"Everyone will sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree" --Micah 4:4
By the end of this article you might reconsider sitting only under a "fig tree". There are some extremely fantastic trees in this world: exotic, fragrant, fruitful, and simply beautiful. It is summertime in most countries now, so let's pause in a shadow of some of these exceptional living beings (even if you do not believe in "Ents", you will agree that some trees will have incredible stories to tell...).
Probably the most otherworldly and mysteriously named of them all is the Dragon Blood Tree, which we discussed in our Socotra Island article The Most Alien-looking Landscape on Earth:
The red resin that the tree produces is used (predictably) in lipsticks, ritual magic and alchemy. In voodoo rituals it seems to attract either love, or money (it's never both, you know) or can simply be used as a breath freshener, or toothepaste.
The aptly named Cannonball tree (common to northen parts of South America and Caribbean) often requires a warning sign under it:
The fruits will fall down once ripe, and since they are more than ten inches in diameter, they can easily kill you. So park planners try not to plant these trees close to sidewalks and paths.
This tree belongs to a baobab family, originates from India and brings a lot of color to many streets in Middle East and Asia (especially in Israel and India). It has large red flowers (Bombax ceiba means 'Orange Glow') - so intensely colored that they seem almost made out of plastic:
Apparently this magnificent tree can be grown in miniature, like a bonsai tree, out of a single planted seed (left). On the right is Bombax Ellipticum, shaped like a turtle's shell:
One kind of the Bombax tree even has a sinister story associated with it:
"According to the folklore of Trinidad and Tobago, the Castle of the Devil is a huge silk cotton tree growing deep in the forest in which Bazil the demon of death was imprisoned by a carpenter. The carpenter tricked the devil into entering the tree in which he carved seven rooms, one above the other, into the trunk. Folklore claims that Bazil still resides in that tree."
(Angkor Wat, Cambodia - image via, and at Ta Prom Temple, via)
Here is a giant Bombax tree, obviously mighty and wise, at the Ta Prom temple in Cambodia (left) - and another huge bombax root in India (right):
Speaking of baobabs... The Monkey Bread Tree can come in many weird shapes, like the bottle shape on the right (Teapot Baobab)... or it can reach to the sky with the bare root-like branches, creating the illusion of being planted "upside down" (left):
Baobabs store water in their swollen trunks - as much as 31,700 gallon (120,000 l) of water. Some empty trunks were so big that they were routinely used as prisons in Western Australia. One such prison tree can fit up to 5 people inside:
So what about "monkey bread" name? The fruits of baobab are also called the "Judas Fruit" (the fruit has 30 seeds inside, like 30 "pieces of silver"). The beautiful creamy white flowers (right) are pollinated by bats:
This spot is one of the most magical on Earth, and easily could be called One of the Seventh Wonders of Africa. It reminds me of some of fantasy landscape art, for example "The Renegades of Pern" by Michael Whelan - see it here.
The Most Sheltering Tree & The Walking Tree
We started by speaking about sitting under a fig tree. Well, there is a huge fig tree, with a wonderfully spread out shadow. It's the Banyan Tree (Ficus benghalensis), the National Tree of India, also called the Bengal Fig. Here it is in Hawaii:
In India people worship under this tree, wandering between the strands of mighty aerial roots - the tree can grow as large as the whole city block, for example the Great Banyan Tree, which is a forest in itself:
At one point it was "the widest tree in the world in terms of the area of the canopy... A 330 m long road was built around its circumference, but the tree continues to spread beyond it."
This is not a forest, but a single tree with multiple aerial roots! -
"The circumference of the whole complex of trees grown from the one central ancestor - still very much alive and all connected to it by the roots visible well over human height - is measured in kilometers."
