Friday, May 01, 2026

20 years of Reykjavík Pool Culture

Image: Art Bicnick, Reykjavík Grapevine

Discovering and being part of the pool culture in Iceland has been one of the great joys of my life. Here are some impressions from various times I’ve enjoyed it over the last twenty-one years: 

                                                      ~ 2004 ~

Some vacation trips are family affairs, others are romantic getaways for two. Then there is the third type, the solo excursion. Traveling by oneself has some unique advantages. You only have to please yourself. You can set the pace, either fast or slow, according to your mood or disposition.

So you can imagine my slight consternation when, during my carefully planned solo trip to Iceland last spring, I was “befriended” by a somewhat clueless and flabby college counselor who was the tour leader for a group of teachers-in-training from a state school in Michigan. He had done no homework about this trip, none about Iceland in general, and none about Reykjavík in particular. My schedule was complete, I had about twenty hours of things to do each day. I was not a slave to that schedule but I didn’t have any time to babysit.

Nevertheless, I mentioned to this chaperone that I was going to Laugardalslaug, and he was welcome to come along. “Do you have a car? How far is it?” Well no, I didn’t have a car and it was about 1.5 km to the pool from our guest-house on Bólstaðharlið—not a really long walk but far enough to tax the feeble. In other words, my accidental companion. We did make it there, he was complaining all the way and we had to stop a few times to rest. We showered and changed into our swimsuits; he felt the need to wear a shirt into the pool. I did my laps, then soaked a bit to get the travel kinks out. I think my ‘pal’ spent the whole time wondering what he had gotten himself into.

Finally, it was time to go (the pool was closing), and we headed back. He had to stop at the American Style restaurant, where we drank Cokes while he complained about his time in Iceland. Some date. When we got back to the guesthouse, he went straight to bed but I stayed up and talked with some of his charges, the students who were far more in tune with the idea of Icelandic exploration. Over the course of the evening, one of the students was complaining about being stuck with such a dud. I thought about this for a while and then said: “Yeah, but I had to see him naked!” 

I returned to Laugardalslaug later in the week, this time I made the mistake of mentioning the film of Hallgrímur Helgasson’s 101 Reykjavík to a fellow ‘hot potter’. He had not been amused by it and let me know it. Evidently I still had a lot to learn about pool culture.

                                                      ~ 2006 ~

“The water has memory, you see, the water has memory.”


When a man who has spent his life on the ocean speaks poetically of water, I will give him due consideration.

I was sitting in a hot pot at the Vesturbæjarlaug pool, sharing water with a retired trawler captain, a Spaniard, and an elderly woman, the conversation was as warm as we were. It was another unseasonably fine October day in Reykjavík and I was taking a final visit to the neighborhood pool. The conversation swirled like the water in which we soaked; moving between politics, economics, wool, music and water. Always water, this rock in the North Atlantic, surrounded by water and the fish in it which generated wealth, the heat from the geothermal water making living comfortable here, and the electricity generated from the hydroelectric plants making modern life practical. I mentioned Halldór Laxness and his novel Kristnihald undir Jökli, wherein the "fallen" pastor Jón Primus declared his only theory: “… water is good… one doesn’t even have to go by my theory unless one is thirsty.” Everybody laughed. Water is good, especially when one is in it with congenial company. When I had finally become thoroughly cooked I reluctantly left.

BEST MUSIC OF THE DAY: The speech of an Icelandic coquette in hot-pot 3 at the Vesturbaejarlaug thermal pool (13:00). She was in an animated discussion (about working hours I believe), but I could appreciate were the beautiful cadences and inflections of her voice. Did I mention how much I enjoy being here?

                                                      ~ 2009 ~

I haven't had any deep conversations in the "hot pots" this trip as yet, but there have been moments, like the one Sunday with a mother and father and their ten year-old daughter. The daughter was resting her head on her father's massive chest, talking to him quietly and sweetly. She then started to croon a plaintive childrens song- a very touching and tender scene.

Monday: I was in a pot with three older people when some young men from from the U.S. came in and started taking computer repair. Talk about a mood killer! They left soon enough; the ensuing quiet was most welcome.

