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} catch(err) {}</description><title>Willy Blackmore</title><generator>Tumblr (3.0; @willyblackmore)</generator><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/</link><item><title>rachelfershleiser:

jbanash:

It’s here! The trailer for White...</title><description>&lt;iframe width="400" height="225" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Z1bF0zMYsxw?wmode=transparent&amp;autohide=1&amp;egm=0&amp;hd=1&amp;iv_load_policy=3&amp;modestbranding=1&amp;rel=0&amp;showinfo=0&amp;showsearch=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://rachelfershleiser.com/post/48943336118/jbanash-its-here-the-trailer-for-white" target="_blank"&gt;rachelfershleiser&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://jbanash.tumblr.com/post/48887288621/its-here-the-trailer-for-white-lines-was-debuted" target="_blank"&gt;jbanash&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It’s here! The trailer for &lt;em&gt;White Lines &lt;/em&gt;was debuted on In Bed With Books yesterday, and I’m so, so pleased with how it turned out. Bonus points for readers who can guess which photos are of Club Kids who inspired characters in the book. Think of it as a game of &lt;em&gt;Where’s Waldo&lt;/em&gt;, but with more eyeliner.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;I’m gonna file a YA novel about 80s clubbing under Things I Never Knew I Needed but OBVIOUSLY I Do.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Truth.&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48953499298</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48953499298</guid><pubDate>Fri, 26 Apr 2013 14:19:37 -0700</pubDate></item><item><title>I made a gif! Which is something I've never done before! </title><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://gifsoup.com/view/4647342/whitelines.html" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;img alt="image" src="http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view7/4647342/whitelines-o.gif"/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;It&amp;#8217;s from the trailer for &lt;em&gt;White Lines&lt;/em&gt;–which you can &lt;a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&amp;amp;v=Z1bF0zMYsxw" target="_blank"&gt;check out&lt;/a&gt;, if you&amp;#8217;re so inclined.&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48885873754</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48885873754</guid><pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2013 16:12:00 -0700</pubDate><category>lit</category><category>White Lines</category><category>Jennifer Banash</category></item><item><title>"If ag-gag laws are about protecting farmers from the threat of terrorism, or at least an attempt at..."</title><description>“If ag-gag laws are about protecting farmers from the threat of terrorism, or at least an attempt at coopting the heightened emotions and base good-versus-evil dichotomy of the war on terror, then it seems fair to map the anti-war argument onto the ag-gag debate too. Because, in many ways, the efforts to sanitize the horror of death (and torture) in war and steps taken to do the same in a slaughterhouse are based on the same basic tactic: Don’t allow the public to see it.”&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt; - &lt;em&gt;Ag-gag laws &lt;a href="http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/04/18/ag-gag-laws-consumer-rights-and-power-visual" target="_blank"&gt;make me think&lt;/a&gt; of Georges Franju’s “Blood of the Beasts,” a documentary about a French slaughterhouse that’s a terrifying allegory of the Holocaust.&lt;/em&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48364905468</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/48364905468</guid><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2013 10:01:14 -0700</pubDate><category>food</category><category>ag-gag</category></item><item><title>TakePart was nominated for a Webby Award.</title><description>&lt;a href="http://pv.webbyawards.com/nominees/web/general-website/green"&gt;TakePart was nominated for a Webby Award.&lt;/a&gt;: &lt;p&gt;I edit the food section, and am therefore pretty damn proud of this. But it’d be even more awesome if we WON a Webby. So maybe vote for us?&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47572821268</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47572821268</guid><pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 16:05:00 -0700</pubDate><category>Webby Awards</category></item><item><title>so-treu:


