austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Next morning we got up a bit earlier; we'd have to catch a train. Still we had the breakfast nook to ourselves (when we avoided some uncleared tables) and [profile] bunny_hugger observed about the TV news crawl that there was a delightful lack of people talking about Trump and his insanities. This was the week that Elon Musk had his messy breakup with Trump, mind, so I had seen some of the funny bits of that on social media, but we didn't have the oppression of this being all the news and that was surprisingly refreshing. Also, such soft, melty brie. So much brie.

This time around we asked the hotel staff to arrange a taxi for us and they were able to get one with the same company we'd gotten on Sunday, but for less than half the price. We also reflected that we should have asked the hotel ahead of time if they would arrange for taxi service, which they probably would have been able to do and would have been able to get cheaper for us.

The train back to Paris and Gare de l'Est was on time and fast and then all we had to do was go up and down four hundred different stairwells on an underground path running from Ile de France to the Norman coast and back to get to Gare du Nord, the train station that's the next one on the metro line. This because our connection to Rennes left from there. Gare du Nord also lacks adequate seating space for people just hanging around waiting for a train, although at least one block of what looked like seats was closed off for construction so maybe they're a little less at fault.

While we were getting a snack and finding our next train a guy, an American by accent, came up to ask if we could help him understand where his own train might be. We were and are novices at this but we'd more or less figured out where on the overhead boards they showed the several different train number identifications, and which of the kinds of icon it showed when they had assigned a track number. In his case, they hadn't yet assigned one, but it should be coming within minutes. We hope we were right or that he asked someone better-informed.

Now up to this point every train we'd been on had been not just speedy but on time, like, to the minute. And we had even commented on this, maybe foolishly, since now there was some kind of problem and the train stopped for what ended up being about a half hour total, and moved at mere American train speeds for a while after that. [profile] bunny_hugger saw guards standing at road crossings halting traffic so it looks like there was some important signalling problem hitting our line. Well, even Jove nods, I guess.

When we got to Rennes [profile] bunny_hugger said she'd get walking directions from her phone, if we needed them because I might well remember how to get to our hotel, the same one we stayed in ten years ago, all right. I think that overstates my memory for how to find places I've been once before but oh, yes, it did get to be pretty familiar pretty fast. And yes, it was the same hotel we stayed at before, with things stunningly similar to what we had known. With one difference: last time, the breakfast nook had a small bowl with a poor lone goldfish in not remotely enough water. [profile] bunny_hugger checked, from trip review photographs, that they no longer kept a goldfish in such terrible conditions before rebooking this hotel. (They now put some miniature bottles of jam in the space.)

We were set up nicely in the hotel and more or less ready for the conference the next day, although [profile] bunny_hugger was irritated her shirt had got a crease in it despite everything and there was no method at all for flattening a shirt; no iron, no pressing board, not even a hangar that could be used to let it absorb moisture from a hot shower and then settle out.

But we also had the question of what to eat and when we found there was a grocery store a couple blocks away, sure, we went for that. We had notions of getting some nice little sandwiches (all that we could find that was vegetarian was fake bacon, tomato, lettuce, and vegan mayo, billed as Le British for some reason) and exotic flavors of potato chips and something called ``Monster Munch'' (original flavor, though they had variations) and a couple small bottles of Coke Zero. They had some more exotic, more interesting-looking flavors but all at room temperature and without a fridge or ice we weren't confident we would get a fair taste of it.

So this would be our quiet, personal meal back in the hotel room. While [profile] bunny_hugger got ready for bed, a friend on Telegram started looking up where you could find pinball in Paris, their helpful nature failing to register my explanation that we were not in Paris except as a transit point. But it did make me wonder: was there somewhere in Rennes, or in our Belgian destination of De Panne, where we might find a game? That seemed worth checking ...


And now to check in on the Calhoun County Fair, which had no photographs from [profile] bunny_hugger --- we had expected us both to be out of town when they were to be dropped off, so she didn't sign up --- but had other things to look at. For example ...

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Nice little water fountain statue set up to make the fairground rides look more permanently decorated.


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I'm sure I said this before but that rhino looks like they're taking stuff for medical purposes only.


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Big Top Circus is one of the kiddie funhouses (really they're all kiddie funhouses) but it has got app splash screen energy.


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Over to the crafts barn where we once again failed to convince [profile] bunny_hugger's mother to enter anything. Still, here's some nice patterns of fat rabbits and small birds.


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More crafts, including a bunch of needlepoint and other felt fixtures and some really great castle playset that's got stuff in every room.


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More of the embroidery and needlepoint and stuff. Note the knives with movie killers on them.


