OCR Text |
Show [e2° Footprints in the Snow a Or makers. A dreary winter can this way be rendered more ... enchanting @ e ° wins of < 0 ...make your own clay forms! ° oO weekly classes wed. 6-8 pm bs we a ~ aes “Glassiworks ; ¢ 3 .. make your own beaded ° glass creations! 0 1R, oO 20 0 8 8 ia ig BE . ° 0.0.4 ° yee create it...stamp it... paint it....fire it.....it's yours! a° °° Of ¢g0 0% £ flyeg Color. # paint it yourself Oe ceramics Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10-8 Fri. & Sat. 10-10 sf " it 26? Sun. 12-6 0 : studio 931 east 900 south * 532-CLAY at ar PHOTO: te, fei Pes, the paw tracks return repeatedly to the human tracks betraying the bond between the species. Next time you're out walking, take a closer look at the tracks. They tell tales of their “Hafidbuildifig” : curiosity of te ° OO the meandering velocity. Even if the dog is clearly unleashed, % Oe 20) i record that animal, and its impatience with human INTRODUCING... 0 a The tracks of a dog, beside those of its owner, 6 Ea back with increased running speed. Some joggers produce a sweep or comet tail angling off at the rear outside corner of the heal. This comes from a kind of rowing motion of the leg, with the foot arcing out in the stride and then back, as the heel comes in to make footfall. This seems to be more common in tired or slogging joggers. Some prints exhibit sweeps and brushes between footfalls. Clearly, thes made by foot-draggers, people who do not pick up their feet when they walk. You can discover such tracks in a mere half-inch of snow. How foot-draggers avoid stumbling, I don't know. Couples tend to have about 18 inches between their prints. A pair of walkers of the same sex generally put a few more inches between themselves. O. Se Se JACK WRIGHT Tracks tell tales of their maker. tracks of rabbits and squirrels, zig-zagging, looping, pattering from pine to pine, or the almost mystical track of the coyote, or more rarely, the big, deep post-hole tracks of the moose. There is something enchanting about these footprints in the snow. But down in the city, the tracks are not so enchanting. They have a technological busyness to them. They are hurried and purposeful, and cast in computerized designs that are even more indicative of our species than the bare foot. but interesting Not so enchanting nonetheless. Human tracks have three basic aspects: stride, straddle and toe-out. Stride, of course, is merely the distance between prints. This varies in my Salt Lake sample from 22 to 33 inches. Stride, quite naturally, increases with walking speed. Longer stride is not simply a device for cov- ering more ground, but a necessary result of increased momentum. Straddle is how far apart the prints are right to left - anywhere from two to 10 inches in my sample. Toe-out (technically called “pitch”): You have probably noticed that the foot doesn’t fall parallel to the line of travel, but falls rather at an angle, with the toe pointing out and the heel pointing in. Toe-out can be anywhere from 0 degrees to 27 degrees. Heavy people seem to toe-out more than thin people. (Presumably, this helps distribute their weight more widely.) I suspect that athletic people toe-out less than non-athletic people, but I haven't confirmed this. When running, toe-out greatly diminishes, or even disappears altogether. This is due to the toe being brought in to play more fully. Jogging or running also produces a characteristic print with a broken tread pattern at the toe and a small ridge of snow thrust up about 2 inches back from the tip of the toe. LL 3DVd © SAWIL NIVLNNOW By Jack Wright it n the high country of the Wasatch it is the |