Showing posts with label Kai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kai. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Unsinkable

Credit: Aaron Brackney
Obviously, just because I'm still officially on "Intermission" that doesn't mean I won't pop in here now and then to stoke the fire a bit. Still TBD is whether this portends an expansion of this blog from "mostly movies" to "more or less movies mostly, yeah, but also more of the other stuff too depending on my own caprice and whims."

If you've kept up with the U.S. news this week, you know two things: (1) Newt Gingrich is still to "values" what a ten-gallon sack of live tapeworms is to a recipe for Lobster Thermidor, and (2) Seattle got socked with more snow in two days than we usually get in a year.

Although Elizabeth and I were effectively immobilized here atop the crest of our West Seattle ridge surrounded by hills worthy of a Jamaican bobsled team, we were well provisioned and experienced no significant difficulties.

Well, there was that one thing:

Wednesday's fine blanketing of new-fallen snow has by now become, after hours of light freezing rain, that afternoon's solid encasement in ice. So today I spent some quality muscle-time chipping and shoveling a mountain of ice off our front steps.

Just as I was wearily leaning the shovel near the front door, an enormous passenger liner hove into view, moving at top speed. It struck my mountain of shoveled ice, capsized, and broke in two. The scream of wrenched metal! The shrieks and lamentations of tumbling bodies! Down, down it slid with eerie grace into the snow near where Kai peed on a bush just a few hours earlier. And yet the band played on. A pitiful few lifeboats, some only half full of wailing women and children, managed to break away and row down 41st Ave. toward the more traveled depths of Andover Street and possible rescue. The last thing I saw was Leonardo DiCaprio sinking into the lawn. I would have offered him a rope or the shovel handle or something, but just then, from the kitchen, I heard the kettle for the hot chocolate. I feel kind of bad about that, but, after all, needs must.

Now, although I didn't have the expected difficulty of getting my car started, I still gotta hire somebody to clean up the lawn by hauling away all those deck chairs.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

An Alaskan Malamute in Seattle (part 2)

Soon after his atavistic explorations of the Iditarod-worthy front yard, Kai checked out the back to see how it compared.


Yep. About the same.

And yet, there's always a downside:
Definitely not ham.


"Wimpy furless primates. You want to go back indoors already?"

Oh, one last thing: When dog-walking out in this kind of cold, DO NOT accept a "double-dog dare" to put your tongue on your pooch's nose. Trust me on this one.


An Alaskan Malamute in Seattle (part 1)

Of course there are inconveniences that arrive with any massive dump of snow so large that the nearby Starbucks corporate HQ officially approves two new seasonal coffee beverages: the Shackleton (a low-low-fat white mocha that never makes it back to your home) and the Donner Party Half-Calf (tastes like chicken). But there was one member of our household who loved the whole experience down to his DNA: our dog Kai.

In his cool equanimity, he proved that this was no "Snowpocalypse," no "Snowmaggedon." In fact, I hope that both examples of lingua hysterica will now be banished from the Tiresome Media Freakout lexicon.



After all...
... it's just snow.

Still pretty damn cold, though.


On the other hand...
... the neighborhood kids are out playing.
And that short beefy child looks a lot like Jack London.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Post-Krismas Kai

"Hey, everyone's home! Let's go out, chase things, run on the beach! I'm a dog on the go! There's my ball!"

"What? You're gonna watch movies? Damn primates. That's okay, I'll wait for you."

"No, really, you go on and do your monkey things. I'm ready when you are."

"Actually, this is a comfortable spot."

"Screw it. Wake me when there's ham."


Saturday, November 12, 2011

How Kai understands "The Hound of the Baskervilles"

Earlier this week Elizabeth got a yen to watch the 1959 Hammer production of The Hound of the Baskervilles starring Peter Cushing (as Sherlock Holmes), André Morell, and Christopher Lee. Thinking that I might do some Sherlockian blogging here ahead of the release of the new Robert Downey Jr. movie, I acceded with pleasure.

As usual, our dog Kai, a 90-pound Mostly Malamute, joined us in the movie room for the showing.

Afterward, Elizabeth mused about how Kai might interpret the story's famous climax through his own perspective and nature. She suggested it might go something like this:

Baskerville: "Help! It's a terrible great evil hell-hound come to kill me!"

