.

I ate so much food and especially enjoyed my sister's specialty: tempura shrimp. She's been a pro at it for over a decade now after repeated lessons from my mom. I brought up a few batches of cookies. One for each of the birthday people and a batch for dessert so that the birthday people wouldn't have to share their booty. My mom started to hand out cookies from her tin until I told her that there was a batch for everyone and she hurriedly put the lid back onto hers and put it away for safe keeping.

That's my 7 (going on 8) year old nephew Justin above. It's just incredible how he's grown. He just lost his third tooth. My niece, Emily who is 3, is quite the talker now. She barely uttered a peep for 2 years. Now, she's talking and shrieking up a storm. She took quite a liking to Lady (who doesn't!) during the course of the evening.

The next morning, my sister got us a dozen bagels to bring home, but we polished off a few for breakfast. Then it was off to SoHo/Little Italy for a walk through my old stomping grounds. We wanted to get a sandwich at Dom's on Lafayette/Kennmare, but sadly, they closed their doors. I pointed us towards Little Italy to another sandwich spot I frequented and I was in for a surprise. The Italian Food Center at Mulberry & Grand was now the Grand Italian Food Center and now had sit-down service instead of Italian specialty groceries. Their sandwiches were still top notch. After scarfing down our sandwiches, we were walking away when I spotted a guy who looked like he could be the owner and I struck up a conversation.

I told him how I used to eat there all the time 7 or 8 years ago. He asked why I stopped coming and I told him I moved to Philly. He responded with a very eye-talian "You kiddin' me?! I love Philly!" which made me smile. He said that people stopped coming to the store for their groceries as larger markets moved into the area around SoHo, Little Italy and Chinatown. He made the decision a few years ago to put in some sit-down service and additional tables on Mulberry St and it's been great. I'm happy for him. It's always sad for me to visit my old stomping grounds and see shuttered windows and gated doors. It looks like the Grand Italian Food Center has some years left in it.

While eating, I noticed an H&R Block which had popped up in the heart of Little Italy. RIGHT NEXT TO Ferrara no less. Crazy. No attempt for the firm to blend in at all either which is a shame. Banks and chain establishments in Chinatown have signs in 2 languages as well as culturally sensitive branding. If CitiBank, Starbucks and McDonald's can respect their surroundings 5 blocks away, why can't H&R Block? Stick a damn red, white and green Italy boot in your window or something! Hang a row of cured meats. A poster of the 1994 World Cup squad with Roberto Baggio's ridiculous hair and Paolo Maldini when he could still run with the best of them. Throw the neighborhood which gave us The Godfather a bone.

It was a great trip back home. I'll be back up in May for my best friend from college's law school graduation party and again in June to see my new nephew and a stay over at my brother and sister in law's place (which Lady hasn't seen yet). It'll be good to be back there a few times in a few months. I still have to get my act together for a long day trip dedicated to photography though.

Reading Railroad Trestle

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

reading railroad trestle
I took a trip up to the abandoned Reading Railroad Trestle 2 weeks ago with Steve, Thad and Andi for the afternoon. It was my second time up there and the landscape had changed a good deal. I last went up in November of 2005 and photos of that trip are up here.

On the last trip up, my group couldn't go south from our entry point, but this time, the brush was cut down and we could. But it was north first. All the bicycles that were up there last time were gone. I think we only found a few bike frames and tires. There were still several shelters under the old Spring Garden station, but the graffiti on the station was new. Walking all the way north to Fairmount Ave between 8th St and 10th St, we saw some new construction across the street right on top of where the tracks used to extend.

We turned around and trekked all the way down to Vine St which yielded a nice view of the new skyline. After walking down from the trestle, we went to get some grub (it was a busy few hours of hiking around up there!) and we saw an older couple coming down from the trestle as well. It seems to be a pretty well known section of accessible abandoned property.

Click here for a photoset of shots from the trip. A few of Andi's shots starting here and one from Steve.

I'm not sure what happened to the Reading Viaduct Project, but it seems to be defunct. Paris's elevated tracks converted into a park, La Promenade Plantée [wiki), is apparently one of the more popular parks, go figure. Some photos of the park by rion.nu. NYC residents have formed Friends of the High Line (wiki) to turn a set of abandoned elevated track into the second elevated park in the world.