Trivia: The United States's 1960 Census was the first to ask about air conditioner ownership. It found about 12.4 percent of all households had air conditioning, ranging from less than five percent in New England to more than 27 percent in the West South Central division (Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Arkansas), with nonwhites having air conditioning at under a third the national rate. Source: Cool Comfort: America's Romance With Air-Conditioning, Marsha E Ackermann.

Currently Reading: Mission to Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer. NASA SP-2007-4231.

PS: It's a bonus story strip recap as I look at What’s Going on in Flash Gordon? Are We in Some Time Travel Story Now? Enjoy!

Witchsign by Den Patrick

Jun. 22nd, 2025 10:57 pm
[personal profile] quippe
The Blurb On The Back:

Do you bear the sign of the witch? Because if you do, gods help you.


It has been seventy-five years since the dragon’s rule of fire and magic was ended. Out of the ashes, the Solmindre Empire was born.

Since then the tyrannical Synod has worked hard to banish all manifestations of the arcane from existence. However, children are still born bearing the taint of the arcane, known to all as witching. Vigilants are sent out across the continent of Vinterkveld to find and capture all those bearing the mark.

No-one knows when the Vigilants of the Synod will appear and enforce the Empire’s laws…

But today they’re coming …


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Den Patrick’s fantasy novel (the first in a trilogy) has interesting world-building that incorporates Norse and Russian history and tries to subvert the tropes of normal ‘young people discover magical powers’ fiction. Unfortunately the pacing is slack, the storytelling doesn’t stand on its logic and the characterisation - particularly of the antagonists - is rarely above the superficial, meaning I won’t be reading on.

Thanks to the Amazon Vine Programme for the review copy of this book.

Another Hiatus

Jun. 22nd, 2025 01:37 pm
lovelyangel: (Mahoro Playful)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
I guess the last time I baked bread was way back in 2020. My baking ingredients (yeast, flour, corn meal) were all very old and had to be replaced. Subsequently, yesterday was the first time I baked bread in nearly five years. And just like five years ago, I underworked the dough. (It would have been better if I had reviewed that old post before I baked yesterday.) Also, although the loaf was brown, it was a little undercooked, as the crust never got crunchy, and the bottom fifth of the loaf was a little gluey.

Homebaked Bread
Homebaked Bread

I need a loaf for a gathering on Wednesday, but I’ve scrapped my plan to use the remaining dough for another bake test and then prepare another two pounds of dough. I got lazy, and I’ll just use the remaining pound of dough for the loaf for Wednesday (which I’ll need to bake on Tuesday). I’ll try to stretch the loaf correctly and bake a little longer on Tuesday.

Star Trek Mapping: The Two Axolotls

Jun. 22nd, 2025 10:23 am
dewline: (amusement)
[personal profile] dewline
Entertaining accident: Decades ago, when Masao Okazaki was putting his Starfleet Museum site together, he assigned the name "Axolotl" to a planet orbiting Gliese 767A.

In 2019, the IAU and Mexico named the star HD 224693 "Axólotl" as part of that year's Name ExoWorlds event.

We have precedent in Star Trek for this sort of thing, thankfully, so I'm not worrying over it.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

When I finally roused myself enough to get up, on the day that should have been our Nigloland visit, it was already like 6 pm. [personal profile] bunnyhugger was getting consoling texts from the friends she'd dared tell. (We wouldn't tell our parents until we got back home.) About all there would be left to do is take a walk --- [personal profile] bunnyhugger was not going to abandon her daily task even for this --- and find dinner. For the walk we wondered if we were allowed into the Parc du Chateau, past the gate behind the hotel. I said I'd seen people going in earlier in the day and as I watched again some more folks went in, so we would follow.

This let us have some time exploring the grounds of the hotel which, as mentioned, used to be a working windmill, on a small river. There were a couple buildings that looked like they were probably once the mill owner's home and maybe a guest house. There was also a fence blocking off fields and other houses, we assume from land being sold to other owners. But the parc itself was this pleasant garden, a chance for us to walk around in mostly shaded paths on a none-too-hot evening, looking at the water and this little boat dock(?) underneath a shelter so you went into a tunnel to get down to the water surface, like some fantasy novel. Also a couple large decorative pools with the water turned off, unfortunately, as they looked great. Some statues, classical stuff like cherubs and Venus and the like. We also could see people dining outside, overlooking the water wheel (fixed in place, as far as we could tell) and the river (changing).

For dinner we had two choices, hunger or the hotel. There wasn't even a convenience store in town. So I put on one of the shirts I wear to work, and figured to wear to the conference, while [personal profile] bunnyhugger put on the blazer she figured to present in and got extremely nervous about dropping food on herself. It turns out the restaurant, though offering two- and three-course meals that looked like what you expect from a fancy French restaurant was much more generally chill than that. We saw people there in if not jeans and a t-shirt and least not much more dressed than that. (Those were outliers, though, and most people were at least dressed up a little bit.) We didn't need to worry, possibly because anyone in town who didn't want to drive to eat out was coming here.