David Bowie as Tilda Swinton, with Tilda Swinton as...</title><description>&lt;img src="http://25.media.tumblr.com/61bbc10a663ed1aa0bd33e1f18208f7c/tumblr_mk4h1xNsDW1qj5xw4o1_500.jpg"/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://so-treu.tumblr.com/post/47258549745/david-bowie-as-tilda-swinton-with-tilda-swinton" target="_blank"&gt;so-treu&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;David Bowie as Tilda Swinton, with Tilda Swinton as David Bowie&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;!!!!!!&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The biggest pop culture &lt;a href="http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/2147184028/superawesomebookclub-bigfun-steve-schapiro" target="_blank"&gt;I-told-you-so&lt;/a&gt; of my life will be the day the Bowie biopic staring Tilda Swinton is released.&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47572420195</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47572420195</guid><pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 16:00:40 -0700</pubDate></item><item><title>"New York's hottest club is TUNNEL. This club has everything—a chandelier room, kids with birdcages on their heads, deadbeat debutantes, a bathroom piled high with coke, space suits, teapot hats, mohawks and more!"</title><description>&lt;a href="http://www.kirkusreviews.com/features/fya-gets-down-dance-floor-white-lines/"&gt;"New York's hottest club is TUNNEL. This club has everything—a chandelier room, kids with birdcages on their heads, deadbeat debutantes, a bathroom piled high with coke, space suits, teapot hats, mohawks and more!"&lt;/a&gt;: &lt;p&gt;Read this review of my girlfriend’s awesome new book, will you?&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47171042715</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/47171042715</guid><pubDate>Thu, 04 Apr 2013 21:54:14 -0700</pubDate><category>young adult</category><category>White Lines</category><category>Jennifer Banash</category><category>lit</category></item><item><title>modfarm:

We’ve been hard at work here in Hudson, getting ready...</title><description>&lt;iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/61713749" width="400" height="224" frameborder="0"&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://modfarm.tumblr.com/post/45269490526/weve-been-hard-at-work-here-in-hudson-getting" target="_blank"&gt;modfarm&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;We’ve been hard at work here in Hudson, getting ready to launch the website and putting the final touches on our first issue (we hit newsstands April 15 — &lt;a href="https://w1.buysub.com/pubs/1M/MFM/MFM_Subscription.jsp?cds_page_id=129465&amp;cds_mag_code=MFM&amp;id=1362171230062&amp;lsid=30601452046015765&amp;vid=2" target="_blank"&gt;pick up a subscription today&lt;/a&gt;). In the meantime, we wanted to say hello to everyone, so we made a short video. Watch carefully and you’ll get a glimpse of Rufus, our favorite office dog.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span&gt;T&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;hanks to Eric Slatkin, &lt;/span&gt;Alex Lisowski, &lt;span&gt;Ben McIntire&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt; and the team at &lt;a href="http://www.hitthehighbeam.com/" target="_blank"&gt;High Beam&lt;/a&gt; for putting this together. Music is “Morning” by &lt;a href="http://www.nicolereynoldsmusic.com/" target="_blank"&gt;Nicole Reynolds&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Very curious to see what the first issues looks like.&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/46478784943</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/46478784943</guid><pubDate>Wed, 27 Mar 2013 20:24:10 -0700</pubDate></item><item><title>poortaste:

George Orwell
</title><description>&lt;img src="http://24.media.tumblr.com/0fb3bf2edaf8550b28d7730744733ab5/tumblr_mk0hvkYPjX1qz59fwo1_500.jpg"/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://beatsandbuds.com/post/45962657200/george-orwell" target="_blank"&gt;poortaste&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;George Orwell&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/45969652367</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/45969652367</guid><pubDate>Thu, 21 Mar 2013 21:06:49 -0700</pubDate></item><item><title>Photo</title><description>&lt;img src="http://24.media.tumblr.com/ccc54edbb9e6b7c3bd0def103c5936c8/tumblr_mk1lltQ8qm1qamjvio1_500.jpg"/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/45967035600</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/45967035600</guid><pubDate>Thu, 21 Mar 2013 20:27:29 -0700</pubDate><category>GPOY</category></item><item><title>I wrote 2000 words about food justice issue in Compton. It's a story I'm pretty proud of. </title><description>&lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Food-related issues are barely mentioned in &lt;a href="http://www.usc.edu/libraries/archives/cityinstress/mccone/contents.html" rel="nofollow" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;em&gt;Violence in the City—An End or a Beginning?