16 November 2019
Advice about copyright
The Alliance for Independent Authors (ALLi) has excellent resources for self-published authors online. Published November 15, 2019, a new report on copyright infringement outlines common mistakes made by indie authors, especially when citing the work of others. Many of us have no clue that if you reproduce others' work, even a paragraph or lines of a poem or song, even when citing it properly, can result in fines of up to $250,000.
It pays to know.
10 September 2019
Route planning around Ireland
I used Google Earth to plan our trip to Southampton in the UK which never materialized. When a friend asked us to help him plan a circumnavigation of Ireland, I returned to Google Earth to work out the distances around the west coast with which our friend is unfamiliar. This way I could point out the places where there's nowhere to find shelter for big enough distances to worry about the weather. I found it to be really easy but I forgot to get a screengrab when it was all done, so I'll have to do it again. In the meantime, here it is for reference. NOT FOR Navigation. The miles really add up when you have to go in and out into anchorages and harbours.
Distance from Start (not point to point)
Crosshaven to Kinsale
17 NM
Kinsale to Glandore 48
NM (Alt Castletownsend)
Glandore to Sherkin Is 66
NM
Sherkin to Schull 81
NM
Schull to Crookhaven 92
NM
Crookhaven to Bere Is 116
NM (Alt Bantry - SCH)
Bere Is to Valentia Is 171
NM (Alt Dingle - marina)
Valentia Is to Inis Mor
256 NM (Alt Kilrush,
Shannon or Rossaveal, Cashla Bay – SCH)*
Inis Mor to Inisbofin 302
NM (Alt Killary Hbr – long way in to
anchorage)
Inishbofin to Clare Is 322
NM (Alt Achilbeg or Rosmoney - Westport)
Clare to Blacksod 349
NM (Alt Inishkeas in settled weather)
Blacksod to Broadhaven 380
NM
Broadhaven to Teelin 431
NM (Alt Killybegs in Str S - SCH)*
Teelin to Arranmore Is 473 NM (Alt Gola Is)
Arranmore to Sheephaven Bay 504
NM
Sheephaven to Loch Swilly 523
NM
29 May 2019
Next steps
Today, they announced the winner of the NineDots prize. "Annie Zaidi has won the $100k @NineDotsPrize for innovative thinking with her essay Bread, Cement, Cactus: http://bit.ly/2Qw2GFj" Oh well. I gave it my best shot. I may still write the book. I already have an outline. I should have been writing it all along.
I'm still suffering from writer's block when it comes to starting the new book about my family's journey to America during WWII, but that hasn't stopped my other activities, including planting a vineyard and writing new poetry. So I'll get back to it. But first, I'll have to take a little break to go sailing for a couple of months. If you're interested in 'what on earth is she up to now?', check out my sailing blog. See you later.
08 May 2019
Writer's Block
I haven't written very much in the past year since our nephew Cillian died. Oh, I've written a few bits of poetry, website posts for the Ocean Cruising Club, my blog on sailing - but I haven't picked up a big project in the past year. I seem incapable of concentrating long enough. I suppose the time shall come. I've never really had writer's block so this is new to me. But I think it's a bit more than that.
I think the passing of a young man, combined with all the dire warnings about the state of our precious earth have taken their toll on me. I'm weary. The unprecedented decline in species due to man's trashing of the earth has confirmed what I've suspected for a long time. We're heading for a mass extinction, annihilation. So why bother to write?
In the meantime, I am forcing myself to stop working and trolling the net idly and read more instead. Reading will eventually inspire me to pick up that pencil again. But what I've been reading is Michele Obama's book Becoming, which although inspiring also exposes hatred and divisiveness among people. Destructive people. And Climate Justice by Mary Robinson is supposed to inspire individuals to act but instead points out how little has been accomplished and how difficult it is to move the needle. Maybe I've succumbed to depression again?
I have been trying to get a bit of inspiration for my mom's memoir again and have picked up The Shoemaker's Daughter, which I hope will help. Also waiting in the wings is Red Famine about Stalin's starvation of millions of Ukrainians to death. Such joyous topics, but the background is needed to write my story effectively.
We have released a new edition of Happy Hooking The Art of Anchoring so that's something. It's our third edition -- who would have thought? A webinar is coming up. And we've delivered a webinar on sailing in Galicia, so perhaps a new guidebook is in order. But who knows? I just know that I haven't been in the mood to concentrate for prolonged periods on starting a big project.
I've installed Grammarly on my laptop and I must say, I am impressed to a degree. It picks up more than Microsoft but it still misses quite a bit and yet insists on things being wrong when they are stylistically correct. For example, above I said I was weary and Grammarly insists that I'm wary instead. I tell it no, I'm tired but weary is more evocative. They disagree. Who writes the algorithms anyway? Can someone be both a tech guru and a grammar wiz at the same time? Such important questions beg to be answered.
If I can get past this depressive state, perhaps I can work through such issues and find joy in writing again.
02 March 2019
11 February 2019
Writing poetry
I was inspired by a radio programme interview with Michael Longley, whose poetry sang to me over the airwaves. He inspired me to continue to write poetry, even though I really don't know what it is anymore. It used to rhyme. It used to have rhythm. Today, it is just a shorter collection of words strung together in a way that may or may not speak to someone. Michael said poetry is best written by the young and the old. I used to write poetry when I was young, as so many of us do when we have powerful emotions battling inside us through hormonal surges. Now that I'm older, I've started again, in tune with what he said. Perhaps it's because in the middle, we're too busy to be emotional. At both ends, we can't help it. Here goes...
Emotion on the ocean
by Daria Blackwell
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