January 2009

Cincinnati Farms Motion Before City Council Feb 4th

Next Wednesday (February 4th) the Cincinnati City Council will vote on the Cincinnati Farms motion, which will allow farmers to lease city-owned lots for urban agricultural production.  If you'd like to show your support for this idea, you can sign the petition.   If you really want to show your support, come to City Hall no later than 1:15 pm on February 4th (be sure to allow time for parking and to pass through security) and fill out a speaker card, which will allow you to address City Council for up to 2 minutes. 

Politics of Food
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Thank You!

Thank You!

Authored by Sherman Cahal on January 31, 2009 at UrbanUp
On January 30, Forgotten Cincinnati opened at Park+Vine from 6 to 9 P.M., featuring photographs from myself and Ronny Salerno of Queen City Discovery. I'd like to express much thanks and gratitude to those who came in to view the exhibit, and to Dan Korman for hosting us. I met a lot of great individuals throughout the night, including Allen Singer, author of The Cincinnati Subway, Erin Lombardi of Closson's, Dan of Queen City Survey, Kevin Lemaster of Building Cincinnati, Chris Cousins of Urban Ohio and countless others!

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Forgotten Cincinnati will be running at Park+Vine until February 26, although we may be there until late March. Works will be rotated on the wall over time, and I'll get to work on larger display cards so people won't have to resort to squinting to read the text!

All of the prints are for sale, although if you find any image you'd like to have printed and/or framed at my sites, please do not hesitate to call me at 513.432.4267 or shoot me and e-mail at shermancahal AT gmail DOT com.


  • Where: Park+Vine, 1109 Vine Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, 45202.
  • Hours: 11 to 7 Monday-Saturday, 11 to 5 Sunday
  • Web-site:parkandvine.com

  • Thank you again for supporting my sites for the past ten years. This site has grown from a personal project with a handful of photographs, to one that hosts over 4,300 spanning a multitude of states and dozens of locations. Be sure to check out my other sites for more photographs and information!

  • Abandoned
  • American Byways
  • Bridges & Tunnels


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    Cincinnati Twitter Bots

    I was inspired by the DIYcity challenge #1, but (selfishly) since I don't drive very much, I wasn't inspired enough to work directly on the TrafficTweet concept.

    But in the introduction to the challenge they mention a twitter bot called shakeshack. The shakeshack bot has a very simple purpose in life and that is to retweet reports on how long the line is at a restaurant called the Shake Shack in NYC. This is useful for fans of that restaurant who want to know if it's worth stopping by. If the line is too long (since it is a popular joint) they can avoid it, and if the line is short, then they can make the trip. People who are interested in the info just follow shakeshack. People who are at shakeshack can tweet @ messages to it, and it will rewtweet their messages automatically to the rest.

    So, today I had lunch at Chipotle on Fountain Square and I was thinking about how I could really use a similar service for knowing whether or not to walk all the way down there. Fountain Square Chipotle tends to have a pretty long line usually, but sometimes it's short, and on those days, I would want to visit.

    So, I found this site called twittbot.com that lets you create a basic retweeting bot like the shakeshack bot and I made an account called fschipotlebot. (Maybe I should have gone with fschipotle. Oh well.) So, if you send an @ message to the bot, it will retweet it to its followers. Any information on line length, etc, is the goal here. Like today I would have tweeted "@fschipotlebot line is almost to the second doors. Looks like maybe a new employee in the burrito-construction team."

    Anyway, if it gets used, that will be awesome, so check it out. Using the twittbot.com service was dead-simple (it took me about 30 minutes) and is all this bot really needed. In the future, I'd like to move onto making more complicated bots, that I will probably have to script and run on my own hosting. Let me know if you have any thoughts on other useful twitter bots!

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    Forgotten Cincinnati opens tonight

    Our beloved city is the subject of the new exhibition Forgotten Cincinnati opening 6 to 9 p.m. Jan. 30 here at Park + Vine, 1109 Vine Street. From abandoned amusement parks and crumbling breweries to forgotten neighborhoods and other derelict structures and locales, Sherman Cahal and Ronny Salerno present photographs of a deserted Queen City. Forgotten Cincinnati runs through Feb. 26 and possibly beyond.

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    Message from the Director - December Edition

    Executive Director Kim Fender talks about funding challenges facing the Library.

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    City Council Members Update




    Today I went in and created articles for those City Council members that still did not have pages. I copied the info from their bio's which can be found on their official web site.

    Also, I'm working on a super-secret project for hereincincinnati.net that is separate from the wiki. I hope to be able to say more about it before the end of the month.