Hound: "It's a human! I can get petted!"

Baskerville (running): "I must escape from this giant, evil creature!"

Hound (jumping up and knocking him over): "Stop! Rub my tummy!"

Baskerville: "Help! Arrgh! My heart!"

Hound: "Finally, I can lick your face. Oh human, I adore you. Here, I'll lie on your chest to get closer. I love you, human!"

Baskerville: "Hellllllp!"

Suddenly the villain Holmes, knowing nothing about dogs, appears and shoots the good boy instead of giving him a reasonable command such as "Off" or "Down" or "Greet." He doesn't even offer an ever-present pocket treat.

To Kai, it's one of the great cinematic canine tragedies.


Friday, December 3, 2010

"...more important things..."

Masahiro Miyasaka. From nasa.com.
Winter is my favorite time of the year for night sky-watching. Earth is arcing through the part of its solar orbit that faces out toward the constellations Orion (a professional and romantic touchstone for me and Elizabeth), Gemini, Leo, Canis Major and Minor, the Pleiades star cluster, and more. It's something I look forward to every December, and on nights between now and February I'll get to feel ice forming on my mustache. One of my first public shows was a gorgeous planetarium production on the subject (the winter sky, that is; not my icy mustache).

Of course, living here in Seattle doesn't present enough opportunities for clear-sky viewing, but I take 'em when I get 'em.

There may be a film reference I could drop in here to justify this post in a "mostly movies" blog, but that's just not where my head is at the moment. (Oh, okay — "My God, it's full of stars!" There.)

Instead, in about ten minutes I'll be walking with Kai down by the water at Alki under the first blue-sky day we've had since November 23. (That day's Facebook update at 7:07 am: "It may be 23° with snow out my back door right now, but the sky is so clean and clear that I can't recall the last time the moon, 96% full, was so crisp and vivid through my binoculars. Gorgeous detail.") If the clear sky holds true into tonight, I'll be out there rather than in here. Although I will, no doubt, make sure a hot beverage is waiting for me when I get back inside. (Memo to self: Google search for drinks hot Bushmill's).


The sky tonight:

StarDate.org

Amazing Space (from the Space Telescope Science Institute)

EarthSky

Astronomy magazine

Sky and Telescope

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Walking with Frances Farmer: of bad girls and good dogs

Today I walked Kai near the house here in West Seattle where Frances Farmer used to live. I've done that a number of times and didn't realize it until about an hour ago, when this commemorative post by Kim Morgan (a former DVD Journal colleague) informed me that
"the bad girl of West Seattle," the troubled non-conformist, the short lived Hollywood star who rarely censored her thoughts
died 40 years ago this past Sunday. Kim's fine remembrance jogged my memory that, oh yeah, Farmer used to live not far from where I'm typing now. Thirty seconds of Googling later, I've made it a point to give the house a particular notice and a nod next time Kai and I stroll by.

It's a good neighborhood for dog-walking and — thanks to the bar named Shadowland after one of her biographies — raising a glass to "the freak from West Seattle."

For more, here's a 2008 post from WestSeattleBlog.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Kai goes to the beach

 
1. "Hey, a beach! Birds! Smelly things! Let's go!"


 
2. ::read read read::


 
3. "Well, crap."


 
4. "Bet I could jump this."


Music: The Doors, "I Can't See Your Face in My Mind"
Near at hand: a glass heart

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Duel in the Sun

The place: Laurelhurst Park, Portland, OR.

The encounter: Kai (Flickr) + male dog near his size. Mutual sniffing, postures taut, hair-trigger alphaness is in the air. At last, terms of engagement are agreed upon.

The event: Olympic free-style pissing match.

En garde!

Kai: "This is my oak tree." Pisses on it.

Challenger: "Nay, 'tis MY oak tree." Pisses more, truly an impressive riposte.

Kai: "Oh, yeah?" Hits bullseye again.

Challenger: "Upstart cur!" Retakes target.

Kai: "Dickweed!" And again.

This continues.

At last, honor satisfied, they part.

The tree's thoughts went unrecorded.



Music: Frank Zappa, Broadway the Hard Way
Near at hand: the latest issue of The Stranger

Sunday, March 21, 2010