29 April 2008

Now on the shelves...





Here's a few crappy photos of the cover, inside poster and contents. Click for detail.

Issue #2 now on the shelves at Reading Frenzy (Sw9th and Oak, downtown Portland), Powell's on Burnside and the Hawthorne Powell's. (Check the Small Press/ Zine sections.)
It should also be available on the Powell's website soon.

28 April 2008

Now Available: Foulweather Issue #2



The Beach is the ultimate borderland or no-man's land. It is the boundary between land and sea, solid and liquid, man and nature, civilization and the wild, reality and fantasy, inhibition and liberation. Moral, cultural, political and personal battles are fought on this front-line.

Foulweather #2 features the following:

Diamond Mining With Dora, by Pete Lewis, a demented socio-political history of the beach as a symbol of liberation. From Victorian Britain to Dora's Malibu to Japan's Seagaia with various diversions a long the way.

Foulweather On The Beach, by Pete Lewis an ugly memoir as told from various filthy beaches around the world.

Beach 90th by Justin Hocking, an autobiographical account of learning to surf in New York and Oregon while battling personal demons, seeking enlightenment and trying to make sense of the turn of the century.

They Turned Their Backs To The Sea by Ricardo Salcedo , an account of culture clash in Jamaica and disillusionment with the peace corps. Body surfing, voodoo and dope smoking, a plenty.

Second Homes by Dave Fitzpatrick and incredibly personal account of how the beach featured in near destruction and renewal of this talented writer's marriage.

Activate an eco rant by Stiv J Wilson

Plus art and photography by Dennis Dread, Jeff Petersen, Frank 'Patch' Cubillos, Alison Lewis and Rick Albano.

More details to follow.

23 April 2008

What was that?

Scheduled Delivery:

25-April-2008

Hold tight... for real this time.

22 April 2008

Have you ever...

- Victor Lebow


...wanted to blame one group or one person for the mess this planet is in. It is near impossible. Perhaps you could blame Adam and Eve for forcing us out of paradise. Or Pre-historic man for discovering fire. Or the first farmers for settling and surrendering our Gatherer-Hunter existence. Druids and priests for establishing hierarchy and removing us one step from actual existence into the symbolic. Perhaps it is easier to blame systems. Mercantilism, Imperialism, Colonialism, Capitalism, Communism.

Consumerism.


The above quote is not a sarcastic take on 21st century consumerism. It is a genuine proposal, made in the 1950s, on how to strengthen post-war Capitalist economies by a 'Retail Analyst' by the name of Victor Lebow. Lebow probably had little foresight into how much we would embrace his ideas and how destructive they would be in real terms. But if he did, well, he's probably burning in hell right now...


Check this 20 minute film for more and then try not to take a hammer to the machines:

Story Of Stuff

16 April 2008

In progress...


"Death Comes Looking" by Marie Taylor (Zen Brush)



The other day I was hiking into my favorite surf spot. I knew it had the potential to be phenomenal. Everything was lined up perfectly. Swell, winds, tides, weather, sandbars. The cosmos was on my side. I cold feel it. Now this spot is pretty secret. I sort of want to tell more people about it but I can’t bring myself to just yet. Obviously, it is best if you discover it yourself and then perhaps we can go there together. As is, I have to surf this place solo.

Anyway, I began the hike through the forest. The hike is about an hour but I timed it so the tide would almost be right when I got there and so I could relax on the beach awhile before my paddling out.
About 15 minutes away from path down to the beach I heard a rustling in the woods. I wondered if it was an elk. I’d seen elk here before in the early morning. I started to reach into my backpack to grab my camera in the hope I could get a photograph.

Unfortunately, it wasn’t an elk, it was a grizzly bear. What?! Grizzly bears don’t live around here. I didn’t even have time to put my camera away and put my backpack back on properly. I left my backpack on the ground but for whatever reason, I held onto my surfboard. Trying not to shit myself, I immediately ran away wondering to myself, what is the appropriate response here? Climb a tree? Play dead? Or run like a motherfucker? I chose to run like a motherfucker and so did he or she…


I’d heard grizzlies could run faster than humans. I’d seen Herzog’s ‘Grizzly Man.’ I was convinced the bear would reach out and grab me any second but somehow I was getting away. At this point I had diverged from the trail but I knew I was getting closer to the cliff.
I probably ran for about five minutes without looking back until I got to the edge of the cliff. From where I stood there was no obvious way down. Then I heard that rustling sound again. It still seemed distant at this point but I knew the bear would soon be upon me.

Jump or change direction or fight the bear with my surfboard? No time to think…
All I wanted was a nice surf session in good waves to dial in my new 6’7” Art Coyler quad. I hadn’t bargained on this life and death shit…. Why me?

The bear was getting very close now. I looked around. Maybe I’d survive the jump into the sea below… Maybe I could throw my surfboard down and then jump in after it and then paddle around to the beach? No, way too high, too many rocks to possibly land on.
And then, I noticed a rope, leading down the cliff. It looked pretty secure and led all the way down to the water. Weird. Maybe some surfers had rigged it up as a quick way to get into the line up. Either way, I had to give it a go. But if surfers had rigged it up how did they get their boards down?

