25 Şubat 2013 Pazartesi

Valentine's Day Printables: Yoda One For Me

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In a recent Silicon Valley Mamas article, my friend Robyn writes of a recent DIY Valentine backlash.  I'll admit, I've noticed it too -- which makes it even weirder that I'm going in completely the opposite direction.  Since The Pea was in kindergarten, I've been content to buy cheapo $3-for-24 Valentine cards from Target or Walgreens, but this year I just couldn't resist trying a few of the DIY ideas I've seen on Pinterest.  Yesterday I made some You Rock Valentines with some leftover candy from 3Po's party, and today I made some Yoda Valentines.


3Po loves Yoda, and he chose this one on Pinterest.  It's really more of an assemble-it-yourself rather than a do-it-yourself kind of Valentine:  Just print and cut out the cards, cut two slits above and below Yoda's hands, slip in a Pixy Stix rod (you can also use a glow stick or a pencil if you don't want to give out candy), and tape the back to secure.  It's almost as easy as buying the valentines at the drugstore!

Here is an image file that you can download and print:


You can get up to 8 of these cards on an 8.5"x11" sheet of paper or cardstock (sturdier paper is better).  Below is a PDF document that you can download from my Scribd account:

Valentine Printables: Yoda One for Me by

May the Force be with you!

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Camiguin Island

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Camiguin Island, PhilippinesCamiguin Island (as viewed from neighboring White Island), Philippines.  Image source: Wikipedia Commons
Boracay Island, one of the crown jewels in the Philippine archipelago, has once again landed on a Best Beaches list -- this time it's TripAdvisor's 2013 Traveler's Choice Awards for Best Beaches in the World.  With all the global attention it's getting, even though it will never be as crowded or touristy as Venice Beach or Waikiki Beach, it would be a stretch to describe Boracay as "remote", especially if you first saw it fifteen, twenty or more years ago (as I did).  For a truly remote island, you'll have to look elsewhere -- say, Camiguin Island.  We visited Camiguin last December, and it really gave us city slickers/ suburbanites a refreshing taste of a slower, unspoiled life.


To get to a remote island, you're going to need to do a bit of traveling, and getting to Camiguin is no stroll around the block.  First you have to fly from Manila to Cagayan de Oro City (a 1.5-hour flight), on the island of Mindanao.  Then you have to endure a drive of about 90 km to Balingoan port.  That doesn't sound like much -- according to Google Maps it should take just over an hour to get there -- but the winding, 1-lane roads and excruciatingly slow vehicles we encountered meant that it took us over 3 hours, even with the van driver driving like a lunatic.

Ferryboat to Camiguin Island, Philippines
Once you get to Balingoan port, that's when the adventure really begins.  A ferryboat leaves Balingoan port for Camiguin island every hour......ish.  Sometimes ferries leave an hour apart, sometimes it's 90 minutes, other times it's two hours.   It's almost impossible to figure out what time the ferry actually leaves because the crossing time varies with the tide and waves, and the darn thing seems to wait until it fills up with passengers before leaving.  We ended up waiting 45 minutes instead of 15, which of course meant that everyone's potty break schedules were all off, and we couldn't hold it until arriving at our resort, as we had originally planned. Do you know why so many Filipinos pee in the bushes and trees?  Because they're cleaner than the public restrooms.  Fortunately we found a hole-in-the-wall eatery that let us use their restrooms for 5 pesos (12 US cents) per person.  It wasn't the Ritz (we had to flush the toilets by pouring water into the cistern), but hey, this is the province.

Ferryboat to Camiguin Island, Philippines
The Balingoan-Camiguin ferry is nothing like the boats that glide along Paris' Seine river, or the boats that take tourists to and from Ellis Island in New York.  This ferry is creaky, rusty, muddy and slow.  Cars, trucks, livestock and cargo take up most of the room, and there is a small upper deck for human passengers.      I'm a terrible sailor, so I was dreading the two-hour voyage, but the crossing was surprisingly smooth.  The waters were pretty calm, and I kept my eyes on Camiguin Island the whole way.


Camiguin Island, Philippines
Camiguin really looks like something out of the movie South Pacific -- rolling hills rising into mountainous peaks, birds flying along the coast, nothing but green as far as the eye can see.  Camiguin is the second-smallest island province in the Philippines, in both land (91.89 sq miles/238 km²) and population (83,000).

