The Viking Imagination: Medieval Cartography of Scandinavia

Just because I love cartography, here’s a couple of remarkable Scandanavian medieval maps. Note the dominance of several kraken and sea monsters off the Norwegian coast and how each country is barely hanging on by a thread because of these menacing beasts. Here be magic, Vikings and mysterious beasts.

Velleius Islandia by Abraham Ortellius (1603)

The Viking Imagination: Medieval Cartography of Scandinavia http://wp.me/p41CQf-Iuf
Velleius Islandia by Abraham Ortellius (1603) The Viking Imagination: Medieval Cartography of Scandinavia http://wp.me/p41CQf-Iuf

The map depicts Iceland in remarkable detail, including its mountains, fjords, glaciers and a graphic depiction of Mount Hekla erupting in a fiery explosion of flames and volcanic material. Along part of the coastline, Polar Bears can be seen floating on icebergs. The map includes over 200 place names, primarily Danish in origin and many of which are likely misread from the original map, owing to the different writing style employed in Iceland during the period. While the map is far from accurate, it depicts first time a meaningful depiction of all known settlements in Iceland and many other points of interest, including a number of glaciers.

The map illustrates a remarkable array of the legendary and mythical sea monsters and creatures of the 15th and 16th Century, along with early depictions of the sea horse, manta ray, walrus and whale. Some of the more purely fanciful images may derive from tales of St. Brendan, a sixth century Irish missionary who, according to legend, journeyed to Iceland and whose name is associated with a mythical island of the same name. Others are traceable to Olaus Magnus’s Carta Marina of 1539, although they were probably derived directly from Munster’s Cosmographia of 1545 and most notably Munster’s chart of the Sea and Land Creatures.

Carta Marina by Olaus Magnus (1539)

When this map was made in 1539, scientific innovation was still largely a dream. There was an abiding and widespread belief in the sea being the dwelling place of unknowable creatures like griffins, unicorns, dragons, the phoenix, the monstrous things.

The Viking Imagination: Medieval Cartography of Scandinavia http://wp.me/p41CQf-Iuf
Carta Marina by Olaus Magnus (1539) The Viking Imagination: Medieval Cartography of Scandinavia http://wp.me/p41CQf-Iuf

Olaus Magnus (1490–1557) and his elder brother, Johannes, were Catholic priests who sought exile following their native Sweden’s conversion to Lutheranism during the Reformation.

While living in Gdansk in Poland, Olaus begun work on a map of the northern regions in 1527, the same year that Sweden became Protestant. This map would take him nearly 12 years to finish. A triumph of skill, imagination and patience, it was printed in Venice, and was the largest and most detailed map of Northern Europe ever completed at that time.

Listen up

If you haven’t been reading my blog lately, I’ve been on a Viking-loving journey. Listen to these podcasts about the Icelandic sagas, the mystery of the Lewis Chess Men, an orchestral interpretation of the story of Odin’s Raven Magic, how Viking language become modern English and check out these Epic Maps from other places.

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EP Review:  Notion by Tash Sultana (2016)

Tash Sultana is the real deal. A genuinely talented and unique Melbourne multi-instrumentalist who made a name for herself the old fashioned way, by busking on the streets of Melbourne (Bourke St mall and Degraves St) and making homemade videos to YouTube. These simple and raw B&W videos of Tash subsequently went viral and gained millions of views.

From this ground-swell of passionate supporters of her music, Tash has quietly built up a massive following among Melbourne musos, punters as well as overseas music-lovers. Her 2016 tour of the UK, Europe Australia and NZ rapidly sold out.

Tash plays every instrument on her eponymous EP: the stomp box, harmonica, vocals, guitar, looping, beatboxing, synth, trumpet – which makes the sound even more impressive.

Listen on iTunes

With a guitar since the age of three

“Guitar, I started playing when I was three. It’s still my favourite thing. Being a musician I have to learn it myself, and learn other instruments myself. Once you pick up one instrument you get the ears for it, and for another. And you can keep going and the sound just becomes familiar. It’s never ending, you don’t have to stop anywhere. I’ll pick up an instrument and play it heaps for a couple of months, then pick up another instrument and play that heaps. I just rotate, but guitar is one that stays the same.”

