Category Archives: Welcome

Beyond Solstice

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By Carol van Strum

Future archaeologists poring over the remains of our humble dwelling will discover a remarkable phenomenon. At exactly sunrise on the winter solstice, on the rare occasions when the Sun appears at all at this time of year, the sunlight pierces a small hole just below the roof peak. For precisely eight minutes, a broad sunbeam illuminates a wall of faded Red Dwarf stills, ending its bright passage on a sheet of 32-cent Comic Strip Classics postage stamps.

The geographic precision of this solar alignment with a minor flaw in exterior siding will no doubt have future anthropologists drooling, but their interpretations will be far off the mark. Even farther off are any religious or ritual connotations they might attribute to this annual spotlight on Lister, Rimmer, the effervescent Cat, and other Red Dwarf regulars, to say nothing of the perforated portraits of Popeye, Nancy, Dick Tracy, Blondie, Alley Oop, Krazy Kat, Barney Google and Prince Valiant.

To avoid such future misinterpretations, I hereby certify that the aforementioned hole in the siding was not intentional and has no astronomical or mythical connotation, being instead the result of a stage carpenter’s hapless attempt to build a real live house. The Red Dwarf photos lit by the solstice sunbeam are no more than my son’s exuberant experiments with early downloading software, our first color printer, and a tube of superglue. And the postage stamps? That’s a tough one to explain without revealing an entire family’s inability to tear a single comic hero from the glorious bunch.

So much for the solstice, which in these parts is just another grey winter day. The day worth celebrating is not December 21, but December 26, and no direct Sun is needed. The 26th, you see, is the day the chickens notice the extra minute and a half of daylight and respond accordingly.

In our supreme arrogance, we think we’re smarter than chickens and other bird-brains, but if the Sun didn’t appear to “stand still” for a few days as Earth tilted on its axis, I doubt if we humans would notice the lengthening days until mid-January or even February, the increase is so minimal at first. But the chickens notice almost immediately; within five days of the solstice, the hens rearrange the tired straw in their nests and start gobbling oyster shell, kale, and other sources of calcium; after lazing around for months, their stud rooster stocks up on worms and protein, oils up his crow for another season of strenuous, nonstop sex, and wakes the world at first light again.

By December 26, the changes are apparent: after only one or two eggs per day since mid-October, the number increases daily, at first punctuated by occasional “practice eggs” — huge double or triple yolkers, tiny yolkless wonders, and more rarely shell-less, wobbly membranes like jelly balloons, bulging with precious cargo. By mid-February, each hen is producing an egg almost every day.

Chickens are not the only birds that respond to minute changes in day length after solstice. Certain owls, for instance, build their nests in this dead-time of winter and lay their eggs while the world sleeps under blankets of snow. I’ve never eaten owl eggs, however, and chickens are easier to observe than owls. An important distinction is that these are not commercially-raised battery hens, living out their short, beakless lives under artificial lights without ever seeing the Sun or sky or seasonal changes in daylight, and never even dreaming of a rooster; their life span is measured in months. The chickens here are farmyard critters, with their own raccoon-proof house and yard, and access to unlimited greenstuff and bugs; their lives follow the seasons and so does their egg production.

Long ago, I tried installing lights in the chicken house and keeping it lit during the winter, which ensured constant high egg production through the year, but the hens only lived for a year or two, and I took the lights out; the oldest of our hens since then have lived fifteen years or more, some laying eggs seasonally right up to their last year before enjoying a well-deserved retirement. In return for our protection and care, they provide not only eggs but rich, organic manure for the garden, which in turn produces much of their greenstuff and many worms. Come winter, egg production shrinks with the shortening days and we turn to egg-less recipes, which makes December 26 a day to anticipate and celebrate:

Love and joy come to you
And to you an egg or two…

Democracy Now! — Monday, Dec. 21, 2015

Vision Quest, Planet Waves' 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Vision Quest, Planet Waves’ 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley faced off Saturday in the third Democratic presidential debate.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley faced off Saturday in the third Democratic presidential debate. Image:video still.

Today’s edition covers the third Democratic debate, in which Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders battled over foreign policy. The Sanders campaign has also accused the DNC of attempting to undermine the Vermont senator’s campaign, following a row over a data breach; Martin O’Malley’s team has joined criticism of the DNC for the way in which debates were scheduled. Other highlights included Clinton and Sanders responding to questions on corporate America.

We are honored to offer this broadcast as part of our affiliation with the Pacifica Network.

Music From Vision Quest

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Here is a bit of music from Vision Quest the 2016 annual edition of Planet Waves. These recordings feature Daniel Sternstein and Daniel Grimsland, both of The Grape and the Grain. We began the musical project to create theme music for the 2016 annual edition of Planet Waves, though it’s taken on a life of its own. Photo is studio where we’ve been recording, once or twice a week for the past three months or so.

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Democracy Now! — Friday, Dec. 18, 2015

Vision Quest, Planet Waves' 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Vision Quest, Planet Waves’ 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Enrique Marquez, friend of Syed Farook, Indicted on Terrorism Charges. Image: video still.

Enrique Marquez, friend of Syed Farook, indicted on terrorism charges. Image: video still.

Today’s episode looks at a possible cover-up of Navy SEALs inflicting gruesome torture on Afghan detainees. The New York Times has published an investigation report.

Juan Gonzalez examines the case of Clarence Moses-EL, a Denver, Colorado man who spent decades in prison for a crime of which he has now been cleared. Finally, there is an update on the fragile ceasefire in Yemen.

We are honored to offer this broadcast as part of our affiliation with the Pacifica Network.

Danielle Voirin’s Photo of the Day for 12.18.15

Vision Quest, Planet Waves' 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Vision Quest, Planet Waves’ 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.


Paris-based photographer Danielle Voirin travels the world and documents her experiences in photographs. She takes street photography and photojournalism a shade beyond even art, to the level of mysticism. You may see more of her work on her website DanielleVoirin.com, or her alt website, DaniVoirin.com.

“Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field.  I'll meet you there. -  When the soul lies down in that grass the world is too full to talk about." - Rumi, September 30, 1207 - December 17, 1273.

“Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field. I’ll meet you there. – When the soul lies down in that grass the world is too full to talk about.” – Rumi, September 30, 1207 – December 17, 1273.

Democracy Now! — Thursday, Dec. 17, 2015

Vision Quest, Planet Waves' 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Vision Quest, Planet Waves’ 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Baltimore: Mistrial in Trial Against Officer in Death of Freddie Gray. Image: vide still.

Baltimore: Mistrial in Trial Against Officer in Death of Freddie Gray. Image: video still.

Today’s episode examines the Freddie Gray case mistrial verdict due to a hung jury, which has sparked protests in Baltimore. There is also a feature on the state of emergency declared in Michael Moore’s hometown of Flint, Michigan. Flint’s mayor made the declaration following the discovery of unsafe lead levels in drinking water.

We are honored to offer this broadcast as part of our affiliation with the Pacifica Network.

Democracy Now! — Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2015

Vision Quest, Planet Waves' 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Vision Quest, Planet Waves’ 2016 annual edition, is fast approaching publication. Pre-order all 12 signs at a great value or choose your individual signs.

Republican Presidental Debate. Video: image still.

Republican Presidental Debate. Video: image still.

Today’s edition looks at the first Republican presidential debate since Donald Trump proposed to ban Muslims from entering the U.S. During the debate, Trump suggested closing areas of the internet… Guests on the show included Arun Kundnani, author of The Muslims Are Coming!