Wednesday, December 21, 2016

WRITERS, T'IS THE SEASON



When I was teaching English Composition at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, I adapted "The Twelve Days of Christmas" and on the last day of classes cajoled my 18- and 19-year-old freshmen students into singing it. (As I recall, final grades might have entered into the discussion.) Despite some jagged interpretation of rhythm, we were unanimously impressive on the "NO MISSPELLED WORDS" line! ...and, yes, this is what we covered during the semester!

“ON THE LAST DAY OF CLASSES”
Tune: “The Twelve Days of Christmas”
(Adapted in the full spirit of a semester’s end by C. Lowrance)

Start of EACH verse:
INSTRUCTOR: On the last day of classes, my students gave to me…(On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…)

End of EACH verse
ALL: A perfectly written essay! (a partridge in a pear tree)

STUDENTS: sing all verses, as follows:  

BRILLIANT Revision! (2 turtle doves) …in a perfectly written essay!!!  

CLARITY and Concision!! (3 French hens)  

GOOD Use of Example!!! (4 calling birds)  

NO MISSPELLED WORDS!! (5 gold rings)  

MARVELOUS Tone and Style!! (6 geese a-laying)  

FINE Process Analysis!! (7 swans a-swimming)  

GREAT Comp and Contrast!! (8 maids a-milking)  

STRONG Cause/Effect!! (9 ladies dancing)  

EFFECTIVE Organization!! (10 lords a-leaping) 

POWERFUL Style!! (11 pipers piping)


MEANINGFUL Content!! (12 drumers drumming)












































  



































Saturday, December 10, 2016

Guest post by artist Kathryn Kleekamp: A Fragile Cape Cod

I am delighted to provide readers an opportunity to savor the reflections and significant talent of Kathryn Kleekamp, a friend and artist whose work I greatly admire and whose values I respect. It is one thing to theoretically deplore the effect of coastal erosion, it is quite another to stand in its presence as a witness, as Kathy has done. I thank her for sharing.    


A Fragile Cape Cod
This time of year most of us enjoy fond thoughts of friendship and family. We treasure those   all-too-brief moments when we get together to celebrate with  loved ones, especially those who live far away.  We’re particularly thoughtful of  precious family members who may no longer be with us.
A recent early winter trip to the outer Cape’s Province Lands with a group of friends led to similar feelings. Instead of lamenting the loss of an individual however, I contemplated the loss of our beautiful coastline.
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Ray Wells Dune Shack  ~ Province Lands, Truro, MA

I rather imagine others who’ve witnessed this area’s erosion from storm winds and strong currents have similar thoughts. For a significant number of people, their simple shingled cottage which provided  a favorite family gathering place with barbeques on the porch and a beach where countless sunsets were admired, are now only memories.


When the nor’easter Juno, with 70 mile-an-hour winds, hit Cape Cod in January of 2015, the storm surge swallowed beaches and dunes from Sandwich to Truro. At Ballston Beach in Truro, the storm washed away dunes that had been rebuilt just the year before.  High tides and strong winds created an overwash causing water and sand to flow into the Upper Pamet River Valley covering the marsh and beach parking lot. The resulting breach in the dune was approximately two hundred feet wide.


C:\Users\Kleecamp\Desktop\KMK Desktop\KMK Docs\Book.2\Images\12-005 DDD Ballston Beach, Truro showing breach in dunes after Juno..jpg

Dune erosion at Ballston Beach showing cut in the dunes.
Photo courtesy of Greg Berman, Woods Hole Sea Grant Program.


In the town of Sandwich where I live, Sandy Neck Beach is considered one of the “hotspots’ of erosion on the Cape. Damage from Juno resulted in more than a dozen beachfront homes being condemned. Wind-driven water dumped tons of sand that blocked Mill Creek, an important shellfish area and herring run connecting to Cape Cod Bay. Water intrusion also flooded sections of inland historic Route 6A, the Old King’s Highway.


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Painting “Sandy Neck Beach" 2008 Photo of same house 2015



Perhaps one of the most iconic Cape Cod  cottages claimed by the sea was Henry Beston’s Fo’c’sle, Initially built on the top of a 20-foot dune overlooking the Great Beach in Nauset it succumbed to a winter storm in 1978 after having been moved inland twice. Even the marker where the house last stood is now underwater.


C:\Users\Kleecamp\Desktop\outermost.jpg

Painting “Outermost House”                    Outermost House being
(As it might have looked on original site) washed out to sea 1978


These are just a few dramatic examples of Cape Cod’s diminishing shoreline. Cape Cod towns make every reasonable attempt to rebuild beaches after major storms, but  it’s only a matter of time before natural influences again challenge our best efforts. Like the holiday gathering that is cherished for its brief moments of family togetherness, we should be mindful of the temporary nature of a shoreline constantly influenced by the dynamics of Nature’s forces. Cherish it and protect it.