EP Review:  Notion by Tash Sultana (2016)
Tash busks in Bourke St mall

The first track on the EP is ‘Synergy’ is reminiscent of the ominous and atmospheric trip-hop from the 90’s track by Tricky or perhaps Sneaker Pimps. Tash has a voice that swirls and toys with the audience, with the same mysterious vibe as Kelly Dayton, lead singer of 90’s band Sneaker Pimps.

‘Gemini’, track two of the EP is a slow-burning dreamscape of sound and something about it reminds me of a slow love-making Sade song.

Notion, the third track on the EP is a dreamy, navel-gazing acoustic pop with soaring guitar and raw vocals that sound a tiny bit like a female version of Jeff Buckley.

Jungle, track four of the EP is different sounding again, with a huge, sweeping dub/reggae beat and with Tash doing some beatboxing over the top. It’s yet another dimension to a very impressive and diverse EP. I can hear some faint Tricky and early Massive Attack influences in this song.

EP Review:  Notion by Tash Sultana (2016)

Other comparisons could be made between Tash’s sound that of Matt Corby’s.

Tash, like Matt has a big, velvety and atmospheric blues sound with a lot of textures and depth. It’s the sort of music you want to settle into, in the middle of the night with a single malt in hand. It’s music for the twilight hour between dreams and wakefulness.

Although to compare Tash to Matt Corby would be to ignore her unique sound and the sensual epic dreamscape of her EP. It sounds like music made by someone in their late 40’s with half a lifetime of experience under their belt, not someone just entering their 20’s.

Anyway, enough of my gushing. If you want to sample Tash Sultana I recommend you get onto ITunes and download it.

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Roland: Gargantuan Elephant Seal Of Berlin Zoo

Roland was a goliath 4,000 pound sea elephant (A.K.A an Elephant Seal Mirunga patagonica. He lived in Berlin Zoo from the late 1920’s until his death during the second world war.

Roland: Gargantuan Elephant Seal From Berlin

Here he is getting a snow bath from his handler at the Berlin Zoo (date unknown)

In this film you can see his large gelatinous proportions, including monstrous jowls and a trunk-like snout.

They breed on lonely southern islands such as the Falklands off South America.

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Elephant Seals feed mostly on cephalopods like fish and squid. A bull like Roland would have a commanding presence of the beach. In the wild he would have had a harem of about 25-40 cows under his control.

Roland was a well loved resident at Berlin Zoo and when he died, they created a loving memorial to him including a bronze cast of his face.

Roland: Gargantuan Elephant Seal From Berlin
A bronze cast of Roland’s face
Roland: Gargantuan Elephant Seal From Berlin
A life-size memorial statue of Roland after his death

German taxidermists Karl Kaestner and Gerhard Schröder of the Natural History Museum in Berlin created a dermoplastic modelof Roland and crafted his skin onto it. This museum display was destroyed in 1944 during the Bombing of Berlin in World War II. All that is left of Roland is his “death mask” at the German Maritime Museum in Stralsund, Germany. (updated 12.09.16)

Roland: Gargantuan Elephant Seal From Berlin
Kids in front of statue of Roland



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Welcome to Big Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London’s Swinging 60’s

Big Biba was an outrageous cornucopia of weird fashion on the London high street in the 60’s. Before H&M, Topshop or Harvey Nichols there was Biba.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

Invented by IT girl of the time, Polish-born Barbara Hulanicki, Biba started out as a mail order store that sold one dress available in one size. Very rapidly it blew up and became a High Street department store and the most hip and happening place in London during the 60’s and 70’s. Frequented by Julie Christie and Twiggy and icons like David Bowie and the Rolling Stones.

