Saturday, October 21, 2023

A Trip to New Mexico

Daniel and I have prioritized our travel to explore places we’ve never been before.  Our latest trip was to New Mexico, which neither of us had ever visited.  Friends have been telling me about Santa Fe for years.  I originally planned to visit in the summer of 2021, but the Delta variant reared its ugly head and I decided to forego that trip.  We finally got around to visiting New Mexico this month, partly for leisure, partly to investigate a possible winter home.

If flying, the most efficient way to get into New Mexico is to fly to Albuquerque (ABQ).  Santa Fe has an airport, but it’s very small and we found if we were to fly there, the price would have been higher, and our layover would have gone on forever.  So, we flew into ABQ via Denver.  Upon landing in Denver, we had to wait 20 minutes before our gate was ready, then had to rush to the other terminal for our connection – only to discover that that flight was also delayed.  No worries, we arrived at ABQ’s charmingly westernized airport only slightly late, got our rental car, and enjoyed a leisurely drive to Santa Fe. 

By the time we got into Santa Fe, we were hungry, so we headed to Santa Fe Plaza, near the Palace of the Governors and parked our rental.  We selected Coyote Cantina, where I enjoyed some fine drinks, and I sampled my first ever Frito Pie.  Delicious!


A Frito Pie

Dan in a hare-ey situation.


We started Friday with a hike at
Cerrillos Hills State Park.  Exercise was necessary, because we ate so much during our trip that we ran the risk of sabotaging our diets.  Then we headed to Meow Wolf, a sort of combination art gallery and funhouse, which was the highlight of our trip.  This is the kind of place that can be enjoyed by people of all ages and persuasions.

Outside Meow Wolf

Dan in the cotton candy room



We were unaware an annular eclipse was going to occur during our trip, so we neglected to bring solar viewing glasses and, despite looking at numerous places, were unable to find any.  We went to an empty parking lot Saturday morning and enjoyed it as best we could without harming our eyes.

That evening, we took a break from our sightseeing to take in the new Exorcist film.  It was totally unmemorable. 

Sunday morning, we packed up and headed to Albuquerque for the last two days of our trip.  Instead of taking I-25, we took state route 14.  This proved to be interesting as it took us through the tiny town of Madrid, once a mining town, later a filming location for Wild Hogs, now mostly an artists’ colony.  Continuing our journey south, we took a detour and drove to the top of Sandia Crest, then back down again.  By the time we got into Albuquerque, our appetite needed to be satisfied and we stopped at the 66 diner.  The experience was more notable for its vintage Route 66 décor than for the ordinary Chicken Fried Steak I ate. 

On our way to ABQ from Santa Fe

Comfort food

Albuquerque is quite a bit larger than Santa Fe – its population is greater than municipal Cleveland, yet it retains a small-town feel.  With the roads largely laid out in a grid pattern, it’s easy to navigate.  (Just about every road we encountered in New Mexico was far superior to Ohio’s counterparts.)   Old Town was quite crowded on Sunday, with vendors and activities aplenty.  Yet we found most were selling the same things as in Santa Fe. 



Monday was our last full day in New Mexico.  Dan had been wanting to try blue corn pancakes, so we headed to the Range café for an early breakfast.  Although I’ve been on a low-carbohydrate diet since 2021 (and have lost almost 40 pounds), I tried the pancakes and greatly enjoyed them.  We then headed to the Sandia Peak Tramway for a ride to the top – some 10,679 feet.  Yes, our ears popped on the way up and on the way down.  Unfortunately, due to a minor injury I wasn’t able undertake a hike to the Kiwanis cabin, built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s.  Still, the vistas from the peak made it one of the highlights of our trip.

View of ABQ from Sandia Peak



We flew home Tuesday, connecting at George Bush Intercontinental Airport – a fine, well-run airport.  During our brief connection, I had the need to use the restroom and walked in to hear Beethoven’s last string quartet on the overhead speakers.  One wonders what the Master would think to have his music playing in such a place.  

Sunday, October 8, 2023

Mozart, Staud, and Tchaikovsky at Severance

Daniel and I headed to Severance last night for our first concert of the Cleveland Orchestra season.  Conductor Franz Welser-Möst and guest soloist Christoph Sietzen provided a program that combined the somewhat familiar with the brand new. 

