Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Arizona Renaissance Festival

Did you ever want to run off and join the circus as a kid? Well okay neither did I, but I always heard that phrase and now I think I may understand it a bit better. My younger son and I have attended the Arizona Renaissance Festival for the past two years. This year we even went twice, spent entirely too much money, spent about 4 hours on the road each day to get there and back, stayed from opening to close each time, returned home exhausted, dirty and TOTALLY happy with the experience.

This may be the only event in Arizona with reasonably priced good food. We did learn to stay away from the turkey legs and steak on a stake, but that's because we're from the south and we demand some form of seasoning on our meats. You're just not going to convince me they didn't at least have some salt and pepper during the Renaissance. However, the shrimp and chips were plentiful and cost less than a burger and fries at BK. Affording the food will not be an issue when you go and I want you to GO.

I want you to drop your grown up pants, don a pair of tights and a peasant shirt or something and just GO. Remove that broomstick from your situpon and use it to fly to your local Ren Fest. Truly, your face will not crack into slivers if you smile or actually laugh. I'm sorry, but someone duct taping a bunch of firecrackers to their chest, using a juggling torch to light them, and then having the audience douse the embers with water balloons is funny stuff!

This is not Cirque du Soleil, and if dressing up to go see jugglers is your idea of a grand time I sort of pity you. Ren Fest is earthy, gritty, broad daylight entertainment. There are puffs of smoke, usually from someone lighting their chest on fire with black cats, but no concealment, no dreamscape. The entertainers are real, not ghostly shapes on a stage with no personality. Well, okay the Cast in Bronze guy is kind of weird in his costume, but I'll put up with his somewhat disturbing beak in order to listen to him play the carillon. How many of you have even heard of a carillon, much less seen one being played live?? They're quite rare these days.

Many things at Ren Fest are rare these days. How many harpists do you meet outside your city symphony? Trust me, the harp is best enjoyed in the shade of a tree whose leaves are whispering in a mild breeze. How about listening to a harpsichordist on a patch of soft grass? Think heavy metal gets your heart pounding? Try bagpipes and drums that vibrate your soul. Then again, there is that carillon played as rarely a carillon has been played.

True, the Renaissance Festival has little to do with the actual Renaissance and if you want to be a snobby stuffed shirt about that, stay home, but I can think of little else that would inspire great writing, great thought and great art than some of the music you will find at Ren Fest. Exactly how much fun would it be to sit around and watch people think or pretend to compose, or, god forbid, pretend to carve the statue of David (which would be heresy)?

Rather than people pretending to recreate the great works of the Renaissance, you will instead find much frivolity and excess. They will clap you in irons if you so desire (and indeed some of the costumes did look more like medieval dominatrix garb) but there is jousting, rope ladder climbing, games of skill like axe and knife throwing, great music and entertainment. The street performers and stage performers are all friendly and make you feel part of this 30 acre town. The buildings are beautifully constructed and, if you're a Harry Potter fan, make you feel like you stepped onto the streets of Hogsmeade. This fact alone, well okay and the harp music, had me wondering how I could train one of the horses and volunteer us to wander the festival streets dressed up every weekend next spring. In essence, I wanted to run off and join the circus!


Monday, March 14, 2011

Just some fun stuff from PBR Glendale Invitational

Holy flaming bull heads Batman! This is not a rodeo! THIS is the PBR! (for my friend Stockyard Queen). At least they didn't get the Border Patrol to try and ride spooky horses past the bull heads this year. When did they paint them silver?



The bullfighters of the PBR doing the dangerous job of distracting the bull so that the rider can get away safely. These fellows are amazing to watch in action.



According to my 200 some odd photos, the bulls often don't fall for the bullfighter tactics and go after the rider anyway. Here, Valderon lights out across the arena, the bull lights out after Valderon, and everyone else lights out after the bull.
It kinda looks like everyone is chasing that Brazilian dude.



You know how they talk about "the rider covered that bull"? Well, if this rider's missionary position is any indication, the bull is about to cover him (in the language of horse breeders). Darned if we didn't get home in time to watch the telecast and hear Hummer report on this ride. His exact words were "That bull had his way with him!" Great job Hummer,
you made us send our coffee through our noses.



I think Lohstroh is pretending to be a wounded mountain lion on a canned hunt.
Bet the bull is laughing.

Some great buckoffs from the PBR Glendale Invitational

Bet he's good at Twister too.


What must go through a rider's mind at this moment...



Rider should have gotten points for Levitation.



I don't remember the name of the bull but it should have been Trampoline.

Some of the great bulls from PBR Glendale Invitational

Mad Max



Guilherme Marchi riding Stubby



Valderon's event winning ride on Speckled Ivory
(did you hear us all BOO at the low score?!)



Dustin Elliot
(damned good ride for 7.79 seconds)





Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Our new blog

We created a new blog about raising Miniature Horses. If you're thinking of getting a mini or know someone getting a mini, go here: http://allaboutminihorses.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Dancing with the... umm... stars.

Okay, now that they've voted off the people with any real claim to fame, what have we got left and what reality show would they be appropriate for in the future?

A. Shawn Johnson: Little Magilla Gorilla Jr. She's a gymnast. I'd never heard of her before I started watching Dancing with the Stars to see Ty Murray. To be a gymnast you have to perform to music. You have to deal with choreography. Not ONCE has this kid looked like anything other than a muscle bound gymnast on that dance floor. There has been no grace there and those arm movements, impressive in a gym or boxing ring, have no business getting anything greater than a 7 in a dancing competition. Perhaps they'll develop a show called "Boxing with muscle bound children destined to be severely arthritic" just for her. I have a hard time believing that her "fan base" is larger than Lil' Kim's.

B. Melissa Rycroft: The town cryer. She's a professional cheerleader (that's dance, of a sort, people). According to her own little bio video for DWTS she's been taking dance since she was a toddler. UMM.. Did I miss them change the name of the show to Professional Dancers Dancing with Professional Dancers? As far as I can tell, her only claim to fame is that she lined up with a bunch of other gold diggers (yes, that's what you call that) and got dumped on national television. WTH did she expect? You don't find true love when you're choosing out of a field of ONE so she's either a gold digger or a moron, either way she's not a star but she is a professional dancer. So, perhaps ABC will invent a vehicle for Melissa called "Are there people who stupidly think that someone can actually fall in love on command for a national audience or are they just gold diggers?".

C. Gilles Marini: Actor, at least that's what they tell me, I've never heard of him. To be fair, this season of DWTS has been my first foray into network television since my friend Cheryl's TV show got cancelled and before that Frasier. So if all the acting you're famous for is bad network TV, chances are good I haven't heard of you. I don't know how much acting training Gilles has had, but well rounded actors have had at least some dance because it's hard to get acting work and the more entertainment skills you have, the more marketable you are, and if you went to school for your acting you damned sure had dance classes. Perhaps a show for Giles called "Best Dancers Ever Beaten by Height Impaired, Clunky Boxing Gorillas" would be suitable.

Of all the trumped up undeserving pieces of garbage I have ever sat through, this one takes the cake. I should have stopped after watching Ty's Lindy Hop because once again that dance was GREAT and worth watching several times, but nooooo I watched to see Gilles take home the trophy. Never in my wildest dreams did I think little miss "OH was I supposed to be graceful??? I thought I was just supposed to out muscle Mike Tyson and then stick the landing!" win. Whatever...

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Newer video of the baby!

She gets stronger every day and she's giving her momma and me more grey hairs.