Speaking of the aerial roots, or "legs" with which a tree can reach into the ground and thus "extend" itself - there is a Walking Tree (more info) equipped with the unusual "stilt roots", which supposedly make it more stable... or let the tree wander at night? (just kidding)
Rightly called "The Flame of the Forest", Spathodea tree has the potential to become an invasive species, but is often planted in urban areas. So consider this, soon you'll have the whole city taken over by these large orange blooms; sort of the "Day of the Triffids"-inspired nightmare:
As the first poster replied, those are Dale Chihuly creations (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chihuly). The one on the right is installed at the Franklin Park Conservatory in Columbus OH, as are many other Chihuly glass sculptures. The one on the left may also be there, but I don't recognize it from my visits.
Dale Chihuly for sure. The one on the left is at the New York Botanical Garden. And oh, the big trees growing in Cambodia might be Ficus trees, not Bombax.
North America has its share of Magnificent trees. One of the oldest organisms, heaviest and generally biggest tree is the Pando in Utah's Fishlake National Forest.
The Dragon Blood Tree is a truly magnificent herbal aid for blood issues, internally and externally. This page is making it sound like it's just for lipstick and superstitious BS.
See if you can find any Oskar Fischinger animations. He worked in the 1920s, first in Germany, then came to Hollywood. The opening sequence for Disney's Fantasia is based on his work.
YouTube has a lot of "based on" and "inspired by" videos, but the real thing is always the real thing.
Much of Winsor McKay's animation has been recovered and is available on DVD. The creator of _Little Nemo_ and _Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend_ produced multiple works, some for those newspaper comics as well as the famous _Gertie the Dinosaur_.
This "wonderful buggy-like automobile" is Bill Cushenberry's custom "Silhouette", and it very definitely did exist as a real car: http://www.kustomrama.com/index.php?title=Silhouette.
Like the "1960 Ford Predicta" that you show, it was a custom built by an independent customizer, not a factory concept car.
The ford mustang did pretty well but never appealed to me. Now when I think about what the original concept was--A mid-engine two seater--I really wish they went with that! http://media.photobucket.com/image/original%20ford%20mustang%20concept/PaulPless/HPIM0018.jpg
That penultimate photo is is of Machu Picchu turned on its side, and with surprisingly little photoshopping to exaggerate the mountain's profile to resemble a face. See this photo: http://www.machu-picchu.us/machupicchu-machu-picchu/machupicchu.jpg
Images.google.com links 3 million pictures of Machu Picchu and there are only two points where those pictures can be taken. That surprised me because last time I checked there was only one. The mountains suggest several possible rearrangements.
A part of my artistic work is about this perception phenomenon: it´s known as "pareidolia". I create my own. You can see how I work in my blog: http://aidadonoso.wordpress.com/ Regards! Una parte de mi trabajo artístico es sobre este fenómeno de la percepción: se le conoce como "pareidolia". Yo creo mi propia pareidolia. Podeis ver como la trabajo en mi blog: http://aidadonoso.wordpress.com/ Un saludo!
"a 144 Mega Pixel 4x5 scanning camera; it produces the highest resolution digital photos in the world."
unless, of course, you scan a developed 4x5 sheet of 25iso film at 4800dpi which also creates a digital photograph, which has been rated to the equivalence of a 500MP camera--imagination what a 5x7 or an 8x10 sheet of developed film would produce.
Writing as a long time DRB fan, this post was disappointingly out-of-place ad for HD, purveyor of slow, bloated status symbols for middle-aged rubes. There's nothing interesting or original about a modest stab at cashing in on the chopper/bobber/rat fad.
That looks about like the most generic and boring motorcycle that they could have possibly designed. HD has resigned itself to making the most sterile and non-innovative motorcycles on the market.
If you want to see a minimalistic cruiser design with splashes of classic aesthetics then look at the Confederate Hellcat.
I realize ya'll got bills to pay and all, but really at the end of the day you'll make more money if you don't make Hawaii 5-0 look demure when it comes to product placement.
