Showing posts sorted by date for query jordan river. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query jordan river. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, February 3, 2024

Spring Skiing In January

By the time we reached February, lighter-than-usual snow due to El NiƱo had thinned snow coverage below what it has been in December.

The last few days in January were downright warm once we had donned ski clothing layers, although we had a cold snap in the middle of the month when nighttime temperatures dropped to 38 below zero.

Big Sky Resort continued valiant efforts with their snow-making and trail maintenance, but by February 2, thin coverage forced closing some runs to focus on a few favored slopes.

A larger-than-usual crowd on that Friday made it seem more like the public ski mountain that it truly is than the private ski playground that it sometimes feels to be.

I love spring skiing's warmer temperatures, even if snow isn't as good as on frigid winter days, so Julie and I make the best of it.

When Julie joins me two or three days a week, we pick and choose the runs we take.  We ski down Mr. K the most because of its consistently good snow coverage.  Our second top choice is Tippy's Tumble. 

 

By the end of the day, we've had a lot of great skiing, even if avoiding other skiers is the biggest difference in each time down.

We now both take the shuttle bus from Town Center rather than driving, and we have a pretty good routine down.  When I go alone, Julie drops me at the bus stop and later picks me up, saving me the plodding walk in ski boots.

On solo days, I try to add variety, searching for hidden gems.

Yesterday, with the big crowd forced onto fewer runs ---  compounded by the popular Hangman run being used for a ski race which limited choices further --- there were actually five to fifteen minute waits for lifts, even in the Single line, but I got in some fun runs.


Most of the time we ski down and either get on immediately or wait a couple of minutes.

When we aren't skiing, we take hikes, and the views just walking by the snow-covered golf course in town are pretty awesome.

On Wednesday evenings, Julie and I have been heading to the nearby Wilson Hotel lobby to enjoy live music with a spectacular view of Lone Peak as a scenic backdrop.

Julie took a really great short video of a local pianist one evening, which is linked here.  He called his style sci-fi movie soundtrack, and we quite enjoyed it, just as we have other acts like jazz duo and country-folk singer/songwriter.

Happy Hour makes drink prices very reasonable --- $5 for a craft beer or rum and Diet Coke --- then we head home for dinner.

There's also usually a spirits tasting of some sort, often local Willie's Distillery (highly recommend their Canadian Whiskey, which tastes sort of like Captain Morgan) and Aperol Spritz, a drink I enjoyed for happy hours on our Princess Mediterranean cruise last year.

For our Wedding Anniversary, we headed to Tips Up to split a huge double cheese burger.

Yes, we're quite the big spenders when it comes to dining out on our anniversary, though in our defense, I will say that double burger now costs $28 and does easily feed both of us.


We've also gone to our favorite restaurant, River House Grill, a couple of times for our favorite, fried chicken dinner.  The recipe seems very similar to the one used by my mom and grandmother, so of course we love it.

With three pieces of chicken each, plus side dishes and a supplemental order of onion rings, we have not only dinner but leftovers for lunch the next day.

Mostly we have our meals at home, cycling through dishes we cook no matter where we may call home. 

People we encounter in Big Sky tend to be on vacation, so it is somewhat like living on a cruise ship constantly.

We meet lots of interesting people from around the country who offer a wide spectrum of viewpoints.


Now that Darlene, Brooks and BG3 spend less time in Big Sky in the winter, Julie and Igo through a bit of withdrawal from being away from family after just a week or so. 

We've skied two to four times each week, and just being out of the house keeps us from over-consuming food and media.

In the afternoon, I stand in our bedroom looking out the window to play my guitar and sing a combination of songs memorized fifty years ago along with a few new ones over the course of an hour or so.  It helps with my left hand flexibility, which before I started playing again was slowly succumbing to numbness.

I can't find the exact quote, but I read that Dick Van Dyke said essentially that in his thirties, he exercised to look good.  In his fifties, he exercised to stay fit.  In his seventies, he exercised to stay ambulatory.  In his nineties, he exercises as an act of defiance.  I seem to be on that same track, albeit with a heavier build than that nimble star of a TV show my sister and I watched regularly when we were kids.