Tuesday: I was in the same pot. The sun was shining so you could bask in it while the hot water swirled all about you. Then a trio of bikini-clad teen-age girls came in. From the sound of their conversation I surmised that they were Swedish. One had a waterproof camera (normally forbidden in the pool—but who’s going object to some girls snapping pictures of each other?) and I used that camera to take a picture of all three them together. The sounds of their voices were like singing as well.

Grace is real.

Wednesday: Ok, I'm back from the pool, were I spent time listening to an old fisherman punctuate his monologues with Icelandic poetry. He evidently was well known to the regulars who, like me, enjoyed his performance.

                                                      ~ 2012 ~

Monday: At Vesturbæjarlaug the air temp was 4°c, a balmy 39°f but the sun had retreated behind leaden clouds, giving a somber look to the surroundings. There were only about a half-dozen other bathers in the pools; I had never seen them so empty. I did my laps then went into the medium hot pot, alone. The cricks and aches from my flight quickly were forgotten.

Tuesday: This afternoon I spent close to three hours there: enjoying the sun, the 38-40° C. (100-104° F) warm water as well as interacting with an interesting mix of people from various backgrounds. The conversation was lively, the first half-hour was dominated by an older gentleman whose non-stop banter kept the pool laughing. It was all Icelandic, I could understand the laughter and when he referenced numerous vacation sites (Costa del Sol, Sardinia, Crete, San Francisco) but otherwise I could understand little. When he left a woman took up the slack for another half-hour, also in Icelandic. The crowd turned over, and several of the new arrivals started talking to me (in English) about a wide variety of subjects: the destruction of the Reykjavík city center, Vikings in the new world, Snorri Sturluson, the Kensington Rune Stone (they brought it up!), Shakespeare’s visit to Iceland (?!), the spread of Icelandic pop culture, and music education in Iceland (one of the men in the pool had been a music teacher of the Ákadóttir Twins!!)

Eventually the crowd thinned out but two men (a nephew and uncle) remained and our talk turned to Halldór Laxness. We talked about the problems of translation, various books, and the subtle ironies in Laxness' writing. Then it was only the nephew who remained, he spoke to me about his life in Denmark, how he wanted to return to Iceland permanently, and about the water. “God made the cold water, and the Devil made the hot water, and the mixing of them is what makes Iceland such a special place.” He also introduced me to the pleasure/torture of the 'cold pot'—with water in the 8-10° C. range (45-50° F.) and the importance of drinking lots of water when in the hot pots.

On Wednesday I spent some time on the Seltjarnarnes peninsula, and went to the salt-water pool there. My swimming pass wouldn’t work, the attendant laughed and said “That's for the city pools, you're in the country now!” The pool and the changing room were very nice indeed, one might call it ritzy, although I’m not big on the way salt water feels on my skin. I had a conversation with a couple of teen-aged boys about music, they were into “Pink Floyd and Led Zep.” Upon learning that I was from Minnesota, an elderly woman mentioned going to the University there in the 1950s, learning nutrition. I asked her about Ancel Keys, but she didn’t remember him.

Friday found me back at Vesturbæjarlaug, in the hot-pot with Ufuoma, a vivacious woman from Nigeria (via the UK.) She had married an Icelander and had embraced the country fully—including hugging several of the pool patrons that knew her. There was a morning exercise group that morning that we joined; she was in a lot better shape than I was. Her performance suggested that she was an experienced dancer. Our conversation showed that she was highly educated (I later found out that she has translated Chaucer into Icelandic for a stage play.) Her name meant ‘peace of mind’, and she lived up to the moniker. The hot tub conversation we were having was interrupted when we were joined by Vigtýr, ‘The Banjo Player,’ as she called him. He was in his mid 30s, tall and handsome, with long blonde hair—a regular Viking. Ufuoma, who had been out of the country for the last few weeks, had to catch up on things and asked him how he had been doing lately. His answer was quick in coming and surprised me with its bluntness: “I’ve been feeling kind of… I guess you could say I've been lonely…” Ufuoma, expressing genuine concern, started asking questions. Vigtýr said he had always been self-reliant, but lately it had started to catch up with him. Ufuoma knew that he had some health issues as well, including surgery to relieve nerve damage in one leg, a condition which caused him to have phantom pain in his foot. Ufuoma nonchalantly picked up his leg and began to massage the offending foot. “I know someone in London, he can help you, no surgery, you should go see him,” she said. She then lifted her leg above the swirling water and showed us the scars on her leg. She had gotten them from the exhaust of a motor scooter. They were interesting, two almost perfectly round spots. Had her healer friend helper her recover? Or did she just want to show us her leg? I didn’t have any interesting stories to offer about either of my legs. The instant rapport we shared (based mostly on Ufuoma’s extremely engaging personality), was like a meeting between old friends. It would be hard to image in any other circumstance, but the leveling nature of the hot-pot made it seem natural. It was with great deal of reluctance that I finally took my leave to catch my flight back home.