The one serious drawback to the meal was it wasn't vegetarian. There were individual vegetarian pieces --- including the Avocado Toast appetizer --- but for the main course it was something an animal had to die for, and we accepted that, resolving not to tell anyone at the conference this. (Not that anyone asked or would be likely to.) I had my first meat-based sausage in years and in a sauce so creamy that I'm still tasting it three weeks on. And then dessert was more wonderful yet. [personal profile] bunnyhugger got an ice cream, but served within some sort of bread shell that soaked it up spongelike without overwhelming the taste or feel of the melting ice cream. Me, I went for the more basic plate of local cheeses, and I wouldn't be sad to have a plate of cheeses for every dessert. Or main course. Really you could pretty well sum up me by just putting up a sign, ``Bit more cheese''.

After a good while including after-dinner coffee they ... didn't seem to be bringing us a bill, which, sure, is the non-American-restaurant way. I had noticed several other people leaving simply by departing the table so figured that was the thing to do; there wasn't tipping and they knew what room to charge it to, so there. So after some assurances that we weren't dining-and-dashing we got up and walked slowly back to our room and then had some worries that we had done the wrong thing.

Well, on the hotel bill there was a charge for about what we estimated the dinner would cost, although it wasn't billed anything obvious like ``dinner'' or ``meals'' or ``restaurant''. It instead had a name of something like ``floor charge'', and google translations managed to make the purpose of that charge even more vague and ill-defined. It's been a couple weeks now, though, and we haven't heard any trouble, and they certainly have our e-mail and credit card information so we probably got away with it all right.

After dinner ... you know, strange as it may sound, I wasn't quite ready to go to bed. I got my camera out. I wanted to walk some, and alone, and I ended up taking by night the walk we'd hoped to do that morning down to Nigloland, to look at the gate and just ... be alone with my thoughts about this accident.

I would not stay alone. While walking along the long fence of the park someone stopped his car to ask if I needed anything. I told him no, I was fine, we just had come for the amusement park and found it closed and I needed to be sad. This he understand, but he did tell me the park would be open Saturday, which, yes, but I'd be gone by Saturday. I thanked him and he left. (We spoke in English, after the first sentence or two. I had actually thought out ahead of time what I might say if someone stopped by me, and I think I had the basics of it ready, except that in my mind I was saying dimanche [ Sunday ] instead of samedi [ Saturday ].)

The second time this happened I had basically the same conversation, and I guess it says something about the population of Dolancourt that a person taking a walk at like 10 pm on a Monday [ lundi ] might draw two cars stopping to ask if I needed a lift.

And that's how the day that should have seen us at Nigloland ended.


Now in photos let's look again at the Calhoun County Fair, as the day was ending but there was still plenty of Fair left ... we thought.

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Here's the Wiggle Worm, which I believe was a junior caterpillar ride. Also there should be grown-up caterpillar rides again.


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First picture of the carousel, and you can see [personal profile] bunnyhugger getting snaps for her 2025 calendar.


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Somehow this angle makes the canopy lights look like there's more than there are, and arranged more randomly than their actually strongly-symmetric arrangement were.


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Hey, Sea Ray was a fun pinball game, I didn't know they turned it into a swinging ship ride!


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Turning around again to face the carousel and at least a couple horses with the distressed/wide-open mouths meant to suggest they're straining for their speed (which at like five rpm is respectable).


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Some of the landscaping the rides operator puts up to give the place the impression of a more permanent park. Which suggests they pick up this mulch after the week is over and bring it to the next fair.


Trivia: Mexico City has more than five hundred streets named after Emiliano Zapata. Source: The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal about Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power, Dierdre Mask.

Currently Reading: Mission to Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer. NASA SP-2007-4231.

Fordow, Natanz and Esfahan

Jun. 21st, 2025 10:28 pm
dewline: Facepalming upon learning bad news (bad news)
[personal profile] dewline
Dammit, Donnie.

You and the rest of your gang...just cannot leave well enough alone, can you?

A late visit to Canobie

Jun. 21st, 2025 09:53 pm
mmcirvin: (Default)
[personal profile] mmcirvin
My kid is home from the summer but has a summer job that often gives her weekend hours and time off when I'm at work, so any time off we can all have together is precious. Today she didn't have to go in super early and had reduced hours, so it made sense to do something after work, and we made our first visit of the year to our home amusement park, Canobie Lake Park, which reminded us how nice a place it is.