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    Tweet Congress: Missing our locally electeds

    Out in the community

    Driehaus calling TwitterFone?

    So, does your Congressional representative or Senator want you to know what’s going on? Well, if you look around the Greater Cincinnati area the answer would be mostly no.

    Using TweetCongress, an amazingly great use of the Twitter API, you can follow exactly what is going on with your federally-elected officials. What’s even more amazing is that they publicly harass those Members of Congress who are not on Twitter to join.

    Here’s what the intro to their site says:

    “We the Tweeple of the United States, in order to form a more perfect government, establish communication, and promote transparency do hereby Tweet the Congress of the United States of America.”

    via Tweet Congress.

    I love it!

    As Steve Driehaus’s campaign communications director, I worked hard to get Driehaus into as much social networking and new media as possible (much was done before I got there, but there was still plenty to do). He was open to it, but, as I think he openly admits, it isn’t his strong suit. Plus, too many politicians think the mainstream media is their best shot and the other stuff is just “extra.” True, to a large extent. But not for long.

    I am proud to say Driehaus got much better at it as the campaign wore on (even agreeing to have a blogger meet-up, which was fantastic). TweetCongress says Driehaus is not on Twitter, which isn’t exactly true. It just hasn’t been updated since I posted the last Tweet the day after election day thanking everyone for their support. Get on it, folks! It’s a great way to keep in touch with your constieuents…

    Who else is on Twitter locally? Well, if you ask TweetCongress, House Minority Leader John Boehner of West Chester, Ohio - just on the outskirts of the Cincinnati Metro area - is the only one. Rep. Jean Schmidt of the Ohio’s 2nd Congressional District (and my representative, now that I live in Mount Washington) and Rep. Geoff Davis of Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District do not Twitter.

    My work on this political campaign and consulting communications on another this past year made me realize one amazing thing: Politicians are waaay behind the curve on the technology front - with one major exception. President Barack Obama. ‘Nuff said.

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    White House Breaks Transparency Promise

    In a blog post announcing the President’s signing of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the first piece of legislation he has signed, we are informed that the bill has been posted on the White House web site and is now open for comment… after the President signed it.

    For quite some time President Obama has promised that all non-emergency legislation will be open for public comment on Whitehouse.gov for 5 days before the President signs it. I am not sure what constitutes “emergency” legislation; providing emergency appropriations in response to a disaster or attack would apply. This was supposed to be a major element to the President’s transparency efforts, even though the effect of it can be disputed (the bill has already passed and can’t be changed). A blog post from the White House on January 20th say this:

    One significant addition to WhiteHouse.gov reflects a campaign promise from the President: we will publish all non-emergency legislation to the website for five days, and allow the public to review and comment before the President signs it.

    It is too bad they let this transparency promise slip on the very first piece of legislation that hit the President’s desk. After a few transparency wins for the administration, it looks like they’ve hit their first fail.

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    Curbly Video Quick Tip: Keep Your Shovel De-Iced for Easy Snow Removal.

    01/28/09

    Brrrr... We're certainly in the dead center of winter, and for those of us north of the Mason-Dixon line (and for many of you below it), that means lots and lots of shoveling to keep sidewalks, porches, and driveways clean. But, as any 12-year-old kid can tell you, after the first few minutes, snow and ice start to build up on the shovel's surface, and it becomes heavy and more difficult to use.

    Click play, or go here to watch the video.

    01/28/09

    To keep the shovel slick and (mostly) ice free, spray both sides with non-stick cooking spray, and dig away.

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    Major snow event, from the perspective in Cincinnati

    Major snow event, from the perspective in Cincinnati

    Authored by Sherman Cahal on January 28, 2009 at UrbanUp
    On Monday night into Tuesday, Cincinnati received up to six inches of snow, which was followed up with up to one inch of ice that night. On Wednesday morning, most of the region received up to six inches of additional snowfall, making for one dramatic start to the week!

    1 A view of downtown from Mt. Adams.
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    10 Wareham Drive, leading to Mt. Adams in Cincinnati, is a tough climb in severe winter weather.
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    11 Handled great in the adverse weather! Not one slip up with over 200 miles traveled during the storm.
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    12 Snow covered steps in Mt. Adams.
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    14 Mt. Eden Drive in Eden Park.
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    15 Eden Park
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    16 Eden Park
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    17 Eden Park
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    18 Eden Park
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    You can find more photographs stuffed under general Cincinnati photographs and Mt. Adams. There are also more photographs from Eden Park at American Byways. Enjoy!

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