It's Spring! Or very nearly. Birds are chirping, squirrels are scampering, and the ground is coming back to life. I've seen lovely little spikes of green edging their way up into daylight from the bulbs I planted last year. So, naturally, I'm beginning to think about what I'm going to plant this year, how I'm going to use it (hopefully more efficiently than last year), and what my long-term plans for crop rotation and permanent structures will be.
We are truly blessed with an overabundance of garden space, a rare problem these days. We live on 5 acres with a modified log-siding home, large barn and small pond. Both of us work, part-time moving to full-time in June for me, and full time for my partner Ben. We are also sharing our space with three glorious creatures of elegance (ie: cats) and one small carnivorous pony (the dog).
We've owned our home for going on three years; Ben has owned a home before, but I'm pretty much a homeowner newbie. I'm also a complete newcomer to this natural space as well, after growing up in the Caribbean, and moving to Houston;Oklahoma was a bit of a surprise to me. Interestingly enough, the effects of climate change are first being felt in the garden all across the nation, so this Oklahoma climate is a bit of a surprise for everyone here.
We are busy folks with a lot of potential land to mess with, so last year our intentionally small garden patch...became a bit larger of an undertaking than we had planned. We started with a 10 yard by 25 yard space directly behind the house. It is shielded between the house and a thicket of oak and scrub bushes to the east and west, by an extension of that thicket to the north, with southern exposure. It does get plenty of morning sun, and little direct sunlight after 3:30 p.m. typically. We've put in raised beds, according to Mike McGrath, about four feet wide so we can reach them from the edges.
Last year, we planted heirloom tomatoes (Cherokee Purples and Boxcar Willies) and some romas, as well as two tomatillo plants and a host of peppers. We also planted Swiss Chard, Rosemary, Sage, Thyme and Oregano. I found a Cuban Oregano plant, but he did not survive winter, sadly. He was in a pot, but I suspect he'll do better if I can find a good warm microclimate for him in the ground with southern exposure.
We are planning to put in okra, more tomatoes, kale, chard, more tomatillos, bell peppers and scotch bonnet peppers. Most of my produce loss last year came from planting more and not knowing the growing seasons well enough. We did surprisingly well, our tomatoes had two rounds of fruiting, with so much yield, I didn't know what to do with it all in time. We had colanders of plump vivid tomatoes sitting around for days. I finally did the lazy plan...I stuffed whole tomatoes in ziploc gallon bags, and just froze them. They disintegrate upon thawing...but the flavor is AMAZING when cooked, and it saves labor in the kitchen if you're reducing the tomatoes to paste or prepping for sauce.
The other part of gardening I'll be posting here is the cooking of said produce. I love veggies. Growing up Indian in Trinidad, you have access to a massive variety of culinary traditions, foodstuffs, herbs and techniques; I'll share my successes here...maybe even my failures (cautionary tales are entertaining...and helpful!).
So to start off...a major complaint about okra is the texture...that slimy, stringy, er...snotty texture that has people turning to the deep fat fryer as the only functional way to eat okra. Instead of fried okra (which I love, don't get me wrong, people) I tried skillet stewing it with a natural goop-cutter...tomatoes. I sauteed onions, garlic and a little ginger in the skillet, with some bell pepper chunks in olive oil (a Cuban mirepoix) until the onions turned translucent. I then added the tomatoes and okra, 3/4 cup of water and about a half tsp of good black pepper.
Cook that mix down, at a simmer, stirring occasionally. When the visible liquid has reduced to a quarter of what it was, stir thoroughly and taste. Add salt at this point, or a little low-sodium soy to intensify the flavor. Then cook to your desired texture. I like a little liquid in mine, but some folks prefer a thicker mix with more of a paste. I like to serve the okra and tomato beside a good piece of protein and starch (chicken and brown rice, steak and roast (homegrown) potatoes) but it's pretty good on its own, over rice or with a piece of roti. Vegan friendly recipe, btw!