I will mention a movie I watched this week free on Amazon Prime.  Air is the Ben Affleck-Matt Damon collaboration about the birth of Nike's Air Jordan phenomenon.  It's a fun look back to the mid-1980's, a wonderful time to be alive, and see the "high tech" of that day.

I've never worn Nike's, having gone from New Balance to Adidas Rod Lavers to my now favorite Skechers, so perhaps that made me reluctant to watch the movie, but like other movies by these guys that I've watched beginning with Good Will Hunting, I found it well done.

Brooks worked many years in product licensing at Ocean Pacific, so I'm sure he would find a lot in Air's milieu relatable.

I've seen Damon in Big Sky skiing --- or actually having lunch at a yurt where we also stop while skiing --- quite a few times in recent years.  If I happen to see him this year, I can mention I enjoyed this new flick, though usually we just exchange glances which I project acknowledges recognition from past years.

I don't bother celebrities I see, including Ben Affleck's ex-wife Jennifer Garner, who also skis in Big Sky.  They're entitled to live wonderful American lives too.







Saturday, October 21, 2023

Temples of Karnak and Luxor

We received a wake-up call at 4:30 AM on our last morning at the Cairo Marriott.

After setting our luggage outside our room, we headed down for the early continental breakfast, which turned out to include a chef preparing fresh eggs to order, so not exactly roughing it.

Our group gathered in the lobby to take a bus to the airport.  Every time we boarded the bus, we found a list prepared by our guide Fawzy assigning seats, which is a very good system.  We moved around to different spots throughout the tour, avoiding any problems over time with some staking out what for some reason might be preferred seats.

The flight to Luxor took about an hour.  We had the usual long wait for luggage, but soon we were off to the Temple of Karnak.

Pharaohs ruled Egypt for about 3,000 years, basically from the start of "history" (anything before a written record is by definition "Prehistoric") to the early Roman Empire, when Egypt's Cleopatra took her own life.

Because that is such an enormous span of time, historians have designated three eras, simply called the Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom, with New being a relative term still ending before Jesus Christ was born.

Our time in Cairo had focused on the era of the magnificent stone Pyramids, which was the Old Kingdom.  

The Old Kingdom collapsed, probably devolving into infighting among contenders to the throne.

Some theorize that spending for massive Pyramids and treasures buried with the Pharaohs drained the wealth of Egypt, leading to this unrest.  Others claim that it was the lack of building a major public works project like Pyramids resulting in unemployment, with idle people having time to stir up trouble.

Whatever the case, eventually a new great Pharaoh arose in the ancient city of Thebes and united Egypt again under his rule.

Pharaoh Ahmose I credited Amun, the local god of Thebes, for his victory over the Hyksos, who were foreign rulers from the Levant.  It is unclear exactly who the Levant rulers were, but they came from the area now encompassed by modern-day Israel, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. Some think these invaders were Canaanites, while others believe they were Israelites.

The line of Pharaohs that arose from Thebes in that era claimed to have been selected by Amun and essentially to be gods themselves, descended from Amun.  

Somehow, Amun morphed with the god Ra to become Amun-Ra.

Amun-Ra was more popular than The Beatles --- as a time-travelling John Lennon might have said --- for Egyptians.

Rather than building Pyramids, this new batch of Pharaohs devoted great riches to embellishing the Temple at Karnak and the nearby festival grounds in Luxor.

Our guide Fawzy said that we could assume that the inner sanctums were the oldest, and that they kept building newer sections over the ages, but I have also learned that Pharaohs remodeled the temple literally in their own images.

For example, they would chisel out the name of a prior Pharaoh and write their own name instead, or change the face of a god or Pharaoh to reflect the current leadership.

They felt justified in doing this because as the current Pharaoh, they had inherited the royal Ka, or essence of being, so they essentially were the new god.  And you thought Joe Biden and Donald Trump had big egos!


As mentioned previously, King Tut and his father Akhenaten had been so thoroughly erased from history by Pharaoh Ay that Tut's tomb remained hidden until 1922, which resulted in the boy Pharaoh intended to be erased from history becoming arguably the most famous Pharaoh of all.

Not only did Pharaohs replace names and faces in the art, but sometimes Pharaohs replaced entire shrines and buildings.  As to how Egyptologists figure all of this out from rubble to rebuild is beyond me.

Something else I could not fathom is the logic of why the Pharaohs built so many massive columns so close together.  After all, as a modern husband I have watched the Property Brothers increase the value of older properties by creating open floorplans.

Obviously, a much different aesthetic was in play in ancient Egypt, but these old structures are nonetheless awesome, and I guess that is the intent: to inspire awe.

I must confess that often my mind was more concerned with looking at the structures and finding shade than setting my brain to record exactly what was being said about the long line of different Pharaohs.

Regarding the structures, I recall Fawzy pointed out that while there are many amazing historical sites in Egypt, lots of artifacts and full structures were carried away by conquerors and now reside in places like the British Museum.


He pointed out two huge granite obelisks which were quarried from single slabs before being transported about 150 miles on the Nile from Aswan, or basically a reverse of our upcoming river cruise.  The Obelisk of Thutmose is 75 feet tall and estimated to weigh about 150 tons, whereas the one built by Queen Hatshepsut is 97 feet tall and estimated to weigh 320 tons (and some claim as much as 700 tons).

The process of standing each of them upright was a massive undertaking in its own right.  Quite remarkable that Egyptians accomplished this without modern heavy equipment, just as we can say about constructing the Pyramids.  Fawzy sadly added that there are now more Egyptian obelisks in the city of Rome than in all of Egypt combined.


On the religious front, you may recall that Pharaoh Akhenaten (King Tut's father) abandoned the polytheistic traditions --- and the whole great conqueror role that always came with his position as monarch of Egypt --- to worship one god, Ra, making the Egyptian religion a precursor to the one God tradition of the Hebrews and what you might call the Allah traditional belief of Islam.


I was raised in a Christian church that focused on the concept of one God, with Jesus and the Holy Ghosts being one with God the Father, but many traditions including Catholic and Episcopalian recite the Nicene Creed, with all that its focus on the Holy Trinity implies.  The name Amun is obviously quite similar to the word we say at the end of our prayers.  Amen.

At Karnak, in addition to the main temple for Amun-Ra, there is a second smaller temple for his wife Mut (also called Amunset) and another smaller temple for their son Khonsu, so that's also a holy trinity of sorts.

It also has the tradition of a holy mother, not unlike that found in some Christian sects that emphasize the importance of the Virgin Mary.

As to whether these are coincidences, selective perceptions or related to some deeper truth is for you to decide for yourself.


Despite all the great wealth devoted to the Temple of Karnak, the only people allowed to be inside the walls to appreciate it were the priests, the Pharaoh and presumably those family members and guests the Pharaoh might invite to join him.

Once a year, however, the "Inundation" must arrive to bring prosperity to Egypt for another year.

The Season of the Inundation, of course, was the annual flooding of the Nile, which would bring them another year of abundant food and all that entails.

Scientifically speaking, we know the Nile was going to flood no matter what rites were performed by the priests, Pharaoh and worshippers, but who wanted to take that chance?

Especially when they could celebrate in Luxor with the spectacular Festival of Opet.

The three gods were paraded along a 1.7 mile route lined with ram-horned sphinx statues, a dedicated road from the Temple of Karnak to the celebration grounds in Luxor.

With the common people not being worthy to see the actual statues of the gods, the priests put the statues into barks, which were boats with long handles for the priests to parade them into town, all the time cheered by the worshippers who lined the path.

People would shout out questions, and sometimes the gods would answer by going forward or backward, which of course would have been whatever the priests carrying the barks did, unless you believe in Ouija Boards.