Marketplace in Camiguin Island, Philippines
Camiguin's economy is agricultural (fishing and farming), although the tourism industry is growing as more people from other parts of the Philippines and abroad are discovering it.  There are no fast food restaurants in Camiguin.  There are no shopping malls, unless you count the local markets (where my aunts actually bought little fruit trees to take home!), or roadside stands that sell hand-forged machete knives (called bolos).

Bolo making, Camiguin Island, Philippines
Yes, I know the sign says it's a laundrette, but my mom had eyes only for the lethal weapons being displayed by the side of the road.  She bought one to take home with her.  No, she's not planning on going on some senior rampage, Filipinos use bolos to clear brush and weeds in their gardens!


I told her there was no way airport security would let through carrying a 12-inch machete blade, even in her check-in luggage, but she breezily assured me they wouldn't even blink -- and they didn't.  I guess they're used to people traveling from Camiguin with bolos,  fruit trees and all kinds of stuff.
Most of the houses around Camiguin are small and simple, but here and there you can find some prime examples of colonial Spanish architecture.  My mother's uncle married a woman from Camiguin, and her family happens to own one of the oldest and grandest of those ancestral homes, so a group of us paid a visit and took a peek inside.  From the stone walls of the first floor (that once housed the horses and carriages) to the huge windows in the second-floor family living area overlooking the street below, it's a classic Filipino Bahay na Bato. It looked so much like the home that my mother was born in, that I was swept by a wave of nostalgia for the days when I spent summers there as a little girl.

Bahay Bakasyunan, Camiguin Island, PhilippinesOur home away from home in Camiguin was the Bahay Bakasyunan resort, at the northern end of the island.  Bahay Bakasyunan (pronounced BAH-hayee bah-kas-YOO-nan) means "vacation home", and guests actually stay in little cottages made from native building materials, so they resemble native homes.  It's such a beautiful place, and I have so many photos and so many nice things to say about this place that it deserves a future post of its own.  Stay tuned!


The main attractions of Camiguin Island, of course, are natural, not man-made. One of the must-see places is Katibawasan Falls.   It's located in a clearing surrounded by ferns, trees and flowers. Water drops 250 feet from the side of Mt. Timpoong, into a small pool.  Yes, it's like a scene straight out of South Pacific / Jurassic Park / Castaway / Blue Lagoon / insert your favorite island movie.

Unfortunately, it had rained hard the day before, so the falls were swollen and the current was fierce, and we were not allowed to take a dip in the pool.  The kids contented themselves with clambering on the rocks and surrounding themselves with the spray from the falls, while the adults contented themselves with snapping a million photos.


We took a dip in the mineral pools of Ardent Hot Springs.  They're located at the foot of  Mount Hibok-Hibok, one of seven volcanoes on Camiguin and the most recently active.  Ardent Hot Springs has several pools of varying temperatures, all fed by running streams heated by the volcano.


Last but not least, we visited White Island, a tiny sandbar just off the northern coast of Camiguin whose land area depends on how low or high the tide is (for more photos and descriptions, check out my White Island post).

There were several other attractions we didn't get to -- a few old churches, Soda Water swimming pool, the Sto.Niño cold spring, Mantigue Island, a sunken cemetary -- but we were there for only 3 days, so we had to prioritize.  If we had stayed longer I would have liked to hike up Mt. Hibok-Hibok, go for a spin around the island with Alfie on a motorbike (the road circumnavigating the island is just 64km or 40 miles), and gone snorkeling (my scuba-mad cousin went on a dive off the coast and said the corals looked amazing).  I would love to go back to Camiguin someday -- but the Philippines has over 7,000 islands, which means there are so many more to explore.....


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What's for lunch?

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Buttered bagel, applesauce, lowfat milk

One of things I like best about packing my kids' lunches is that I get to control how much packaging and waste I'm using.  With reusable lunch containers I not only eliminate the need for paper plates or plastic sandwich bags, I can also buy things like crackers, cookies, chips, tomatoes, cut-up veggies, and even yogurt in economy packages instead of individual packages, saving both money and packaging.  In theory, anyway.  There are still days when I pack individual juice boxes instead of filling up a water bottle, or give in to applesauce in squeezable pouches instead of spooning it from a big jar into a little container.  But I've come a long way from the days when plastic sandwich bags and plastic water bottles were one of my grocery staples.  Every little bit helps, right?