I discovered that I loved cooking out of my garden. Every meal, we'd calculate the approximate percentage of the meal we had grown, or that was locally sourced. There were many meals where, with the assistance of my local farmer's market, 99% of our food came from within 100 miles of our home--including the spices. In Houston, I could source my food locally, but it was harder to grow it myself...here in Oklahoma, we're more than just slow-food consumers, we're producers as well.
Left of Center
Monday, March 4, 2013
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Engineering Ethics
In light of Saturday’s tragic murder of Kasandra Perkins by Kansas City Chiefs’ linebacker Jovan Belcher, followed shortly by his suicide, I found the implications of JD21Dougherty’s blog entry “The Invisible Injury” important to discuss. JD21Dougherty contends that technological augmentation could help prevent harm to those people who engage in violent or highly energetic activities, such as professional sports. I don’t think he goes far enough. Class and race play an important part in American sporting culture, where most of the players in the NFL are people of color, and playing professional sports is seen as a ticket to rapid upward mobility. If the public resists the benefits of health to players and their families because they prize the authenticity of the game more than the welfare of players and their families, they are supporting institutionalized racism and privilege.
When working in a climate of institutionalized injustice such as racism frameworks in the USA, it is important to pay attention to race in the discussions where it has been relevant. The day after JD21Dougherty’s post, news broke of the murder-suicide in Kansas; and public opinion began to circulate about the nature of the relationship between the victim and perpetrator, mostly based on scant information and lots of conjecture. Accusations were made against both Perkins and Belcher; that she was a gold-digger, that she had provoke the attack, and according to the sports news site deathspin she was “the catalyst” for her own murder.
Accusations against Belcher ranged from indictments of all athletes as promoting a culture of misogyny and violence, to Bob Costas' broadcast on Sunday Night Football. Avoiding domestic violence altogether, Costas instead chose to address gun control. Yet the elephant in the living room was the most powerful argument for Josh's suggestion of technological augmentation—Belcher was subject to multiple Traumatic Brain Injuries during his career in the NFL—injuries that, repeated over time, result in behavior change, personality shift, loss of higher reasoning, general cognitive impairment, dementia, depression and seizures among other more severe effects. In Belcher’s case, discourse has turned to TBI as a root cause of Belcher’s violent behavior. And he’s not the first athlete to succumb, if so.
Attention turned to the role of TBI in professional US athletics with the 2007 death of wrestler Chris Benoit, who suffocated his wife and child before taking his own life. His death had come around the same time as a rash of suicides in the NFL, a worrisome trend that led the Sports Legacy Institute; a group dedicated to “the study, treatment and prevention of brain trauma in athletes and other at-risk groups,” according to their website; to include Benoit’s brain in the samples of the dead NFL players’. All the brain tissue showed signs of specific injury attributed to repeated, massive trauma, known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
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| Brain tissue stains showing CTE evidence (image courtesy of Boston University) |
Sunday, the Boston Globe reported on a newly concluded study from the Boston University School of Medicine, where researchers autopsied 85 brains (mostly from professional athletes) and found CTE throughout the samples—including the two brains from autopsied high school athletes. The study focused on charting the progression of CTE, which may progress for some time after the initial concussive impact. According to the Globe’s report “It starts with headaches and problems with concentration in the early stages, followed by depression, aggression, explosive anger and short-term memory loss. Then comes more serious cognitive impairment, and eventually full-blown dementia where a person doesn’t recognize loved ones.” The disorder was first suspected in the early 1920s, in early professional boxers. Mohammed Ali is believed to have CTE, previously characterized as Dementia Pugilistica.
There are many sports fans who question whether there is still a race problem in American sports, claiming that racism is over since the players are integrated. Yet there are many facets of racism just as there are to any institutional power differentials. There may be many people of color playing in the NFL, but the folks calling the shots on the field and in the halls of power are typically still white males. According to the Race and Gender Report Card issued by The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, most of the players in the NFL are African-American, but the majority of upper and middle management are and have been white. There have never been any CEO's of color in the NFL as of 2011.
