Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Life inside a glass house....


 

After touring Bioshephere 2* we determined that it would be like living inside a gigantic bottle...and yet a group of scientists did just that. They signed the contracts and went inside for a 2 year tour of duty....along with 45 species of animals/insects. It now belongs to the University of Arizona, but that only happened recently....original facility became a human-inhabited laboratory back in the early 90's.

*[ Constructed between 1987 and 1991, it was used to explore the complex web of interactions within life systems in a structure that included five areas based on biomes and an agricultural area and human living/working space to study the interactions between humans, farming and technology with the rest of nature.]
 

 h
 
Tours start at the lower level of this building, which is another level down.
 This building is the size of 3 football fields long.
  
 
 
Rain-catchers designed from children's hands dot the landscape.
Water conservation is a large part of the recycling program built into the facility. Originally, the inhabitants had no paper products - yes, that included NO tissue, toilet paper or paper towels.
 
 
 
 
One of the biomes included an 'ocean with coral reef'....Pacific Ocean water was trucked, as was the sandy beach located at the bottom end of the photo (not visible here but we were standing on it).
 
   
 
This is a huge expansion bladder aid in the distributing of heat generated with all the glass. Heat has  to go somewhere, thus. this Dupont rubber bladder with its 40 year warranty,and it is still manually checked each morning. We got to yell "Hello" once inside this room - as it acts like an echo chamber.
 
 
 
I'll close with a piece of sculpture, one of several on the grounds. There are also additional photos in a separate slideshow to the right of this piece. The tour we took was educational in the scientific as well as a social/cultural commentary on communal living, it was worth every penny of the entrance fee and half of that is tax decuctible!
 
~ Ciao
 

Sunday, December 9, 2012

You want FAIR? ...then find one near you


 
As a kid growing up in Seattle my parents would answer my "that's not fair"  with the phase, "you want fair?"- with - "we'll go to Puyallup in September"....(when the county fair occurred). Now as an adult I can go to any street fair that I happen upon and this weekend we found ourselves in the midst of the Tucson 4th Avenu Winter Street Fair where they close off almost 1 mile of the street near the University. And with 400 booths we spent most of the day exploring those booths.  Oh, darn - Sun and art in December...can't get better than that.
Tucson 4th Avenue Street Fair - Winter - is this weekend, however March 22-24, 2013 is the date for the Spring Street Fair if you want to mark your calendar.  I found 3 of my favorite
 
   Food

 Music
 
 
and some really amazing artists....
 
I collect "faces" in art form. Ceramic masks, mixed media (wood/paper/shells etc), and have needlepointed several myself. These copper figures (very light weight) called Ancestors caught my eye....she sells them on Etsy - in addition to the "Ancestors" she also has some amazing photographs, nightlights and other art she has created. Check her out!
 
this little piggy
 
metal musician

  hookah anyone? shop on 4th sells them.

For a day activity this had it all; music, food, arts, and exercise.

~Ciao




 
 

Thursday, December 6, 2012

3, 2, 1....Launch -

 
Ok, as many of you know, due to my spouse's interest in anything 'aerospace' related, I have spent quite a bit of time in airplane/space museums, floating aircraft carriers, etc., if it has a plane, helicopter or rocket we see them - and there are quite a few of those around the country. Yesterday we spent a couple of hours touring the Titan Missile Museum, near Sahuarita, AZ, 25 south of Tucson - it was fascinating! 
 

Born out of the 1960's Cuba Missile crisis, the 54 silo sites were built as MAD or "mutually assured destruction" or deterrants to war.


Missile sites were located in Kansas, Arkansas and here in Arizona....and their were hidden in plain sight. The government wanted our enemies to know that we were serious and could destroy them even in the event that they struck first. Frakly, that knowledge didn't give me a lot of comfort.

Diagram of 18 AZ silo locations


 The guided tour starts with a 17 min video that gives youthe history of  how the silos came to be, the US Air Force stewardship of the program and then the walk-a-bout of  the silo itself. This tour is the bare essentials-tour, one of seven tours offered. There is even a sleep-over program
for those who wish to have a hands-on experience.
 
Part of the tour we took gave me the opportunity to be "Crew Commander"... answering questions about the control panel and assisting with 'launching' the Titan II....selection is by whoever enters the room first.  Anyone can do it!
 
 

A view of the Titan II missile from above....impressive isn't it.

 
 
 ~ Ciao