Monday, November 29, 2010

Understanding Ice Hockey Statistics

Ice Hockey Stats (shortened for statistics) is a record of the performance of the team and the players. In other words, it shows the standing of the team one is interested at. Many find it hard to understand the statistics since reveals only numbers and abbreviations, the meanings of which are unknown to lay persons. Discussed below are abbreviations used in the records and what do they stand for.

A players statistics include the following abbreviations: G is for goal and A is for assist, which is the total number of scores and assists the player made respectively. PTS is the scoring points determined by adding his goals and assists. PIM stands for Penalties infraction minutes or penalties in minutes, which are the number of penalties called to the player. GP is the number of games the player has entered. TOI indicates the total time he spent playing on the rink. PPG and PPA show the number of goals and assists (respectively) done by the player while his team was on power play. SHG and SHA are for goals and assists accomplished during the time when they are shorthanded (lacking a player). +/- is a sign unique to the players stats and stands for goals scored for the team minus the goals scored against the time for the time the player was on the rink and the teams have the same number of players.

G, A and GP holds the same meaning when one is looking at a goaltenders stats. The number of games he has started is represented by GS. GA stands for goals against, which is the sum of goals against the goaltender and its average is denoted as GAA. W, L, T, and SO are used in the same manner the team stats use it (see below). SOG, or shots on the goal, is the number of goals dealt. SV, or saves, is the total number of shots deflected by the goaltender.

W stands for wins, L is for Losses. GP stands for the number of games played by the team. T is for ties, SOL for shootout losses (which are games lost in shootouts) and OTL is overtime losses. PTL is the abbreviation for points, which is determined by wins, losses, overtime losses, shootout losses and ties. PTS is the tool that matters most to the team since it dictates the current standing of the team. GF and GA are goals for and goals against respectively.

With all these letters flooding the sheets, an amateur can get a rough idea on the standing of a team by looking at the W, L, T, SOL, OTL and PTS. All the others only become useful in breaking ties.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Wildlife trekking

On the 15th of May 2009, it was a bright day for us in Murchison falls Uganda. We embarked on an early morning game drive on the northern bank of Murchison falls where our tour guide spotted for us lions. Buffalo s and Rothschild giraffes, wildebeests, water bucks, bush bucks, reed bucks were seen in big numbers. I enjoyed viewing the amazing giraffes feeding on the tree leaves as high as the tree tops as we cruised on the boat upstream the calm Victoria Nile and the base of the falls just tens of meters from the "Devil's Cauldron. There we marveled at toothsome hippos, crocodiles and over the 17-kilometer stretch we were able to see elephants, water bucks and Uganda cob not forgetting the many bird species like the Goliath herons, Egyptian geese, pelican bee-eaters, kingfishers, Horn bills, cormorants and the rare shoe bill stork. After taking shots of the photogenic Murchison Falls we returned Uganda Safaris Lodge for relaxation, dinner and an overnight.

The following morning, we embarked on a whole day drive with our packed lunch we drove via the Albertan Escarpment of the western Rift valley. We passed through verdant countryside and traditional homesteads and farms. Fort Portal rests in the shadow of the Fabled "Mountains of the Moon". We arrived On the 15th of May 2009; it was a bright day for us in Murchison falls Uganda. We embarked on an early morning game drive on the northern bank of Murchison falls where our tour guide spotted for us lions. Buffalo s and Rothschild giraffes, wildebeests, water bucks, bush bucks, reed bucks were seen in big numbers. I enjoyed viewing the amazing giraffes feeding on the tree leaves as high as the tree tops as we cruised on the boat upstream the calm Victoria Nile and the base of the falls just tens of meters from the "Devil's Cauldron. There we marveled at toothsome hippos, crocodiles and over the 17-kilometer stretch we were able to see elephants, water bucks and Uganda cob not forgetting the many bird species like the Goliath herons, Egyptian geese, pelican bee-eaters, kingfishers, Horn bills, cormorants and the rare shoe bill stork. After taking shots of the photogenic Murchison Falls we returned Uganda Safaris Lodge for relaxation, dinner and an overnight.

The following morning, we embarked on a whole day drive with our packed lunch we drove via the Albertan Escarpment of the western Rift valley. We passed through verdant countryside and traditional homesteads and farms. Fort Portal rests in the shadow of the Fabled "Mountains of the Moon". We arrived Kibale national park in the afternoon and had our Dinner and overnight at Luxury safari Lodge in the Park.

In the morning before sunset we drove to the forest in search of primates like chimpanzees, Red-Colombuses, Blues, Red-tailed and Grey cheeked Mangrove monkeys swung on trees through a dense forest.we also viewed a few birds, butterflies and many small insects. All in a close quarter, at a swamp Eco-tourism site we encountered rare and beautiful flora and fauna.

Next we proceeded to Queen Elizabeth National Park following the mystical Mountain Range most of the journey. We viewed water bucks, Buffaloes and a variety of Antelope species arriving in time for an evening unique 2-hour boat cruise on the channel and into Lake Edward. This cruise passed through the highest concentration of breeding Hippos, bird species like the kingfisher at the banks of the channel plus animals like elephant and buffaloes were drinking water at the edge. We passed by a gorge for a forest walk to look for the habituated chimpanzees and other primates with the help of sticks which were provided by the game rangers. We went Sight seeing around the creator lakes region set deep into the volcanic creators, interacted with the local salt makers and Baboon cliff all was a wonderful memorable experience.

The following morning we were transferred to a Gorilla national park, but first we got involved in a game drive along a track and Queens Mile in the park to see Lions, Elephants, Cape buffalo, Warthogs, leopard, hyena, mongoose, water bucks etc.We later had our dinner and over night stay at lake tented Camp.