Not everything about it is perfect. It being a fairly hot day, we spent the first part of the afternoon at Canobie's waterpark, Castaway Island, which despite being doubled in size a few years ago is still too small for the demand and inevitably slammed on a day like this.

This was the first time I successfully rode all the way around Castaway Island's small "tidal river" attraction, sort of a wave pool/lazy river hybrid, which I think I am just too physically large a person to comfortably enjoy, at least on a day when it's that crowded. At least they did have some tubes that were big enough for me to float on (unlike some previous visits), but these tubes were in short supply and I kept having to pull my limbs in to keep from hurting somebody. We wanted to try the big tube waterslides at the center of this attraction, but things just seemed to be moving so slowly and chaotically that it was unclear if we'd even be able to get a tube to ride on. I think they need more staff here and more rules.

We got wet from the various water-dumping apparatuses around their slide play structure instead, then went to ride the log flume and get wet some more. Some interesting discussions ensued of the relative scariness of roller-coaster drops, which are more intense but have you wearing some kind of restraint, versus a flume like Canobie's where you have none. For some reason, when I was a kid, I was terrified of roller coasters but I found flume drops like this (bigger ones, actually!) no big deal. But for my peeps it's the opposite. Here's Canobie Coaster's off-ride footage:



The highlight of the day, though, after some relaxing family rides, was getting them on Canobie's vintage cheeseball horror dark ride, The Mine of Lost Souls. I'd ridden this years ago with my brother-in-law but it was my wife and kid's first time. I didn't spoil them for the utterly WTF plot twist that happens toward the end. Here's Haunts and Amusements' excellent ride-through (content note: video does contain flashing lights):



Not sure I'd call it terrifying but it's certainly confusing.

My kid wasn't up to riding Yankee Cannonball today but I did want to get in a ride on a big coaster, so as it was getting dark I got in a ride on Untamed, Canobie's Gerstlauer Eurofighter 320+ looping coaster, with its beyond-vertical drop into three inversions. I have an unreasonable home-park love for this little coaster and unlike Yankee Cannonball, I can always get on Untamed in just a few minutes with the single-rider line, so it's a great one to just knock off in any available snippet of time. As I was getting off, the whole midway was lighting up and it was a nice thing to see. This video by Front Seat POVs was taken during the day, but it gives you the basic idea:



We wound up the day with a twilight drive on the vintage Arrow car ride, the Canobie 500. A fun time all around.
[personal profile] quippe
The Blurb On The Back:

Ibraheem LOVES Eid.

What’s not to love?

There’s games and snacks and … PRESENTS!

Eid is ALL about the presents - isn’t it?

Join Ibraheem as he hunts of this gifts and discovers all the things that make Eid wonderful.

A heartwarming celebration of Eid, curious children and family love.


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Farhana Islam and Nabila Adani’s picture book is a colourful, joyous exploration of the social, family and spiritual meaning of Eid that aims to show young readers that the celebration is not just about receiving gifts. I liked the fact that it’s aimed at Muslim readers but it does miss a trick by not giving a bit more context or explanations for non-Muslims who may want to know more about it.

IBRAHEEM’S PERFECT EID was released in the United Kingdom on 27 February 2025. Thanks to the Amazon Vine Programme for the review copy of this book.

Latourelle and Coopey Falls

Jun. 21st, 2025 02:27 pm
yourlibrarian: Small Green Waterfall (NAT-Waterfall-niki_vakita)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] common_nature


We drove down the historic 30, a 2 lane road that wound around the hills and which crossed paths with numerous waterfalls. Our first stop was Latourelle, which was just off the road. Read more... )

It's a Long Way Down the Holiday Road

Jun. 21st, 2025 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Nigloland was closed.

Not just for the night. They would not open Monday, the day we had planned to visit. Nor Tuesday, the day we were leaving town. They would not be open again until next weekend, a time when we were scheduled to be out of the country of France altogether.

This threw our night for a loop.

So here are the mistakes we made. The first was forgetting just how late the European amusement park season starts. Even when we were in the Netherlands for our honeymoon, in early July, parks were still closing at 6 pm. This early in the year they haven't even gone to full-week operation. The first week of June they weren't even open outside weekends and holidays.

Holidays. This was the mistake we made. We knew they were open the following Monday, the day after Pentecost, because that's when every park in France was expecting to be slammed with people. This is why we changed our trip plans, moving a park from the Monday after the academic conference to the Monday before. We failed to think to check whether the parks would be open.

