Almost Tulip Time in Holland!

It's like a dream

It’s like a dream, photo by cae3 – Anita

Tulip Time in Holland is just around the corner! The annual celebration of Holland’s Dutch heritage and tulipular beauty takes place May 7-14, 2011 and features parades, music, dancing and much more. They explain that:

This year is a particularly special celebration as we recognize the bicentennial anniversary of the birth of the founder of the Holland, Michigan: Reverend Albertus C. Van Raalte, who led his congregation of Dutch Calvinists in founding our city in 1847. To commemorate his birth, a Bilateral Conference will take place in Holland, Michigan and the Netherlands in the fall of 2011. For more information, visit www.dutchheritagewestmichigan.com.

Like most celebrations, the Tulip Time Festival started as a relatively small event, which was proposed by Miss Lida Rogers, a high school biology teacher. In 1927, Miss Rogers presented the idea of commemorating Holland’s Dutch heritage, history and culture to the Women’s Literary Club. Her proposal was accepted, and in 1929, the City of Holland planted its first crop of 100,000 tulips. The overwhelming number of visitors to our small town resulted in the community’s decision to repeat the event. As thousands of spectators soared to hundreds of thousands, the celebration lengthened by days, and pageantry, costumes and parades and the popular Dutch Dancers were added to produce a week-long festival that is now over 80 years old.

“Tulip Time” on Michigan in Pictures has all kinds of photos & information about this festival!

Check this out bigger and in Anita’s Explored slideshow.

The Red-Bellied Woodpecker sings Happy Birthday, John James Audubon

Bobby Dazzler

Bobby Dazzler, photo by Spring Noel.

I never for a day gave up listening to the songs of our birds, or watching their peculiar habits, or delineating them in the best way I could.
~John James Audubon

Today is the birthday of John James Audubon. That entry on Wikipedia relates that he was born Jean-Jacques Fougère Audubon. In 1803 at age 18, he immigrated to the United States and anglicized his name to John James Audubon. Learn more about him and the society that bears his name at audubon.org.

I didn’t really think that there would be a Michigan tie-in, but it turns out that the single most valuable book in the University of Michigan is (you guessed it) Audubon’s Birds of America:

In 1838, the Regents of the University of Michigan authorized the purchase of John James Audubon’s Birds of America. Held in the Special Collections Library, the eight-volume, double-elephant-folio edition is the single most valuable printed book in the MLibrary collections.

Here’s the beginning of the Family XVI. PICINAE. WOODPECKERS. GENUS I. PICUS, Linn. WOODPECKER. entry from that book:

Much of what I have said respecting the habits of several of our Spotted Woodpeckers applies to the present species, which differs, however, in the greater extent of its migration in the spring and summer months, when the greater number of those which return from the south to our Middle and Eastern Districts proceed considerably farther northward than the Hairy Woodpecker, although not so far as the Canadian. In winter I have found the Red-bellied Woodpecker the most abundant of all in the pine barrens of the Floridas, and especially on the plantations bordering the St. John’s river, where on any day it would have been easy to procure half a hundred. Indeed, on this account, and from its well-known notes, the officers and men of the United States’ schooner Spark, as well as my assistants, always spoke of it by the name of chaw-chaw. Perhaps it partly obtained this name from the numbers of it cooked by the crew in the same manner as the dish known to sailors by the same name.

It is, however, less common in the United States than the Hairy Woodpecker; but its range is as extensive, for I have found it from the Texas to the extremities of the British provinces of Nova Scotia, and as far inland as I have travelled. It appears, however, that it does not inhabit the Fur Countries, as no mention is made of it by Dr. RICHARDSON, in the Fauna Boreali-Americana. It is generally more confined to the interior of the forests, especially during the time of its breeding, than the Hairy Woodpecker, although in winter I have found it quite as easily approached. In autumn it frequently occurs in the corn-fields, where it takes its share of the grain, in common with the Hairy, the Downy, and other Woodpeckers. It is a lively and active bird, fond of rolling its tappings against the decayed top-branches of trees, often launching forth after passing insects, and feeding during winter on all such berries as it can procure. Its flight is strong and better sustained than that of the Yellow-bellied or Hairy Woodpeckers, and, like the Golden-winged species, it not unfrequently alights across the smaller branches of the trees, a habit which, I assure you, is oftener exhibited than has been supposed, by all our species of this interesting tribe of birds.

More at Red-bellied Woodpecker on All About Birds including their calls & drums.