 Spanish omelette, green salad with chickpeas, mushrooms and raspberry vinaigrette


Antipasti skewers (pasta, grape tomatoes, mozarella, salami, olives), veggie chips, yogurt-covered star cookies

Cucumber and cream cheese sandwich, potato chips, cherry tomatoes

Cream-cheese sandwich bites with blueberries, strawberries, chocolate chip cookie



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Don't Be Shy, Don't Hold Back at SFMOMA

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A huge, site-specific fabrication of hair, glue and rope has appeared in SFMOMA's atrium, spelling out nonsense in languages that look real but are in fact invented.



united nations--babel of the millenium was created in 1999 for the museum by Shanghai-born, New York-based artist Wenda Gu in 1999 and paid for by Vicki and Kent Logan, who are being feted on the second floor with a highlights exhibition taken from their massive donation of 330 contemporary artworks to SFMOMA fifteen years ago.



Kent Logan was a New York investment banker with Goldman Sachs, Paine Webber, and Barclays before arriving in San Francisco with his wife Vicki in 1992 as one of the seven partners of Montgomery Securities, one of the major funders of the 1990s Silicon Valley dotcom gold rush. He must have amassed quite a bit of that gold himself because he retired in 2000 in his 50s and moved to Vail, Colorado, where he became a town councilman in 2003.



The Logans built a modernist chateau in Vail adjoined by a 7,500 square foot private museum to exhibit their growing art collection (click here for a 2007 New York Times article about the artworld trend, Museum for My Stuff.) In 2006, they made a fractional gift upon their deaths to the Denver Art Museum, who will be inheriting the childless couple's Vail home, gallery and about $90 million in art and cash for its maintenance. In 2005, the couple bought vacation property at a gated Scottsdale community where they have been scandalizing the neighbors with their modernist golf course home filled with aggressively confrontational modern art (click here for a 2011 Wall Street Journal article with photos).



Though I don't particularly share the Logans' taste in art, at least it is their own taste rather than the product of an army of consultants. In an interview with Kyle McMillan, Kent notes,
"We've had advisers suggest that we look at this, buy that, but we've really ignored them for the most part. So, we've always said that we have to like the work because we're going to live with it, and we don't want to buy something that someone said we should have and then find out we don't like it. You can tell the difference. If I walk into a collector's home, I can tell immediately if there has been an adviser or a consultant at work, because it looks like one from Column A and one from Column B – a trophy type of collection."

I thought the metallic figures above were the latest Oversized Shiny Things from Jeff Koons, but they turned out to be aluminum figures by German artist Thomas Schutte from 1998 called Grosse Geisters (Great Spirits).



The requisite Jeff Koons piece was the goofy 1991 marble sculpture Self Portrait above left, surrounded by pop art samples from Warhol, Ruscha and Gilbert & George.



Though they have moved on to contemporary Japanese and Chinese art, the Logans also collected a lot of young Brits, such as Jenny Saville, whose 1999 painting Hem above is looming over an amused Patrick Vaz.



There is also the requisite Damien Hirst formaldehyde and dead animal sculpture on the floor, something I had only experienced through photos. In the flesh, so to speak, the effect is disturbing and disrespectful. I wanted to steal the piece away and give the creature a decent burial or incineration.

Qin Shihuang's Immortality at The Asian

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The Asian Art Museum has been sponsoring a promotional stunt involving someone appearing in public around the Bay Area as a "LOST" terracotta warrior who is looking for the rest of his army. On Wednesday morning, he was "found" at the Civic Center Farmers Market by the formerly homeless gentleman above whose first name is Moses, which seemed appropriate, who brought the warrior into the museum for a press preview.



China's First Emperor, Qin Shihuang (259-210 BCE), led one of the more colorful, action-packed lives in world history, and his death turned out to be similarly spectacular, with reportedly 700,000 slave laborers working on his underground tomb for decades.



In 1974, farmers digging a well uncovered the burial complex, which contained 8,000+ individualized terracotta warriors with thousands of bronze weapons to either guard the emperor's tomb or to conquer heaven itself. As part of the Asian Art Museum's 10th anniversary in its Civic Center location, China has loaned ten of the warriors along with other ancient objects found in nearby tombs. It makes for a fascinating, spooky exhibition that will be installed at the museum through May.



Qin Shihuang was born into intense palace intrigue in the the empire of Qin, and once he came to power, "unified" six neighboring warring states through military force. He was equal parts tyrant and creator throughout his 36 year reign. He had a central roadway system built, started the construction of the Great Wall of China, and simplified and codified written Chinese along with weights and measures. He also fended off numerous assassination attempts, including an attempt by a blind, virtuoso musician who tried to kill him with a lead lute. He also banished all foreign scholars as spies, and tried to destroy the Confucian intellectual movement by burying its scholars alive.