                                                      ~ 2015 ~

Monday: The pool was, as it usually is, sublime. It was sunny, with a light breeze, 8°C. air temp (about 46°F.) There are two new GIANT 'hot-pots', better for extended lounging, but not as intimate as the old ones (which are still there.) Got into an extended conversation with a woman of 'indeterminate' age, the first topic always seems to be "why Iceland?"

Tuesday: Earlier in the day, at the pool, the Icelandic author Þórbergur Þórðarson came up in conversation. My companion mentioned another book by this author which I will have to pick it up when I return home. In the book the protagonist pines for a young girl who “… still had a bit of God in her.” When he returns from fishing, the girl had grown up and the main character becomes disillusioned with the result. As we were talking, in the shallow wading pool near us, there were numerous young children getting rudimentary swimming instruction. Their shrieks and cries were, to my ears, akin to birds singing.

“Those children still have that little bit of God in them, don't they?” said my companion.

                                                      ~ 2018 ~

Back again in Vesturbæjar, this time with The Weaver in tow. We came straight from the airport, going to a nearby bakery/coffeeshop for some breakfast then getting into the pool about 10:00. The hot-pots there were a perfect cure for jet-lag. Suitably refreshed, we left the pool and dressed and then were off to Ólafoss, Gljúfrasteinn, returning to our apartment mid-afternoon. We returned a couple of times during our trip, once getting into a discussion about Independent People, the famous novel by Halldór Laxness. The local in our shared hot pot was enthusiastic: “I read it in Icelandic and in English, side by side—it was a perfect translation.” The Weaver, initially skeptical about going to the pool, warmed up to the idea after a few trips.

                                                      ~ 2022 ~

I woke up Wednesday morning completely refreshed. Any lingering traces of jet-lag were gone and by now my morning routine had been established: coffee, cereal with fruit and milk, checking email and the weather, then heading out to the pool for some laps and socializing. It was a bit colder that particular morning, the temps were just below freezing and there was a thin film of ice on the pond across the street from my digs. It almost made me wish I had brought a warmer jacket. The paving stone sidewalks were a bit slippery but I made it to Vesturbæjarlaug without managing to break my neck. At the pool I did manage a few laps and then I just indulged myself in trying out each of the different soaking pools before returning to my usual 38-40°c hot-pot.

I spent Wednesday afternoon noon at the pool where I struck up a conversation with two people, one was a thirty-something man that I learned was Guðmundur Óskar Guðmundsson, the bassist for Hjaltalín! He was most surprised when I told him I had a copy of one of his limited release albums. My other pool-mate was a friend of his, a lively older woman who was 95 and proud of it (“I still drive!”) and we shared travel stories and commented on the weather (not a cloud in the sky again today!)
Thursday was another beautiful day at the pool (45°F, sunny, no wind). Had a long conversation with an Icelandic woman about Icelandic literature, music, film and drama all the while soaking in a hotpot directly across from the noted actor Ingvar Sigurðsson. I reluctantly left her and the pool for it was time to officially start Airwaves. I made my way over to the Iceland Airwaves check-in and got my wrist band.