I'd love to see the abandoned trestle turned into a park here in Philly, but the rest of the existing Fairmount Parks System needs a good deal of TLC already. But who knows what will happen with the Super Mayor. Also, according to a commenter on one of my trestle photos, the designer of the NYC project is a Philly resident so you never know what could happen…

After the Cleanup

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Lady and I got rolling a little bit late, but we got out and cleaned for a few hours nonetheless. We arrived at Schuylkill River Park at 25/Locust Sts around 9.40a and grabbed some of the large brown bags and got to work. It was great to see that most people were making the extra effort to sort the junk from the recyclable junk. Paper, glass, plastic, aluminum were put into designated bags while the lovely mossy clothes, plastic bags, food containers, needles and whathaveyou were put into others.

In the area where we cleaned (between Chestnut and Locust Sts) I'd say there were a solid 50 – 75 people. The park runs up to Race St so I'm gonna assume there were, at least, an additional 75+ people. I had a good time out there picking up other people's shit. But the most fun I had was chucking the full bags of other people's shit into the dump truck. There were a dozen of us around when the truck came around to the 25/Locust entrance. We got to work and it was done pretty quickly and the truck moved on up the running path.

The next day, Lady and I cleaned up our house. A good scrubbing all over the house was needed and it got it. We've been putting it off for awhile now, but we put our minds to it following the bigger cleanup effort.

Some photos of my friend Kevin's cleanup area in Point Breeze starting here.

Philly Spring Cleanup

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

philly spring cleanupThis Saturday the 5th is the Philly Spring Cleanup from 9a – 5p. I was just checking the map to see which areas still needed to be filled, but it looks like all 162 locations all the Fairmount Park and recreation sites are full. That's absolutely incredible. I have no idea as to how many people it takes to fill up a location, but damn. I'd put an absolute low ball estimate at 20 people per site so that's at least 3,240 people.

Lady and I will be helping out at the Schuylkill Banks site. We won't be heading down to the Linc for the after party (we'll be at a friend's birthday party), but I'm sure I'll read about it later. I hope to see lots of familiar faces on Saturday cleaning up the park a bit. I play soccer just south of the park (Tawney field) so it'll feel a little like cleaning up where I play which is nice.

UPDATE: So the map on their front page was only displaying the Fairmount Park and recreation sites and I mistakenly thought that all the sites were full, but they've changed the map and the smaller volunteer locations are listed.

Addicted to Film

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

irish frank rizzo and comcast center
To say that I've been bitten by the 35mm film bug would be an understatement. I feel like I'm in my first couple years of college again shooting film on a nearly daily basis. It's beyond fun. It's sublime. And, it's expensive. Not as bad as the one time hit of a $1k+ digital body or professional lens, but each roll of 36 exposures costs between $4 and $9 a roll and then processing, scanning and 4"x6" prints comes to another $19- $30 depending on where I get it developed, hi/lo res scans, color/true black and white film, special processing… So it's closer to a buck a pop, right around the cost of Polaroids. But good God, it's exhilarating.
Irish Frank Rizzo and Comcast Center; Nikon F3; Nikkor-N 28mm f/2 AIS @ f/8 1/500s; Ilford XP2 Super 400

When I started shooting film again, I thought I'd carry it around along with my Nikon D200 digital body and take it out here and there. Now, I'm taking the film bodies out and leaving the digital home more often than not. It feels more fun. I don't know if this film honeymoon will last, but I sure hope so. I am, however, being reminded of just how expensive it is and why I stopped shooting film on an almost daily basis in college. It's putting a significant dent in my less than shallow pockets.

I do have the equipment available to me to process the film at home though. The black and white would be easy enough; I've never developed color before. But doing so would open up a whole new can of worms.

pinky and her kids
Black and white photography is wonderful and it brings me back to a certain period of my life, but color photography with real films (none of the CVS bought stuff) is new to me and very exciting. I've been testing out all different kinds of black and white and color films. I'd like to have an understanding as to how lots of films behave under different conditions and be able to match a film to a project if need be. But I'd ultimately settle on a few stocks of film to shoot on a regular basis. Right now, for black and white, I think it would be Kodak Tri-X 400 and Ilford HP5+ 400 for everyday stuff. I still have a few color films to go through.
Pinky and Her Kids; Yashica Electro 35 GSN; 45mm f/1.7 @ f/1.7; Fujicolor Superia Reala 100

It's been a blast picking the brains of other film shooters around town and elsewhere on forums. I've been remembering a lot and learning more. I do want to graduate to medium format sized photography, but that is yet another can of rabid worms.

