Unleash the Funk: Soul Step Dance Studio
- At March 18, 2013
- By Guest Swagributor
- In Local Happenings
- 2
I’ve been dancing at Soul Step for four years now. I started when I was about seven, even though the age for that group was nine and up. But that didn’t stop me! I’m so glad I do hip hop. It’s a huge inspiration for me, and an important part of my life.
About every year, there’s a dance showcase performed at Soul Step. It’s so fun to watch, and to dance in! My youth class did a hip-hop routine, and we were so excited! I think that for me, when I perform in dances like that, I’m nervous, but once I start dancing I just get lost in the music and I have a great time.
This year at the showcase, two breakers from Grand Rapids came. They were from the dance crew 61syx. They were awesome! And it was unbelievable what they did (check out my video below!) and how they actually did it without breaking every bone in their body (like I probably would on the first attempt). There were some contemporary dances too, (not done by 61syx, I’m sure that’s a little out of their style) which were astonishing to watch. In addition to hip hop and break dancing there was also a house performance. It’s more “loosey goosey” as Emily puts it. Emily is the owner of Soul Step. She also teaches my hip-hop class, along with a lot of other classes. She works really hard, and she’s an inspiration to me too. She’s a great dancer. I want to be just like her.
Also at the showcase, Emily talked about hip-hop culture. Hip hop isn’t just running around the floor and sliding, and breaking isn’t just spinning on your head either. It’s a way of expressing yourself. It’s also a form of art. Anyone can do it, if you set your mind to it, and everyone can dance. Like Seoul said at the showcase, (Seoul is from 61syx) it’s important that younger kids are learning and embracing this dance. That’s how it continues – the youth pass it on and keep it alive. And it is right here in Northern Michigan.
There are lots of different classes offered at Soul Step (they even have beginner hip-hop classes for adults). I definitely suggest you check them out!
Video of Seoul from 61syx by Izzy Beckwith
Leapin’ Leprechaun 5K 2013
- At March 16, 2013
- By Kim
- In Kim's posts, Local Happenings
- 0
Congratulations to all of the Leapin’ Leprechaun 5K participants for braving the weather and for all the green (less pinches to hand out)! Happy early St. Patrick’s Day and top o’ the mornin’ to you all!
A Look Through Our Lens – Week of March 14, 2013
- At March 14, 2013
- By Kim
- In Local Happenings
- 0
Photo descriptions (L to R):
1) Boss Hogg visiting the Homestead for closing day on the slopes – Glen Arbor 2) Bison – Oleson’s Farm, Traverse City 3) Totem Shop at night – Glen Arbor 4) March frost pattern on glass 5) Sunset over the vineyards – Old Mission
Peninsula 6) Art’s Tavern decorated for St. Patty’s Day – Glen Arbor 7) Rainy reflections – Boardman River, Downtown Traverse City 8) Rain drops on branch 9) Birds on a wire, March rain shower – Traverse City
Maple Sugaring Part 1, Tree Tapping
- At March 13, 2013
- By Nate
- In Local Happenings
- 6
This time of year, for many, is Michigan at its ugliest… it is, after all, mud season. The attraction of bright, sunny skies and warm beaches found in the southern reaches of our country is no wonder in contrast to the long stints of cold, gray skies and the wet, sloppy mix of snow, rain, and mud found around here, but as Emerson said there is beauty in all seasons:
“To the attentive eye, each moment of the year has its own beauty, and in the same field, it beholds, every hour a picture which was never seen before, and which shall never be seen again.”
If you do stick around this time of year, I suggest finding a way to get involved with maple-syrup production. Grab the kids and head to a maple-syrup pancake breakfast at a place like Wagbo Farm, harvest from one of your own trees, or find a friend who’s already into it to tag along with, like I did. If you’ve been cooped up inside or find yourself generally out of touch with nature maple sugaring will pull you right back in or maybe even put you in touch for the first time. There are a lot of different-size operations out there but they all start by tapping trees at the magical time when winter is on the cusp of spring. Days need to be below freezing at night and above freezing (ideally in the 40s) during the day for sap to flow, be collected, and then boiled down into sap. There is a ton of boiling involved- sap-to-syrup ratio is 40 gallons to 1 gallon.
Matt McDonough, a co-worker and friend, is allowing me to “help” him this season and I’ll share what I see in a series of posts. Matt’s put his operation together over the past six seasons in classic Northern Michigan style, utilizing networking, innovation, ingenuity, and good old-fashioned elbow grease. The trees he taps are on a friend’s property, his sap buckets are re-purposed frosting buckets, the bucket lids are scraps from a sign company, and he welded his own evaporator, to give you a sense of how he does things. He also does most of the work himself but does contract out some of the heavy lifting to his son Sam and daughter Abby who you’ll meet in another post.
The photos in todays post are from tree-tapping day. In all, we put in 37 taps and tried a variety of spouts – Matt is always experimenting. In his operation tapping involves drilling into a maple tree a couple of inches, tapping in a spout with a wooden hammer, and hooking a bucket with a lid to the spout. The spout directs sap from the tree’s xylem, where energy-rich, sugary sap is transported from the tree’s roots to its branches, into the collection buckets. The actual physiological explanation of how sap moves is a mystery to me but I couldn’t help but be awestruck that a stream of sap flows straight up a tree for several weeks a year and there’s so much of it
siphoning off a few gallons doesn’t hurt it a bit. Oh and if you are wondering if the holes hurt the tree, doesn’t seem to, we saw a bunch from previous seasons that had completely closed up and healed! Needless to say I left the woods that day even more of a tree geek than I already was.
A Look Through Our Lens – Week of March 7, 2013
- At March 07, 2013
- By Kim
- In Local Happenings
- 0
1) Thaw and refreeze of March 2) Mama and two fawns resting – Burdickville 3) Snowy road – Benzie County 4) Sunshine over the snow 5) Pine 6) Patterns in snow 7) Ice shell – Good Harbor 8) Tapping the maples 9) Esch Beach