                                                      ~ 2023 ~

The Vesturbæjarlaug pool was a bee-hive of activity. I did my laps, explored the various hot-pots, and finally settled in at the 38°c hot-pot. I saw Ingvar again, as he was making his rounds of the pool. I was soon joined by a man who recognized me from years previous. “You’re that guy with the Halldór Laxness website,” he said. I had recognized him immediately because he was a doppelgänger of one of my neighbors at home. We made some small talk, he asked why I was here. I mentioned the festival, and also said that I was going to meet up with some old blog-friends. “I’m having lunch with Silja A—, the writer at TMM, to talk about the new translation of Halldór LaxnessSalka Valka. “Oh, you’re in good hands with Silja,” he said, smiling.

Everybody knows everybody here.

On the other side of the lap pool was a grass-covered earthen berm, it helps to cut the wind and offers a bit of privacy. As I talked with my old ‘pal’ I noticed two men in swim suits lying on the side of the berm, feet up-head down. The air temp was warmer now, it had risen to 4°c (39°f) but it was still cooler than I would like when taking a nap in my Speedo. They must have stayed there for several minutes, I stopped watching after a while, when I looked up later they were gone. I looked at the clock and it was 1230 hours. My luncheon date was at 1400 hours, and on the other side of the city from the pool, about a half mile from my apartment. I said goodby to my tub-mate, and headed back to the apartment to prepare for the afternoon’s adventure.

The next day I spent a long time in conversation with Lárus Halldór Grimsson, an Icelandic music veteran who had been in the prog-rock band Eik in the seventies. He was full of stories; hanging out with David Bowie, writing music for plays, and had even portrayed a young Halldór Laxness in a television production! Lárus seemed to know everybody in Iceland, and was full of arcane references, but I think I surprised him when he mentioned Baggalútur. I said that I not only knew of them that I had seen them perform and I even had one of their CDs. I spoke of the Ákadóttir Twins who comprised Pascal Pinon and he knew their father well. We also talked about the late, great Jóhann Jóhannsson whom he knew back in Jóhann’s days in the punk-rock group Ham, which brought out me telling them about seeing them perform the previousnight. From Ham and Johann it was only a slight turn in the conversation to Hildur Guðnadóttir, the Academy Award-winning composer. He had given her a stuffed Pink Panther doll when she was a small child!

Speaking of children, a young man with a boy came into our pot, the man explained that the boy was autistic, and liked to take water-bottles! I moved my $8 medical-grade water bottle away as the scamp cavorted around the pool as we talked. The man wasn’t his father, he was just a friend of the family (and not even an Icelander!) and had some free time so he took the boy to the pool to give his parents a little respite. No big deal here, it takes a village to raise a child. I managed to give the boy a side-eye wink that he caught and answered with a shy smile. After the pool, I sauntered back to the apartment. It was a bittersweet trip; by this time tomorrow I would be in the Keflavík airport, waiting to return home.

It’s good to live in the moment when on vacation.

No what-might-have-beens, no second guessing your itinerary, no comparing this trip to another one. The weather, while still warm by November standards, had turned a bit windy, so I spent most of the afternoon in the hotpots at Vesturbæjarlaug swimming complex. There were a lot of people there with Airwaves armbands, and even a couple of performers. Lolling in the shallow oval hot-pot, laying back with my head on its rim, gazing at the wispy clouds floating high above me allows my brain to stop, being one with them, a moment I will long remember.

