Monday, November 19, 2018

Book Announcement: Cornelius O'Keefe

I found the following new book announcement recently that will be of great interest to all rhinoceri:

Image of Historic O'Keefe Ranch, with lighting by Rhino Designs
from The Historic O'Keefe Ranch website, http://okeeferanch.ca

Cornelius O'Keefe:
The Life, Loves, and Legacy of an Okanagan Pioneer
Amazing Stories by Sherri Field

An entertaining biography of cattle baron and land magnate Cornelius O’Keefe, founder of the Historic O’Keefe Ranch. From humble beginnings to a life of prosperity in the heart of the Okanagan Valley, Cornelius O’Keefe is best known today through the historic ranch in Vernon, BC, that still bears his name. Established in 1867, the O’Keefe Ranch was at one time the largest cattle ranch in the region, with thousands of head of cattle grazing in the vast open ranges. By the early 1900s, the ranch had grown to over 12,000 acres, and Cornelius O’Keefe had built quite a legacy for himself. Known as a tireless worker who dabbled in a number of professions in addition to cattle ranching—from mining to operating a general store to being a postmaster—O’Keefe also had a full personal life. He married three times and had seventeen children. His family continued to live on the ranch until the 1960s, when it was opened to the public as a heritage site and tourist attraction. This concise biography brings the dynamic figure of O’Keefe to life and illuminates a fascinating period in BC history.

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

The Most Powerful Force in the Universe Discovered Near Flint, Michigan

The Most Powerful Force in the Universe
Discovered Near Flint, Michigan

August 1, 2018 -- In the suburban community of Grand Blanc, Michigan, down Saginaw Avenue from the city of Flint, scientists have located what they believe to be the source of all energy -- and, therefore, all matter -- and the most powerful force in the known universe.

This power source sits on the edge of Thread Creek, a tributary of the Flint River. There, a small cylinder less than five feet tall radiates energy at an astonishing rate. Scientists call this energized cylinder "RoseAnnO'Keefe," and they've been tracking it for 90 years!

Origins 

Spacecraft narrowed the origins of RoseAnnO'Keefe to the family Shimertino in the constellation Sicilius some time in 1928. RoseAnn started life as a little Shimertino and grew for a quarter century before colliding with O'Keefe with such tremendous force that nine satellites were formed in little over 10 years!

Fifty years ago, NASA began picking up signals from RoseAnn indicating the energy source was in the Detroit area. However, RoseAnn is clever and continually transforms its energy into useful community service.

Transformation

Often disguised as a mother, RoseAnn is capable of quickly transforming into an autonomous driving vehicle, a medical services provider or a blood drive coordinator, as needed. It sheds enough energy to fuel nine satellites and still has enough power left to cook, clean and illuminate an entire household.

Shortly after the turn of the Millennium, O'Keefe went supernova and RoseAnn lost her orbit. Her signal was picked up a few years later in the Flint area where it was tracked to the maternity ward at a hospital where satellites are launched seven days a week.

This time disguised as a grandmother, RoseAnn was tracked to the injured infants ward. Unable to make her own satellites anymore, she took to repairing damaged satellites. 

Research

Once they had tracked the most powerful force in the universe to the banks of Thread Creek, scientists began to study how it worked. They subjected RoseAnn to monitoring, fluid draws, x-rays, scans and biopsies. They analyzed the numbers and tracked the results for decades. What they found is truly astonishing!

RoseAnn runs on Low Orbit Volunteer Enthusiasm. It's a parasite that feeds off boosting the welfare of others. It uses community service as a lever to create massive energy flows used to launch and repair satellites. Low Orbit Volunteer Enthusiasm has no weight or mass. The most powerful force in the universe, it can only be studied by the trail it leaves behind.

Conclusions

Scientists are certain of one thing: the incredible force on the banks of Thread Creek shows no signs of diminishing. They expect RoseAnn's light to remain visible for billions of years to come.

Monday, June 18, 2018

Friday, March 16, 2018

Another O'Keefe Makes It To The Rhino

Piano Man from Soul of Athens on Vimeo.
I found this video of Rick O'Keefe in Athens, Ohio. Anyone ever see him there? Interesting guy!

Friday, March 2, 2018

Dr. Cornelius "Thumbs" Pianeer - A Biography

painting of dr. cornelius pianeer
Artist Rendering of Dr. Cornelius "Thumbs" Pianeer in the Appalachian Highlands.

