Monthly Archives: November 2012

X-Spot Gallery, Wing 01b

Continuing from X-Spot Gallery, Wing 01a, next we view “Trouble in Store”…

… and then on the wall across from it, the enigmatic “What’s Behind the Red Door?” I believe this is also the largest work of X-Spot’s Kollage Kid kollection, er, collection.

“Road Trip” (left) and “Elephantasmagoria” (right).

Straight ahead: “Cactus House”, a nice, compact black and white effort.

Then across from it we have another b&w collage exhibited beside the resting Baker Bloch here, named “What Lies Beneath”. Reminds me a bit of “Who Left That Tap Running?” from the upwards part of this wing.

The witty “I Remember the Incident at the Canal”. Do *you*?

“Found Heads” — there are a number of these type of collages in Michael’s work depicting a row of women and/or men whose appearance have been uniformly altered.

“nowhere town2.” Strangely enough I think I want to actually visit!

“Madonna and Egg”, made from Tunnock’s Tea Cake wrapper foil, old scrap and cut outs, according to Michael’s flickr page on the work. A bit different from the rest of those here.

And we leave this wing with “Victorian Seaside Holiday drawbacks No. 237” to the left and “Mr. Archimboldo” to the right, with another NYC background for the latter.

Super job Michael!

3 Comments

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^

X-Spot Gallery Wing 01a

Wing 01 of 04 of the newly established X-Spot Gallery features 25 collages from Kollage Kid, or Brit artist Michael Leigh in real life. I describe his collage technique as quintessential toward the end of this Pietmond review from January. I’ll let the pictures do most of the talking, along with providing titles of each here. Please check out the Laughing Shed blog for more information about Michael’s exciting work.

As we head up into this wing of the X-Spot, we have the similarly punning “Wall Flower” to the right and “Flower Mill” to the left. Nice start.

“Freudsters”. Luv this one.

“Ant Invasion”.

And in a similar mode, once more, we have “Who Left That Tap Running?” just further up.

Then “Hula Hoop Party” across the wall from it…

… and “Time Travel” on an adjacent wall to both of the last 2 collages pictured above.

“Noah’s Submarine”, hehe, and, to the right of it here, “Cafe of Earthly Delights,” a cute and clever spoof of Hieronymus Bosch’s famed “Garden of Earthly Delights” triptych.

The marvelous “Bill Haley Fans”. You guys remember “Rock around the Clock” don’t you?

Another New York City disaster collage similar to “Ant Invasion”, this one called “The Great Flood”. Since taking this picture of Kollage Kid’s work, the Statue of Liberty and NYC as a whole have come up in another guise within this blog.

“Space Laundry” (left) and “The Gem Polishers” (right).

The most excellent “Drowning in Germs”. We’ve reached the top level of this wing.

X-Spot Gallery, Wing 01b

1 Comment

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^

Return to Gene Fade’s Mtn. 02

So following up on last week’s visit to Gene Fade’s Mtn., I returned again this past Saturday for more hiking and pictures and overall fun. Below is a pipe tunnel under an exit ramp from The Way, at the edge of a tiny memorial park where I parked my car.

Within the same tiny park: some rock stairs on either side of a creek running laterally through it, as yet unnamed by me.

Just up a ridge on the other side of the road from here exists the birthplace of famed mossman actor Gene Fade, known for being a 2nd wheel in all those Salad Bar Jack action adventure flicks to Salad Bar himself (played by Grassy Knoll of course). The village is called Jupiter’s Rock or Jupiter Rock or just Jupiter, I suppose, with a central or “downtown” area probably existing on or next to this rock shelf.

And here’s the red mark on the Jupiter Rock itself just around the corner, which reminded pioneer mossman settlers of Jupiter’s red spot that they could actually see with their powerful, naked eye vision. So the legend goes.

On the next ridge south and then uphill exists the Weaving Place that I visited last week as well. This time I brought the fabled Bee’s Line itself, originally laid out in Kentucky in the 4 Valley Regions of neighboring Herman Park. My plan was to weave the line between 2 trees here to assess further potential overlaps and meanings of the markings I made previously at Kentucky. Well, the line was incredibly easy to tangle, and although I managed a weave of sort, I didn’t feel that it produced any real meaning this day. Below is a picture of the futile effort; I just decided to slide the string down on the trunks I wrapped it around so that deer wouldn’t trip over it.