We had come close to this mistake before; our big Pennsylvania Parks Tour in 2013 originally saw us going to Waldemeer on a Monday when they were not open, but [personal profile] bunnyhugger caught her error the night or two before we set out and rescheduled the entire trip to avoid this. This time ... well, we didn't imagine anything was up until the night before our visit, and there was no rescheduling things to match. To do anything at all we'd have to rebook our plane flight from the following Monday morning and get a hotel room that we now realized would be much more expensive than we had gotten here.

My joke about the Walley World photo stopped being funny and we won't be doing that again.

It wasn't an easy night of sleep, as nice as the hotel bedroom was. But what was there to do?

Besides breakfast, I mean. We got down, late but not before the end of service and could have a petit dejeuner to ourselves. This would include the softest, runniest brie we've ever seen; it was more of a puddle than a cheese and I would not be disappointed if I ate that nonstop. Also crepes and what sure looked like locally-made jams, and an all-kinds-of-fruit juice (mostly grapefruit) which revealed to me that I really like grapefruit juices. So many pastries. More cheeses, too. Even champagne, though I didn't partake, for not much good reason. We ate a good-sized breakfast like we would every day of a trip that saw us both somehow losing weight.

After that, and with le Wi-Fi Password in hand, we went back to the room and I confirmed the sad news about Nigloland, just in case we had somehow fallen prey to an astounding hoax. I did a little Internet stuff on the balcony a bit, enjoying the air and the sunlight and tranquility and a couple people wandering into the Parc du Chateau garden around the hotel, and [personal profile] bunnyhugger searched to see what could possibly be done locally without a car. We couldn't even put together a picnic and go off to the river or something; there's no grocery stores in town, and only one bus that runs once a day to a town that has anything. Nor would we be able to eat dinner unless it were at that hotel, a place we had feared was too formal for the likes of us.

After an hour or so of that, though, I was hit by sleepiness, and decided to lie down for a nap. This turned into a two-hour nap and then I got up and went back to bed for another hour. And then got up and went to bed for another three hours while thinking, oh, I would have been an absolute zombie if I were walking around Nigloland all day. ... Well, maybe not; being out in the sun and doing things instead of sitting would keep me going, and coming home to fall asleep would be normal enough. But my did that show how we maybe should have planned on some recovery time after all our transit.

[personal profile] bunnyhugger slept too, not as much as me, unusually. It felt good to have done and I guess it left us well-prepared for the rest of our week six hours ahead of our home time.


With the Jackson County Fair sinking slowly into the past what could possibly come up next but ... oh, the Calhoun County Fair which, as you'll see, was quite different:

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We got there late in the day so here's the Nuf Edils already in evening glow. Also the slide was in a different spot this year!


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Advantage of getting there later is everything already had lights going, and visibly so.


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The Nuf Edils makes a natural angle over the Haus.


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Getting here a slightly better look at the fun haus because the art is ... not exactly folk, really, but it's got a fun vibe.


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Center of the funhouse that's going pretty hard for the Fun Bavarian German vibe. Note the 'Outhaus' sign reading 'Ocupado'.


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And finally, off to the left, the Biergarten hause with a bunch of fun-looking animals all over the place.


Trivia: In the early 18th century, shortly after the invention of champagne, the craze for it was such that a bottle might sell for up to 8 livres. At the time, all the wine drunk in a day by a great lord's household --- including 35 to 40 servants, some of whom had allowances of up to three bottles per day --- might cost only 6 livres. Source: The Essence of Style: How the French Invented High Fashion, Fine Food, Chic Cafés, Style, Sophistication, and Glamour, Joan DeJean.

Currently Reading: Mission to Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer. NASA SP-2007-4231.

Comics Geography Trivia Question

Jun. 20th, 2025 08:30 pm
dewline: Logo: Open comic book with Cdn. Leaf Symbol (comic books)
[personal profile] dewline
Can anyone please upload a scan of the "Ask the Answer Man" section of the "Daily Planet" page from Detective Comics #470 (June 1977)?
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] common_nature
We visited the butterfly gardens at the Charleston Library, on June 19 although this is dated 20 because it's after midnight.  They were filled with birds, although I didn't manage to catch any pictures of them.

Walk with me ... )

Lindsey Stirling

Jun. 19th, 2025 08:47 pm
lovelyangel: (Haruhi Starlight)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Lindsey Stirling
Lindsey Stirling
Night with the Oregon Symphony
Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall • Portland, Oregon
June 18, 2025
Panasonic Lumix ZS99
f/5.6 @ 20.6mm (115mm 35mm equivalent) • 1/160s • ISO 1600

(Note: all photos in this post were made using the Panasonic Lumix ZS99 compact camera.)

Another one of those serendipity things... on Tuesday morning while catching up on a backlog of Oregonian daily editions, I saw an ad for a Lindsey Stirling Concert in Portland. And the concert was for Wednesday night – just a day away. Really?