Spring writes that you can see why they’re called Red Bellied Woopeckers when you see one the red belly exposed. Check it out bigger and in her Birds slideshow.

Many (many) more birds on Michigan in Pictures.

Earth Day, high above our piece of the Earth

Great Lakes, No Clouds

Great Lakes, No Clouds, photo by NASA Goddard Photo and Video.

Today is Earth Day (and also Good Friday). You can read all about Michigan’s role in Earth Day on Michigan in Pictures and check the list of Earth Day events in Michigan from earthday.org.

I thought this shot from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center was a perfect image, and it’s a great lead-in to their Earth Day 2011 slideshow, which looks at almost 40 years of Landsat images. NASA says:

Launched in 1972, the Landsat program is the longest continuous global record of the Earth’s surface. It continues to deliver both visually stunning and scientifically valuable images of our changing planet, allowing us to plan for the future of Earth’s precious resources.

Check this out big as Michigan an in their Explored! slideshow.

Iroquois Pt. Light under Orion

Iroquois Pt. Light under Orion

Iroquois Pt. Light under Orion, photo by yooper1949.

Check this shot out bigger and see the whole series in Carl’s slideshow.

Michigan in Pictures has more about Iroquois Point Lighthouse which is located near Brimley on Lake Superior’s Whitefish Bay. If you click through, you can learn lots more from Terry Pepper including that the point got its name in 1662 after the local Ojibwa encountered a band of intruding Iroquois.

Rodin’s Thinker, Detroit Institute of Art

Rodin's Thinker, Detroit Institute of Art

Rodin’s Thinker, Detroit Institute of Art, photo by Robert Yanal.

The Detroit Institute of Arts has a collection of over 60,000 works of art across a wide range of media. One of the most visible is their cast of sculptor August Rodin’s iconic sculpture, The Thinker. More than twenty monumental size bronze casts of the sculpture are in museums around the world. Rodin made the first small plaster version around 1880, but the first large-scale bronze cast was not completed until 1902.

The DIA’s version sits outside the museum’s main entrance. It was cast in 1904 and donated to the museum by Horace H. Rackham in 1922. The bronze sculpture weighs about 2000 pounds and sits on a 12,000 pound granite base. You can see more views of The Thinker at the DIA.

Check this out bigger and in Robert’s Detroit slideshow.

More sculpture on Michigan in Pictures.

Charlevoix Railroad Depot

Charlevoix Depot.........

Charlevoix Depot………, photo by smiles7.

The Charlevoix Railroad Station to the Charlevoix Historical Society in June 1992 on the 100th anniversary of the first train arriving in Charlevoix.

When I was a kid, a friend of mine’s dad shot dealership posters for car companies. I couldn’t find the one we were in (fog machines and white clothes made it look like England as I recall) but I did find a 1957 Dodge Royal Lancer at the station.

Check this out bigger and in Julie’s Charlevoix slideshow.

Harry Houdini and the American Museum of Magic in Marshall

The big guy

The big guy, photo by santheo.

The Google reminded me that today (March 24, 1874) is the birthday of legendary magician Harry Houdini.

Houdini’s main Michigan connection is that he gave his last performance and died in Detroit, but that’s a story for another day. In their Rearview Mirror, the Detroit News tells the story of Houdini’s first visit to Detroit:

In November 1906, Houdini came to Detroit for a two-week engagement at the Temple Theater. Houdini regularly performed publicity stunts to fill the theaters he was playing, and Detroit was no exception.

Handcuff King Jumps Manacled From Bridge

Handcuff King Houdini Performs Remarkable Feat and Comes Out Safely, Had a Rope Tied Around his Waist and Tied to Bridge to Safeguard Against Accidents

Tied to a lifeline a hundred and thirteen feet long, handcuffed with two of the best and latest model handcuffs in the possession of the Detroit police department, nerved by the confidence of a lion in his own powers … Houdini, the wonder worker at the Temple Theater, leaped from the draw span of the Belle Isle Bridge at 1 o’clock this afternoon, freed himself from the handcuffs while under water, then swam to a waiting lifeboat, passed over the unlocked and open cuffs and clambered aboard.

This story was wildly embellished by Houdini and turned into an 8 minute scene under the ice of the Detroit River in the Tony Curtis movie about Houdini.

You can learn more about Houdini and see some of his equipment and playbills in the collections of the American Museum of Magic in Marshall. The museum is home to the largest collection of magic open to the public, with thousands of artifacts that tell the tales of Houdini, Blackstone, Thurston and other greats of magic.

See this photo bigger and in Sandor’s Michigan slideshow.