From the Weaving Place — which I might rename in light of the inability to actually weave the Bee Line here in any successful way — it was a fairly sharp descent through the open woods to the trail on the northern side of the mountain, also traversed this past weekend. Having failed with my weaving project just up the hill, my fantasy inclined attention instead focused on the queer rock art found all along about 800 feet of this trail, or what I now consider to be a true outsider art piece probably on pair with even Dongoba’s profound rock temples discovered in late 2011.

I recounted the involved fence posts today, and found they numbered 80 and not the 81 or 82 I thought the previous weekend. But it was only in the middle of the night after I returned home that Hucka D. helped me understand this: at the time I first came upon this running fence art project of 80 posts the previous Sunday, the Frank and Herman Einstein! Blog also contained exactly 80 posts as well, blog posts in this case. Since the fence was so strongly highlighted by topping rock or rocks (about 60 of the 80 posts had such rocks), I knew the blog and this art piece made a one-to-one fusion of some psychic kind. As I wrote a syncher friend soon after this discovery, my short and crazy conclusion was that as the blog was about highlighing Frank Park, now Frank Park was highlighting the blog back in its own way (!!) Bizarre.

Post #1 of 80 is pictured below.

More post examples.

Looking the other way from the fence toward a stupid development diseasing a mountaintop in the distance.

Right to left below, we have posts 61, 62, and 63, with 1, 2, and 3 topping rocks respectively. Overall I feel there is a vague internal match between fence posts and blog posts, but nothing pinpoint synchy as yet. Still examining… and this 1-2-3 surface resonance could be a gateway into deeper connections, for example.

The 80th and final post.

I also couldn’t help but notice that the 5 lines made by the fence wires going across the posts echo the look of the Bee’s Line weaving I attempted at the Weaving Place just above this, especially before I lowered the involved string to the ground.

3 Comments

Filed under Frank Park, Gene Fade's Mtn., Mossmen, Toy Avatars

Return to Gene Fade’s Mtn.

I’ll have pictures soon from my return trip to Gene Fade’s Mtn., following up on the first from this year occurring last Sunday and described in this recent post. Preliminary thoughts: There are 2 prominent flats or gaps on the east side of the mtn., similar enough in visual qualities to cause confusion during Gene Fade’s stay there, as he recalls. I believe I’ll call them Logap and Higap for now, for Higap indeed is about 100 feet higher than Logap at least, and maybe up to about 150 feet higher. Jupiter Rock, where Gene Fade was raised, exists on the ridge extended from Logap to the east, creating its own miniature peak. In my hike from last week, I entirely missed Logap, and also Jupiter Rock.

Today at *Higap* I also attempted to unwind the *Bee Line* created in Byng’s Kentucky during October. Well… interesting experiment but really no clear success gained except for a learning lesson. The approx. 65 yard string was extremely easy to tangle up, and that composed the bulk of the problem. I simply left the string up there, and will attempt to make a fresh one in Kentucky probably this coming spring.

Having “failed” at this task, my attention instead focused on the running fence art project also discovered this past Sunday, made up of 80 posts (# I checked today) running through a more forested part of a popular trail on the north side of Gene Fade’s Mtn. There is a very good chance this art piece, as I’m inclined to call it, relays more about the mossmen culture that use to inhabit the area (still does?) and perhaps the life of mossman Gene Fade in particular. Is *this* instead the true Bee Line (Gene Fade’s life thread), or a substitution thereof? I have a feeling it is related but not exactly the same. Wonder if Hucka D. has any thoughts about this?

Hucka D.:

My cue, eh?

bb:

Hi Hucka D. Thanks for showing up tonight.

Hucka D.:

Your time is limited[ at your computer]. I’m here to help. What was the question?

bb:

I was wondering about the running fence project at Gene Fade’s Mtn.

Hucka D.:

Oh *that*. Yes, that was a mossman project. A coded message for ya. Have you figured it out yet? Have you counted the posts yet?

bb:

Yes. There are 80.

Hucka D.:

How many posts are there in the Frank Herman Einstein blog now?

bb:

Lemme check (pause to check). Looks like there are 84, Hucka D.

Hucka D.:

So this one we’re speaking in is 84. Where’s 80? Hard for me to crane my neck that far, hehe.

bb:

Let’s see… the 80th post would be the one just before the original post on Gene Fade’s Mtn. from last Sunday, Hucka D. Then the 80th post of the running fence project is actually displayed in the 81st post of this blog.