Concert! Below This Cut )

A Thousand Stars: Episode V, Part 6

Jun. 19th, 2025 01:02 pm
matril: (Default)
[personal profile] matril
So enough of this Han/Leia stuff, whatever happened to Luke??

We find him hanging upside-down in a forbidding cavern. It's the first of several times in this film that Luke shows up in this striking position, a visual representation of how his worldview is about to get thoroughly upended.

But meanwhile, we have a tantalizing glimpse of Luke's emerging powers. In the first film we saw that the Force helped old Ben moved with amazing speed and dexterity, as well as providing a kind of inner vision past the ordinary senses. But we didn't quite witness an example of full telekinesis (unless you count Vader's Force choking, I guess). Now we get to see the lightsaber, fully out of Luke's physical reach, fly into his outstretched hand.

First, though, there's an important moment of quiet. It's vital that we recognize the need for inward peace and serenity in order to draw upon the Force, because Luke is really going to struggle with that later on. At least for now he's able to get his weapon in the nick of time, free his frozen feet and escape the monster.

(Did you know that Mark Hamill disliked the idea of Luke maiming the creature? He felt that a Jedi would never harm a life form unnecessarily, who was after all only following its instincts. Better if he had just scared the wampa enough to get away. An interesting perspective.)

Anyway, his powers are exciting, but not quite enough to survive a frozen night on Hoth. Next time, the lonely imagery of an ice planet...
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Is it my humor blog? Is it Robert Benchley's? Here's the low-energy results so you can judge for yourself:


I didn't spend a very long time wandering around the day-after-the-fair fairgrounds, but here's what I did see while I was there.

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One of the carnival rides packed up and only looking a bit like the Hall of Justice.


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Couple more rides packed up and, on the left, tractors put on a trailer bed for some reason.


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The Paper Eater, a caged lion here to be your trash bin.


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Meanwhile, off in the distance inside the exhibition hall, people gather their exhibits. I like having the people out of focus but it really needs the frame of the building to be in focus to work well.


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And here's a lion drinking fountain that's got a face full of flowers!


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Of course they leave the port-a-potties up until the last minute.


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ToonTown is smaller than the movie makes it look!


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The ring carved out by the captive pony ride over the course of a week.


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On the table there? That is the tallest broccoli I have ever seen.


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Someone going in to fuss with a storefront exhibit.


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That little creek within the building, turned off but not yet fully drained.


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There it is. The album cover for this set of pictures, with the singer/songwriter sitting out past the spotlight. That's an Art.


Trivia: The word ``shrewd'' first appears in English in the 1300s with pejorative meanings of ``an evildoer, a villain''; by the 1500s it was softened to mean more ``mischievous'' or ``naughty'', and after the 1600s picked up positive connotations of ``cunning, crafty, astute''. Source: Semantic Antics: How and Why Words Change Meaning, Sol Steinmetz.

Currently Reading: Mission to Jupiter: A History of the Galileo Project, Michael Meltzer. NASA SP-2007-4231.

austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

After that wondrous set of carousels and fairground art and all --- including, as [personal profile] bunnyhugger noted, a Bayol carousel rabbit, larger than hers, which revealed that we'd been saying Bayol's name wrong or at least different from how Marianne(?) said it --- what was there to do but get back to the Gare de l'Est so we could wait for our train? Also to sit down a little after we'd been going for so very long. Also to get something to eat. There is no way to guess how much we had eaten in our journeys since the last time we had been in a bed but that's all right; this would be our last food for the day and we didn't go to bed hungry.

You know what Gare de l'Est could really use, though? Chairs. Or benches. Or a lot of seating because for all the people that were there there weren't enough places to sit. Just a bit of advice for French railway authorities there.

The train we got on was one of those high-speed things; we got to see cars on the highway hurtling backwards at highway speed, relative to us. I finally realized where on the screens they showed the speed and could see, we got up to like 150 miles per hour on the ride over, and we would again a couple other rail trips. It hardly felt that fast. We also were not positive we were sitting in the right coach because we went to the coach numbered 9 (or whatever) and while seat numbers larger than and smaller than ours were on it, our actual numbers weren't, so I kept walking in a direction until I found our numbers. We got away with it, at least.