See more shots of the museum in this slideshow and more museums on Michigan in Pictures!

49th Annual Ann Arbor Film Festival ~ March 22-27, 2011

Untitled, photo by Ann Arbor Film Festival.

The Ann Arbor Film Festival (AAFF) is the longest-running independent film festival in North America. The 6 day festival brings filmmakers and guests from all over the country and the world along with 188 films, videos and live performances in 40 programs, including more than 20 premieres of new work from China, England, Spain, France, Japan, Finland, Croatia, Chile, Netherlands, Korea and throughout North America. Complete details, schedules and trailers on the 49th Ann Arbor Film Festival website.

With a focus on independent cinema, the AAFF has showcased early work from filmmakers & artists including Kenneth Anger, Agnes Varda, Andy Warhol, Yoko Ono, Gus Van Sant, Barbara Hammer, Lawrence Kasdan, Devo and George Lucas. Their history page says that:

The Ann Arbor Film Festival was started in 1963 by University of Michigan School of Art filmmaker/artist George Manupelli. The 1960s sparked rapid changes in cinema, thus challenging the art world to accept fresh ideas and talent. Manupelli took advantage of this shift and envisioned a festival that would serve experimental and pioneering filmmakers with the exposure, feedback and competition they desired. He designed his festival to be open to anyone who saw filmmaking as art.

From a casual group of fascinated students, filmmakers and film enthusiasts crowded into the smoke-filled Lorch Hall auditorium, to the thousands of filmmakers, artists and spectators hosted in the grand Michigan Theater, the Ann Arbor Film Festival has grown to be an internationally celebrated institution. Since 1980, it has been independent of the University of Michigan as an independent non-profit arts organization. In the fall of 2003 the festival broadened its scope to include video and digital formats for competition.

Dive into the AAFF website for much more!

The 48th AAFF Highlights slideshow from the Ann Arbor Film Festival shows one of the coolest things about the AAFF, the up-close access to filmmakers that you get through Q&As and panel discussions. Lots more including opening reception, after parties, fashion and (of course) Giant Animal Badminton.

U.S. Coast Guard Icebreakers and the Great Lakes

International Partners

International Partners, photo by KathysPix.

Icebreakers and the U.S. Coast Guard is a great article from the Coast Guard Historian’s Office says that the origin of icebreaking in the United States came in the 1830s as side-wheel steamers with reinforced bows were found to be excellent for clearing harbor ice. This page tells the story of CG icebreaking around the country, and the Great Lakes were certainly a part of that. The Escanaba class light icebreakers in the early 20th century didn’t get the job done, but World War II made icebreaking an essential technology and led to the development of the Wind class vessels. In addition to to these four ships, a fifth was built in 1944, the icebreaker Mackinaw:

The final heavy icebreaker built during the war was the Mackinaw, a ship specifically for Great Lakes use. She was, according to Admiral Thiele, a “squashed down” Wind class vessel, with greater beam and length, but shallower draft than those vessels. Her powerplant and general design were those of the Wind class, but her hull was of mild steel, for fresh water operations. (The ocean going cutters were of high tensile steel.) This vessel was designed to extend the operating season in Great Lakes ports, a strategically important task considering the essential raw materials originating on the Lakes: iron ore, coal, limestone, etc.

In 2006, the Mackinaw was decommissioned and replaced by the new USCG Mackinaw, which we see in the picture above.

You can see more of what was involved in freeing a stuck freighter in Kathy’s Coast Guard Cutters slideshow.

Detroit’s Joe Louis Arena

Detroit's Joe Louis Arena

Detroit’s Joe Louis Arena, photo by chinkon.

I saw a photo of the Joe this morning that made me wonder about the history of the Joe Louis Arena, home of the 11 time Stanley Cup Champion Detroit Red Wings. Wikipedia’s entry on the Joe Louis Arena says that “The Joe” was:

Completed in 1979 at a cost of $57 million, Joe Louis Arena is named after boxer and former heavyweight champion Joe Louis, who grew up in Detroit. This makes it one of three remaining NHL arenas without a corporate sponsorship name (the others being Madison Square Garden in New York City and Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum on Long Island). It is also the fourth oldest venue in the NHL.

…The Detroit Red Wings played their first game at Joe Louis Arena on December 27, 1979. Later that first season it hosted the 32nd NHL All-Star Game on February 5, 1980, which was played before a then-NHL record crowd of 21,002.

Check this out bigger in Cinkon’s slideshow and also see the Joe Louis Arena slideshow from the Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr!