Gavin Bate broadcasting from 8000m

Climbers approaching Camp 3, Lhotse Face, Everest

Some of you know that I went on a charity trek up Kilimanjaro last September under the guidance of Adventure Alternative, a Belfast-based outfit which brought us safely to the top and back. Their director and founder Gavin Bate, is currently perched on the South Col just below the summit of Everest and he’ll be making his bid for the top tonight. You can hear his audio message here:

Gabcast! Everest2009 – MyEverestChallenge.com #45 – Tonight is SUMMIT NIGHT!!!!!

Weather Update and Situation Report from Ireland.com Camp Four

Anyone who wants to support Gavin may do so through his charity, Moving Mountains. This is a brilliant cause and you should give even a few quid. Amazing guy. You can also follow him on twitter if you’re so inclined.

BizGrowthNews

I got Krishna-ed!

Met with the enlightening Krishna De of BizGrowthNews for coffee the other day and was momentarily put on the spot when she asked me a few questions …

Thanks Krishna 🙂

The Third Element

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I was reading a little snippet from ars earlier today about the positive effects of lithium on depression and how naturally occurring lithium ions (Li+) can improve the mood of parts of a nation. I was thinking: what if we selectively introduced it into the water supply of say, the ESRI whose pronouncements last week left the nation in a state of depressed numbness? Maybe lithium – the third element in the periodic table –  could serve to pull the mavens out of their collective funk and get us all happy and productive again. Light at the end of the tunnel? Lithium in the taps?

Just imagine; the film possibilities are endless, you could have the prequel “Helium, the Second Element” starring Enda Kenny (pre Lithium) with an artificial squeaky voice bemoaning the state of the nation, skip the sequel (Beryllium just doesn’t have that ring to it) and move swiftly on to the second sequel, a re-make of The Fifth Element, starring Mary Coughlan as Leeloo and Brian Cowen as Korben Dallas. Fantastic. I’d get Eamon Gilmore to direct them both and Mary Harney to do hair & makeup.

The Third Element itself, okay, I see Minister Eamon Ryan as a swashbuckling Indiana Jones-type character, yahoo-ing in on his bicycle saving the day, dishing out the packets of environmentally friendly Li+ from atop his saddle, Lucinda Creighton TD as the reticent love interest who takes a lot of convincing about the legal aspects and Sen. David Norris as the learned, avuncular professor-type, enunciating blissfulness far and wide.

OK, so it’s decided. Now, off to write the screenplay.

food: preserved lemons redux

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I had blogged about preserved lemons some time ago and had threatened to try a few variations. So now I have, I’ve added cumin, caraway and coriander seeds, the three Cs of cutting-edge preserved lemon recipe development. I’ve also tried using limes to see what happens. Counting down now, only six weeks to wait …

Tenterhooks isn’t in it.

A note on the daily agitation:
I find my daughter is pretty good at this, she has it down to a fine art 😛

preserved lemons redux

d300_2009-05-04_dsc_7164-edit

I had blogged about preserved lemons some time ago and had threatened to try a few variations. So now I have, I’ve added cumin, caraway and coriander seeds, the three Cs of cutting-edge preserved lemon recipe development. I’ve also tried using limes to see what happens. Counting down now, only six weeks to wait …

Tenterhooks isn’t in it.

A note on the daily agitation:
I find my daughter is pretty good at this, she has it down to a fine art 😛

Magill’s

thanks to lolaclickclack on flickr

 

I was just thinking about this shop in Dublin, there’s a particular sausage I get in there called Calabrese, a dry & spicy Italian sausage from suppliers like DCW Casing which I’m very fond of. Anyhow, just go there and buy one for a tenner.

I imagine Magill’s is the type of shop that is suffering in the downturn but I’m hoping it’ll endure because Magill’s is an institution. It has been around for 90 years or so and every, olive, spice, sausage, cheese and patĂ© has left a few of their mollycules flying around. So if I can steal from Flann O’Brien’s Mollycule Theory in “The Third Policeman”, this institution is now part shop, part fondu:

People who spend most of their natural lives riding iron bicycles over the rocky roadsteads of the parish get their personalities mixed up with the personalities of their bicycles as a result of the interchanging of mollycules of each of them.

And:

The last hanging we had in this parish was thirty years ago. It was a very famous man call MacDadd. He held the record for the one hundred miles on a solid tyre. I need to tell you what the solid tyre did for him. We had to hang the bicycle.

Now I’m not suggesting you’ll get hung if you go into Magill’s, unlike their sausages which are, um, well hung, but I’m imploring you, cajoling you, pleading with you to go there and buy something small. It’s a fabulous place, all dark and mysterious with rows and rows of exotic-looking spices, pepper, anise, cardamom, cinnamon – you name it, they have it. Great desserts, breads, preserves and the like bedeck their shelves. Hams the colour of gold and dripping with artery clogging fat, eggs, anchovies.

