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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 22, 2018 - 07:56am PT
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One of the comments to the video:
"How those old men lived up again for 2 weeks, I'll never forget, all the stories and knowledge we got to know ... and above all the cultural heritage they gave us"
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 22, 2018 - 08:40am PT
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You find Kirkesjøen (Kirkkojärvi) in Finland too. Here's a video from Kirkkojärvi school:
[Click to View YouTube Video]
"Kirkkojärvi school is an educational center located in Espoo, Finland, in which the architectural space and the building itself take center stage. It stands out mainly for how it integrates immigrant students in its center and for the use of sustainable architecture."
Finland is known for the superb educational system...
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 22, 2018 - 09:12am PT
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I'm trying to stay away from prejudices, though I have to admit, at times it's hard...
I'm staying away from burgers. That's what it means to be informed...
:o)
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 24, 2018 - 01:01pm PT
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Great link, Todd. TFPU!
“Throughout Slash & Burn, the conventional clarity of the photographic image is often blurred and obscured — by smoke, mist, vapor, dust and darkness — which transform the solidity of the world we think we know into something much more ethereal and atmospheric…. And in a sense, when it comes to this field, Abusdal’s artistic approach is in itself a form of slash-and-burn cultivation, in that through various forms of photographic disorientation, deconstruction and destruction, he creates a new, fertile layer of information and meaning; photographic ashes which are rich with the nutrients needed for newfound notions of personal understanding and cultural identity to grow.”
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 28, 2018 - 10:17am PT
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9LD gets Dan Andersson feeling
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Lyrics:
Natt – Dan Andersson
Jag vill ut till att vandra i vildmark om natten,
till att leta mig vägar där ingen har gått.
Jag vill stanna på Matalams stenfrusna vatten
för att hölja mitt vemod i skymmande grått.
Jag vill hälsa dig, hemland av sånger och saga
och av snö kring Ajatteles klippor och snår;
mitt frostiga arvland där rävarna jaga,
medan midnattens hunger kring skogarna går.
Mina marväxta tallar ha torkat med åren,
och se storfuran lutar sig trött för att dö. -
Det är grått, det går krypande skymning i snåren
och i topparna visslar en västan om tö.
Och ur skuggornas djup klinga urgamla låtar,
där är vallhornets lockton med vemod uti,
där gå viddernas visor kring vindfällda bråtar,
och den själ som de fångat vill aldrig bli fri.
Så jag hälsar dig, gran, som min ensamma like
och jag räcker dig, ungbjörk, min trofasta hand,
och jag kallar mig fri fastän här i mitt rike
jag har fångats och snärjts av det namnlösas band.
Night – Dan Andersson (only content translated)
I would like to walk in the wilderness at night,
and look for ways where nobody has gone.
I want to stay on Matalam's stone-frozen waters
and cover my sorrow in shaded grey.
I want to greet you, homeland of songs and sagas
and of snow around Ajattele’s bushes and rocks;
my frosty land where the foxes hunt,
while midnight’s hunger around the forests grow.
My crippled pines have dried over the years,
and watch the old pine tired leaning over to die –
It's gray, there's creeping twilight in the thicket
and in the crowns the western wind whispers about warmer weather.
And from the depths of the shadows, ancient songs,
there is the goat horn call with sorrow within,
there is the moorland songs around windswept pines,
and the soul they caught will never be free.
So I greet you, spruce, like me alone
and I give to you, young birch, my faithful hand,
and I call myself free although here in my kingdom
I have been caught and entrapped by the nameless bond.
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Reilly
Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
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Jul 28, 2018 - 10:38am PT
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Lk Tåkern (almost Norwegian woods!) wildlife reserve humour...there was a bunch of these along the trail.
I saw a rödräv!
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Jul 28, 2018 - 10:53am PT
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A well made fox. Is it from a park?
Lonely together (ensamma tilsammans) is always a good theme for poets, film makers, musicians and psychologists...
... and Blue Sky Blues is always a Scandinavian alternative... (Blå Himlen Blues - Imperiet with the president of underground rock'n roll Joakim Thåström)
[Click to View YouTube Video]
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 2, 2018 - 05:24am PT
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Finnskogen this week.
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 2, 2018 - 05:29am PT
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Finnetunet on Tuesday
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 5, 2018 - 12:49pm PT
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An artist who knew the forest well: Ivan Shishkin
Ivan Shishkin was part of a cooperative of artists. In 1863 a group of fourteen students decided to leave The Imperial Academy of Arts. The students found the rules of the Academy constraining; the teachers were conservative and there was a strict separation between high and low art. In an effort to bring art to the people, the students formed an independent artistic society; The Petersburg Cooperative of Artists (Artel). In 1870, this organization was largely succeeded by the Association of Travelling Art Exhibits (Peredvizhniki) to give people from the provinces a chance to follow the achievements of Russian Art, and to teach people to appreciate art. The society maintained independence from state support and brought the art, which illustrated the contemporary life of the people from Moscow and Saint Petersburg, to the provinces.