The question of augmentation being questionable for reasons of authenticity of the sport is, in the face of the human tragedy of CTE and resultant family and community violence, appalling. This caveat becomes even more problematic given the disproportional targeting of recruitment for sports and military groups in minority communities, as a vehicle for class mobility and citizenship. Similar effects of CTE and TBI in military contexts have been established for some time, and are theoretically contributing to the massive numbers of military suicide casualties. The caveat of sport authenticity can easily be read as people of privilege watching people of less privilege harm themselves, each other, and their families for entertainment value.
While in college, Jovan Belcher signed a pledge for Male Athletes Against Violence, a group at the University of Maine that focuses on domestic violence. Although this element of Belcher’s past has been limned as irony, its far more telling in terms of his change in attitude after being repeatedly bashed in the head.
Although some outliers resist the growing tide of consensus on TBI and CTE linkage, professional sports groups are beginning to accept the correlation and conduct further studies into how to prevent harm to athletes, and their wives and kids. Yet their efforts meet with resistance from the very fans who claim to love sports. The players who are typically young men of color, can expect to play for about 15 years after college if they get recruited. Unless they are hired as coaching staff or elsewhere in the professional sporting pantheon--a proposition which is statistically rare--they must reeducate themselves or find another line of work. Their families' well-being also hangs in the balance. The integrity of the game may be important, but it is also measured in the well-being of the people who play it and the culture of sports, not just the appearance of authentic risk and damage.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Go Outside and Play?
In the wake of Hurricane Sandy,I suspect it's normal that I would remember my own hurricane fears in Houston. It was late summer 2005 and the Gulf Coast was still reeling from the aftereffects of Hurricane Katrina, when Hurricane Rita formed in the Bahamas heading for Houston. My friends and I were scared, but found our years of gaming helped us think strategically and problem-solve as a group in an emergency situation; our imaginary practice with dice and dragons may have helped save our lives.
Having watched Katrina’s landfall and the subsequent levee and
infrastructure breaks on the nightly news, Houstonians were terrified of the
coming storm. There were runs on the gas station, the stores
were out of food and bottled water, and we had to have a plan if we were going
to weather the storm safely. Fortunately, my gaming group been
gaming together once a week for seven hours each Sunday since 2002. Our game environment required us to work as a group despite rigidly
constructed differences and skillsets. Over the three-year period, we learned to
assign tasks according to our skills, communicate effectively with
one another, strategize quickly, and plan for contingencies without losing
time.
There were seven of us altogether. I was good at understanding others’ strengths
and thinking strategically. My buddy
Matt was also a strategist, and we worked well together; so he and I worked to develop the group
strategy. Jeff was good at forward planning, had available cash and the newest
car. Brad was a master of the roadways
in Houston, although he could be abrasive and impulsive. Joe was a great
quartermaster. He was in charge of defense, and helped Jeff with forward
planning. Shaun was the Gamemaster or
Storyteller—he wielded iron authority and helped keep us focused as we planned our
escape.
The use of gaming-style storytelling for emergency
preparedness is becoming less a fringe activity and more of a mainstream
strategy to teach preparedness skills without triggering anxieties. For example, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
and the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) Citizen Corps both have zombie emergency
preparedness courses. The twist
which makes this strategy more effective than regular training courses seems to
be the element of play involved: “... zombie preparedness messages and
activities have proven to be an effective way of engaging new audiences who may
not be familiar with what to do before, during, or after a disaster, and to
inject a little levity into preparedness while still informing and educating
people,” according to the FEMA website. The gaming model for emergency
preparedness is an effective teaching tool, but it is not only effective in
these scenarios.