Vesturbæjarlaug, an open-air swimming pool, is my personal favorite. Its proximity to the university insures that the pool’s population always consists of a mix of backgrounds: a fair amount of academics, actors, students, tourists and the usual neighborhood old-timers. Geezers like me (67+) get in free, without a doubt the best tourist deal in the whole country. When I walked in and went to the reception desk the clerk asked “Is this your first time here?” when she heard my accent. The first time this trip, yes, but it is just one of dozens—many fond hours I’ve spent here in the hot-pots, absorbing heat and culture in equal measures. I even do laps— and my partaking in actual physical exercise is a rarity. The clerk handed me my ticket and, after scanning it at the gate, I went down into the locker room. I stripped naked and headed for the showers to wash with soap (special emphasis on cleaning the germy bits) and then donned my Speedo to head out to the pool complex. Four double lanes in the 25 meter lap pool, a large shallow pool with slides for children, and six soaking pools of varying temperatures and sizes. The chlorine level in the water is mercifully low which allows one to stay for hours and any traces are dissipated by the fresh sub-arctic air (bring a water container to avoid dehydration!) If you need even more heat there is also a steam bath and a sauna. In the hot pot at Vesturbæjarlaug the topic of Halloween in Iceland came up. “Not my cup of tea,” said a woman sitting next to me with a temporary tattoo of a flaming skull on the back of her hand, “The old Icelandic holidays are disappearing,” a man said, ruefully. He recognized me from a visit ten years ago! I commented that I had been in Iceland once before on Halloween and it was nothing then.

                                                      ~ 2025 ~

Monday: I met Ingimar in one of the hotpots where he told me interesting stories about his exploits in NATO. And of course he knew my old blog pal Kristín. By the time I was thoroughly cooked Ingimar had started to repeat his stories. The pool was crowded, with lots of families and kids. I talked with a couple of men: one a native, the other an ex-pat DJ from Brooklyn. Theatre, literature and even AI music generation were some of the topics of our conversation. I mentioned that I listen to my own AI augmented songs as a playlist, he did the same too.

Tuesday: Woke up early, at 06:00 it was still night. After breakfast I made my way to the pool and took my first lap under the stars. Dawn broke slowly and by the time I left the hotpot it was morning. In the shower I noticed a man who looked like Langi Seli across from me. I asked if he was who I thought he was, and he was (I almost didn’t recognize him without his Gretsch.) I told him of the times I had seen him play, and mentioned the video I made in 2006(!) of him and his band, Skuggarnir. We continued our conversation as we got dressed—our lockers just happened to be adjoining—about Airwaves, Minnesota music and what we were currently doing. When I left, Langi was at the mirror, making sure his pompadour was looking good (it was)

Wednesday: When I was at the pool when one of a group of six ‘mature’ women smiled at me when she saw me entering the hot pot: “We were just talking about you—you are the one who goes to see plays in Icelandic when you can’t speak the language!” Talk about being felt welcome! We talked a bit about Icelandic drama and culture, including Halldór Laxness, of course. One of the women was close friends with Halldór’s daughter Guðny who has an AirBnb near Gljúfrasteinn, Laxness’s estate. Later, I sat with a gang of six Danish festival-goers (you can tell who they are by the wristbands) and we compared notes. They come almost every year for the last 12 or so years. We were going to see some of the same acts tonight.

Thursday: I was sitting in a hot-pot talking with Anna Róshildur and she mentioned the very restrictive audition process for a local act to get into Airwaves off-venue schedule, to say nothing about the regular venues. Troy (from Texas) introduced himself and when he found out that I was from Minnesota mentioned that he was a Vikings fan, I looked for the incision when his broken heart had been mended. He laughed.

Friday: Was talking with a woman from Finland whom I had seen the day before, in the exact same spot in the large hot-pot. She was here for the Airwaves festival too so we compared notes (Ms Obama!) Troy showed up and when I told him of meeting a English couple the night before he said “Barry and Tina! They come every year!“

Saturday: A daytime moon was shining over Vesturbæjarlaug:
Had some lively conversations in the pool’s biggest hotpot with some fellow Iceland Airwaves attendees: Troy from Texas who had known Tina and Barry (see yesterday’s post) for years. A German and a Finnish woman were also very sociable. After a while Troy left (to do laps) and the talk turned from music to horses, so I made my exit as well.

And when will I return? I’ve got a senior pool pass good until October…

By Professor Batty


Comments: 0 


Wednesday, April 29, 2026

My God, what is this salty discharge? Is this crying? This is terrible - I care!

Twenty Years Ago on FITK

Immediately after I woke up this morning, I burst into tears. And I felt so confused about it... I’d thought my days of random bawling were over, that I had successfully buried the past.. but no, apparently not. And this too, after my weekend had been hugely successful. Lunch with friends, shopping, good conversation, films, total unwind-o-rama!