Hucka D.:

But at the time you thought it *was* the 81st post, because you counted wrong. So the 81st and last post, or what you thought was the 81st and last post of this running fence project as you call it, was displayed in the 81st post of this blog, the last one at the time as well, since the newest post is always the last. So the running fence project is this blog itself. Simple enough on the surface.

bb:

What would be the reason for this?

Hucka D.:

The woods are telling you that they know about your blog. And approve. Frank and Herman Parks know about Frank and Herman Einstein. (pause) Einstein.

bb:

Maybe. Extraordinary if so.

Hucka D.:

It’s SoSo so.

bb:

If so — SoSo so (smiles) — then I wonder if there’s more devil in the detail to this one. What if the rocks on the posts tell a larger story about the blog, relating metadata of some kind?

Hucka D.:

Take a look.

—–

bb:

Hmm, well I’m just going to have to keep that in mind when I return to the fence. I suppose I’ll go back this Sunday, then. Too weird a phenomenon not to (!)

Hucka D.:

Frank Park is talking to ya. Frank Park knows.

—–

bb:

So We Are At Tin… — this is also the 10th post of the F and H E Blog, Hucka D. Hucka? Anyway, I don’t think I did that on purpose. 11 posts in September, the blog’s first month. And this is 10th of 11. And *that* post talks of the last post of the Baker Blinker Blog, which is the 2233rd, also making a synchronicity with what Jamie and I were talking about then and he/she mentioning a 2233 composition of lion roar starts for the 4 Dark Side of the Rainbows. Er, but I think that’s involved. Traditionally Dark Side of the Rainbow involves 10 tracks of Dark Side of the Moon, and the 11th lies beyond. The 11th is the song about Tin S. Man, his theme track. 11 beyond 10.

Leave a comment

Filed under Mossmen, Toy Avatars

Equation

Welp, the X-Spot Gallery, SoSo Village and side galleries such as the Tower of TILE and Sink Lair are now open (!). Teleport is found in the heart of SoSo Village, and I’ll provide the SLurl in the “My Virtual Galleries/Temples” page asap (link found at top of blog).

Hucka D.:

What now, then?

bb:

Hi Hucka. Well, guess I’ll play around with my 530-540 prims I have left in the sky.

Hucka D.:

You had a good Jeogeot run. This is *toward* the end but very satisfying. You can always go back in time to establish a Jeogeot art. You can talk to Chilbo people more, then. Chilbo isn’t dead, but the metaverse went thataway (points behind me).

bb:

Yeah, I guess I just sponged off that energy for a while.

Hucka D.:

Sunklands is yours, though. You earned it. Paradise in Big Sink. Can still happen, but you’ll have to go back into the past. Measure everything out — make sure you can re-create it.

bb:

Sinkology may be important. That could be [another] domain name.

Hucka D.:

The direct resonance of Jeogeot with Wazob in the [blog] selection you’re reading is important. Also becomes 1:1 with SID’s 1st Oz at the same time. Jeogeot is SID is Wazob is Jeogeot.

bb:

Finding and understanding Yeot helped pull me out to see the whole picture[ of Jeogeot]. Sampson’s Stones may be a portal back into the Lake District.

Hucka D.:

Keep reading.

bb:

Thanks.

Leave a comment

Filed under Jeogeot, Lake District

X-Spot Gallery/SoSo: Notes

X-Spot Gallery and whole of SoSo Village should be open by this weekend. Need to purchase a couple more pieces of Jeogeot art, check some notecards, and basically I’m done except for the little promotion I’ll do. The first overall exhibit in the X-Spot will be simple, or at least I’ve already set up the same thing in Carcass-One this past spring. Title will be “Pietmond Remembered”, which I think I’ll keep up for about a month. It will include works by “classic” Pietmond artists Mike Casey, Julie Sadler, Kenneth Rouggeau, Melodie Darwin, Kollage Kid, as well as displaying a further refined version of “Jeogeot Through Art and Word” I first set up about 2 1/2 years ago in Noru/Greater Chilbo. Then will make a decision how I want to build upon it or take the New Pietmond energy from that point onward. Checking out collages online now. Maybe even create new collages myself? A possibility of course.

I really like the new stage of Pietmond. Fate that I came back; easy to see that now. Just have to figure out when to exit. Obviously I’ll keep my land there at least through December and probably January as well. Start exploring a bit also.