To see the rest of the shots from which the two photos above came from, click here for the black and white and here for the color. I have a roll of high speed black and white and a roll of color developed and scanned. After the 2 rolls in my 2 film bodies, I think I'll slow down some, unfortunately, from a lack of dough for it.

This set of film was developed, scanned and printed at Philadelphia Photographics at 10/Arch.

Philly Beer 101 with Joe Sixpack

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

joe sixpack at the trolley car diner
Last Tuesday, I went to the Trolley Car Diner (7619 Germantown Ave) in Mt. Airy for a local beer tasting course taught (in conjunction with the Mt. Airy Learning Tree) by none other than Joe Sixpack himself, Don Russell (pictured above). I attended the event with my good friend Pat who, along with his wife, bought me a ticket to the event as a Christmas present. After reading Tony's account of the February class, I was quite excited for the event.

About 30 attendees sat in booths and shared each bottle/can beer between them. Our table only had 3 so we had slightly larger portions per person than the rest of the class! Each student received a packet for the night complete with a list of all the beers we'd be sampling that night (I had had 5 out of the 11); a list of some of Don's favorite bars and a list, with examples, of various styles of beers. The first thing I learned was that all beers fall into one of two categories: Ales or Lagers. I never knew that. According to the handout, an Ale is "Brewed quickly with top-fermenting yeast at warm temperature." A Lager is "Brewed slowly with bottom-fermenting yeast at cool temperature." Who knew Beamish and Yards Philly Pale Ale were in the same family!

The first "beer" sampled was the most popular beer sold in Philadelphia. The watered down beauty taking this crown is Miller Lite. I thought, for sure, that Yuengling Lager would take #1, but nope. Don served this one first for the class to have an understanding of the baseline of beers in the town was. Moving on to the first real beer… a can of Phoenixville, PA's Sly Fox Pikeland Pils (German Pilsner, 4.9% ABV). The label on the can had a set of hops right on it so I knew I'd most likely not be a fan (not into hoppy beers yet at my young age). It was hoppy, but not overpowering. Don took a sec to explain the aluminum can phenomenon in craft beers these days. Apparently, a Canadian company has found a way to produce small quantities of aluminum cans (relative to the output of the Coors/Busch guys I suppose) at an affordable price. More durable than glass bottles, they end up being easier to transport. He said to be on the lookout for more and more small breweries to produce aluminum can versions of their beers. He added that the cans had a special coating to protect the beer from getting a tinny taste to them, but the psychological tie to drinking straight from the can still remains; he advised us to pour it into a glass instead.

Number 2 on the list was one I've had before, Harrisburg, PA's Troeg's Troegenator (Double Bock, 8.2% ABV). I very much like this beer. A nice malty taste to it without being too sweet. It's a high alcohol by volume (ABV) content, but you don't taste it. Don explained the origins of the double bock beer as being a source of extra calories (in the increased amount of malt in the beer) during Lent. Ha! Religion is good for something, eh?

The third beer of the night was one not on the list, a late addition from Downingtown, PA's Victory Brewing Co: Prima Pils (Pilsner, 5.3% ABV). Another beer with a gigantic hop on the label. The beer was very carbonated and hoppy. This pilsner is said to be one of the top, if not the top pilsner in the country. It's won major competitions for the last 6 years. But it's not for me.

Adamstown, PA's Stoudt's Brewery is, if I remember correctly, the only woman-owned good sized brewery in the nation. Their Scarlet Lady (Extra Special Bitter, 5% ABV) was our 4th beer. I've had this one before as well. It's a bitter beer, but offset by malts well. Don called this "a good session beer" meaning that you can drink it all night and not get too loaded (not one of those really high ABV beers) and still enjoy the taste of it (unlike, say Miller Lite). It wouldn't be my first choice on any given night, but I'd be more than happy to help knock off a case of it.