&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, the 101-page report compiled at the behest of then-governor Pat Brown that examined the causes and potential long-term affects of the riots. But the exodus of retailers from areas affect by the civil unrest left a huge swath of L.A. woefully underserved. As Mike Davis writes in his history of Los Angeles, &lt;em&gt;City of Quartz,&lt;/em&gt; the flight of large retailers and the closure of small, locally owned businesses due to “discriminatory bank ‘redlining’ practices” resulted in a situation where “half a million Black and Latino shoppers were forced to commute to distant regional malls or bordering white areas even for ordinary grocery and prescription shopping.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A shopping center didn’t open in South Los Angeles for another 18 years.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/43602526830</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/43602526830</guid><pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2013 16:19:35 -0800</pubDate><category>food</category><category>Compton</category><category>food justice</category><category>shameless selfpromotion</category></item><item><title>#Tao Lin related</title><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://whopays.tumblr.com/post/42930080413/horse-ghost" target="_blank"&gt;whopays&lt;/a&gt;:&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;blockquote&gt;

&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;span&gt;Report: $50 for “chat selections between another person and myself” at this limited edition print mag. &lt;br/&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;span&gt;No official website; more on the publication is &lt;a href="http://mdonahoo.tumblr.com/post/19611900011/horseghost-a-collection-of-writing-and-drawing" target="_blank"&gt;here&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;#Tao Lin related&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42930812885</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42930812885</guid><pubDate>Tue, 12 Feb 2013 08:45:36 -0800</pubDate><category>Tao Lin related</category></item><item><title>Photo</title><description>&lt;img src="http://25.media.tumblr.com/23774f1c1e6dfa674d7073540377cd39/tumblr_mi3bl0YVHP1qamjvio1_500.png"/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42902841228</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42902841228</guid><pubDate>Mon, 11 Feb 2013 20:39:00 -0800</pubDate><category>North Korea</category></item><item><title>"The wash of duck canvas, truck grills and splattered mud flaps that was the Dodge Ram “Farmer”..."</title><description>“The wash of duck canvas, truck grills and splattered mud flaps that was the Dodge Ram “Farmer” commercial, which aired in the fourth quarter of last night’s Super Bowl, made me miss my Grandpa Wink, who died in 2007. The trucks in the ad, which featured radio icon Paul Harvey’s “So God Made a Farmer” monologue, may have been the wrong make, and Wink wore newsboy caps, not cowboy hats—but the palette matched otherwise, and my sense of nostalgia was willing to forgive the discrepancies.”&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt; - &lt;em&gt;I’m a sucker for things that &lt;a href="http://www.takepart.com/video/so-god-made-farmer" target="_blank"&gt;mythologize Midwestern agrarian farming culture,&lt;/a&gt; but at the same time I realize it’s mostly bullshit.&lt;/em&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42299943597</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/42299943597</guid><pubDate>Mon, 04 Feb 2013 13:47:00 -0800</pubDate><category>food</category><category>farming</category></item><item><title>Photo</title><description>&lt;img src="http://24.media.tumblr.com/bacf513345cdb75784441a9c235b873d/tumblr_mgh35gBkAj1qamjvio1_500.jpg"/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/40264650628</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/40264650628</guid><pubDate>Fri, 11 Jan 2013 09:56:03 -0800</pubDate></item><item><title>Spilt Milk</title><description>&lt;a href="http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/01/07/milk-price-hike"&gt;Spilt Milk&lt;/a&gt;: &lt;blockquote&gt;
&lt;p&gt;“But subsidies for crops like corn and wheat would rise dramatically if we went without a contemporary Farm Bill for an extended period of time. According to a press release issued in 2008 by the USDA, which addressed the potential affect of the 2002 Farm Bill lapsing in that year, “Price support rates for corn would almost double, from $1.95 to a minimum of $3.78 per bushel.” Payments to farmers who grow soybeans, an insignificant crop in 1949, would disappear. Tobacco farmers, whose federal support will be completely phased out by 2014, would go back to receiving subsidy payments formulated in an era when over 40% of adults smoked cigarettes.”