L.A.tina

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by Tom Quinn
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Christina watches out her window to the city
Wonders where her boys have flown

Samuel stepped on a mine in Iraq, a piece of her heart gone

Under unfinished beams and eves we gather
In winter’s dark Atwater, morning
Missing mother’s warmth and table
Love songs come from corridor corners
Bird calls; whistles from yesterday’s jungle
Intermittent long sigh ay-ay-ay’s

There’s a new bird park in Avalon
Don’t stop the bus
Walk quietly by
And you’ll hear the songs of the Amazon
And all along the pacific flyway they wait for the end of the week
The builders of the pyramids will go home to momma
And, consuerte, a little chaka chaka

If Flowers Could Hear…Oh, Wait! They Can?

by Carlos de la Rosa
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Walking around Catalina’s interior these last few weeks has been a hugely enjoyable trip into the world of flowers, insects, pollination, and life in a Mediterranean climate island. There are millions of flowers popping out of the ground. Some trees, such as the fragrant feltleaf ceanothus (Ceanothus arboreus), one of three species of Ceanothus on the Island, buzz with insects visiting the tiny flowers that bloom in large bunches that cover the entire tree. Their sweet scent is intoxicating to bees and humans. Insects also visit the spectacular big yellow flowers of the giant coreopsis (Leptosyne gigantea) and the stunning pink blooms of the Santa Catalina Island bush mallow (Malacothamnus fasciculatus var. catalinensis). It is all part of a great circle of life, where plants and insects collaborate in their endless quest to reproduce, obtain food, and build the next generation.

Flowers spread their genes (encased in those minute, dust-like particles produced by the flower’s male parts and called pollen) through various means. The white and purple Island shooting stars (Primula clevelandii var. insularis), for example, produce pollen that needs the buzzing of insects, particularly bumblebees, to be released. The bees literally shake up the flowers with their buzzing wings, and this releases the pollen. This pollen then gets attached to the insects or flies into the wind, eventually finding its way to the stigma or female parts of other flowers, closing the circle of fertilization. These flowers also have interesting structures and colors, which are clearly attractive to insects.

The colors of flowers are actually more vibrant than what our human eyes can see. Many insects, for example, can see into the infrared area of the light spectrum. In this range, other colors and patterns on the flowers appear, which guide the insects towards the center of the flowers where they can find their rewards (nectar and pollen). Some flowers are also shaped in such a way that they can reflect the heat from the sun towards the center of the flower, like a parabolic shape, or sonar or satellite dish shape. Some insects hide inside flowers that close at night, taking advantage of this warm shelter.

But here is where the story gets really weird. What if some flowers could actually “hear” or sense the sounds made by the beating wings of insects and increase their nectar production to attract more insects? Yeah, this sounds incredible, I know. But in recently published research this is precisely what is happening. Researchers from the University of Tel Aviv, in Israel, have documented the phenomenon on one species of plant whose flowers seem to be able to detect the sound of insects and increase their nectar production within minutes. Doing experiments with the beach evening primrose (Oenothera drummondii), which grows wild in the southeastern United States, they documented the yellow parabolic-shaped flowers responding to the sound frequencies and recordings of bee wings berating to produce some 20% more nectar than when exposed to other wavelengths of sound. The parabolic shape of some flowers has also been documented in the rainforests, where some flowers use this shape to attract pollinating bats by reflecting back the ultrasounds produced by the bats as they hunt and look for nectar.

Looking around at the Island’s flora, we can see many species that have shapes similar to those shown by the primrose. And many insects including bees, bumblebees, flies of all sizes and colors, wasps, butterflies and moths, beetles, and more, visit them throughout the summer. Could any of the flowers can also “hear” and reward their pollinators? Looks to me like a fertile area of new research!

In a future article, we’ll talk about the importance of insects to the health of both, natural and man-made (agricultural) ecosystems. No matter how annoying people may find them, without insects—bees in particular—our agricultural systems would literally collapse, and the natural splendor of a wildflower show like the one we are witnessing this year on the hills of our beloved Island would come to an end. Our lives are made more precious because of all these creatures, great and small. Learning about fascinating and astounding features such as the ones being discovered right now only makes us appreciate more the value that nature and wilderness have in our lives.

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Want to learn more about this phenomenon?
Check out the links below!

The original article on the subject of plant responses to pollinator sound can be found and downloaded at this link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/507319v1

And here is an article on the subject in Spanish. Y aquí un artículo sobre el tema een español: aquí

Do You Smell That?

by Rich Zanelli
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Painting by Buck Lopez (courtesy of the Catalina Art Association).

We have all seen it and heard its effects, but how many of us have smelled lightning? If you have ever been close to a lightning strike, you have probably noticed a smell, sometimes fairly faint and sometimes overpowering, immediately after, probably even before the hairs on your arm have stopped standing on end. Some describe the odor as similar to chlorine. To me, it smells like melting plastic or burning inorganic matter. It is on the unpleasant side, but the reason behind the smell is really pretty cool.