Next up was Dogfish Head's 90 Minute IPA (Double India Pale Ale, 9% ABV) from Milton, DE. Dogfish Head is probably my favorite local brewery, if not my favorite brewery in general. I haven't had a single beer from their vats I haven't liked. They are true masters of the high ABV beers. They'll all get you loaded within 3 beers, but you won't taste the alcohol like other high ABV brews, this one was no exception even though I normally don't like IPAs. This IPA had a typically bitter initial taste to it, but a very atypical malty-molasses end note coating your entire tongue to relieve it from the initial bitter shock. My personal favorite Dogfish Head offering is Raison D'Etre which, according to their website, is on temporary hiatus.

Don told us of a little one-upmanship which was going on between the brewers at Dogfish Head and Sam Adams of which Sam Adams holds the crown with their Utopias weighing in at 27% ABV – the highest ABV retail beer available today. it sells for $120 per 24oz. bottle. At Morton's in Center City, they sell it by the ounce for $10 a pop. Don described Utopias as not really a beer, but more like a port, but not as good as a port. Sam Adams is pushing the envelope of what a beer is with their Extreme Beers collection; their continued creative push puts them in high regard among even the snobbiest of beer drinkers.

Sixth up was from Cherry Hill, NJ: Flying Fish's Belgian Abbey Dubbel (Belgian dubbel, 7.3% ABV). Another of the beers I've had previously. I had a little anecdote I told to Pat and our boothmate of a night out after no dinner where I polished off 2 goblets of Belgian Abbey Dubbel and then suddenly feeling very, very drunk. After being told it was a 7.3% ABV beer (making my 2 beers more like 4 typical beers) and no dinner, I told my friends I should get home before I started stumbling all over the place. This beer has a mellow fruitiness hidden in it's medium brown coloring. I can't recall what Don said about the cask conditioning of this beer (starting to feel a little tipsy at this point of the night).

Another Belgian style beer was next. From Easton, PA was Weyerbacher's Merry Monks (Belgian tripel, 9.3%) which I had definitely seen on the shelves of The Foodery, but never tasted before. This golden colored beer tasted strongly of fruit and reminded me of lambics. It tasted like fizzy fruit soda with alcohol dumped into it. After letting this sample sit and warm up for several minutes, it tasted much better. I very much advise drinking this one not straight out of the fridge.

Philadelphia's own Yards Love Stout (English stout/Oyster stout, 5% ABV) was the 8th beer of the night. This is a new favorite of mine. I bought a case of it for a party after many people telling me how great it was – they were all right. Apparently, Yards used to brew a special batch of Love Stout with actual oysters in it on Valentine's Day (as per the original recipe). We'll see if that tradition is kept up post split up of the company.

Don mixed in a good deal of history during the course of the night. He told us that home brewing was outlawed during Prohibition and reinstated only during the Carter administration. It was then that the craft brewing in America took off. Sam Adams (est. 1984) is the largest of the craft breweries and their selection of 26 beers yields a deep bench. Apparently Yuengling is right around the same size, but very much lacking in the imagination the team at Sam Adams has.

The big 10 ended up being my favorite beer of the night and the first beer by Victory I actually liked: Baltic Thunder (Baltic porter, 8.5% ABV). It had a good deal of chocolate and fruit to it and apparently made with lager yeast, but brewed in the ale method. This 22oz. bottle was from the first bottling of the run and apparently took the blending of 3 different brews to make this one. Don noted that the final incarnation of the beer would taste very different from this one and he hoped that it would stay as close to true to this bottling as possible.

The final beer of the night was another offering from Dogfish Head: Aprihop (Fruit beer, 7% ABV). Like the name implies, it's a hoppy beer with a heavy apricot flavoring. It seemed to be above average in carbonation. The incredible apricot flavoring takes some getting used to, but it mellows out after a few sips.

I chimed in with a question as to why the breweries disappeared from Philly. I knew that Philadelphia was the brewing capital of America for sometime, but didn't understand how/why all the breweries went away. Don said that there were once about 85 breweries in town. But it was Prohibition that did them in. After Prohibition, production moved to large-scale output factories. Philadelphia's breweries simply couldn't match the output of cities like Milwaukee and St. Louis.

After everything was over, I said hello to Don and bought a copy of his book which he graciously signed for me. He also kindly sat down for a shot with all the beers sampled during the class (minus the Scarlet Lady and Love Stout which were totally cleared from the room at that point). Thank you Don.

If you're into beer or want to get more into beer, I highly recommend this class. The April 22 class seems to still have room!