We got off the train in the small town of Bar-sur-Aube, at something like 7 pm on a Sunday, when the place was even more quiet and asleep than you might imagine for a tiny French village late on a Sunday. Question: how to get to Dolancourt and our hotel? I had insisted, it's a train station, there will be a taxi stand. So there might be, but the station was closed up and deserted. Fortunately, they had posted signs with taxi services so I borrowed [personal profile] bunnyhugger's phone and after wrestling with it to allow me to make the local calls that she had got European service for, had a halting conversation with a taxi dispatcher who was running everything through Google Translate. None of this reassured [personal profile] bunnyhugger, but the taxi arriving in about the promised half-hour did. The driver asked if either of us wanted to ride in front and I gave the seat to [personal profile] bunnyhugger, giving her the chance to see the countryside --- beautiful as you'd hope --- and get the first glimpse of Nigloland park. It's got a huge drop tower, it's easy to spot.

Our hotel, the former water mill, was a lovely spot and gave us Chambre number 1, just past a small stairwell up and then another right back down. We turned down the dinner reservation offered us; between fatigue and a great number of small snacks over the day we weren't hungry. And then for all that ... well, [personal profile] bunnyhugger hadn't yet taken her daily half-hour walk. What better thing to do than pace out our journey tomorrow, to get to the amusement park?

We set off in the wrong direction at first, retracing the taxi's steps because we had seen a sign for Nigloland and the Hotel des Pirates from the road. Realizing we were getting only farther from the tower, I started walking along a gravel road past grapevines that possibly was private property? But finding an arrow sign pointing to Nigloland reassured us that if we were trespassing, it was a generally forgiven trespass. We stumbled our way through, trying to take whatever path led us closer to the tower, until we found a side street facing a big park sign, one of the landmarks we'd seen on google Street View. From there --- and now, suddenly, I somehow knew exactly where to get here from our hotel and how to get back efficiently --- we walked to what we took to be the gate of the park and then back to our temporary home.

Reentering I asked the desk clerk for the Wi-Fi password and he told us that was impossible. We have no idea what that meant. The next morning I would ask a different person at the desk --- I remembered enough French to say, ``je voudrais le ... [ fumbling, sheepish expression ] Wi-Fi password?'' --- and she wrote the password down for me, and did not explain that it was written on the back of our room's key card as we would have known had we ever turned that over. The first clerk doesn't seem to have taken a dislike to us or anything either; he was the host when we went to dinner the next day and was as pleasant as possible, and was the same at breakfast the day after that. Maybe I expressed myself poorly.

But for that night, we were on our own without Wi-Fi. Fortunately [personal profile] bunnyhugger had her cell phone and could use it to look up the most important thing: when would Nigloland be open tomorrow, so we knew just when to get up, and how long we'd have to kick around after the park closed. 1 pm to 6? Noon to 5? 11 am? 10?

The answer was nothing we had anticipated.


So with the Jackson County Fair done you know what that leaves me ... that's right: looking around the fairgrounds as they clean up, when I went down to pick up [personal profile] bunnyhugger's pictures! And ribbons! So here's the same spots you were just looking at but with even fewer people somehow!

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Here's my car, parked where all the food vendors and picnic tables had been just like fifteen hours before.


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The canopy to the right is where, I think, the magician had been set up. I don't think it was that Aaron guy [personal profile] bunnyhugger's been following.


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Inside the exhibition hall, with the now-empty booths and false storefronts.


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It wasn't just vegetables that got the card instructing people to throw them out. Baked goods got one too. In the window you can see a couple miniature sets not yet picked up.


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And here's the vegetables waiting for their owners to come, take the ribbons, and throw them out.


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This is not where they're to be thrown, but it is a depression that caught my eye.


Trivia: While fleeing New York, after the duel that murdered Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr stopped in Philadelphia at the home of old friend Charles Biddle. Present was also Charles's son, Nicholas Biddle, who would be the head of the Bank of the United States who warred with, and lost to, Andrew Jackson. (Nicholas was home from college and waiting to leave for Paris.) Source: The Money Men: Capitalism, Democracy, and the Hundred Years' War Over the American Dollar, H W Brands.

Currently Reading: The Invention Of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America, Steven Johnson.

A forest walk

Jun. 18th, 2025 08:50 pm
cmcmck: (Default)
[personal profile] cmcmck posting in [community profile] common_nature
We headed up Lime Kiln Lane and over to New Works then into the forest.

Things are now very green indeed although this is always a green landscape being on the west coast side of things:


More pics: )
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

So. Despite mild confusion about which station to transfer at, and which direction to take out of the Metro, we got to the Musée des Arts Forains just about on time for our 1 pm tour. There were maybe twenty people in the group with us, apparently about half the size of a normal tour group, which meant that some things would go quicker. The museum is at Les Pavillions de Bercy, a set of buildings that originally warehoused wine (the location was, back then, outside the limits of the City of Paris and so immune to the wine taxes) and that naturally grew open-air cafés and other little amusements. So this is why the buildings are a couple of huge, high-ceilinged spots, with plenty of space for everything inside, and separated by enough space for a modest-sized group to hang out in plenty of space.