The two most abundant elements in our atmosphere are oxygen and nitrogen. However, atoms of these elements rarely occur without a partner. Thus, instead of a bunch of Os and Ns in our atmosphere, what we more accurately have is a bunch of O2s and N2s. When lightning strikes, it superheats the air around it to ridiculous temperatures (over 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit), causing the sonic boom we hear as thunder and forcing molecules of air to be violently split apart. All of this activity results, for a short period of time, in stray Os and Ns. Most of these pair back up fairly quickly, but every so often a stray O will join up with an O2 to make a molecule of ozone (O3). The human olfactory system is sensitive enough to smell ozone in small concentrations (about 10 parts per billion – that is roughly equivalent to traveling five feet of your journey all the way to the sun), so even a small amount of ozone in the air is noticeable to us.

Another interesting factoid is that you can sometimes smell ozone before a thunderstorm hits. This results from previous lightning-created ozone molecules being pushed forward at the leading edge of a storm. It does not necessarily indicate that the upcoming storm will be severe, only that it had been severe.

Fun Facts About Lightning

1. A single bolt of lightning is around 5 times hotter than the surface of the sun.

2. The irrational fear of lightning is known as keraunophobia.

3. The odds of being struck by lightning in your lifetime is 1 in 3,000.

4. Each second there are 50 to 100 Cloud-to-ground lightning strikes to the earth worldwide.

5. On average, the Empire State Building in New York is struck 24 times a year and was once struck eight times in 24 minutes.

6. The energy contained from a single lightning strike can power a 100-watt light bulb for 90 days.

7. “Lightning never strikes twice” is just a myth, lightning can strike the same location many times.

8. Lightning follows the path of least resistance as it streaks through the sky. It would prefer to travel in a straight line, but will shift its path to avoid obstacles, even as small as a speck of dust. This is why it has such an erratic-looking visual signature.

9. “Lightning” and “lightening” do not mean the same thing.

Borrowed from: https://churchillsc.co.uk/news/10-interesting-facts- lightning/ and then modified.

The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant…

W. Fassbinder’s
all female cast explores
sex & power in 1972
with no #metoo.

petra von kant

Petra von Kant is a famous fashion designer who sits at the center of a love triangle between her assistant, Marlene, and an acquaintance (the friend of Petra’s cousin) Karin. The plot of The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (1973) takes place entirely in in Petra’s apartment, tracing the shifting dynamics between these women. But there is something more impressive than Fassbinder’s inventive film techniques, his portrayal of transgressive sexual relationships or this all-female cast. What makes the drama of Petra so powerful is its relentless account of women struggling — together and against one another — in the shadows of patriarchy and the emotional economies it traffics. The agony of each act peels back another layer of this struggle, with the apparent “absence” of men making the brutality of a patriarchal world all the more palpable. So much so is this the case that even as the final act of Fassbinder’s film ends as a “failure” we as viewers cannot be anything other other than grateful for the sensibility it lends to our accounts of gendered violence and its repercussions.

Films like The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant, or even the comical love-triangle of Yorgos Lanthimos’s recent Oscar-contender The Favourite (2018), remind us that the moment of #metoo cannot ever be understood as merely a contention for (long-belated) recognition of gendered violence between powerful (often white) male figures and their counterparts. Rather, it is an entry point for the analysis of the ways patriarchy works as an integral foundation for the operations of modern exploitation and the institutions which manage them.

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portrait by Ron Pyke (follow him on facebook and instagram)
words by Colin Eubank

Catalina Art Association Local Artist of the Month: Buck Lopez

This month’s artist is one hardworking and talented artist, musician and CAA volunteer: Buck Lopez. Buck has had an artistic flair ever since he could hold a pencil. He loved to draw and paint in elementary school. He even won a blue ribbon in our Youth Art Show.

“I’ve always loved art,” says Lopez. “Mrs. Rockwell was, and still is, my favorite teacher. I learned so much in her class. I grew up watching some of the local artists like Sampson, Upton, Dawes and Warner. I loved their work. After High School I didn’t paint as much. It wasn’t until I got my first tattoo that I fell in love with it as an art form. I learned everything I could about tattooing and committed to being a tattoo artist. It got my creative side going again…Unfortunately a hand injury caused me to stop tattooing, and I was sad to put my creativity aside. [But] all I needed was the gift of canvas and art supplies to express myself artistically again. I haven’t stopped since.”

“My first art show I was in a booth next to Danny Patterson. I’ve always loved his work, and he’s always given me so much advice and encouragement. When I was placed next to him in the Catalina Festival of Art, I thought: ‘I made it. I’m in the big show next to one of my favorite artists!’ I’ve been in every Catalina Festival show since — and I’m in the Art Association Gallery too. ”

“At the end of the day, with every painting, carving, performance with the band, you know what I’m about, where I came from, my family and its history. I’m an Islander, and very proud of that. I’m proud of our beautiful little town of Avalon. She is the best inspiration, and that’s how I got Isle Valley Art.

As a side note, we at the Catalina Art Association appreciate all the hard work Buck puts in helping set up and tear down the festivals for the past 3 years. His dedication is a true blessing.

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