Friday, September 1, 2023

two primes and a square

A year can be divided by seven and thirteen and four

Imperfectly factored into two primes and a square 

Determined by the motion of the moon and the earth 

Leaving one day as a remainder or two in a leap


The seven day week is a natural unit of time 

Fitting closely with the phases of the moon

With four weeks approximating the lunar cycle

Though a careful observer sees the slippage 


A year spans four seasons of thirteen weeks each

And sometimes contains thirteen full moons 

The so-called blue moon making a season with four

Shifted a bit each year by the leftover days


Fifty-two weeks times seven days makes 364

Coming up a bit short out of sync with the sun

Four seasons times thirteen weeks makes 52

Almost but not quite exactly one year 


Thus the jokers get placed in a deck of cards 

With its four suits of thirteen cards matching up

With our actual seasons and weeks and moons 

Drawing arcane cosmology into games of chance 


Meaning nothing in the end but still interesting to me

Imagining a calendar that could be shuffled and cut

Arranged into a random timeline distribution 

Similar to how some memories play back 


If such a calendar could be dealt around in hands

Games based on imperfect information could be devised

Starting with a kind of thought experiment 

Envisioning incomplete sets of seven and thirteen and four 


Mathematics is quintessentially human

Concepts existing only in the imagination

Constructing proofs of true statements

Numbering our remaining days

Skylands NJBG September 1, 2023

Thursday, August 31, 2023

DeKorte August 31, 2023

Monday, August 28, 2023

picture this

Picture a young science teacher on an adventure 

After a last minute invite to join a summer expedition 

To make a rainforest tree inventory recording girth and height 

Traveling to the opposite end of the earth


From northeast New Jersey to northeast Australia

Encountering plants animals stars all new and different

Absorbing the experience working hard getting around

Finding a way through the dense forest growth 


Teamed up in pairs to survey designated areas

Their challenging task how to measure elevation 

Needing to figure out the best way to get it done

Inspiring our friend to use himself to gauge the height 


Visualize this person standing at the base of a tall tree

Smiling quite pleased by his human yardstick presentation 

Having drawn one foot lines across his shirt and pants

Marking himself up into the unit of measurement 


As I heard the story after half a century gone by 

It seems that shirt came back as a cherished souvenir

And his classroom the next year featured rainforest lessons 

And the annual science fair included a rainforest room


The person here in front of me talking today 

Contending with the challenges of illness and age

Lights up when recalling this happy memory 

Bringing back that smile for me to see