Early in the morning entered into a gorilla sanctuary. The rain forest was spectacular one; it offered a dramatic, heavily forested and dense landscape crisscrossed by numerous animal trails, allowing access for us. The Recorded mammals there included the endangered mountain gorilla, the rare golden monkey, buffalo, elephants, bush bucks, leopards, giant forest hogs as well as other animals. The park is best known for the fascinating gorillas, where the time taken and terrain varies according to the movements of the marvelous primates. The thrill of spending time with and observing the gorillas is a rare, moving, awesome and exciting adventure. The gorillas were shy and peaceful, what was an unforgettable experience to watch and photographed them as they interact with each other!

In Mburo National Park, we drove along the lake shore track, and with its own system of game trails and cleared walkways, that offered interesting guided lakeside walks. Here we found herds of zebra, Cape buffalo and eland, were easy to approach. Along with the game drive, we also enjoyed a boat trip on L.Mburo and self-guided nature trails. More than 250 species of birds were around the Lake including Papyrus, the extraordinary White winged Warbler and Bare-Faced Go-away bird. Later that day we returned to Kampala stopping at the Royal Drum Makers and the equator and took photographs. I bale national park in the afternoon and had our Dinner and overnight at Luxury safari Lodge in the Park.

In the morning before sunset we drove to the forest in search of primates like chimpanzees, Red-Cole buses, Blues, Red-tailed and Grey cheeked Mangrove monkeys swung on trees through a dense forest.we also viewed a few birds, butterflies and many small insects. All in a close quarter, at a swamp Eco-tourism site we encountered rare and beautiful flora and fauna.

Next we proceeded to Queen Elizabeth National Park following the mystical Mountain Range most of the journey. We viewed water bucks, Buffaloes and a variety of Antelope species arriving in time for an evening unique 2-hour boat cruise on the channel and into Lake Edward. This cruise passed through the highest concentration of breeding Hippos, bird species like the kingfisher at the banks of the channel plus animals like elephant and buffaloes were drinking water at the edge. We passed by a gorge for a forest walk to look for the habituated chimpanzees and other primates with the help of sticks which were provided by the game rangers. We went Sight seeing around the creator lakes region set deep into the volcanic creators, interacted with the local salt makers and Baboon cliff all was a wonderful memorable experience.

The following morning we were transferred to a Gorilla national park, but first we got involved in a game drive along a track and Queens Mile in the park to see Lions, Elephants, Cape buffalo, Warthogs, leopard, hyena, mongoose, water bucks etc.We later had our dinner and over night stay at lake tented Camp.

Early in the morning entered into a gorilla sanctuary. The rain forest was spectacular one; it offered a dramatic, heavily forested and dense landscape crisscrossed by numerous animal trails, allowing access for us. The Recorded mammals there included the endangered mountain gorilla, the rare golden monkey, buffalo, elephants, bush bucks, leopards, giant forest hogs as well as other animals. The park is best known for the fascinating gorillas, where the time taken and terrain varies according to the movements of the marvelous primates. The thrill of spending time with and observing the gorillas is a rare, moving, awesome and exciting adventure. The gorillas were shy and peaceful, what was an unforgettable experience to watch and photographed them as they interact with each other!

In Mburo National Park, we drove along the lake shore track, and with its own system of game trails and cleared walkways, that offered interesting guided lakeside walks. Here we found herds of zebra, Cape buffalo and eland, were easy to approach. Along with the game drive, we also enjoyed a boat trip on L.Mburo and self-guided nature trails. More than 250 species of birds were around the Lake including Papyrus, the extraordinary White winged Warbler and Bare-Faced Go-away bird. Later that day we returned to Kampala stopping at the Royal Drum Makers and the equator and took photographs.

Personalized Graduation Gifts - Ideas to Select Cheap Graduation Presents

I have talked about some of the personalized graduation gift ideas which you can give to any person that just graduated from law school, medical school, high school, nursing school, elementary school, military school, college, university, preschool, junior high, 8th grade, kindergarten. It can also be given to phd or masters recipients.

These gifts are unique, unusual, cool, nice, perfect, great, cheap, can be personalized, good, special, fun, appropriate, popular, funny, affordable. These are some of the words to describe these graduation gifts I am about to unveil to you. It can be given to any person regardless of whether they are your son, brother, sister, daughter, uncle, father, mother etc. It is for both the male and female gender, this implies that it can be given to a man, woman or children. They are gourmet gifts, so every person can take gourmet items.

1. Vineyard select wine basket

This gift can be personalized with up to 25 characters of your choice. The gift basket expresses fruit and characters. It contains Washington's most excellent vineyard yields. It contains wines from Avery lane to make a nice gift for any person that love to take wine. The receiver of this present will benefit from taking the wine together with saraivanov parmesan, artichoke, cheese biscuits, bonbons au chocolate, smoked salmon, camembert cheese spread, rosemary and roasted garlic crackers, dolcetto tiramisu wafer rolls etc. There are two versions of this wine gift basket to select from; they are namely merlot and chardonnay. You can select from any of this bottle of wine to add to this gift basket. There is option to personalize the gift to suit the receiver while buying. You can select the preferred character of your choice to write on a satin ribbon placed on the gift. You can wish the person "happy graduation" through this means.

2. Macadams' Congratulations Collection

If you need to show congratulations in an extraordinary way, this unique gift can aid you to utter it eight different times. The gift contains toffee peanuts, sugared peach slices, island mix, Jordan almonds, candy berries, Guadalajara mix, jelly beans and sour cherries. These items will taste delicious to the receiver. This will afford the receiver the chance to enjoy the delicious taste of their achievement.