Leave a comment

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^

Gene Fade’s Mountain

I should have had at least 1 blog entry for this mountain in the Baker Blinker Blog but, as I remember, upon my last visit to this small mtn. almost a year ago now, I forgot to bring my camera. Didn’t forget today, but still not a whole bunch of pictures snapped, at least until I found another extended rock art piece (!). Don’t think this is the creation of noted rock artist Michael Too, as I call him on this blog and also the BB Blog, but very interesting nonetheless, and seemingly meaningful. But I’ll get to that in a minute-o.

Parked my car on a dirt road just off The Way, and hiked up some kind of old road to reach the site of the first picture below. Actually, just before this I examined a place on the other side of the road that *does* have an entry for it on my previous blog, a place I called Notherton there, and where mossman Gene Fade supposedly lived and worked at one time. Nothing new found there this fine, blue day, so I decided to focus on the mtn. across the road, which I’m temporarily calling Gene Fade’s Mtn. until I get a better name. For on the slopes of this mtn. is where Gene Fade was actually born, in a small village called Jupiter Rock. The below picture comes just uphill from this rock, but I was unable to reach Fade’s fabled birthplace this day because of blocking rhododendron. I’ll have to attempt another day, and believe me if I was off today and it was sunny instead of drizzly, I’d be wandering on Fade’s mtn. again for this and other reasons. As it is I’ll have to wait till at least Friday.

I’ve decided to call the spot on the mtn. below the Weaving Place, and it already has a story, as I pondered about it while walking around and around some of the pictured trees, actually making a circular track. I thought of Gene Fade’s life story, and how, at the end, perhaps he returned here to his homeland to somehow *weave* his life story around these trees in the same manner I was walking around them. I thought of Byng’s Bee Line as well, and how I should return to this ridge and unravel it between two of these trees. And that’s exactly what I might do in the near future (Friday again?). But back to Fade: somehow he wove his life around these trees in the same manner as you would weave a string around them again and again, as I plan to do apparently. This is a way to *record* a life, and my belief is that other mossmen did the same at this spot, hence the common name “The Weaving Place”, with the actual, “recording” event called “The Weaving” itself.

The Weaving Place is not far from the top of GF Mtn. On the opposite side of the peak, and about at the same elevation, comes another interesting, platform area where we have obvious evidence of human intervention in these woods. I don’t think this is a hunting spot, since hunting is illegal in Frank and Herman Parks (thankfully!). Instead, the hammock seems to indicate peaceful, leisure activity, as does a nearby rope with attached swing (not pictured). Did people climb trees here? At any rate, I think it was a camping site for certain.

Now to the rock art. Actually hiked halfway around the mtn. before this to return to the Weaving Place, and then decided to descend on the north side of the mtn. to a trail instead of just simply backtracking to the car from here. The additional effort paid off, as along almost all the trail I had to hike to get back to the car were fence posts with rocks balanced on top of them, sometimes one and often several. As I counted them off, there were about 82 posts, with only 20 without rocks, making a significant run. Of course it’s not on the same scope, but it reminds me of concept artist Christo’s Running Fence project set up in northern California during the mid-70s. But instead of the creation of a fence here, we have the accenting of such (topping rocks). This is another place I definitely plan to return to on my first decent weather day off. More pictures and details to come of this, then — I can’t help but think this is psychically connected to my ponderings about the life of Gene Fade and his “Weaving” on the ridge just above this.

Interesting “spirit” effect going on here. I remember the sun just coming out again as I snapped the picture of this more arrowhead-like topping rock.

Double posts, but only one with rocks on top of it.

As I returned to the car via a short cut through a meadow, I heard a metallic clicking in the distance. I quickly honed in on the source: this tag on a nearby power line poll with the number 162304 on it. Seemed significant as well, since these are all the numbers between 1 and 6 except 5, and I had just finished counting all the 81-82 posts in the fence art project described above.*

A final place visited before getting back in the car and heading home: perhaps the site of another mossman village atop a bank very near Notherton, and perhaps yet another stop in the life of Gene Fade.

—–

* Note: As mentioned in subsequent entries about this “art project”, the involved posts number 80 instead of 81 or 82.

1 Comment

Filed under Frank Park, Gene Fade's Mtn., Mossmen, Toy Avatars

New Pietmond Plans 02

X-Spot Gallery is slowly shaping up, including the creation of a logical entry point from SoSo Village directly beneath it.