Just go there, you don’t need an excuse, just indulge your palate.

14 Clarendon Street  Dublin, Co. Dublin, 01 6713830

I have no interest in Magill’s other than being a lover of food. And Calabrese.

misc: Staying Up in down times

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or Managing Your Career In A Difficult Economy

Yesterday evening I attended a seminar entitled  Staying Up in down times – an event which covered various aspects of career management and surviving the downturn, particularly appropriate since the company I used to work for has gone into liquidation and I’m currently reinventing myself.

There were three speakers at the event – James Sweetman, Brendan Murphy and Krishna De (who had invited me along, thanks Krishna). Each covered a different aspect of managing a career in these times.

First off was James and one of the things he spoke about at length was operating outside of your comfort zone. I took a lot from that; due to the circumstances at my former office, my envelope has been certainly been pushed financially and in terms of creativity, I’d been doing a lot more direction (as distinct from editing) over the last few years, so comfort zones had been broached for sure. I’m reasonably allergic to using the word creativity with grown-ups, some people have more of it than others and some people know how to use and leverage what they have better than others. It’s similar to being good at football except you get paid way less.

I’m pretty much a neophyte when it comes to events like these and I was entertained and informed at the same time which is a good thing. I’m a little uncertain though because I’ve never worked in a company of more than about 30 people, and I suspect a lot of the information last night was aimed at the corporate world. The second speaker, Brendan Murphy was pretty succinct in his delivery: basically if you think you’re certain of the viability your job, happy days but make a plan; if you’re uncertain of your job, make a plan; if you don’t have a job, make a plan and act on it. Over the last while I’ve been in categories two and three, thus the opportunity to relaunch myself. The bottom line is having a good CV, a document that has been recently updated, is accurate and true.

The last speaker, Krishna De, resonated with me the most. I suppose I’ve been tinkering around the internet for years and years, since the idea of broadband was but a dream and a far flung one at that. Dial-up was my introduction to this medium – remember dial up, kids? So there are bits of my stuff scattered all over the shop without too much coherence between any of them. Krishna’s all about the Personal Brand – her presentation was really interesting & started me thinking about how to get a bit of coherence between all the stuff I do online – kili.intercuts, video.intercuts, plain ol’ intercuts (you’re here), hughchaloner, flickr, pix.ie, linkedin, twitter, facebook, youtube, vimeo – all that crap is lying around out there without too much of it pointing at ony other bits of it. So a big thanks to Krishna. Youtube is the second biggest search engine in the planet! I never knew that. My youngest kid (aged 4) “plays” on Youtube all the time, imagine that! I’ve a few bits in there all right but they’re typically and cryptically hidden away somewhere in the dusty bowels.

I think I need to get organised.

Thanks again to Krishna for the invite and the mentions.

Fintan O’Toole on Guinness advertising

There was an interesting article in the Irish Times last Saturday written by Fintan O’Toole entitled “Finding the art in the advert” which gives “Anticipation” a favourable mention:

The superb 1977 Man of Aran spoof in which the islanders wait in the pub for the currach to arrive with the barrel of Guinness suggests the passage of time by sound alone – the ticking of a clock and the plash of oars – and is almost wordless (“Ta said ag teacht” and “aris” being the sum of the dialogue). So is the other great take on this theme, the 1994 Anticipation ad, with Joe McKinney performing his strange jerky dance while he waits for a pint to settle.

I’m not sure that Fintan’s Irish is up to scratch (“TĂĄ siad ag teacht” and “arĂ­s”) but maybe recent budgetary cuts in the Irish Times have taken the fada out of the spell checker.

“Anticipation” has been shown again recently on TV as part of Guinness’ 250th anniversary celebrations, but it feels a little strange to me since the ad has had to be squished into a shorter form (than its original 60 seconds) to accommodate the front and end animation that’s part of the 250 series. Some of the cuts are a little different than they used to be, but I suppose only anoraks like me would notice that …

So INTP


photo: SoFoBoMo ’09

Think I’m going to do this. SoFoBoMo is short for Solo Photo Book Month. The idea is you photograph, write the text and design your book all in one contiguous 31 day period between May 1st and June 30th.

Could be fun, could be a pain but I think I’ll do it all the same.

Hey that’s almost a poem.

[redux]

I’ve just read out there on Twitter that the elfin and lovely seethedetails has written up the local participants and I’m privileged to have an honourable mention. She’s put a lot of thought and work into this blog entry that I’m shamed into reciprocating if only by a lowly trackback. Thanks Julie! You’ve obviously done a lot more thinking about this project than me.