&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/blockquote&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/40020286671</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/40020286671</guid><pubDate>Tue, 08 Jan 2013 09:16:00 -0800</pubDate><category>food</category><category>farm bill</category><category>Dairy Cliff</category></item><item><title>California for the Trees</title><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;&lt;img align="middle" height="608" src="http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8227/8357625261_bfbea187d2_z.jpg" width="610"/&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My seven-year-old self felt there was no better toy than a good stick. When the tall white oaks around the reservoir began to turn colors in the fall, we would collect bundles of their smaller dropped branches, picking only the finest specimens. Crawling around in the piles of leaves, we brandished them like many a different weapon. What made a good stick, I don’t know. But somehow my friend Max, two years older than I, managed to find all of the best ones; my sticks tended to be middling. This lack of stick-appraising skill was not unlike my inability to claim the Far Side in the back seat of his family’s bright-orange Volkswagen Rabbit. What defined the car’s prized seat defied the logic of its name; it simply was where Max sat, a fact I only grasped in hindsight.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The stature of oaks made them useless in our other favorite tree-related activity: climbing. The low branches of the magnolia in my parent’s backyard&amp;#8212;kitty-corner from Max’s house, and Daniel’s too&amp;#8212;made it particularly well-suited to my own childhood lack of coordination, while the upper strata of thin branches were the domain of the athletic Max and Shane, who lived just a block up Court Street. The sap-sticky branches of the pines at Howard Park were more democratic, their straight, regularly spaced branches as simple to scale as a ladder, making it possible for me to reach a similarly high perch above the park’s swing set and merry-go-round.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Trees were toys for all of us, but they were less generic for me. When we had Christmas at the farm my grandfather lived on outside of Mason City, we didn’t just decorate some random conifer; the presents were laid out below a stately Blue Spruce. And the trees were usually cut from one of the many stands planted on his land, some of which was devoted to growing seedlings into saplings to sell to his landscaping clients at Blackmore Nursery.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;In the tall Bur oak behind the house he built a tree house for me, the ladder a set of two-by-fours running up the trunk, leading to a platform set high in the tree’s rough arms. From that perch I could look across to the other massive oak, hung with an array of birdfeeders, and over to the shed and the brick silo. In the shed were stacks of decomposable rag-paper pots, the kind that could be planted along with the root ball of a tree and left to rot away into the soil. In the other direction, away from the house, was a low-lying flat plain gridded with irrigation pipes and sprinklers for watering the saplings Grandpa Wink kept there.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;His way with plants wasn’t limited to trees. In the springtime we took cardboard flats and short, dull knives over to a patch of asparagus that ran along side the fence marking the south edge of the property. Though asparagus was a vegetable I loathed as a child, I helped with the harvest nonetheless, hunting for the green spears amongst the grass and slicing off the stalks with those worn knives. He also knew where a small spring was, just off of the gravel road that led to his fields of sod, the grass as thick and perfect as a carpet, where you could pick watercress that grew among the rocks. In the summer, her tended to a small plot of tomatoes next to the papery barked Birch tree. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;When the trees were dormant and the sod fields were covered in snow, Wink replaced his long days of nursery work with time spent in his basement woodshop. His designs were elegant and practical, a bed frame or a bookshelf, and always built out of cheap knotty pine. The house was heated by a castiron stove that he expertly built fires in every morning, stoking the smoldering coals into jumping flames again whenever the temperature dipped too low. His life was never too far removed from a tree of some sort.&lt;!-- more --&gt;The first time I moved to California, just after high school, I lived in Monterey, where the native pine and cypress still dominate much of the coastal skyline. Monterey Cypress are expressive in a way that’s easy to love, their irregular shape and dramatic swoops conveying a kind of ever-lasting stoicism, an appearance that has made certain ocean-side specimens iconic. But when fall rolled around and those evergreens, true to form, failed to change color, I felt a sort of panic. After surviving that long wait to leave Iowa known as high school, I thought I would find myself perfectly at home in some far cooler and more desirable location&amp;#8212;preferably New York. I got into Pratt and, briefly, believed that 9,000 merit-based-scholarship dollars could pave my road to Clinton Hill. But then the true math filtered through my head and I passed on a long-roped noose of student loan debt for a free bedroom in my grandparent’s terracotta-roofed house in Pebble Beach, and by-the-credit tuition at Monterey’s community college.