Video and analog gaming are massively entertaining, but
are also powerful tools for socialization and cognitive development in the field of childhood development. The
concept of play as learning has been used in education, cognitive development and emotional development in prepubescent
children for over forty years. These benefits are also confirmed in the use of video games,
according to Mark Prensky, a scholar, author, game designer and consultant in
leveraging games to learn. According to
Prensky’s model, children learn at both the surface trivialized skill learning
of navigating a game space as well as skills at another, deeper level: self-protection,
group socialization, non-verbal communication, parallel processing, and
multitasking.
Critics of gaming cite the dangers of increasing violence, as well as violent and recursive misogyny. They claim, justifiably, that virtual gaming space is just as subject to bullying and misogyny as real space. Yet online games typically include a code of conduct which allows the gaming company to help protect players from their most offensive peers. These codes of conduct create a set of mutually agreed upon rules for the space, and provide a platform for ejecting offending members from the community.
Critics of gaming cite the dangers of increasing violence, as well as violent and recursive misogyny. They claim, justifiably, that virtual gaming space is just as subject to bullying and misogyny as real space. Yet online games typically include a code of conduct which allows the gaming company to help protect players from their most offensive peers. These codes of conduct create a set of mutually agreed upon rules for the space, and provide a platform for ejecting offending members from the community.
These rules are necessary as there is a large range of gamers in shared space. According to the Pew
Research study “Adults and Video Games,” more than half of all adults in the
United States play video games regularly, as do almost all children age
12-17. Instead of being isolating, these games are
wildly socializing, as players must work together to accomplish tasks at higher
levels in Massively Multiplayer Online RolePlaying Games (MMORPGs). The players are rewarded for
mastering skills such as cooperation, problem solving, and strategy.
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| Burned evacuee bus, Sept 23, 2005. (image courtesy of The Houston Chronicle) |
My weekend gaming group displayed all these characteristics
when we attempted to evacuate Houston before Hurricane Rita. Millions of people attempted to flee the city, and some lost their lives during the
attempt. It was the hottest day of the summer when people got on the
roadways, and between poorly maintained vehicles and poor planning, a bus full of senior citizens exploded on the roadway while trying to evacuate, killing 24 passengers.
We too tried to leave, caravanning in our two newest and most reliable vehicles. Everyone brought personal essentials, but also brought specialty equipment such as firearms, toolkits, water, an emergency radio, walkie talkies, additional fuel and a small car air pump. We also had to reassess the situation during our evacuation attempt. We had been idling for 7 hours, during a 100+ degree day, our formerly full fuel tanks were low by a quarter, and we had no expectation of making the freeway. There was no fuel coming into the city, and our best case scenario was running out of gas near Columbus, Tx; right in the path of the storm.
We reassesed, and turned back. Our cars, near to overheating after 7 hours of idling traffic, cooled down as we sped along bare roads leading back into town, to hunker down at the most secure location.
In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, there was little we could do to help, but our friends knew what to do from our firsthand accounts. Not one of our gaming group in the New York area, even the differently abled, was injured in the storm. Some of us live to play, but we can all play to live.
We too tried to leave, caravanning in our two newest and most reliable vehicles. Everyone brought personal essentials, but also brought specialty equipment such as firearms, toolkits, water, an emergency radio, walkie talkies, additional fuel and a small car air pump. We also had to reassess the situation during our evacuation attempt. We had been idling for 7 hours, during a 100+ degree day, our formerly full fuel tanks were low by a quarter, and we had no expectation of making the freeway. There was no fuel coming into the city, and our best case scenario was running out of gas near Columbus, Tx; right in the path of the storm.
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| Houston has 6 million residents. Here they are. (image courtesy of The Houston Chronicle) |
We reassesed, and turned back. Our cars, near to overheating after 7 hours of idling traffic, cooled down as we sped along bare roads leading back into town, to hunker down at the most secure location.
In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, there was little we could do to help, but our friends knew what to do from our firsthand accounts. Not one of our gaming group in the New York area, even the differently abled, was injured in the storm. Some of us live to play, but we can all play to live.
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