3. Heartfelt Congratulations

When you need to commemorate their graduation, this gift pack is the perfect item to present. It contains blooms of success like solidago, asters, carnations and delphinium. On top of their graduation celebration, you will also see two mylar balloons to let them know that they are on top. The flowers used in this gift pack are the freshest available flowers.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Richard Wright's Last Literary Efforts and Last Days on Earth in Exile in Paris

Richard Wright moved to Paris in 1946, with his wife and a 4 year old daughter. He met among others Gertrude Stein, Andre Gide Simone de Beavoir, Aime Cesaire and Leopold Senghor. He even assists Senghor, Cesaire and Alioune Diop in founding the Presence Africaine magazine. He returned to the United States only briefly. He then returned to Paris and became a permanent American expatriate befriending existentialists like Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus while going through an Existentialist phase in his second novel, The Outsider (1953) which describes an African American character's involvement with the Communist Party in New York. Acclaimed as the first American existential novel, he warned that the black man had awakened in a disintegrating society not ready to include him.

Wright travelled through Europe, Asia, and Africa, experiences which led to many non-fiction works like Black Power (1954), a commentary on the emerging nations of Africa.

In 1949, Wright contributed to the anti-communist anthology The God That Failed his essay which had been published in the Atlantic Monthly three years earlier and was derived from the unpublished portion of Black Boy. This led to an invitation to become involved with the Congress for Cultural Freedom, which he rejected, suspecting that it had connections with the CIA which with the FBI, had Wright under surveillance from 1943.

In 1955, he visited Indonesia for the Bandung Conference and recorded his observations on it in his book The Color Curtain: A Report on the Bandung Conference. Wright was optimistic about the immense possibilities posed by this meeting and the resulting alliance between recently-oppressed but now independent nations which became known as non-aligned states..

Other works including White Man, Listen! (1957), and another novel, The Long Dream (1958) as well as a collection of short stories, Eight Men, were published only after his death in 1961.

His works primarily deal with the poverty, anger, and the protests of northern and southern urban black Americans.

Despite overwhelming negative criticism from his agent, Paul Reynolds, of his four-hundred page "Island of Hallucinations" manuscript in February 1959, Wright, in March, outlined this third novel in which Fish was finally to be liberated from his racial conditioning and would become a dominating character.

By May 1959 Wright had developed a desire to leave Paris to live in London for he felt French politics had become increasingly submissive to American pressure, and the peaceful Parisian atmosphere he had once enjoyed had been shattered by quarrels and attacks instigated by enemies of the expatriate black writers.

On June 26, 1959, after a party which marked the French publication of White Man, Listen!, Wright became ill,as a result of a severe attack of amoebic dysentery which he had probably contracted during his stay in Ghana. He was so ill that even when in November 1959 Ellen secured a London apartment, he decided "to abandon any desire to live in England. By this decision he also abridged his protracted hassles with British immigration officials.

On February 19, 1960 Wright learned from Reynolds that the New York premiere of the stage adaptation of The Long Dream received such bad reviews that the adapter, Ketti Frings, had decided to cancel other performances. Meanwhile, Wright was running into additional problems trying to get The Long Dream published in France. These setbacks prevented his finishing revisions of "Island of Hallucinations," which he needed to get a commitment from Doubleday.

In June 1960 Wright recorded a series of discussions for French radio dealing primarily with his books and literary career but also with the racial situation in the United States and the world, specifically denouncing American policy in Africa.

In late September, to cover extra expenses brought on by his daughter Julia's move from London to Paris to attend the Sorbonne, Wright wrote blurbs for record jackets for Nicole Barclay, director of the largest record company in Paris.

In spite of his being in financial difficulties Wright refused to compromise his principles. He declined to participate in a series of programs for Canadian radio because he suspected American control over the programs, and he rejected the proposal of the Congress for Cultural Freedom that he goes to India to speak at a conference in memory of Leo Tolstoy for the same reason.

Still interested in literature, Wright offered to help Kyle Onstott get Mandingo (1957) published in France. His last display of explosive energy occurred on November 8, 1960 in his polemical lecture, "The Situation of the Black Artist and Intellectual in the United States," delivered to students and members of the American Church in Paris. Wright argued that American society reduced the most militant members of the black community to slaves whenever they wanted to question the racial status quo. He offered as proof the subversive attacks of the Communists against Native Son and the quarrels which James Baldwin and other authors sought with him.

On 26 November 1960 Wright talked enthusiastically about Daddy Goodness with Langston Hughes and gave him the manuscript. Since Wright contracted Amoebic dysentery, his health became unstable despite various treatments. His health deteriorated over the next three years until he died in Paris of a heart attack at the age of 52.and was interred there in Le Père Lachaise Cemetery. Claims have been made that he was murdered.

Wright became enchanted with the haiku a Japanese poetry form which wrote over 4,000 of. In 1998 a book was published ("Haiku: This Other World" with 817 of his most preferred ones.

Upon his death, Wright left behind an unfinished book A Father's Law. which looks at a black policeman and the son he suspects of murder. Clearly influenced by James Joyce's Ulysses, it presents one day in the life of Jake Jackson a violent man from Chicago, who has not much hope in his mean environment. Wright had finished this manuscript in 1934, titled it Cesspool, after repeatedly being rejected by publishers before Native Son was released. Wright's daughter, Julia published it in January 2008. His travel writings, edited by Virginia Whatley Smith, had appeared in 2001, published by the Mississippi University Press.