The Pharaoh would play some public ceremonial parts to get the blessing of the gods.

Then there would be a huge party in Luxor, with lots of drinking and presumably sex, based on the small but hugely erect statues of the fertility god Amun-Min displayed in the gift shop of our cruise ship.

Speaking of the cruise ship, we boarded M.S. Queen of Hansa for lunch after our tour of the Temple of Karnak.  After two hour in 100 degree heat of that open-air museum, we were ready for an air-conditioned break.

While the optional afternoon felucca boat ride excursion sounded tempting, we just wanted to eat lunch and then relax before heading over to nearby Luxor to see the festival grounds.

Evening temperatures were cooler, and we were fully refreshed to explore the wonders of Luxor.

Without delving too deeply into history, I will note that Alexander the Great, upon conquering Egypt, became Pharaoh.  In Thebes, he put his personal stamp on the temples in the same manner as Pharaohs before him.

Alexander III of Macedon had been educated by Aristotle, so he knew about the glories of Egypt.  Egypt by then had been conquered by the Persians.

Alexander had been told by his mother Olympias that his real father was the Greek god Zeus, who had struck her womb with a lightening bolt.


Alexander the Great conquered many territories held by the Persians, including Egypt.

Alexander took an arduous journey through the desert to Siwa to seek out an oracle for Amun-Ra.

The oracle proclaimed Alexander the Great was indeed the son of Amun, who Alexander the Great came to refer to as Amun-Zeus.


Perhaps because of this, Egyptians accepted the rule of this "foreigner," and Alexander embraced his role as Pharaoh, which after all essentially made him a god.

Still mortal, Alexander died while still a young man.  Had he lived, it would be a different world today.

Alexander's sprawling worldwide empire was divided among three generals, one of whom was Ptolemy, who would rule Egypt. 

While there are other Pharaohs associated with Luxor, including Hatshepsut, a woman Pharaoh whose temple we would visit later in the trip, Alexander is so close to the end of the Pharaohs that I decided to follow through to the last great Pharaoh, who was also a woman and is well-known.  


Pharaoh Ptolemy I reigned from the city of Alexandria and was a productive Pharaoh, but ruled like a Greek, not an Egyptian.  While Egyptians appreciated their isolation along the Nile, Greeks embraced the sea and world trade.

The next 12 Pharaohs Ptolemaic line were all named Ptolemy.  They didn't bother to venture from the Greek-dominated metropolis of Alexandria into greater Egypt or to learn the Egyptian language.  The daughter of Ptolemy XII, Cleopatra, was ordered by her father to marry her brother Ptolemy XIII, carrying on the family tradition. 

While that practice seems odd, apparently not only was it common for Pharaohs (unclear if it was a ceremonial wedding or ... yuck!!!), but Cleopatra was actually the seventh queen in the family tree named Cleopatra destined to marry a Ptolemy.  

Cleopatra, however, was very well educated and smarter than Ptolemy XIII.  Unlike other Ptolemies, she had traveled through Egypt to tour its wonders and learn about its culture.  Cleopatra was the first in the Ptolemy line to learn the Egyptian language.

She looked to the larger picture and realized rather than marrying her brother and paying tribute to the Roman Empire with the vast wealth still generated by the Nile Inundation, there was a better way forward for her and Egypt.  She would rather rule at the side of the Roman general in Egypt, who held the real power.

Cleopatra reigned over Egypt with Roman Julius Caesar, who could resist neither the allure of Cleopatra nor the ego-trip of being considered to be a god.  

Cleopatra accompanied him to Rome in glory, all of which was backstory for the Ides of March.  Their son Caesarion became her co-ruler as Ptolemy XV after Julius Caesar was assassinated by Roman Senators. 

Cleopatra had a subsequent relationship with Caesar's successor, Marc Antony, which ended tragically.  Her son Caesarion was killed by Julius Caesar's nephew Octavian within days of Cleopatra's suicide, in August of the year 30 B.C., and that was the last of the Pharaohs.


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