Saturday, April 03, 2010

NaPoWriMo

April is National Poetry Month--in the USA, I'm guessing. But on the Internet, there are no national boundaries unless you are trying to buy something subversive, like a book of poetry (Amazon.com refused to sell me a book of poetry because I do not live in the USA).

Anyway, about NaPoWriMo: it's a time herds of poets attempt to write a poem every day. That fact has made me decide to join the herd and resume posting a new poem every day this month.

That's what's happening on wordcurrents.

Monday, February 15, 2010

wordcurrents down

wordcurrents is down.

I installed a plugin that was supposed to keep readers form copying posts without permission. Immediately it created a database error that locked up the whole blog with an error message.

I have disabled the plugin, uninstalled it, deletaed and respored my datebase from a previous backup, upgraded my wordpress installation, all to no avail.

My latest strategy has been to ask my IP to restore the whole site to its state before 9 pm EST.

I'll now have to wait.

(Feb 16) Overnight, my ISP fixed the problem by reverting wordcurrents to Feb 14. Not everything working in the back end of the site, but at least it's up.

Monday, February 01, 2010

Goodbye 1000 Poems Celebration Contest

It has been an interesting experiment/experience running the contest, which ran from December 12 2009 to January 31, 2010.

The idea was to get some substantial feedback from my readers.

The result was as follows:
I received one email through the entry form from a reader who legitimately requested that I edit his book of poetry, and something like thirty spam messages per day. Over the course of the contest, that amounted to about 1500 spam messages.

I think I'll have to conclude that the prizes (signed, hard copies of my work and podcasts by request) were not commensurate with the task of creating an entry.

The other element of my expectations, that of attracting more readers to my poetry and more listeners to my podcasts, seems to have worked. Poetry readership and podcast listenership are up substantially.

Now: I wonder if, now that I have closed the entry form, the spamming will stop.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

voice

Both Kate and Anna McGarrigle's homes are within about an hour of here. Today's poem, "voice", is prompted by Kate, who died yesterday of cancer at age 63.

Here is the Montreal Gazette article.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

"What happened to the daily poems?" you ask.

You may have noticed that wordcurrents (A new poem every day . . . .) has had no new posts since Sunday January 10, 2010. Today is Thursday the 14th. What happened?

I got the 'flu.

Monday, I slept all morning. That afternoon, I practised with our quartet, Acapellics Anonymous, 2:30 to 4 pm at our home, waved goodbye, and suddenly felt so tired I had to lie down. By 6 pm I had a temperature, and the next few days blur into each other, as I slept most of the time.

Fortunately, we had no major snowstorms that needed shoveling, and the only social engagements I had were duplicate bridge and Barbershop practice, to both of which I sent regrets.

I had in the back of my mind that this was a chance to germinate some poetry seeds, but my brain refused to consider poetry. Last evening, my brain gave its consent to consider the concept, worked on a beginning for a poem about inability to work a poem while sick, but that went four lines in my head (still more or less there) and no further. It seems that writing requires something that sickness removes. Maybe science can use that observation to further investigate art.

When will I post again? Not yet. Later today? That seems unlikely: my impetus seems to me at this moment to be trapped within the leprotic hoary crust of a virulent joke.

Monday, January 04, 2010

The drive to the beach

I wrote this poem at the suggestion of Kathleen Hay, soon after St. Albert's Cheese opened its Facebook location, and everybody in the area was becoming a fan.

St. Alberts is one of the few remaining "cheese factories" in an area once famous for its cheeses. Our focal farm industry used to be dairy farms (raising mainly Holstein cattle). In the day, there were numerous of these "cheese factories" scattered around the area. My wife's uncle, Alex Cameron, made a cheddar that won the gold medal at the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago. His cheese Factory was located in a frame house north west of Cornwall.

Virtually all of these cheese factories were forced to close over the last fifty years when, in a colossal blunder, the government of the day instituted a mandatory system of milk quota that restricted sale of milk to cheese producers who could obtain "quota" and drove up the price so much that the cheese factories could either no longer obtain milk or could no longer afford it, and all milk went to the single large producer, which soon had a monopoly, Kraft Foods.

St. Alberts was one of the few small producers to survive. Click on the photo to see the full size. One of St. Alberts staple products in curd. For a virtual tour of the manufacturing process, see virtual tour



The cheese curd has to be fresh, never refrigerated, as refrigeration changes the nature of the texture and taste. Fresh cheese curd is soft, moist and squeaky when you bite into it. It has a slightly salty taste. It comes almost white or coloured orange. It is this curd that is pressed into blocks and aged various lengths of time to become the revered cheddar that is a hallmark of the region.

One ray of hope: Margaret Morris' Glengarry Fine Cheese opened in 2009 just a couple of kilometers north of Lancaster Ontario. In the same building is Glengarry Cheesemaking, which teaches cheese making and sells supplies. Several varieties of Margaret's amazing cheeses are for sale at Farmboy in Cornwall. Of note is her Lankaaster, a fine Dutch Gouda. She also makes superb cheddars and cream cheeses amd blues. Well worth a twenty minute drive along the St. Lawrence River.