Some of the more candid passages dealing with race, sex, and politics in Wright's books had been cut or omitted before original publication. But in 1991, unexpurgated versions of Native Son, Black Boy, and his other works were published. In addition, a previously unpublished novella, Rite of Passage, appeared in 1994.

Wright's books published during the 1950s disappointed some critics, as they felt that his move to Europe had cut him off from his social, emotional and psychological roots.

During the 1970s and 1980s increasing interest is being shown in Richard Wright. with ceaseless flows of critical essays written about his writing in prestigious journals, conferences held on him on university campuses, a new film version of Native Son, with a screenplay by Richard Wesley, released in December 1986 and selected Wright novels becoming required reading in a growing number of international universities and colleges.

Recently critics have called for a reassessment of Wright's later work in view of his philosophical thrust. Paul Gilroy, for instance has argued that "the depth of his philosophical interests has been either overlooked or misconceived by the almost exclusively literary enquiries that have dominated analysis of his writing. " His most significant contribution, however, remains his desire to accurately portray blacks to white readers, thereby destroying the white myth of the patient, humorous, subservient black man. While some of his work is weak and unsuccessful especially that completed within the last three years of his life-his best work will continue to attract readers. His three masterpieces Uncle Tom's Children, Native Son, and Black Boy-are a crowning achievement for him and for American literature.

This prolific accumulation of literary works was well prepared for when as a young man living in Memphis, Tennessee, Wright began an intense reading period in which he became familiar with a wide range of authors, many of them contemporary American authors. Of that period in his life he wrote: Reading was like a drug, a dope. The novels created moods in which I lived for days

REFERENCES:

Richard Wright Papers at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. (The largest collection of Wright's papers)

o Richard Wright Small Manuscripts Collection (MUM00488) owned by the University of Mississippi Department of Archives and Special Collections.

o Richard Wright's Biography at the Mississippi Writers Page

o Richard Wright Collection (MUM00488) owned by the University of Mississippi.

o Richard Wright at the Independent Television Service

o Richard Wright's Photo & Gravesite

o Summary of Richard Wright's Novels

o Synopsis of Wright's Fiction

o Biography of Wright and his later papers

o Reviews of Wright's Work

o Biography of Wright and his works

o Critical Reception of Wright's Travel Writings

o Review of The Outsider

Materials in the Fales Collection of the New York University Library

The Firestone Library at Princeton University.

Private papers and letters housed at the Beinecke and at the Schomburg Library in New York City.

John A. Williams, Richard Wright (1969),

Constance Webb, Richard Wright: A Biography (1968). Webb, a friend of Wright's, had access to his personal papers, and after Wright's death she spoke at length with Ellen Wright, who made available to Webb all of her husband's files.

Margaret Walker, Richard Wright: Daemonic Genius (1988)

Michel Fabre, The Unfinished Quest of Richard Wright (1973; rev. ed., 1993), a more literary account of the writer's life. The 1993 edition of The Unfinished Quest includes an excellent bibliographical essay, but much of Fabre's biographical material relies on Webb's book.

Charles T. Davis and Fabre, Richard Wright: A Primary Bibliography (1982);

C.T. Davis and M. Fabre, Richard Wright: A Primary Biography (1982);

Michel Fabre, The World of Richard Wright (1985)

Addison Gayle, Richard Wright: Ordeal of a Native Son (1980), focuses on Wright's surveillance by the CIA and the FBI during his life.

Robert Bone, Richard Wright (1969);

Keneth Kinnamon, The Emergence of Richard Wright (1972);

ed. by K. Kinnamon Richard Wright (1990)

Kinnamon, ed., New Essays on "Native Son" (1990).

Kinnamon, A Richard Wright Bibliography: Fifty Years of Criticism and Commentary, 1933-1982.

Evelyn Gross Avery, Rebels and Victims: The Fiction of Richard Wright (1979);

Joyce Ann Joyce, Richard Wright's Art of Tragedy (1986);

Jean Franco Goundard, The Racial Problem in the Works of Richard Wright (1992).

Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and Kwame Anthony Appiah, eds., Richard Wright: Critical Perspectives Past and Present (1993);

Richard Abcarian, Richard Wright's "Native Son": A Critical Handbook (1970);

C. James Trotman, ed., Richard Wright: Myths and Realities (1988);

An obituary in the New York Times, 30 Nov. 1960.

http://www.anb.org/articles/16/16-01806.html; American National Biography Online Feb. 2000. Access Date: Sun Mar 18 12:28:42 2001 Copyright (c) 2000 American Council of Learned Societies. Published by Oxford University Press.

James Baldwin Notes of a Native Son (1955);

David Bakish Richard Wright (1973);

Robert Felgar Richard Wright (1980);

Critical Essays on Richard Wright, ed. by Yashinobu Hakutani (1982);

Richard Wright and Racial Discourse by Yashinobu Hakutani (1996);

Richard Wright by Addison Gayle (1983);

Richard Wright's Art of Tragedy by J.A. Joyce (1986);

Richard Wright's Native Son, ed. by H. Bloom (1988);

Richard Wright's Black Boy, ed. by H. Bloom (1988),

Voice of a Native Son by E. Miller (1990);

'Richard Wright: Native Son and Novelist', in Great Black Writers by Steven Otfinoski (1994);

The Critical Response to Richard Wright, ed by Robert J. Butler (1995);

Richard Wright: The Life and Times by Hazel Rowley (2001)

William Burrison "Another Look at Lawd Today," CLA Journal 29 [June 1986]: 424-41).