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Pretending to be a Californian seemed a promising consolation prize to playing at Brooklynite. But around the time of my 19th birthday in mid-October I was forced to face the reality that, in fact, it was not about where you’re at, but rather where you’re from. I longed for the dependable seasonal markers of what I had to grudgingly accept was home: the burnt hues of fall leaves, the dramatic snarl of nude trees in the winter. I had marked the beginning of spring in Iowa by a specific change in the trees too: Before the weather was warm enough for us to spend afternoons hanging from the branches of our magnolia, I’d ask my mom to go out everyday and pluck off one of its fuzzy drab-green buds. Peeling back its many layers, I’d hope to find a tinge of pink at its heart, knowing that such a turn in hue meant that the tree would soon be covered in the pink blossoms I so loved. If I found only green-white petals inside, I’d try again and again until I uncovered the season’s first flush inside one of those tightly layered buds.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;I moved back to Iowa from Monterey quickly enough to see the magnolia tree’s next bloom, and Wink moved off of the farm and into a nursing home shortly thereafter. It was a massive first step toward the death that would follow a few years later. His existence was work, and with dementia eating at the wits he needed to do the same chores he’d repeated annually since opening the nursery in 1946, Wink’s life as I knew it ended. Then a printmaking student at the University of Iowa, I attempted to cope with the inevitable by etching the trappings of the farm into copper and steel:  the heads of the sprinklers that methodically ratcheted a measured spray across the plain behind my tree house, the mid-century curves of his vintage John Deere tractors. Wink was a man whose emotions where hidden behind both that Greatest Generation silence and the same midwestern personal reserve I also suffer from. I mainly knew him as habits and objects: Weak coffee in a plastic yellow cup from Casey’s in the morning; newsboy hats; early nights and earlier mornings; his green trucks and tractors and, oddly, black Saab station wagons.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;William Winkler Blackmore’s casket was made of the same knotty pine he cut and nailed and sanded in the winters, its design not unlike one of his own. After it was lowered into the ground the whole family helped bury him. We grabbed for shovels and started moving the clay-brown dirt, just as many of us had when we worked for him, digging holes and planting trees in his name.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Somewhere, I have a list of the many things that were buried with him, another litany of objects I recorded in attempt to understand who he was. There’s a bottle of Canadian whiskey down there in that pine box, because he always traveled with a small flask, drinking a glass of whiskey-and-water before going to bed at night—a fact about his life I only learned in death.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p align="center" class="MsoNormal"&gt;* * *&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;When October 2008 rolled around, I was prepared for the trees to stay green. I had moved to California again, to Los Angeles, and despite going a good three months without hearing the sound of rain, I managed the non-transition from summer to fall far better than I had in Monterey. But Southern California’s arboreal life presented other discomforts; I couldn’t name most of the trees. Many had the shiny, pointed leaves of subtropical species, leaves who’s Darwinistic designed let water quickly run off of them, a stark, smooth-edge contrast to the many-pointed foliage I was accustomed to. The trees I did recognize were drastically out of context. Ficuses, those diminutive houseplants that reach with spindly branches toward the window of many a Midwestern living room, can be towering things in California. Rather than growing upward and stretching out into a crown, they seem inclined to achieve a blockish state of impenetrability, a wall of branches and almond-shaped leaves. Poinsettias turn leggy and tree-like too, growing as high as a house’s second-story window.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Like the people, most every tree was from somewhere else: The spiny-flowered bottle brush trees from Australia, the loquats from the China, the pastel-flowered jacarandas from South America. Since Los Angeles’ pink magnolias bloom shortly after Christmas, I quickly replaced those rosy flowers with the jacaranda’s periwinkle-purple blooms as a harbinger of spring (along with the rest of L.A.). But I long avoided saying the tree’s name out loud, unsure if it was pronounced with a hard, Anglo “j”, or the seemingly logical soft, Spanish &lt;em&gt;jota.