Welcome to Big Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's
Barbara Hulanicki in the 60’s

At it’s peak, about a million patrons a week shopped there.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

Big Biba store was filled with mirrors, feathers, luxurious fabrics and psychedelic pop-art inspired displays. It was a dim and decadent boudoir that gave young women a sense of escapism from the daily grind. This was a new thing back in the 60’s but would become a common theme used by many High Street shops for many years afterwards.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

Big Biba was a Willy Wonka trip, a wunderkammer of consumerism. It featured pop art and surrealist references with self-referential Warhol-esque displays of gigantic Campbells Soups filled with soups.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's
Warhol cans filled with cans of food

Huge fluffy dogs were filled with pet foods and dog treats. This was the very definition of 60’s kitschy cool.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

A display of suds and washing powder containing…washing powder.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

A gigantic and fully operational record player. The ideal place for a girl to hang out on her lunch break.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

Vogue’s editor Anna Wintour worked as a Biba Girl when she was young.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's
Biba sales girls

A triumph of branding. Everything from baked beans to hair products had the Biba logo plastered over it.

Welcome to Biba: A Legendary Department Store in London's Swinging 60's

There was also a rooftop garden where you could get some interesting and odd (by today’s standards) food and wine.

biba menu

The famous rainbow room was used as a concert hall.

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The high street building that once hosted Big Biba in the 60’s is now home to high street brands like H&M. The gloriously colourful rainbow room is now tragically filled with the work out equipment.

bibaleopard

Eventually Big Biba ran into some financial trouble in the mid 70’s and it was tragically closed down. Barbara Hulanicki moved away from the brand, which went through various changes over the years. You will still be able to spot the iconic logo at makeup counters in some department stores in the UK. The Halcyon Days of this beautiful store are sadly over now though.

Read more about Big Biba and the brand’s meteoric rise to glory on Kasia Charko’s Blog (She was Big Biba’s legendary graphic designer).

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Badass Bitch and Fashionista Lee Lin Chin

Recently Lee Lin Chin bowed out as SBS World News’ most loved news anchor for the past 30 years. She is well-known in Australia for her graceful presence, avante-garde fashion sense, acid tongue and a strangely monotone way of delivering the news.

Badass Bitch and Fashionista Lee Lin Chin

Her twitter account is totally outrageous and she has won a cult following with her edgy, darkly funny and shocking tweets. I just love her rebellious and wild she is. And in a domain that’s normally dominated by much younger, boring, homogenous and white European faces -she has become an icon because of how different she is and also because she simply doesn’t give a shit what anyone thinks of her. I love you Lee Lin!

She isn’t retiring thank god and is apparently going to host a celebrity gossip show on SBS and will lend her face to a public transport campaign in Sydney soon.

Some gems from hrh lee lin chin

Food: Autumn’s bounty and feijoa relish

In our front yard we have a burgeoning, blooming mini forest that encroaches on our house. Part of this wildness is a feijoa tree that drops a bounty of hundreds of oval-shaped bright green feijoa fruit onto the forest floor. I then need to scramble to grab all of these treasures before they are subsumed by the juicy, verdant ground and its birds and ants.

Food: Autumn's bounty and feijoa relish

In case you’re wondering, feijoa is an exotic fruit found in parts of South America and New Zealand. It has a granular, juicy and unusual texture and it tastes akin to fizzy sherbet.

So what to do with 3 large shopping bags full of feijoa? I boiled all of them down and turned it into a large cache of feijoa chutney. That means I can enjoy the flavour all year round. I substituted apples for pears because pears were super cheap to procure in the supermarket. Here’s the recipe

Food: Autumn's bounty and feijoa relish

 

Feijoa Chutney Recipe

1.5 kg feijoas, peeled and chopped
500g apples, peeled and chopped
500g onions, finely sliced
1 litre malt vinegar
750g brown sugar
1 tbsp salt
1 tbsp ground ginger
2 tbsp allspice
1 tbsp crushed garlic
finely grated zest of 1 lemon
½ tsp mace
½ tsp cayenne
1 tsp ground cloves

Place all ingredients in large pan and boil slowly for approximately 1-1½ hours, stirring occasionally, until mixture is thick and brown. Bottle while warm. Keeps for months. Refrigerate once open.

Food: Autumn's bounty and feijoa relish

 

The ultimate guide to collective nouns for New Zealand birds

This post is for all of the New Zealand and global bird-lovers out there.