There are of course a number of reasons why this might have happened:

1) The whole *Monday* thing. A lazy weekend gone by, a new week starting again. Too much work at office, same old jig of deadlines and deliverables etc.

2) In conversations with various friends it kind of emerged that I still cared for S. Yes, I did not want to talk to him or be in touch with him or ever so much as see his face again, but I did wish him well, and maybe somewhere, I still did care. I was actually showing someone my old photographs and a couple of his pictures dropped out of a brown paper envelope. I'd earlier burned all his pictures, but I never even knew these existed. So I sat and tore them up. And then burned them. Jeez, if only exorcizing the past were that simple!

3) Last night, a very old friend proposed marriage to me. He's been around for like almost 6 years now, and he put it across in a very matter-of-fact, non-romantic way. I kind of liked it. Weighing the pros and cons, balancing out, like it was a deal we both could benefit from.
“We've known each other for so long, and we connect mentally, and our families know each other (so there's no problem there), and there’s so much we can talk about, and we're as comfortable talking to each other as we are in silence, so why don't we get married?”
There was something very mature in the whole thing, so I guess it kind of softened the blow, as well as did not get me all shaky-kneed and stuff. Of course, it isn’t everyday that people say they want to marry me (heck, it’s almost been never), but I thought he did it extremely well.

I did not know what to say. I tried being funny (“Marriage? Abhi to mera khelne ki umar hai”), but I knew I was kidding myself. So I just mumbled something like... “I’m glad you considered it, but I'm not really ready for marriage yet, maybe in some years or so… ”

To which reply he put forth another admirable shot, saying, “Ok, I’m going to ask you again in some years, tell me then.”

So yeah, all of this. And my tears in the morning. Whew. Most of you must be thinking I’m all messed up.

Which is true.

I am.


~RS

Reposted

By Professor Batty


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Monday, April 27, 2026

Bill Dale Revisited



Six variations on a country-rock-themed morality play to start off your week on a high-steppin’ note:

The Bill Dale Story

Don’t talk about the things you know are pointless,
just plug that jukebox and have a drink on me...
Ah, how about a drink for every dink in this whole god-damn bar,
and tell my landlord I'm in Tennessee...

... cause I got one way of livin’,
I got no hands on the wheel,
got my left foot in the coffin,
and the other on a banana peel...

Well even though I think you’re just an asshole,
do you think it's alright if your wife comes home with me?
She says she’s sick of your underwear tricks and she can’t get no sleep.
Now what do you think about that for honesty?

... Yeah I got one way of livin’,
I got no hands on the wheel,
got my left foot in the coffin,
and the other on a banana peel...

(spoken) Well, this friend of mine,
he got into a little bit of trouble,
needless to say,
needless to say,
he got into a little bit more trouble...
and then he got into a whole lot of trouble...
needless to say,
you know what happened...
there ain't no moral,
ain't no end, but I’ll tell ya...
needless to say...

... I got one way of livin’,
got no hands on the wheel,
my left foot’s in the coffin,
and the other’s on a banana peel.


~ Jimmy Derbis, ©1980

More BD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22Tq0C9E0bM

By Professor Batty


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Friday, April 24, 2026

Quiche

Chef Batty goes wild in the kitchen again, this time with a Potato-Crust Quiche. I used a 10” springform cake pan which was nice for the thick potato crust, a 9“ pan would work better with regular pastry, an 8” pan could work (with smaller quantities of ingredients.) Grease the pan sides, it may be non-stick for cakes but this cheesy, starchy amalgam will adhere to almost anything.

Solid food, not for the faint of heart, but soooo delicious. Serves 8

CRUST:

Preheat oven to 400°
Boil 2 1/2 pounds of yellow potatoes until soft (20 minutes)
Mash cooked potatoes with:
        2 Tablespoons butter (add 1 reaspoon salt if using unsalted)
        1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
        1 tablespoon cornstarch
Press into pan, covering sides and bottom, (greased sides and bottom or use paper)
Bake for 25 minutes
Spread egg wash on crust
Bake for 5 minutes (reduce oven to 350°)
Cool for 10 minutes

FILLING:

Fry  1/2 lb chopped bacon, remove from pan leaving grease behind
Fry  1/2 lb chopped leeks (or onion) in bacon fat for 10 minutes (low heat), set aside
Mix  4-5 eggs with:
        1 pint heavy cream
        1/2 teaspoon salt
        1 tablespoon mustard
Herbs to taste (Italian, Herbs de Provence, dill, chives, spinach, etc.)