The Early Life of Cornelius Pianeer
Dr. Cornelius "Thumbs" Pianeer was born in the state of Michigan in the 1950s, the fifth child of nine, "like the center note of a kalimba with two older brothers and two older sisters and two younger brothers and two younger sisters and I learned how to play them all."
As a child he showed no musical talent whatsoever, though he was good at mischief and everyone could count on him to come up with a plan when a plan was needed. "That's what you call 'im-prov-i-za-tion,' son."
Dr. Pianeer dropped out of college when he was 19 and went to Ireland where he worked shoveling cow poop on a farm until he learned some humility. It was in Limerick, Ireland, while playing his thumb piano in a cow pasture that he was visited by the fairies and given the gift of song.
Unable to find a lass and settle down, Dr. Pianeer returned to Michigan where he flunked Basic Harmony and decided to pursue the ministry. He sold all his possessions, bought a backpack and went to the Grand Canyon where he lived in a cave for a month and lost his favourite thumb piano. Dr. Pianeer then followed the rain to the great northwest where he found an Irish lass and settled down on the shores of Puget Sound.
Thumb Piano Brings the Rain
It's said the thumb piano brings the rain. In Africa, thumb piano musicians are recruited to drought-stricken areas. Dr. Pianeer says "the thumb piano should always be played near running water because that's the rhythm it follows. If there's no running water, the thumb piano will make its own."
Living on the edge of a rain forest on the Olympic Peninsula, Dr. Pianeer perfected his style without causing problems for the locals due to all the rain. On vacations, his Irish wife asked him to leave the thumb pianos at home.
Dr. Pianeer was living the good life, roaming the mountains and the seas, making up shanties on his thumb pianos, calling in tides and sending out vibes. That all ended when his Irish bride went a little crazy and moved to New Orleans and Dr. Pianeer tagged along.
At the Crossroads in New Orleans
By this time, Dr. Pianeer had secured a Doctorate of Divinity from the Universal Life Church of Seattle, Washington, and paid $89 extra to get a fancy diploma, clergy cards, and a binder with all the language for all the typical ceremonies of the world's major religions. He was prepared to recite ceremonies for birth, transition to adulthood, marriage, sickness, death and despair in five faiths. In New Orleans, he added a few more.
Dr. Pianeer quickly became involved with the Catholic Church and several Voodoo churches in New Orleans, working as a teacher, musician and healer. "The thumb piano was made for healing. It sets peoples minds at ease."
At the Voodoo Spiritual Temple on Rampart Street, near the crossroads at Congo Square, Dr. Pianeer performed a piano service four mornings a week for the tourists and "the Loa." He was billed as The Piano Priest of New Orleans and was known as a friend to the disadvantaged.
"Sometimes people throwed money in, sometimes they took it out," Dr. Pianeer said of the collection plate that was passed during his performances. The Temple also served as a soup kitchen and sleeping shelter and Dr. Pianeer often played to a roomful of sleeping bags and vomit. "Young folks got no place to go if they can't go home."
Hurricane Katrina and the Beginning of the End
Alone, divorced, mentally fragile, Dr. Pianeer lived in the Faubourg Marigny off the French Quarter in New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina came and washed away all his flock. Dr. Pianeer stayed another three years, helping rebuild St. Roch Church and lifting the spirits of his listeners and visiting the hospitals with his healing kalimba.
But Dr. Pianeer's own health declined and he was certified mentally ill and put on tranquilizers. The hurricanes kept coming and people learned the thumb piano brings water and they asked Dr. Pianeer to stop. That's when he met another lass, Miss Amelia Mae, an artist and religious scholar who was also alone, divorced and mentally complex. The two of them ran off together to the Shenandoah Valley to recuperate and try again.
Way Back Up in the Woods Among the Evergreens
They lived in the woods where they made art and music and love. Dr. Pianeer learned how to rile-up the cicadas with his Karimba thumb piano, which has rattles attached. "You can play it at night and they all line up on it. Cicadas, frogs, crickets, birds -- they all love the kalimba and will line up on it if you play long enough."
One of Dr. Pianeer's first recorded performances is in the woods in the mountains with the crickets and the crows. "I got the call that my daughter's pappy-in-law got the word he got cancer. So I went outside and played a healing song for him, and it came out 'Ditty for Daniel,' and the crows came in at the end. I recorded it on my phone and sent it over to Nashville for him but it didn't do any good."
After five years in the mountains, Dr. Pianeer and his artist wife Mae moved into town and Dr. Pianeer volunteered at the local school for the deaf and the blind since he knew a little sign language on account of being a 10-religion minister and helper of the disadvantaged. Well wouldn't you know they put him with the blind kids instead of the deaf ones, so he learned how to read and write Braille and how to work with young people who, like him, have cognitive difficulties.
The Healing Powers of the Thumb Piano
One thing leads to another, don't you know, and Dr. Pianeer is now working with a blind audio engineer who showed him how to better record the thumb piano. Now Dr. Pianeer travels around the world with his artist wife Mae, playing healing thumb piano and recording thumb piano, and a blind engineer makes it all sound good on the stereo!
Dr. Pianeer expects the Big Shot behind the dozen religions he has mastered will soon call him to perform in another dimension "where human beings ain't allowed." These healing recordings will be all that's left to help future generations understand the healing powers of the kalimba, the karimba, the thumb piano, the mbira, the sansula, the tamboola and all the other variations of tuned tines. "Just watch out for the water."

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Wren I Call Your Name

Dr Cornelius Thumbs Pianeer

LissenUp!

I givin' y'all a PRE RELEEZ of this new ambien' masterpeez, "Wren I Call Your Name," bein' a DUIT between yerz trooly and a Wren! I dedkate this peez to Conor Seraphim O'Keez 'count of hez love of the Wren and hez love of TRAINS which, if yer lis'nin, come 'bout 30 sekenz and the Wren come 'bout three.

Yerz Trooly!
Dr. Cornelius "Thumbs" Pianeer

https://drive.google.com/open?id=16UO821wMOXJdd_VYcvIS3aNi2ixH4_Bl

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

THUMBS DRIVE Track Listings


This Giftmas, I provided Seraphim, Tom, Barry, and Donald each with a THUMBS DRIVE containing four CDs of the legendary Appalachian-American, Dr. Cornelius Pianeer. I have since mailed a THUMBS DRIVE to Cristy & Kelly and Owen. Hopefully, y'all got your THUMBS DRIVES. Here's a copy of the track listings in case y'all want to be educated about what you're listening to. Enjoy!

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