New Zealand has some wonderful and incredibly intelligent birds that also tend to have rambuctious, mischievous and cheeky personalities.

Check out this video of a kea being, well… a kea if you don’t believe me…

Here are some little known collective nouns for New Zealand’s beautiful and diverse birds

Collective Nouns

Fernbirds, a waddle of

Hihi (Stitchbirds), a sewing circle of

Hihi (Stitchbirds), a rookery of

stitchbirds - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
stitchbirds – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kahu, an arsenal of 

Kahu, a battalion of

Kahu - Harrier Hawk- Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Kahu – Harrier Hawk- Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kaka, a hoon of

Kaka - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Kaka – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kākāriki (New Zealand parakeet) a swooping of

Kakapo(s), a booming of

Kakapo (a flightless parrot), an island of

kakapo - morepork - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
kakapo – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kakapo, a looming of

Kakapo, a rumble of

Kakapo, a trek of

Kea(s), a circus of

Kea, a conspiracy of

Kea - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Kea – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kotare (Kingfishers), a concentration of

Kotare (Kingfishers), a relm of

Kotare (Kingfishers) (Belted), a crown of

Kotare (Kingfishers) a rattle of

Kotare (Kingfishers) a clique of

Kotare (Kingfishers) a concentration of

Kingfisher - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Kingfisher – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kiwi(s), a tribe of

kārearea (NZ Falcons) a jubilee of

Moa(s), an extinction of

Moa - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Moa – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Moreporks, a haunting of

Morepork - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Morepork – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Kereru (New Zealand Pigeons) , a roost of

Kereru - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Kereru – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Piwakawaka (Fantails), a spread of

Piwakawaka (Fantails), a war party of

Piwakawaka - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Pouakai (Haast’s Eagle), an eyrie of

Haast eagle - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Haast eagle – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture.

Pukekos, a gawky of

Pukeko - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Pukeko – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Takahe, a mountain resort of

Takahe, a tussock of

south island takahe - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
south island takahe – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Tui(s), a battery of

Tui, an ecstasy of

Tui - Harrier Hawk- Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Tui – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Tītipounamu  (Riflemen), a firing squad of

Rifleman- Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Rifleman- Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Wekas, a brace of

weka - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
weka – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

Whios, a whistling of

Whio - blue duck - Birds, Mana and Maori Culture
Whio – blue duck – Birds, Mana and Maori Culture

More about Maori Kites at New Zealand Geographic

More about the conservation status, behaviour and biology of New Zealand birds at the Department of Conservation website

More about Maori symbolism and New Zealand native birds

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Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand

A few years ago we went to Central Otago on a trip. It really was a magical time away, At that stage we both had highly stressful jobs and we were really needing to get away from everything.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Sipping my tea contemplating my life.Copyright Content Catnip 2016

Probably one of the best places in the world to blow the cobwebs out of your world and to get a fresh perspective on your tiny, insignificant place in the cosmos is Otago. It’s desolate, alpine crags and mountains soar into the sky and create knife-edge and flinty cuts into the sky. Even in the winter-time the sky is mostly blue, a deep cerulean blue of the ocean. The highways undulate and gently curve through the solitude and there’s near to nobody else to bother you.

On the ground there’s mossy, downy grasses and soft undergrowth. It’s as though you could fall to the earth and it would embrace you and kiss you softly. I contrast this to the tinder dry and brown undergrowth of Australia, my homeland. If you take a tumble onto this ground it instead scratches and wounds you. I always found something about the latter unappealing about Australia, although petty, it’s a metaphorical idea of the earth being tough and barren, versus being verdant and pillow-soft.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Before the cruise. Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Moody contemplation. Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Mirror lakes. Copyright Content Catnip 2016

Milford Sound has retained its wild beauty because of its remoteness. To get there one must travel through a avalanche and earthquake-prone one-way tunnel through a mountain.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Avalanche fodder. Copyright Content Catnip 2016

The powers that be have wisely made it incredibly difficult to get to this place, and so Mlford Sound, although being a mecca for tourists and the most popular place for a photo-op, remains largely left to its own devices.