&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Even the natives looked different, the stubby leaves and pointy acorns of California Live Oaks a far cry from the welcoming, open-palm-like foliage of its Midwestern cousins. And if the smell of the indigenous bay laurels was familiar, seeing a few thousand Spice Island bottles-worth of leaves attached to one immense tree, each recipe-size-portion glossy with life rather than a drab, dull green, was disorienting.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The fruit trees, however, presented no qualms. That citrus, figs, avocados and more were all there for the grabbing was thrilling. There was a lemon tree planted hard against a fence just down the alley, and ripe fruit usually hung out over the adjacent parking spot; I could run down, pick one and be back in the kitchen before anything burned or boiled over. A well-manicured Meyer lemon sat in a yard a few blocks further away, but its location and thorny branches required late-night harvests of a dozen or so fruit. That I never stripped that or any other tree bare made it easy to convince myself that these fruit thefts were, at best, Robin Hood-like; steal from the maybe-neglected tree and give to, well, me. After brewing so many cups of coffee while looking out the kitchen window at a neighbor’s overburdened persimmon, how could I not feel felt compelled to slip over the back fence at night to snatch ten pounds for myself?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;My jump from stealing fruit to stealing plants started with a geranium. A cookbook-writing friend showed me how to use rose geranium to flavor jams, and when I first rubbed one unremarkable-looking leaf between my fingers and smelled its familiar, heady scent, I fell for the plant. There was the fact that a geranium’s rose is not a rose is not a rose is not a rose, and also that a single cut branch could be stuck into the ground and grow an entire other plant. I bought some rose geranium cuttings from at a flea market; I bought another scented geranium from a nursery and effectively cut the sticker price in half by spitting it into two plants. The next logical step in thrift was to pinch off a length from someone else’s landscaping and plant it at home, a green-thumb crime I’ve committed numerous times.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;This spring, when the buds on the leafless trees began to swell, I snapped off a branch from a fig tree and stuck it in some potting soil. And waited. A few small leaves folded off of the tip of the would-be tree, and I hoped that the buried bud scars were figuring out how to grow roots rather than foliage. But for each fig leaf the stick grew, their stature matching those Durer engraved for Adam and Eve, another would fall off. It was a stick that would stay a stick.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;The twig I broke off of a dormant grape vine looked like it wouldn’t even make it as far along as the fig. Pencil-thin and all but straight, it more resembled a stake than a plant, and seemed sure to be a second clonal failure. But a shoot pushed its way through the dirt after a few weeks, and the nascent grapevine is now inching its way higher and higher into the world.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;Mine is a garden mostly dedicated to annuals: tomatoes and beans in the summer, greens in the winter, herbs and marigolds filling in the borders. More substantial plants like trees or grapevines, plants that can last a lifetime, if not longer, have always seem prohibitively expensive, especially for planting in the yard of a rented apartment. The Santa Rosa plum seedlings at the nursery look so tempting, but why suffer the sticker shock if my girlfriend and I might be living in some other apartment by the time the tree has recovered from being transplanted, established a root base and bearing fruit?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;But a small branch stealthily cut from a nearby tree? That I can both afford and justify. Now I think less opportunistically when taking in the arboreal life of my neighborhood. Just a lemon will suffice for cooking dinner, but when considering a whole tree’s worth of lemons, there’s more to debated: the variety, the health of the tree, the yield. Would a wild California bay laurel take well to a backyard life? Or would it be smarter to propagate one of the shoots that’s managed to force its way out of the base of the tamer, domesticated bay up the block?&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p class="MsoNormal"&gt;It’s been three years since I’ve laid eyes on my parent’s magnolia, and I’ve managed to live in the same apartment for more than a year for the first time in my life. Still, the experimental, west-coast outpost of Blackmore Nursery primarily exists in my head, but it’s bound to grow. Because I’ve started to collect sticks again, and I’m learning what makes a good one. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/39937571641</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/39937571641</guid><pubDate>Mon, 07 Jan 2013 09:27:15 -0800</pubDate><category>longreads</category><category>tl;dr</category><category>prose</category><category>California</category><category>Los Angeles</category></item><item><title>#IOWASHAME</title><description>&lt;p&gt;In 2009, the Iowa State Supreme Court unanimously struck down a state ban on same-sex marriage. Since the verdict on Varnum vs. Brien was issued, three new judges, all Republicans, all male, were appointed by Gov. Terry Brandstad 2.0 in 2011 (he also appointed Chief Justice Mark Cady in 1998); the other judges are all male, all Democrat, and all appointed by Gov. Tom Vilsack. Despite the rightward shift of the Court, four justices&amp;#8212;three of them Democrats, to reiterate&amp;#8212;who decided that a ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional ruled that a dentist could legally fire an employee because he found her to be &amp;#8220;irresistibly attractive.&amp;#8221;   &lt;/p&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38561447739</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38561447739</guid><pubDate>Sat, 22 Dec 2012 11:18:08 -0800</pubDate><category>IOWASHAME</category></item><item><title>"The court ruled 7-0 that bosses can fire employees they see as an “irresistible attraction,” even if..."</title><description>“The court ruled 7-0 that bosses can fire employees they see as an “irresistible attraction,” even if the employees have not engaged in flirtatious behavior or otherwise done anything wrong. Such firings may be unfair, but they are not unlawful discrimination under the Iowa Civil Rights Act because they are motivated by feelings and emotions, not gender, Justice Edward Mansfield wrote.”&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt; - &lt;em&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_268743/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=nf6K7RTt" target="_blank"&gt;#IOWASHAME&lt;/a&gt; (via &lt;a class="tumblr_blog" href="http://annfriedman.com/" target="_blank"&gt;annfriedman&lt;/a&gt;)&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Are these the same seven judges that ruled on gay marriage? This is a fucked decision.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/em&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38497621835</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38497621835</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2012 15:10:51 -0800</pubDate></item><item><title>So the Iowa Supreme Court isn't all that awesome afterall.</title><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38495581307</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/38495581307</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 2012 14:43:34 -0800</pubDate><category>irresitable attraction</category></item><item><title>"Fallen Fruit was initially born as a cartography project: The group charted the publicly accessible fruit trees in various neighborhoods around Los Angeles, distributing the maps online. The artwork helped residents interact with their communities, showing people that they could turn to local resources like the Meyer lemon tree that's branches reach over an alley rather than taking a trip to the grocery store. This ongoing mapping effort, which has since expanded across Los Angeles and around the globe (curious to know where all of the guanábana trees are in Cali, Colombia? There’s a map for that), was followed by fruit-tree adoption events, community jam-making parties, and eventually public orchards like the one at Del Aire."</title><description>&lt;a href="http://www.takepart.com/article/2012/12/10/a-public-orchard-takes-root-in-la"&gt;"Fallen Fruit was initially born as a cartography project: The group charted the publicly accessible fruit trees in various neighborhoods around Los Angeles, distributing the maps online. The artwork helped residents interact with their communities, showing people that they could turn to local resources like the Meyer lemon tree that's branches reach over an alley rather than taking a trip to the grocery store. This ongoing mapping effort, which has since expanded across Los Angeles and around the globe (curious to know where all of the guanábana trees are in Cali, Colombia? There’s a map for that), was followed by fruit-tree adoption events, community jam-making parties, and eventually public orchards like the one at Del Aire."&lt;/a&gt;</description><link>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/37894203389</link><guid>http://willyblackmore.tumblr.com/post/37894203389</guid><pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 2012 22:26:47 -0800</pubDate><category>food</category><category>Los Angeles</category><category>urban farming</category></item></channel></rss>