His historical reputation was blackened thoroughly after his death by Confucian scholars who survived the persecution, and who wrote damning accounts of his brutality. According to a good Wikipedia article, his historical reputation has been improving lately in China. The Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek was being approvingly compared to the First Emperor in the early 20th century, while Mao was said to have bragged that he had exceeded him:
Mao Zedong, chairman of the People's Republic of China, was reviled for his persecution of intellectuals. On being compared to the First Emperor, Mao responded: "He buried 460 scholars alive; we have buried forty-six thousand scholars alive...You [intellectuals] revile us for being Qin Shi Huangs. You are wrong. We have surpassed Qin Shi Huang a hundredfold."



Qin Shihuang was obsessed with the idea of immortality, and had magical elixirs created for him in order to live forever. The irony is that most of the life-extending elixirs were laced with mercury which probably helped hasten his early death via poisoning. The final irony is that thanks to his spectacular burial complex being discovered intact so recently in modern history, he really has made himself immortal.

24 Şubat 2013 Pazar

Valentine's Day Printables: You Rock!

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Valentine's Day printables
Valentine's Day is not a crafty holiday for me.  I have never been a fan of handcrafting dozens of valentines for my kids' classmates. It just seems like too much effort (times 3 kids!) for something that just gets thrown away.  My idea of crafty valentines is buying a $3 pack of Hershey's kisses, a pack of $3 drugstore valentine cards, and taping the kisses to the envelopes.

But the adorable images of artsy, craftsy Valentines on Pinterest have been calling to me -- and since I had about a dozen leftover Rocky Road miniature bars from 3Po's birthday party (he had a rock climbing birthday party -- get it, Rocky Road?), I decided to give them away as valentines rather than gobble it all myself.



Valentine's Day printables
I created a printable tag that you can cut out, fold in half, and staple to a clear cellophane bag.


Valentine's Day printables
One side says "Happy Valentine's Day! You Rock!", and the flip side has a "To/From" tag so kids can write their name and the name of the child they're giving it to.

Valentine's Day printables
I added arrows to camouflage the staples; if you position your stapler carefully over the arrow, the staple should be hidden on both sides.



Valentine's Day printables
You can give out Pop Rocks instead of Rocky Road bars, but the Pop Rocks need a bigger bag, and a wider tag.  I've made sheets of these tags in two sizes -- the small one can be used for cellophane bags approximately 2.75 inches (7 cm) wide, and the large one can be used for cellophane bags that are about 4 inches (10 cm) wide.  I also made You Rock tags in case you want to hand out rock candy lollipops; just punch a hole in the tags and tie the tags to the lollipop with a red ribbon.

Valentine's Day printables

All the printables are below.  These valentines are really easy to assemble.  They don't require any gluing, drawing or anything crafty -- but they're still Pinterest-worthy!


Foldover tags for small cellophane bags:Valentine's Day printables

Foldover tags for medium cellophane bagsValentine's Day printables
All-purpose gift tags

Valentine's Day printables


You can download all sizes in a single PDF file below:
Valentine Printables: You Rock by



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Valentine's Day Printables: Yoda One For Me

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In a recent Silicon Valley Mamas article, my friend Robyn writes of a recent DIY Valentine backlash.  I'll admit, I've noticed it too -- which makes it even weirder that I'm going in completely the opposite direction.  Since The Pea was in kindergarten, I've been content to buy cheapo $3-for-24 Valentine cards from Target or Walgreens, but this year I just couldn't resist trying a few of the DIY ideas I've seen on Pinterest.  Yesterday I made some You Rock Valentines with some leftover candy from 3Po's party, and today I made some Yoda Valentines.


3Po loves Yoda, and he chose this one on Pinterest.  It's really more of an assemble-it-yourself rather than a do-it-yourself kind of Valentine:  Just print and cut out the cards, cut two slits above and below Yoda's hands, slip in a Pixy Stix rod (you can also use a glow stick or a pencil if you don't want to give out candy), and tape the back to secure.  It's almost as easy as buying the valentines at the drugstore!

Here is an image file that you can download and print:


You can get up to 8 of these cards on an 8.5"x11" sheet of paper or cardstock (sturdier paper is better).  Below is a PDF document that you can download from my Scribd account:

Valentine Printables: Yoda One for Me by

May the Force be with you!

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