From 1871 to 1923, the society arranged 48 mobile exhibitions in St. Petersburg and Moscow, after which they were shown in Kiev, Kharkov, Kazan, Oryol, Riga, Odessa and other cities.
Another artist from the cooperative was Ilya Repin. Here's his painting "Barge Haulers on the Volga"
And here's a song to go with it: Volga Boatman By The National Tatarstan Orchestra
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Yo, heave ho! Yo, heave ho! Once more, once again, still once more
Yo, heave ho!
Yo, heave ho!
Once more, once again, still once more
Now we fell the stout birch tree,
Now we pull hard: one, two, three.
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
Now we pull hard: one, two, three.
Now we pull hard: one, two, three.
Yo, heave ho!
Yo, heave ho!
Once more, once again, still once more
As the barges float along,
To the sun we sing our song.
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
To the sun we sing our song.
Hey, hey, let's heave a-long the way
to the sun we sing our song
Yo, heave ho!
Yo, heave ho!
Once more, once again, still once more
Oh, you, Volga, mother river,
Mighty stream so deep and wide.
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
Ay-da, da, ay-da!
Volga, Volga, mother river.
Yo, heave ho!
Yo, heave ho!
Once more, once again, still once more
Yo, heave ho!
Yo, heave ho!
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 12, 2018 - 11:00am PT
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Sønsterud this weekend...
Human culture landscape:
Beaver culture landscape:
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Reilly
Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
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Aug 12, 2018 - 11:36am PT
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Do they ever do anything with those big rolls or are they just for turoids?
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 12, 2018 - 11:50am PT
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It's food for the trolls...
And here's Troll salmon:
Always be careful when you feed the trolls...
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RRad
Trad climber
Poway, CA
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Aug 15, 2018 - 02:30pm PT
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 16, 2018 - 12:37pm PT
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RRad
John Bauer was a fantastic artist. In Sweden Bauer means fairytales, trolls and forests.
Bauer's favorite subject was Swedish nature, the dense forests where the light trickled down through the tree canopies. Ever since he was little he had wandered in the dark woods of Småland imagining all the creatures living there. His paintings frequently included detailed depictions of plants, mosses, lichens and mushrooms found in the Swedish woods. He is best known for his illustrations of Among Gnomes and Trolls.
In a 1953 article in Allers Familje-journal (Allers Family Journal), his friend Ove Eklund stated that "although [Bauer] only mumbled about and never said clearly", he believed that all the creatures he drew actually existed. Eklund had on several occasions accompanied Bauer on his walks through the forests by Lake Vättern, and Bauer's description of all the things he thought existed made Eklund feel he could see them as well.
Ove Eklund on Bauer:
Yes, there he was, John Bauer, with his brown, eternal pipe glued to the corner of his mouth. Now and then he blew a small cloud of brown troll smoke straight up into the turquoise-bleu, sun-sparkling space. And muttered something far behind his tight, narrow lips—not always so easy to decipher. But I, having had the key for many years, understood most of it.
Bauer and his friends were part of a generation of Swedish painters who started their careers just before the Modernism movement began to flourish, but at the same time were considerably younger than those dominating the Swedish art scene: artists such as Carl Larsson, Anders Zorn and Bruno Liljefors. Bauer was inspired by these artists, but from his heritage came in contact with Fritz Erler, Max Klinger and other German illustrators. He lived in an era when the Old Norse were romanticized throughout Scandinavia, and borrowed ideas and motifs from artists like Theodor Kittelsen and Erik Werenskiöld, yet his finished works were in his own style. After his journey to Italy his works clearly showed elements from the 14th century Renaissance. The pictures of princes and princesses had elements from Flandic tapestries, and even the trolls garments were pleated, much like the draped clothing seen in antique Roman sculptures.
At midnight, without fail, the Troll King goes up Troll Hill and stands gazing at the stars. Below him the wind sighs through the tree tops in the Forest. His golden crown glints in the starlight as he studies the sky. He looks like solid rock perched on solid rock. He has stood there for centuries, and he intends to stand there for many centuries more.
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ionlyski
Trad climber
Polebridge, Montana
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Aug 16, 2018 - 03:02pm PT
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Marlow,
Is that a stump puller upthread? If so, how does it work?
Arne
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Marlow
Sport climber
OSLO
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Topic Author's Reply - Aug 17, 2018 - 09:39am PT
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Ionlyski
Yes, it's a stump puller. "Stubbebryter" in Norwegian.
My grandfather Martinus had a self-made one.
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ionlyski
Trad climber
Polebridge, Montana
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Aug 17, 2018 - 07:13pm PT
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Our spruce are all dying out from root rot, a fungus that can reside in the stumps and roots for decades. Some recommend pulling the stumps to remove the fungus as they can travel through the root system into other trees.
Thanks Marlow, I had an idea about a tripod like that. Nice to see that it does work.
Arne
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