I knew I had to throw my surfboard down and hope it made it to the water and that I could reach it when I made it down. I quickly hopped over to a nearby ledge but not before tripping over a tree trunk and landing on one of the fins of my surfboard… damn those fiberglass fins are sharp. Before I could examine the gash in my palm I threw the surfboard off the cliff. It fluttered down the cliff face like a badly folded paper airplane. It took a lot longer to reach the water than I had anticipated. I then realized it was a good job I hadn’t jumped.

I could feel the blood dripping out of my wound onto my feet but I didn’t want to look at it just yet, instead I watched my surfboard land on some rocks and smash into pieces… Fucking Christ. $550 down the fucking drain…


Rustle, rustle…

The bear was now so close, my only chance was the rope.
I ran back over to where the rope was tied. It looked secure enough to hold my 195 pounds and so I began to lower myself down, as best I could with a wounded hand. As I was about six foot down, the bear peered over the side and let out a horrendous growl that set my heart a pounding, until my rib cage violently shook. Shit, this is going to be one hell of a story…

I slowly eased my way down, leaving a slither of blood along the rope above me. Blood dripped below me and I realized the wound was pretty significant. I knew I had to stop the bleeding as soon as I got down. I could still hear the bear growling above. I took a deep breath to regain my composure. I looked down at my oncoming descent. It didn’t look too far now. A survivable fall at this point… perhaps.

I looked into the clear water, half tempted to simply drop into it. The swell I had predicted was pumping in. Beautiful six-foot waves were breaking off the reef, breaking into almond shape barrels and then reeling into the sand-bottom beach.
I briefly took stock in how this day had panned out and how it was supposed to have been. Then I noticed what I thought was a fin slicing through the water below. And then another. What must have been about half a dozen sharks were circling below me. Surely my falling blood had not hit the sea and was now attracting them? If I fell, I would fall right into their vicinity. I then saw one of the sharks lift its head out of the water and appear to look right at me.

The bear was still stomping around up top. The cliff seemed to vibrate with the bear's aggravation.
I thought, perhaps I could find a ledge to rest on for awhile, or until these wild beasts were bored with me.

I began to lower myself even further and then I noticed a mouse perched on a tiny ledge that the rope had caught up on, a few feet above me. The mouse began to nibble on the rope.
Should I try and sway the rope away from the mouse? I was loosing strength and blood. It seemed too risky. The mouse continued to rapidly nibble the rope.
I took another breath and looked at the cliff face, in an effort to avoid looking above and below.


And here I still am, hanging on this bloody rope, a hungry bear above me, sharks below me and a little mouse about to seal my fate...


Hmmm, I see some berries, in front of me. I think I’ll try one.

Wow, that’s a pretty fucking delicious berry.

14 April 2008

feelin'

Feelin'

-Tubing beach breaks
-Wu Tang Clan
-The posthumous poems of Charles Bukowski
-Green tea

Not feelin'

-The Olympics
-Pulling wet wetsuits over skinned knees
-Employment
-Alcohol

Oh, and I heard on Friday that the 'guts' of Foulweather #2 have been printed. Covers printed this week.

08 April 2008

Libraries

Portland Library, early twentieth century.

Sometimes, it is easy to take libraries for granted. Yet, as the economy plummets, it never ceases to amaze me how such an vital resource keeps flourishing here in Portland. The public library is such a simple concept. Yet in the context of our times and political climate, it is also quite a radical service. I mention this because, I just received an email from someone who had found Foulweather #1 on the shelves of one of Multnomah County's libraries.
Looks as though, three copies are out on loan as we speak! Cheers to the Librarians!
I'm hoping I can get Foulweather #2 in there also.

04 April 2008

one day. once upon a time. all alone. i tried to paint a picture. i painted a cracked vase on my mother’s mantle piece. i was still alone.

one day i came across a crying child. i told him that his dead dad would say hello to him soon. i told him, his dead dad would whisper through the blowing leaves and the crashing waves
and i felt like never before.

one day i came across a happy child in the toilets. i told him a story about how he will never see his mother again. she was off to prison and he was to be left all alone and i felt like never before as he cried and cried, with his underpants around his ankles.

one day. all alone i accepted that there was no such thing as magic.
until I caught a taxi home late one night. the taxi driver began to tell me a story.

he became
a gigantic storm
gale force winds
one hundred foot high waves
wild animals
giant sea creatures
angels in trees
demons under the bed
unconquerable mountains
bottomless oceans
past tragedies
future hopes

he became
repetitions
circles
cycles
birth
death
re-birth

i asked him how he became these wondrous things before my very eyes
he asked if i believed my eyes
yes
then i too had such power

one day
all alone
once upon a time
i began to tell stories
i developed a habit
i became addicted
i could do nothing else

but
tell stories about the old man and his stories
demons from the old man’s stories chasing me
and angles from his stories saving me

one day
all alone
i told a story
as old as storytelling itself

the young boy whose mother went to jail
he began to throw stones at me
others joined in

stones at my head
in my face
piercing my chest
blood and exposed bone
i fell to the ground

then i saw a sharp knife
somebody grabbed my tongue
and cut it out

i tried to keep telling my story
but i bled and bled
i spoke an unintelligible garble
with mouthfuls of blood
theirs

and mine

02 April 2008

Lunar Eclipse





Messing around with a camera during the total lunar eclipse a month or so back.