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Kissimmee Vacation Homes - A Vacation Home Gem Among Disney and Orlando Travelers

What is the best deal when planning a vacation to Disney World. I would have to say it is in the nightly rental rates found for new Kissimmee Vacation Homes.

Almost all vacation pool homes in the greater Orlando area are actually situated in the town of Kissimmee, FL. Matter of fact, most people are not aware that a huge portion of the Disney World theme park complex is actually situated in Kissimmee.

I guess the first question that needs to be answered is what is a "private vacation pool home"?  These are private homes that have been purchased by investors who desire to make money off of the rental income generated by his or her investment. Each home has a living area, a dining area, a great room and a number of bedrooms and baths depending on the rental needs of the vacationer. Oh yes, each of the homes have their own private screened in lanai and swimming pool.

As J. Avery of Springfield, IL said.... "We were looking at booking a hotel for our family of five that is until we found out about the prices of the vacation pool homes." The idea of having our own full size private swimming pool close to Disney World is what attracted us to book our home.  What a fabulous Disney vacation this was."

The attraction of Kissimmee vacation homes by Disney is the low nightly rates. Years ago when there were not many short term rental homes in the market, the rates were significantly higher. With the over building due to the cheap mortgage money, this segment of the lodging industry grew far faster than demand. Today, because it is a "buyers" market, homes which sold for over $500,000 a few years back are now carrying rents of only $125 and $175 per night depending upon season. These nightly rates are unheard of. It is one of the reasons that many are checking out the possibilities of renting a private pool home close to Walt Disney World.

When a person is looking to find the best value for his Disney World vacation, he will look long and hard. Attraction theme park ticket prices are set by the parks. But, the one area which offers the absolute best deal is the Kissimmee Vacation Homes where nightly rental rates are down somewhere between 30 and 40% from a few years back.

Here is a valuable tip for those looking to find deals in Orlando, check out the vacation pool homes in Kissimmee... you will be impressed with fabulous rates! Don't miss out.

The Fascination of Tabasco Sauce

On my recent trip to Louisiana, I discovered that Avery Island, the home of Tabasco Sauce was a short distance from my hotel. On a sunny Sunday afternoon I traveled to the plant to see exactly how Tabasco Sauce is made. It was an amazing experience and nothing what I expected. Avery Island sits atop a natural salt bed which is said to be as deep as Mt. Everest is tall. It is coarser and almost looks like sea salt.

Avery Island, Louisiana, is the home of the McIlhenny family. About 130 years ago, a gift of Capsicum frutescens peppers from China or Central America was presented to Edmund McIlhenny. Soon his private pepper sauce was being requested by friends and acquaintances alike and the business was born. They outgrew the land and in 1965, the family transferred some of the growing of the peppers to Central America. The McIlhenny family still supervises every step of the growing and manufacturing process.

The pepper seeds are planted every February in the greenhouses where they remain until mid-April after the last frost when they are transferred to the field. The plants grow and mature until August when they turn the perfect shade of deep red and are ready to be picked. The full size of the pepper is only about 1 to 1-1/2 inches. The red peppers are picked daily by field workers who use a little red stick called Le Petit Baton Rouge which is painted the exact color of the ripened pepper. This way there is consistency in all peppers picked.

The same day the peppers are picked they are ground into a mash with a small amount of Avery Island salt. The mash is placed into oak casks supplied by companies such as Jack Daniels or Jim Beam. The casks are sealed and the tops are covered with salt from the island and holes are drilled into the top of the casks to allow ventilation. This is done to keep the barrels from exploding during the fermentation process which lasts three years. Yes, you heard it right, they store these barrels for three full years.

At the end of three years, the barrels are opened and the mash mixed with a special vinegar and secret spices and placed in large mixing vats. The vats are stirred for the next 30 days. At the end of this, the mash mixture is run through three separate screens to extract the pepper pulp and seeds. The bottles are then ready to be filled with the familiar red cap and labels applied.

Approximately 720,000 bottles per day are manufactured and shipped to over 160 countries, in 22 different languages. Nothing is wasted in the process. The pulp and seed by-products that were strained from the Tabasco mash are used to make well-known products, some of which you may know. These include Ben Gay, Icy-Hot, Close-Up toothpaste, Spam, Slim Jim beef sticks, Heinz ketchup, A1 Steak Sauce, Cheez-It Crackers, Lawry's salt and Vlasic pickles, to name just a few.

I had the opportunity to visit the country store and taste Tabasco ice cream and a line of special Tabasco Sauce dips and Tabasco cola. They even take the barrels that the mash was stored in and chip it to make charcoal briquettes that are wonderful for barbecuing. There is always a story behind the product sitting on the shelf of your local supermarket.

Peace and love.