Add leeks and bacon onto crust in pan
Add 4 oz shredded Gruyére (or other) cheese to crust in pan
Pour filling mixture onto crust in pan
Bake for 30-35 minutes until the center of the top is almost firm
Let sit for 1/2 hour
Enjoy

I was dumbstruck inspired by this video:



Top image: The Weaver

By Professor Batty


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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Officer Spinach

Twenty Years Ago on FITK

Officer Sivanich was the Minneapolis Police Department’s School Safety Patrol liaison for many years. Tens of thousands of school children knew him for the safety lectures he would give each year to all the elementary schools in the city. The School Safety Patrol consisted of those sixth grade students who would raise and lower the “stop” flags at crosswalks. Officer Sivanich or “Officer Spinach” as the younger children might say, was well liked—indeed, he was possibly the only positive aspect of the police that many youngsters ever received. Back then there was one cop for all the schools. Now, police are at all the schools.

Recently, his obituary ran in the Minneapolis paper. Tens of thousands of other people like him, in thousands of other places, have performed many of the same services as he did. He was a civilizing influence, he made a difference, and, helped by his instructions, we never had an accident at a school crossing.



Comment:


I just stumbled across this site...not even sure what it is...but wanted to mention that Art Sivanich was my father in law and a better person you are not likely to ever meet. He is missed dearly by all who ever knew him.

Kris Sivanich

By Professor Batty


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Monday, April 20, 2026

Iceland? Not Iceland?

Non-scenic landscape views.

Alley:
Grocery:
Compost:

By Professor Batty


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Friday, April 17, 2026

Toothache Date

Another odd date story.

Lesley and I worked in the sub-basement of Dayton’s, a large department store in downtown Minneapolis. I worked in an area where I sorted packages and loaded pallets to be shipped out. Lesley worked in the office next to it where the price tickets were generated. This was pre-UPC bar codes, price marking was done in basically the same way it had always been done and the store had opened seventy years earlier. Lesley was young and bored in that job and when I mentioned that I was going to see a band tonight she lit up. The date was set.

When I picked her up at her house, she seemed to be bothered: “I’ve got this terrible toothache,” she said. “I’ve got some cloves, maybe that will help.”

We went out to the show but the band was playing on the University Campus and we weren’t students so we couldn’t get in. Her mouth was really starting to hurt now, so I took her home. On the way I learned that she already had a boyfriend, but she couldn’t go out with him because he was in jail.

Ulp.

I dropped her off and wished her well.

A few weeks later I happened to run into her at a convenience store. She was glad to see me, her tooth had been fixed, and her boyfriend was back and was waiting outside the store in his car. “Let me introduce you,” see said and took me outside. Her boyfriend pulled down his shades and gave me a dirty look as he reached over and opened the door for Lesley.

Perhaps that toothache saved me from a whole lot of trouble.

By Professor Batty


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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Her Mother’s Daughter

Twenty Years Ago on FITK
At the job-site for a new restaurant, I met up with one of the owners to discuss the sound system installation. He had brought along his teen-aged daughter. I had known him for years, from way back in my show-biz days. The other owner, his wife (who was not there), I had known longer.

As we discussed the mundane yet germane topic of routing wiring in a plenum, I caught myself looking at his daughter. She was petite, with deep brown eyes, and her appearance suggested that she was even younger than her actual age. I had a strange feeling—not exactly déjà vu—but something similar; I could sense that my mind was trying to match her visage with some stored facial memory.