"basically a light-weight Softail" and other comments in the article show that HD still have no imagination and are deliberately borrowing tired old ideas from their own tired old models. I'm looking forward to the day when they drop the prehistoric design and put out something really new. Pushrods? Come on HD, it's 2011.
All you Jap bikers need to calm down. Harley is the only motorcycle. They make many different models if you don't like this one. They still won't sell to fags, though.
A lightweight Softail is a contradiction in terms. These are steampunk motorcycles without the irony -- built by the truly clueless for aging pot-bellied guys. Real outlaws have long since ridden sportbikes.
As a 45 year rider who's owned 10 street bikes, other than the underdeveloped, and short lived XLCR, I have never seen a Harley that didn't look like a cartoon caricature from the 50's or 60's. And unfortunately, many Harley owners have plenty of callow "attitude" towards anything other than Harley's, as the comments seen here illustrate, so I avoid Harley's and most Harley people like the plague that they are.
Up near the start the bike is described as being "unique" and then it starts listing all of the bits that were copied, sory "reminiscent". Overall it sounds like something put together from the left overs pile at HD.
Say what you will I have recently purchased a blackline and love it I have always owned sport bikes but will never go back it's the most balanced and comfortable bike I have ever ridden each to their own that's why everyone is different it's not a image thing and as for the fag comments it's prob coming from one and one that is jealous and can not afford one why else would you be researching Harley Davidson if you didn't want one?
Whoa! Talk about a blast to the past. I remember going to the San Antonio zoo as a kid in the 70's and getting a few of the figurines from the Mold-a-rama machine. I think the best part was being able to watch the process as it created these neat souvenirs. Thanks for the memory.
There's a museum in San Francisco at Fisherman's Wharf that has a rather sizable collection of old machines like these. Most of them actually work and are available for visitors to use. If you go, it's right next to the submarine (U.S.S. Pampanito).
wow! what a wicked article full of great pics! really made us all smile here in the Bespoke Arcades office... Thanks!! for a really modern take on arcade machines, check out our site..
The baseball arcade on used to be at the Jersey boardwalk as a kid... sort of nestled behind all the newer video games. I remember loving it as a kid, so detailed and games were pretty realistic.
Also, check out Sigma Derby... it's a coin operated mechanical horse racing game that I think only has one remaining functioning one at the MGM Grand in Vegas. Such a fun, old school game that costs nothing and people actually interact.
Blast from the past indeed. Some great arcades here. And great pictures too - where did you find them? I particularly like zoltar! You still see a few of them about. As fun as arcades are, I'm still not sure I would swap my Xbox games for them!
11 Comments:
the glass trees look like Dale Chihuly creations
As the first poster replied, those are Dale Chihuly creations (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chihuly). The one on the right is installed at the Franklin Park Conservatory in Columbus OH, as are many other Chihuly glass sculptures. The one on the left may also be there, but I don't recognize it from my visits.
Dale Chihuly for sure. The one on the left is at the New York Botanical Garden. And oh, the big trees growing in Cambodia might be Ficus trees, not Bombax.
North America has its share of Magnificent trees. One of the oldest organisms, heaviest and generally biggest tree is the Pando in Utah's Fishlake National Forest.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pando_(tree)
Yes, we have aspen clones in Canadian Rockies - interesting to observe them turn color as one organism.
where did that last tree image get taken? the "tolkienesque" one?
The Dark Hedges - County Antrim, Northern Ireland - see more: http://tinyurl.com/3jrolgj
Bazil is the demon of death? I thought he was either a fox (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Brush) or a hopeless hotel owner...!
Gorgeous stuff! The writing is really interesting too--thanks for a great read :)
Jacaranda is not endemic to Australia nor New Zealand. They are introduced; originally from South America.
The Dragon Blood Tree is a truly magnificent herbal aid for blood issues, internally and externally. This page is making it sound like it's just for lipstick and superstitious BS.
Post a Comment
<< Home