Friday, November 12, 2010

A Tourist Guide to Rhinebeck, New York

1. Introduction and History
Located on the east side of the Hudson River in Dutchess County some 100 miles north of Manhattan, Rhinebeck, accessed by the Taconic State Parkway, Route 9, Route 9W, and the New York State Thruway, is both a picturesque and intensely historic village. It itself is part of the Hudson River Valley National Historic Area which was established in 1996 by Congress to recognize, preserve, protect, and interpret the nationally significant history and resources of the valley for the benefit of the nation, and stretches from Yonkers to Albany.
Founded in 1686 when Dutchmen Gerrit Artsen, Arie Roosa, Jan Elting, and Henrick Kip exchanged 2,200 acres of local land with six Indians of the Esopus (Kingston) and Sopaseo (Rhinebeck) tribes, it was initially designated "Kipsbergen." In 1713, Judge Henry Beekman referred to these land holdings as "Ryn Beck" for the first time.
One of the country's largest historic districts with 437 sites listed on the National Historic Register, the village of Rhinebeck nucleic acid and the largest, which surrounds the town of Rhinebeck, include half of section 30 of the 16 miles of the river adjacent to the landed gentry of the region during the stand will include 18, 19 and early the 20 Century.
Often called a "picturesque village" and the "jewel of the Hudson," which offers many excursions to nearby attractions such as antique shops, art galleries, bed-and-breakfasts, inns andrestaurants, usually housed in historic buildings.
Signature and stalwart of the village is the Beekman Arms, America's oldest, continuously operating inn listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Tracing its origins to 1766 when Arent Traphagen relocated his father's successful Bogardos structure of stone and sturdy timber--so constructed to protect it against Indian attacks--to the crossroads of the recently designated Ryn Beck village, it ultimately served as a Mecca of Revolutionary, often hosting great musicians like George Washington, Benedict Arnold and Alexander Hamilton. Then, when the British burned Kingston City, is located on the Hudson, people have sought refuge here.
Purchased in 1802 by Asa Potter, was later published several roles, including city hall, theater, post office and newspapers.
Renovated, expanded and renamed to its current "Beekman Arms", a nickname derived from the owner Durs Tracy served as the inspiration forThomas Wolfe's novel of the time and the river, after the frequent visits here, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, comes from the nearby Hyde Park, has led all four of his successful conduct of elections and the election campaign as governor of his very porch .
The much larger group provides routes for sightseeing, restaurants and hotels, in the midst of a protected area, colonial atmosphere.
The Tavern at the Beekman Arms, the ground floor is furnished with dark wood, cut a huge brickfireplace, and wide plank floors, and is subdivided into the Colonial Tap Room, a garden greenhouse, and several separate dining areas.
The upper floors contain the original inn's meticulously restored and elegantly appointed 1766 rooms, although accommodation is available in numerous affiliated structures. Amid exposed brick walls and high ceilings, for instance, guests can stay in the village's original firehouse, while the Townsend House, which opened in 2004, features the design and Architecture influenced by other historic structures Rhinebeck. The Guest House, located behind the main building, inn, offers lower costs, motel style.
The Delaware Inn meters, designed in 1844 by Alexander Jackson Davis and a fine example of American Carpenter Gothic, is one block north of the Beekman Arms, and is part of a complex of seven companies, which surrounds a courtyard. Many rooms have fireplaces.
Rhinebeck is a lot of activities. The Dutchess CountyFairgrounds, for instance, hosts events such as the Dutchess County Fair, the Rhinebeck Antiques Fair, the Crafts at Rhinebeck exhibition, and the Iroquos Festival, while the Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck offers live classical, drama, musical, and children's performances showcasing local theater companies, although talent has also included national and international names. Resembling an oversized barn to complement the surrounding rural landscape and to pay tribute to the origins of summer stock, it replaced the temporary tent under which seasonal performances had been given between 1994 and 1997, opening in July of the following year and becoming a year-round venue in 1999.
Several early-aviation and architecturally historic sights surround the immediate town, most of which offer exquisite views of the Hudson River and the Catskill Mountains beyond it.
2. Museum of Rhinebeck History
Located 3.5 miles north of the Village of Rhinebeck on Route 9, the Museum of Rhinebeck History, housed in the historic Quitman House, was founded in 1992 "to encourage understanding and appreciation of Rhinebeck history through the collection, preservation, exhibition, and interpretation of materials significant to Rhinebeck" by means of letters, books, journals, clothing, furniture, photographs, postcards, and artifacts. Open from mid-June to October 31, it features two annual exhibits, previous ones of which have been entitled "The First Century," "The Civil War," "The Guilded Age," "World War I," "The Roosevelt Years," "World War II," and "Early Rhinebeck Industries," among others.
The Quitman House, marking the area of the town's first settlement, had been built in 1798 as a parsonage by the parishioners of the nearby Old Stone Church for the Reverend Frederick H. Quitman, who had served the Lutheran congregation for more than three decades.
Henry Beekman, who had settled 35 Palatine German families in the area in the early-1700s, had been given most of the land by royal grant, and the nascent community developed round a single log church until the 19th century, at which time commerce had taken root three miles south in the village designated "The Flatts."
3. Wilderstein
Located two-and-a-half miles from the historic downtown district of Rhinebeck, Wilderstein, named after the petroglyph of a figure holding a peace pipe in his right hand and a tomahawk in his left in Suckley Cove, translates as "wild man's stone" from the German, and had been a restrained Italianast villa when it had been built in 1852. Home to three generations of the Suckley family, it had been significantly enlarged in 1888 with two upper floors, a tower, and a veranda, rendering it the elaborate Queen Anne-style mansion overlooking the Hudson River it is today.
The interior retains all of its original wall carvings, furniture, artwork, book collections, and stained glass from its 1888 expansion, and the ground floor, designed by Joseph Burr Tifany, features a dark, heavily-paneled foyer, a fireplace, a library, a dining room, a kitchen, and two living rooms.
