Friday, June 20, 2014

Great Salt Lake in 3D Part 1 The Marina

The Great Salt Lake is one the most unique and mysterious bodies of water on our planet. This post is the first in a series of articles exploring Utah's inland sea. Many of the photos can be viewed in 3D by gently crossing the eyes until both images become one. It's EZ to see 3D. 
Last weekend, the Zenberg Blogue was invited to attend the grand opening of Great Salt Lake Marina's new Visitor Center. FOX 13 Utah's Big Buddah and two representatives from the Deseret News, (a photographer and writer), were the only other media in attendance for the AM event that included a boat ride on the Great Salt Lake. 
Ceremonial cake and chicken salad croissant sandwiches were provided too. 
After enjoying some food, we headed to one of the docks to wait for our ride. 
When the boat arrived we boarded and donned the life jackets that were provided. Mine needed some serious adjusting to make it fit correctly. 
Then we set sail.

I was surprised at the size of the swells and got rather wet from sea spray as we sped across the lake. My clothes quickly dried and became hard and crunchy with salt. 
Sea foam accumulates on the rocks along the levy to depths of four feet.
This light beacon sits at the mouth of the marina to help guide mariners. The 1200' tall Kennecott, (now Rio Tinto), smoke stack is visible in the background.
Billions of cute little sea monkeys play just beneath the surface of the briny marina water.
Next time we head west, all the way to the other side of the Great Salt Lake to the very mysterious Stansbury Island. See ya there!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Fester of ColourZ SO4 Lake City


In Living Colour

On Saturn Day, the Salt Lake City Krishna Temple hosted the Festival of Colors USA. Although I've known about and even dabbled in Krishna consciousness for more than forty years, this was the first Festival of Colors I have attended. I was astonished at the turn out and found it to be a very positive experience with good food, great music and lots of friendly people enjoying a jubilant celebration. It was impressive to me that no one was smoking, drinking or doing drugs and everyone was positive, friendly and pitched in to clean up afterward. As usual, I seemed to be the eldest person in attendance... something I'm getting used to. 


Trending 

I discovered Krishna Consciousness when I was still in grade school. My elder brother of eleven years, taught me some basic meditation and introduced me to Eastern philosophy. I became familiar with Eastern thought and had read the I Ching, Upanishads* and Bhagavad Gita before graduating from grade school. At the age of eleven, I had the opportunity to see a performance** of sitar master, Ravi Shankar, along with his family and friends, at the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City. I was the youngest person there. In those days, none of my peers listened to ragas and most of them had limited exposure to meditation and Eastern religion. I've always lived way beyond the trend curve*** and was so pleased to discover that so many people now have interest in Krishna Consciousness. Tens of thousands attended the event on Saturn Day.  


Jai Krishna and the Ananda Groove played an inspiringly hip and rockin' set.

MC Yogi had the opportunity to improvise thanks to technical difficulties. 

In ninth grade, I did a book report on the Upanishads. Another student did his report on the Book of Mormon. The other pupils giggled and thought that was weird, (and probably thought my report was even weirder), but I was pleased that he did it with no regard for peer approval or affirmation.

** Former Beatle, George Harrison, was the headliner that night, but I enjoyed the Shankar set as much if not more than the popular songs of the quiet one. I had the opportunity to see Ravi Shankar perform three times before he died.

*** I've never been a joiner and never really felt a need to fit in. Even in my punk rock days, I wore my hair long whilst the "scene" was wearing it shaven or short. Eventually, the trendees wanted to be like me and began wearing their hair long too. That's when I cut mine off and proclaimed that PUNK IS DEAD.
Heil Krishna

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

April foolZ


For at least four years I've been perfecting a wonderful April Fools prank that was to be published at 12:01 am today, April 1. I say, was, because the content on the file no longer exists* so the April Fools joke is on myself.

Dumb decision 

I decided to have one final read through and had changed two words to two other words when I noticed that the old text was being consumed by the new text as I was typing. I quickly "undid" a couple of times and zap! Blank white monitor. Reacting quickly, I failed to undo undo so immediately closed the file. I've learned the hard way that closing an unsaved file sometimes doesn't auto-save changes I've made to it, so considered closing to be a possible option for recovering the text. Nope! Nada! Zilch! Not even!

I considered rewriting it but it was just too perfect to reproduce, at least for right now. It's still on file in my brain so who knows? Maybe someday. Meanwhile, 
Have a Nice April Fools Day!

 *Nobody's blaming Martin Harris' wife... OK! She did it! And that George Bush too! And those Tea Party guys!!! and that one Santa's Elf who went bad, (snappy dresser though). 

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Best Song of 2013

There were a plethora of great songs last year, but the one that ascended to the BEST OF position, is the Cogito's RemiX of Adrea Castiano's "Falling"

The Falling RemiX was recorded, produced and engineered by Mason Rosenberg who also played on, produced and recorded the original track for Adrea Castiano. The Falling RemiX is masterfully reconstructed and exemplifies an exaltation of the original piece while exhibiting superior technique and ability in the realm of remiX. 

The Cogito, a moniker used by musician extraordinaire,  Mason Rosenberghas demonstrated exhaustive expertise for half a decade with original and remiX compositions that are always amazing and pleasing to the ear.


The Cogito's Mason Rosenberg is maybe best known for playing bass in the Vox Jaguars, A Quantum Visionary and numerous other bands. Mason currently lives in Santa Cruz, CA and in addition to being a popular bassist, he also writes, produces and records music. Mason's bio is so vast that it requires a Wiki installment* to cover his musical activities sufficiently. 

Mason's work is highly respected among his musical peers. The ineffable Denney Joints** of Midnite Snack said "Mason is one of the most accomplished musicians I know... he has refined taste and knows the value of art and integrity..." Apollo Records recording artist, Oliver Nickell*** of Tree said "One thing I've always admired about Mason is his musical diversity and exploration of sound... [he] has covered much musical ground in a short lifespan." 

Congrats to the Cogito, a worthy recipient of Zenberg Bolgue's BEST SONG of 2013.

See Mason's Bio at: 

** "Mason is one of the most accomplished, most serious musicians I know. And his attitude isn't fucked up either, even on par with most frustrated people trying to have a better attitude. He has refined taste and knows the value of art and integrity over curly, golden locks." --Denney Joints

*** "One thing I've always admired about Mason is his musical diversity and exploration of sound. As the years progressed, his music has acquired a quite unique quality from experimenting and blending together many different genres. From his early work producing various music with Sir Paul in high school and their legendary live set at Harbor High's annual battle of the bands, his experimental effort in Pterodactobot, his contribution of raw power-driving baselines in the Vox Jaguars, and eventually his refined down-tempo, glitch-influenced production, the Cogito; Mason has covered much musical ground in a short lifespan."        --Oliver "Tree" Nickell