And I think I will rename the village as a whole SoSo, or SoSo Village. Although this still is New Pietmond, it may not be known as such in general. But I guess the X-Spot Gallery and SoSo Village together are New Pietmond… hafta think about that a little more.

Hucka D.:

The X-Spot Gallery and SoSo Village are fused[ now]. Goodnight to you baker b.

bb:

Hi Hucka D.

Hucka D.:

Two in one. Opposites yet equal. High and low[ hi and lo]. Hilo maybe, even. Have you found it yet?

bb:

Found what, Hucka D.?

Hucka D.:

The map. I get past/present/future confused sometimes.

bb:

Not sure. What is it I’m suppose to find… suppose you can’t really tell me that.

Hucka D.:

Um, no. But soon.

bb:

Tomorrow I have a free and beautiful hiking day. Excitement once more (!) Thinking of returning to Lion’s Roar for the first time in several weeks. No snow on the ground now here, Hucka. Hucka? Anyhoot, hafta think about that as well.

Plant:

Carcass-8.

Leave a comment

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^

New Pietmond: Plans

Idea: Might change the name of New Pietmond to SoSo Village?

Idea: Use this quick analysis of the Oblong series by Hucka D. and Baker Bloch

http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2009/10/25/bill-hill/

as basis for new analysis, a New Pietmond Analysis. I had already planned to look over Floydada (much larger critique of Oblong series, written during the creation of the series itself). I’m thinking of a pretty large book, but new and different, as stated. New Pietmond style pretty.

—–

11/10/12, 3:23 pm.

New Pietmond projects:

Revision/updating of “Jeogeot Through Art and Word” exhibit.
Basically I think Jeogeot energy is done for except for pockets such as New Pietmond (and Chilbo, for example, which still lives on despite the reversion to private landownership — I have nothing, really, to do with it now, though, and never did much actually; on the surface). *But* it may still be important to keep developing this exhibit for historic purposes. The merger of Melodie Darwin’s Jeogeot related photos into the exhibit earlier this year is a key. Might even go out and buy some more Jeogeot art (?) Anyway, this is one thing I can do in New Pietmond.

A peak of energy for Jeogeot as a whole might be identified when Chilbo attempted to cooperate with Linden Labs in 2009 to potentially create a primary urban area for Jeogeot as a whole. Instead the energy seemed to soon split between Parktown (closer to Jeogeot’s central infohub) and Chilbo, as the latter gradually withdrew more into self containment again. Just reading about this, actually.

Re-exhibit some of those present in former versions of Pietmond. Thinking esp. of Kollage Kid’s collages, and perhaps Rougeau’s. Sadler’s? (she’s changed her name in the meantime but I can’t remember what it is right off — not any contact with her in over a year). Could attempt to draw in new artists to Pietmond, either from inworld (less likely) or from the “real world” (more likely if I follow this path). Take a look at Kollage Kid’s newer work; check out his contacts and “likes” again.

—–

“Hucka D.?”

Hucka D.:

Yeah?

bb:

How’re you doing?

Hucka D.:

Fine. You seen Plant around?

bb:

No. Not in quite a long while. You?

Hucka D.:

No. Dr. Blood is here[, though].

bb:

Oh. Is he the same as…

Hucka D.:

No. Here he is.

Dr. Blood:

I see you live in Lion’s Roar now. Good work! For both of us.

bb:

Hi Dr. Blood. Are you the same as….

Hucka D.:

No. Anyway, he’s gone. But: no. Just no. (pause) Alright, maybe.

bb:

Maybe he’s the same as…?

(to be continued?)

Leave a comment

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^

New Pietmond 01

New Pietmond is really shaping up. And I have over 700 prims left to play around with on some kind of skybox project I suppose (!) Very exciting times, and I’m certainly glad now I splurged a bit and delved back into Second Life property ownership. The initial cost was about 37 dollars for the land and then the tier amounts to about 45 dollars a month, factoring in my monthly allowance from the Lindens. I’ll probably give the land up in February again, or maybe even at the end of January. So this is a winter project. Who knows how good or bad the winter will be this year, and last year we had a *mild* one here in the mountains. That contributed to me giving up Second Life expenses in early March for certain (and before that abandoning Pietmond at the start of February). The call of the outdoors at that time was strong.