Calvert Vaux and his son, hired in 1890 to design the outdoor landscape in Romantic style, had already had a long list of similar accomplishments, among them other Hudson River estates and Prospect Park and Central Park in New York, and had ordered 1,091 shrubs and 41 trees from a local Rhinebeck nursery for the Wilderstein project. The area, greatly reduced from its original size, currently encompasses 40 acres and three miles of trails.
Margaret (Daisy) Suckley, a close friend of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the last to survive, had ceded the mansion and its grounds to the Wilderstein Preservation in 1983, a not-for-profit educational institution. Today, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
4. Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome
Located on tiny, easily-missed Norton Road on the east side of the Hudson River not far from the village, The Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome Rhinebeck, a time portal, fields of grass and fabric aircraft, representing the first "children" of aviation a century ago.
His own seed has been planted, as Cole Palen is collecting his cell and license the engine to form the now defunct Roosevelt Aviation School on Long Island, the museum has purchased six aircraft offered for sale to clear the area for commercial Roosevelt Field nextMall.
After storage in an abandoned chicken coop on the Palen farm in Rhinebeck, the six aircraft, which encompassed a 1917 SPAD XII, a 1918 Standard J-1, a 1914 Avro 504K, a 1918 Curtiss Jenny, a 1918 Sopwith Snipe 7F1, and a 1918 Aeromarine 39B, had formed his initial fleet and the "aerodrome" had been a 1,000-foot-long, rocky, swamp-drained clearing called a "runway" and a single crude building serving as a "hangar" on a patch of farmland he had subsequently purchased. Additional aircraft acquisitions-and parts of them-had expanded the mostly biplane lineup, after considerable restoration and reconstruction.
Three metal, quonset hut-like hangars, built between 1963 and 1964 and located at the top of a small hill above the main dirt-and-grass parking lot, house Pioneer, World War I, and Lindbergh era aircraft today, across from a new museum facility and a small gift shop. But the aerodrome itself, on the other side of Norton Road, is accessed by a wooden covered bridge which serves more than just an entrance to the grass field, but as the time portal itself to the barnstorming era of aviation, an historical dimension somehow arrested and preserved in time beyond its boundaries.
The hangers, as if ignorant of the calendar, proudly brave the winds, bearing such names as Albatros Werke, Royal Aircraft Factory Farnborough, A.V. Roe and Company, Ltd., and Fokker. But it is the multitude of mono-, bi-, and triplanes which most fiercely wrestles with one's present-time conception.
The current air show program, which runs from mid-June to mid-October, features the "History of Flight" show on Saturdays, with pioneer aircraft such as the Bleriot XI, the Curtiss D "Pusher," and the Hanriot, while the "World War I" show on Sundays includes designs such as the Albatros, the Avro 504K, the Caudron G.III, the Curtiss JN-4D Jenny, the Fokker D.VII, the Fokker Dr.I, the Nieuport II, the Sopwith Camel, the SPAD VII, the Davis D1W, the de Havviland Tiger Moth, and the Great Lakes 2T-1R.
Biplane rides in four-passenger New Standard D-25s are given before and after the shows, while viewers can admire the fleet either in hangars or on the grass aerodrome while having lunch on outdoor picnic tables at the Aerodrome Canteen.
Audience volunteers, sporting Victorian, Edwardian, and 1920s dress, provide fashion shows after changing in the aerodrome's single, track-mounted, red caboose, often transported past spectators in vintage vehicles such as a 1909 Renault, a 1916 Studebaker, and a 1914 Model T Speedster. Period music completes the scene.
The air shows themselves, which feature only treetop-high sprints of the pioneer aircraft before immediate relandings on the grass, otherwise offer more dramatic maneuvers of the World War I and Lindbergh era designs, including aerobatics, dogfights, bomb raids, balloon bursts, parachutists, and "Delsey drives."
5. Montgomery Place
Designed by Alexander Jackson Davis and nestled on a landscape influenced by Andrew Jackson Downing, Montgomery Place, located off of Route 9G in Annandale-on-Hudson, is a richly-ornamented, classical revival, architectural landmark, reflecting both Hudson Valley estate life and almost 200 years of family ownership and imprint.
Tracing its origins to 1802 when 59-year-old Janet Livingston Montgomery had purchased a 242-acre area to establish a commercial farm and construct a house called the "Chateau de Montgomery" to honor her husband, General Richard Montgomery, it first served as a base in which to live and work.
Poised at the end of a half-mile long alley of deciduous trees, the federal style, stuccoed fieldstone house became the center of orchards, gardens, nurseries, and greenhouses, and flowers and trees had been sent to her from exotic areas of the world, including magnolia, yellow jasmine, orange, and mangos from England and Italy in Europe and Antigua in the Caribbean. The prosperous society provided fruit trees and seed to local farmers.
Even if the property had been earmarked for the heirs of General Montgomery, has forced the former to death his younger brother, Edward Livingston, whose public service career includes positions as mayor of New York was the U.S. representative and senator Louisiana Secretary of State and Finance in the transfer Andrew Jackson administration.
Louis Livingston, his widow, and CoralieLivingston Barton, his daughter, renamed the mansion "Montgomery Place," using it as a summer domicile and extensively modifying its architectural and landscape features during a 40-year period. The farm and pastureland, particularly, sported formal flower gardens and an ornate conservatory, and the estate's aesthetics were enhanced with walking paths to the Saw Kill Stream, rustic benches, colorful fruit gardens, and an arboretum comprised of purple-leafed European beech, cucumber magnolia, red oak, sweetgum, Tuliptree, white oak, Sargent's weeping hemlock, flowering dogwood, Amur Corktree, black locust, and Sycamore trees. These 150-year-od monoliths of nature can still be enjoyed today during the walk from the Visitor's Center and the actual mansion.
Based upon the style of Alexander Jackson Davis, then the greatest American architect of the romantic movement, the house itself was redesigned with porches, wings, and balustrades during a dual-phase process which commenced in 1842 and later in 1860, rendering it the classical revival example it is today.