And I knew exactly what it was, of course. She was her mother's daughter, after all. Her mother and I shared an Aunt and Uncle (we are no blood relation to each other.) I would see her mother at my cousin's birthday parties when we were both children, her mother was about five years younger than me so I thought of her as “one of the little kids.” And now it was as if the years that had passed had never happened, looking into a face from my childhood, a real person, not a dream or a memory.

As we continued to talk this doppleganger became involved with the conversation—she was whip-smart and perceptive. There are some people who, even as children or young adults, make an indelible impression.

I have a feeling that I will see that face often as she makes her mark upon the world.

By Professor Batty


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Monday, April 13, 2026

Radioheart: The Drive & Times of DJ Kevin Cole

A film by Peter Hilgendorf and Andrew Franks
Kevin hosting Reykjavík Calling, Neumos, Seattle, 2011

I caught this film at the MSPIFF 45 last night.

Kevin was a DJ at First Avenue in the 80s (he was Prince’s party DJ!) and he was the founder of REV105, a groundbreaking Twin City radio station in the 90s that my kids adored. REV105 was ultimately bought out by corporate interests but, rather than giving up, Kevin moved on, eventually arriving in Seattle where he worked with the fledgling Amazon and eventually becoming program director for KEXP, the premiere radio station/internet presence in the world. It seems as if almost every modern band of note has performed in their video studios, often with Kevin as the host. I had met and talked with him in Seattle in 2011 and then again in Reykjavík in 2018 and 2023 (during Iceland Airwaves):
Kevin at Kex Hostel, Reykjavík, 2018

He was always gracious, curious and really involved with the Icelandic music scene. Since we shared musical interests I ended up running into him numerous times at Iceland Airwaves in 2023—we compared notes on who to see. One of the acts, Brimheim, was featured in the film.
Kevin and young fans, Smekkleysa, Reykjavík, 2023 

We had also talked about substance abuse, how it could be a problem in the industry, how he dealt with it, and how important it was to continue to seek help. This subject was brought up in the movie, along with KEXP’s efforts to bring mental health issues to a wider audience in its Music Heals programs.
Afterwards, there was a Q&A hosted by Shawn Stewart with Kevin, the director Peter Hilgendorf, editor Andrew Franks and producer Rebecca Staffel.

The audience loved all of it, and they loved Kevin most of all.

By Professor Batty


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Friday, April 10, 2026

Retro Reading

Tom Swift Among the Diamond Makers
By Victor Appleton
Grosset & Dunlap, 1911

This book is a flash-back to my childhood.

My old pal Andy gifted this to me, part of his house-cleaning efforts (he had a duplicate.) The Tom Swift series of books was produced by The Stratemeyer Syndicate, which was responsible for several series aimed at children. Besides Tom Swift the most notable were The Hardy Boys and the Nancy Drew mysteries. The Tom Swift titles had an underlying theme of technology and science and as science has evolved over the years so has this series, with Tom Swift Junior in the 1950s and other incarnations since then. When I was a pre-adolescent I read all of these Stratemeyer titles that I could get a hold of—they fueled my imagination in a (mostly) wholesome way, not counting the racist caricatures.

The Diamond Makers was a bit of a departure from others in the series in that it was not centered on one of Tom’s inventions, rather, it was just a straight forward adventure yarn. Tom is enlisted to help Mr. Jenks, a man who was defrauded of a large sum of money that he had invested in a diamond making process. The process actually worked, but the gang that invented it chumped Jenks after giving him some manufactured diamonds but not allowing him to become a partner. Tom, Jenks (and two other men) blithely set of for Colorado for Phantom Mountain and ‘the diamond makers’ in Tom’s massive airship with all sorts of provisions and firearms. Almost every chapter is a cliff-hanger with the story coming to a climax in a spectacular fashion.

So… was it worth reading again after 115 years?

Compared to some modern children’s fiction neurotic moralizing reading this was refreshing, and occasionally unintentionally amusing (“It did not take our friends long, after they had eaten a hearty meal, to generate some fresh gas… ”) It was even just a tiniest bit suggestive (“Oh, I—I hope you come back safely,” faltered Mary, and then she held out her hand, and Tom—well it’s none of our affair what Tom did after that…”)

By Professor Batty


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