The news that Welser-Möst will be receiving follow up treatment after the recent removal of a cancerous tumor has been on my mind.  But there was no sign of ill health in either his appearance or his conducting last night.  The opening work, Mozart’s Symphony No. 29 in A major, K. 201 was given a lithe, elegantly propulsive performance.  As is customary with Welser-Möst, tempi leaned toward the brisk side, particularly in the second movement Andante, which went at a pace more closely resembling an Allegretto.  But no one would quibble with the superb balance and transparency that conductor and orchestra brought to the piece.

Following a longer than usual stage change, guest percussionist Christoph Sietzen took his place for Staud’s Whereas the reality trembles, receiving its world premiere performances this weekend.  The work calls for a supplement of percussion instruments large enough that the stage extension had to be employed.  The percussion included, among other accoutrements, a Chinese opera gong, cowbells, bongos, woodblocks, crotales, thunder sheets, along with an oil barrel provided by Broadway Scrap Metals and Terracotta pots courtesy of Petitti Garden Center.  In essence the piece is a concerto for percussion and orchestra, which concerns itself more with texture and instrumental effect than thematic development.  Sietzen worked up quite the sweat as he navigated from instrument to instrument.  As this was a world premiere, I have nothing to compare this performance with, except to state that soloist, conductor, and orchestra were totally committed.  Despite the work’s relative modernity and atonality, the audience responded with an extended ovation.  Sietzen gifted the audience with an encore – a short, contemplative piece composed by a friend of his. 

Before and after the Staud work.

Following intermission, Welser-Möst and the orchestra returned for Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 2 in C minor, Op. 17.  For over a century, the work has been titled (courtesy of a music critic contemporary of the composer’s) the “Little Russian,” owing to Tchaikovsky’s use of three Ukrainian folk songs as thematic material.  Some Western orchestras have now retitled the work “Ukrainian” in a justifiable response to Vladimir Putin’s barbaric invasion of Ukraine.  (Truth be told I resist the use of all nick-names in musical compositions unless given by the composer himself: thus the “Heroic” Polonaise and “Revolutionary” Etude of Chopin are titles I don’t use, but the “Pathetique” Sonata of Beethoven is one I do.)  Whether titled or not, the Second Symphony is an engaging work where the composer’s mature style begins to emerge – although it must be pointed out the symphony was revised seven years after its premiere in 1873.  As with the performance of Dvořák’s New World Symphony last April, Welser-Möst avoided the temptation to lay on the work’s folk themes in favor of musical architecture – and his approach worked.  The coda, with a superbly controlled accelerating crescendo, was particularly effective. 

The conductor will be taking some time off for his cancer treatment.  We wish him a speedy recovery with a minimum of discomfort, followed hopefully by a return to the podium. 

Friday, October 6, 2023

2023 Election Endorsements

November 7, 2023, will mark an off-year election in Ohio.  Turnout tends to be low in this type of election, so each vote is especially important.  Vote by mail and early in person voting starts on October 11. 

Issue 1: Reproductive rights – YES

Officially titled "The Right to Reproductive Freedom with Protections for Health and Safety," this proposed Constitutional Amendment is listed on the ballot as Issue 1, having been certified despite the efforts of Ohio’s Secretary of State Frank LaRose and other extremist Republicans and pro-birth activists.  The centerpiece of this issue is allowing women to control their own bodies, including the right to have an abortion. 

These same activists, having failed in their attempt to raise the bar for passage to a nearly impossible level, are kicking up quite the fuss over this proposed amendment.  They are claiming that passage will lead to a rash of partial birth abortions and underage people obtaining gender reassignment surgery.  To use a polite term from another era: Poppycock!  Even Ohio’s Republican Attorney General, Dave Yost, has pointed out that there is nothing in the text of the amendment that even references gender reassignment or transgender people.  Read the complete text for yourself here.  Besides, is there an epidemic of young people in Ohio, or anywhere, seeking gender reassignment?  How would those wanting such a change even pay for it?  I don’t imagine the hourly wages at McDonald’s or wherever young people work would be sufficient.  As for partial birth abortions, the proposed amendment guarantees the right to an abortion during the time the fetus is determined to not yet be viable, as decided by the woman’s physician – unless that physician determines that continuing the pregnancy poses a danger to the woman’s life or health.  Less than .2% of abortions nationally have involved intact dilation and extraction and have generally been performed following a miscarriage.