Andrew Jackson Downing, then foremost landscape writer and co-owner of a nursery in Newburgh, New York, provided input concerning gardens, statuary, walking paths, and water features.
After a post-Civil War decline, during which time the property had been occupied by relatives, General John Ross Delafield, a Livingston descendent and New York attorney, inherited it, and his wife, Violetta White Delafield, herself a botanist, resurrected the landscape by introducing garden rooms for roses, herbs, and perennials, a wild garden with an artificial stream, and a hedged ellipse with a pool for aquatic plants.
In 1986, Delafield descendants conveyed title to Montgomery Place, its 424 acres of land, and a portion of the hamlet of Annandale, to Sleepy Hollow Restorations (later renamed Historic Hudson Valley) in order to ensure its restoration and preservation. Now a National Historic Landmark, it reopened to the public two years later.
6. Bard College
Only a short distance further north and immediately off of Route 9G in Annandale-on-Hudson is Bard College. A fusion of two historic estates, the liberal arts, residential campus, situated on more than 500 acres of fields and forested land bordering the river, features a complex of trails and walking paths through wooded areas, along the Saw Kill Stream, and down to the Hudson River, where the rising Catskill Mountains are visible.
Founded in 1860 by John Bard in association with the New York City leadership of the Episcopal Church and initially named St. Stephens College, it used part of Bard's riverside estate, Annandale, and the Chapel of the Holy Innocents, both of which he donated, to teach a classic, preparatory curriculum for those intending to enter the seminary.
Transitioning to a broader, more secular institution in 1919, it incorporated both natural and social science courses in its curriculum for the first time, and a decade later served as an undergraduate school of Columbia University. Increasingly focusing on liberal arts, it officially adopted the "Bard College" name in 1934 and ten years later became a coeducational institution, severing ties with Columbia.
By 1960, the very expanded curriculum included science, art, art history, sculpture, and anthropology, and attracted a significantly larger student and faculty base. A film department was introduced.
Its first graduate program, the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, was established in 1981, and, by the summer of 1990, the Bard Music Festival, created to provide a deeper appreciation of the repertory of reknowned composers, was introduced, focusing on the work and era of a different artist and showcased in the modern, metal-roofed, Frank O. Gehry-designed Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts in 2003. The architecturally bold, innovative structure, offering tours during the day and chamber, orchestral, jazz music, drama, musical, dance, and opera performances by American and international artists during the evening, is subdivided into three venues. The Sosnoff Theater, with an orchestra, parterre, and two balcony sections, features seating for 900, while the teaching Theater Two sports adjustable, bleacher-type seats and a semi-fly tower with a catwalk. The Felicitas S. Thorne Dance Studio serves as a classroom and rehearsal hall.
7. Clermont State Historic Site
The 500-acre Clermont State Historic Site, north of the town of Tivoli and off of Route 9G, was the seat of the politically and socially prominent Livingston family whose seven generations shaped both the house and its grounds over a 230-year period.
The estate harks to 1728 when Robert Livingston, Jr. acquired 13,000 acres of land along the Hudson River from his father, the First Lord of Livingston Manor, who had owned the second largest intestinal tract of private land in colonial New York and built a brick Georgian mansion, 1730-1750, baptism of the French name "mountain" or "Clermont," after the Catskill peaks visible from him.
When his only son, Robert P. Livingston, and Margaret Beekman, married, had been the heir to vast expanses of the country, has greatly expanded throughout the property. They, and the eldest son, Robert. R. Livingston, Jr., was an important andhighly influential figure who, as one of the Committee of Five, drafted the Declaration of Independence, served as the first US Minister of Foreign Affairs, specifically as Secretary of State, and Chancellor of New York, under whose title he gave oath of office to George Washington as the nation's first president.
Because of the Livingston family's involvement in fostering independence, British troops targeted and burned the mansion in the autumn of 1777, but Margaret Beekman Livingston, who had managed it, had it reconstructed during the three-year period between 1779 and 1782.
Developed for agricultural purposes, it was the site of experimental sheep breeding and yield-increasing crop methods, attracting national attention.
A more elaborate house, in an "H" configuration, had been constructed south of the original one in 1792, but was decimated by flames in 1909.
Serving as Thomas Jefferson's Minister to France from 1801 to 1804, Chancellor Livingston Negotiating the Louisiana Purchase in Paris and then set the first steamship in the world designed by Robert Fulton. Making its maiden voyage from New York to Albany in 1807, has cut the journey by land to less than half the time and the way in the direction of the Fulton Steamboat Company, and the lucrative transport of passengers and goods along the Hudson River.
After the Chancellor's eldest daughter was bequeathed the estate received substantial completion and amendment andin the 1920s, John Henry Livingston and his wife, Alice Delafield Clarkson Livingston, remodeled it in the Colonial Revival style.
Dwelling there between her husband's death and the onslaught of the Second World War, she then moved to the gardener's cottage, unable to maintain its costly upkeep, although it was usually opened during holidays and special occasions.
Deeded to New York State in 1967, it was subsequently designated a National Historic Landmark in 1973, and today appears as it did in the early 20th-century when it had been occupied by Mr. And Mrs. John Henry Livingston and their daughters, Honoria and Janet, the last two generations to have lived there.
A Visitor's Center, located a short walk from the actual mansion, features a museum with a model of the first steamboat, a gift shop and bookstore, and an introductory film.
8. Conclusion
A visit to the Village and Town of Rhinebeck, along with its many significant sights, is an immersion into the historic inns, bed-and-breakfasts, antiques and artwork, architecturally-bold and barn-like theaters, vintage aviation, and earlier-century aristocratic estate life of the region, all with the azure backdrop of the Hudson River and the green silhouettes of the Catskill Mountains rising beyond it.


 Reference : www.thaisabuy.com