So let’s take a look at what’s developing in New Pietmond so far and what I anticipate happening in the near and perhaps also the more distant future in this virtual location.

Below we have a picture of the east to west expanse of New Pietmond, which goes completely from one side of my roughly square 8016 parcel to the other. As I said in my last post on Pietmond I believe, the X Spot Gallery that use to be a skybox in Carcass-1 (my Maebaleia continent digs from earlier this year) has now been moved to the ground itself, with New Pietmond or the core of such literally built beneath the giant x shape.

Baker Bloch here is up on the top of one of the arms of the “x” itself, looking down through an opening into the heart of New Pietmond. He got up here with aid of the Burl Tower, which we’ll discuss further in a moment.

And here we are on the ground itself at roughly the same spot. As you can see, the Trojan warrior statue found in second stage Pietmond (fall/winter 2011-2012) has returned and becomes the center itself this time. It stands at one corner of what will eventually turn into the newest iteration of the SoSo Gallery also found in earlier versions of Pietmond (both stages 1 and 2 this time), and with the Oblong series still within, just like it was in this very early version from 2010, shortly after I moved into the Otaki Gorge sink.

Btw, here’s my first post on Pietmond proper, describing how I just bought the land within the sink in early September 2010:

http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/more-additions/

I’m surprised to see the House of Truth set up so early on the same spot it occupies now — uphill from Peter’s Mound and to the south. And Peter’s Grave or Peter’s Mound still exists in present Pietmond, over 2 years later. However, like I explained before, I don’t on the land within the sink now, or only a very small portion. Instead my main, 8016 parcel lies to the south of the sink. However, I did own part of this parcel before, and called it Pietmond South at the time. Let’s go back again and find when I first bought a section of this land (since I have the BB Blog pulled up in another window already):

Actually, first off here’s a little history of Pietmond from February 2011; might revise this soon:


http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2011/02/15/pietmond-history-work-in-progress/

And here’s a post concerning the start of *renting* this Pietmond South land:

http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/pietmond-south-beginnings-endings/

And here’s what I originally did with the land:

http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/pietmond-south-cont/

And then here’s where I actually bought part of the parcel I own now, in January 2011. The only thing I can spot that would be slightly the same between then and now is that the Home o’ Fibs has been rezzed at roughly the same place in each. I’ll go more into all this history soon. Can’t wait!

Another view of New Pietmond’s heart from a slightly different angle. I don’t have any officially named “ways” yet in the new village, although I suppose that’s on the docket soon enough.

One sidewalk points to the Brash sculpture set up in eastern Great Pietmond now — easy to tell even from a distance because he is standing on his head. I didn’t create this alignment on purpose, however — just happened. Interesting that you look at the sculpture through a rainbow from this direction. The trojan warrior is to the right and facing us… kind of easy to miss him since he’s roughly the same color and texture as the bare tree behind him. There are oodles of “random” objects in New Pietmond already, and more to come I assume. Lots of details to look at from what you can see in this picture alone…

… and this one also, where a blue robot is stolling the sidewalk in front of the SoSo Gallery.

The Newton statue (of Newton-Jasper Memorial Park fame) has also returned to Pietmond, set up beside a church structure that’s totally new for me. Is it Newton’s church or do they worship Newton somehow?

Now 3 of the 4 giant statues or sculpture found in the last version of Pietmond have returned, with only Rusty missing. Although not in the same position as he was before, still Newton is to the south once more, with Brash to the east and Goldie to the west again.

Oh, and Carcassonne has not returned, since the old center of Pietmond (center of sink itself) doesn’t apply in this version. But heck that could change as well.

In east New Pietmond comes a sort of park surrounded by a square shaped sidewalk. Directly ahead of us here (and at one corner of the park) stands the Burl Tower built around a large tree, allowing avatars access to the roof of the X Spot Gallery if they wish for further exploration. This Burl Tower was also present in Carcass-1 of Maebaelia.

Again, while I have the Carrcass-1 posts of the BB Blog pulled up, thought I’d share the first link about the X Spot Gallery structure itself:

http://bakerblinker.wordpress.com/2012/05/25/x-spot/

Baker stands on the balcony of the Home o’ Fibs, looking toward the voided center of the sink. “Yes, this is certainly a *new* version of Pietmond,” he might think while admiring this view, “a New Pietmond for certain.”

1 Comment

Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, Jeogeot, Pietmond^, Sunklands^