Here we took a short video of the trip through the mountain, note the trippy video stabilisation…

Copyright Content Catnip 2016

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Copyright Content Catnip 2016

Once through the tunnel, you zig-zag down a perilous narrow road on the edge of  a mountain where curious and cheeky keas peck at the insects on the ground. If you leave the car stationery for even a few seconds, they alight onto the windscreen and will try and rip off your windscreen wipers, just for shits and giggles. They are nature’s original trolls.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Cheeky keas on the roadside are poised and waiting to chew your windscreen wipers. Copyright Content Catnip 2016

Kea are a protected alpine parrot and known as one of the most intelligent birds in the world. Their wings are a flurry of iridescent purple and orange like a summer sunset. When they fly they gleam and flash with flirtatious brilliance. At ski lodges (apparently) if you dine alfresco, they will steal your steak and have a sip of your latte when you look the other way. They are truly magnificent animals.

We got to Milford Sound for the final cruise. The sun was fast dissapearing behind the mountain. Although in terms of photography, this was certainly the best time to go and the ‘golden hour’.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Words nor pictures can really adequately capture the beauty here. Copyright Content Catnip 2016

The Mirror Lakes

A highlight on the road to Milford Sound is a short walk on the roadside to the Mirror Lakes. As they claim they are actually transparent and it’s possible to see right to the bottom and have this reflected into the sky. We took this short video

 

Night falls on Central Otago

Later on, on the drive back to Queenstown we were forced to pull over and take photos every five minutes because everything was so amazingly beautiful. This somnamulent and sleepy image was accompanied by the distant hooting of an owl, and ponies mewling and rustling the grass. An alpine bucolic scene that we will never ever forget.

Travel: Magnificent Milford Sound, New Zealand Copyright Content Catnip 2016
Darkness falls on the meadows of Otago Copyright Content Catnip 2016

It’s very easy to fall in love with this place and pledge to move here. Although it’s the ideal place if you want zero access to any shops or the mod-cons, cafes and conveniences of modern civilisation and there’s also hardly any jobs here. Therein lies the trade off. No wonder it’s a popular place to retire.

If I was to pick the most beautiful place in New Zealand, this would be it.

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Vespers: Dark Night of the Soul

On a dark night,
Kindled in love with yearnings–oh, happy chance!–
I went forth without being observed,
My house being now at rest.

In darkness and secure,
By the secret ladder, disguised–oh, happy chance!–
In darkness and in concealment,
My house being now at rest.

In the happy night,
In secret, when none saw me,
Nor I beheld aught,
Without light or guide, save that which burned in my
heart.

This light guided me
More surely than the light of noonday
To the place where he (well I knew who!) was awaiting me–
A place where none appeared.

Oh, night that guided me,
Oh, night more lovely than the dawn,
Oh, night that joined Beloved with lover,
Lover transformed in the Beloved!

Upon my flowery breast,
Kept wholly for himself alone,
There he stayed sleeping, and I caressed him,
And the fanning of the cedars made a breeze.

The breeze blew from the turret
As I parted his locks;
With his gentle hand he wounded my neck
And caused all my senses to be suspended.

I remained, lost in oblivion;
My face I reclined on the Beloved.
All ceased and I abandoned myself,
Leaving my cares forgotten among the lilies.

St John of the Cross, Christian Mystic and Poet. Spain. 16th Century

Every Picture Tells a Story: Dusk and vespers at Wysa Słodowa in Wrocław
Vespers, Ostrów Tumski, Wroclaw Poland. Copyright Content Catnip 2016

How Long Does It Take to Make a Woods?

“How long does it take to make the woods? As long as it takes to make the world. It is always finished, it is always being made, the act of its making forever greater than the act of its destruction.” (Wendell Berry, from A Timbered Choir, 1999)

Travel: Hiking in Ireland Copyright Content Catnip 2010
Travel: Hiking in Ireland Copyright Content Catnip 2010
Life on an unstable landmass: Taupo and Rotorua Part Two
Mineral deposits on all of the trees provide an eerie and story book quality to the surrounding shrubs. Copyright, Content Catnip 2017.