I’m a gay man.  The chances I would get a woman pregnant are, well, basically zero.  But when it comes to allowing women to control their bodies, I stand with the vast majority of women.  I also believe that, as former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop did, the only way to lower the number of abortions is to lower the number of unwanted pregnancies – which means better access to contraception.  Not coincidentally, this is also something pro-birth extremists are trying to curtail.  Ultimately, whether or not to terminate a pregnancy is a decision best left to the individual woman in consultation with her physician.  Do Ohioans and Americans in general want to align themselves with countries like Yemen, Myanmar, Pakistan, or Nicaragua – or would we rather stand with Ireland, Germany, the United Kingdom, or the United States before Roe v. Wade was repealed? 

I strongly favor passage of Ohio Issue 1.

 

Issue 2: Recreational Cannabis – YES

In 1975, the Ohio legislature passed, and Governor James Rhodes signed a bill decriminalizing cannabis – making Ohio the sixth state to do so. 

In 2016, the Ohio legislature passed and Governor John Kasich signed a bill allowing Medical use for Cannabis to treat 21 health conditions, and setting up rather byzantine regulations for creating Cannabis dispensaries.  It also severely restricted licensing for cultivation of medical cannabis.  By 2021, only 20 cultivators had been licensed and 125,000 patients approved for medical cannabis.

The Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol initiative, to be listed on the ballot as Issue 2, will legalize recreational cannabis within Ohio, subject to the following:

  • ·        Legalize the possession of up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis and 15 grams of concentrate for adults 21 years of age and older.
  • ·        Allow the cultivation of six plants for personal use, with a maximum of 12 plants per home by adults 21 and older.
  • ·        Allow the sale of cannabis at licensed dispensaries, with a 10 percent sales tax imposed.
  • ·        Divide tax revenue between social equity and jobs programs (36 percent), localities that allow dispensaries to operate (36 percent), education and substance abuse programs (25 percent), and administrative costs (3 percent).
  • ·        Allow landlords and business owners to prohibit use of cannabis within their property.

Legalizing recreational cannabis does not equate to approval of same.  It’s simply an acknowledgement that people use cannabis, just as they smoke tobacco and drink alcohol.  Use of these is a decision best left to the individual, and regulations should be consistent: just as one is not allowed to smoke tobacco in public buildings or airplanes, cannabis use should take place where others will not be impacted by second-hand smoke.  Just as one must be over 21 to legally drink, cannabis should be similarly restricted.  The proposed issue makes provisions for all these matters.  As a homeowner, I will continue exercise the right to ask visitors to step outside if they want to smoke tobacco or cannabis.  Who is going to be harmed by passage of this issue?  Drug traffickers who profit over the semi-illegality of cannabis in Ohio. 

I favor passage of Ohio Issue 2.


 


Issue 5 – Cuyahoga Community College tax levy

I have stated elsewhere that I am in support of free community college for all who seek it.  While this property tax levy does not reach that goal, it helps keep the costs of a college education under control for the modest cost of an additional $14 per year for every $100,000 of taxable home value.  It’s a bargain which only the sociopathic would oppose.

 


South Euclid Mayor: Georgine Welo is running unopposed for her sixth term as mayor.  Just in case someone tries to mount a write-in campaign, let us review her accomplishments.  Welo became mayor in 2004.  During the decades before she took office, none of the previous administrations tried to stop the local slide in population, quality of life, or local amenities that began in the 1980s.  Here are just a few of the developments which have taken place since Welo became mayor:

·        Complete replacement of Cedar Center North shopping center.

·        Construction of Oakwood Commons shopping center.

·        Partial replacement of the May-Green shopping center.

·        Creation of the Food Truck Park.

·        Cutters Creek housing development.

·        Removal of several troubled houses on Greenvale Road; additionally, multiple decaying, unoccupied homes were torn down during and after the Great Recession – many since replaced by new homes.

·        Creation of several pocket parks.

·        Multiple infrastructure improvements on Green Road and South Belvoir Boulevard, with smaller improvements on side streets.

For the first time in recent memory, nearly every store front in South Euclid is occupied.  Further, home values are up, and South Euclid is now a sellers’ market.  There was a house Dan and I considered buying several years ago, and in retrospect I wish I had because it is now out of our reach. 

Mayor Welo wants to continue to build on these successes, and deserves to continue in the job.

 

South Euclid-Lyndhurst School Board

There are four candidates running for the two open seats on the South Euclid-Lyndhurst School Board.  I endorse Cathy Covarrubias for one of the two open seats.