We expected a tour something like we might get at the Merry-Go-Round Museum in Sandusky, with polite docents explaining the most interesting pieces. This is not the docent we got. The one we had, a young woman with a name that was ... I don't remember anymore, something archetypically French like ``Marianne'' maybe ... a performer. I'm not sure if she said she was actually a cabaret performer but she had the energy and drive of one, talking with it seemed everyone, encouraging people to call out answers to questions both serious and silly. (The tour was mainly in French, but she broke into English for the handful of people like us who benefitted from that. Also [personal profile] bunnyhugger had been given a laminated booklet, most of which she photographed, explaining the exhibit in English. There were also German and other language versions available.) You might get some of the tone of the place by descriptions of some of the busts of famous figures decorating the outside of one of the buildings. They had, for example, Charles de Gaulle and François Mitterand. Also Jimmy Carter and Mick Jagger. Why? Well, let's move on inside, shall we?

The museum has a number of pieces of amusement and fairground art --- signs, backdrops, figures from rides, that sort of thing. A lot of things that are illuminated. Some that go back a great way, like bagatelle tables that I teased [personal profile] bunnyhugger with by saying at last, we had found pinball! Some go back only to ... within my lifetime, such as the horse-racing midway game they had. This was one of those roll-the-balls-to-make-the-horses-move games, and everybody got a turn, in a couple rounds of trying. The mechanism they had, in lovely shape and well-painted and with all the horses working, dates to the ancient days of the 1970s. [personal profile] bunnyhugger came within a whisker of winning the race, her turn.

Ah, but the real centerpiece here was not the horse-racing game, or the many figures with bootleg Mickey Mouse or Popeye or such. No, the centerpiece was carousels. Three of them, just like Cedar Point. Once was your classic sort of travelling carousel, three horses across, though with some interesting twists, like, one of the non-horse rides was a rowboat that rocks side to side. I'm sorry to say we weren't able to get a ride in that, but kids leapt into the spot and you can't fault them that.

What we expected would be the most interesting was the salon carousel. This is a near-extinct breed of carousel, with mounts resting on the platform instead of suspended by poles from the canopy, and going for ornateness in the design. This despite being a travelling ride, most of the time, itself! In the classic installation the ride would have a facade built around it to look like a salon, the sort of place where you might discuss Impressionism or the Communards or Boulanger. The platform's made to look like marble, and the seats are tastefully overdone, as opposed to the American carousel style of ``stick some more glass jewels on it''. The carousel moves slowly, even by modern standards, but it's a stately sort of slowness, the sort of thing to make you feel like your'e drowsing in luxury, an attitude supported by the music that's got some classical, lullaby feel.

The penultimate attraction and something I'm sure draws private parties all the time was a band organ, one of the huge ones that dominates a room instead of being set out by a carousel to call people to the midway. It was the sort of thing I'd seen at the Speelklok Museum in Utrecht that [personal profile] bunnyhugger has since been sorry she didn't get to see herself. It played a waltz, and at Marianne(?)'s encouragement many people get into the dancing. [personal profile] bunnyhugger asked if I knew how to waltz and I could say what I did know: you and your partner go around in a circle, which itself goes around in a bigger circle. This is true enough, although people who actually know how to waltz also know how to move as a graceful epicycle among the main circle. Well, for only really knowing the waltz from cartoons and this one podcast I didn't embarrass myself. Only [personal profile] bunnyhugger.

The last big exhibit and the one we did not even imagine was there was ...

So, come the late 19th century. You know what's new and stylish and exciting? Bicycles. Not like those boring old horses and donkeys that everyone rides and is bored by. So what would be a great carnival ride? Something you could really take money for? Something where you ride a bicycle. And so this is the result of that thinking: a carousel that's a ring of one- and two-seater bicycles, set in a fixed ring around the center pole. Its power source? The pedalling of the riders.

[personal profile] bunnyhugger had heard of these, even seen a picture of one, ages ago, in one of her books about European amusements. She did not know any still existed. Neither of us imagined we'd ever be at one, or get to ride one.

There were conditions, of course. First, these were fixed-gear single-speed 'bicycles' so if your feet slipped off the pedals you were not to try getting them back on. Just put your feet up on the frame and wait for the ride to end. Also kids, don't try pedalling. Just sit in the passenger seats behind the pedalers. Also, Marianne(?) warned, it would not be comfortable. The seats were, fin-de-siècle style, hard lumps with no give, and the pedals were shiny brass(?) rods with very little footing, closer to what you get if you take the top off a stirrup than anything you'd actually use to bicycle.

It is also loud, sounding much more like thunder when you get it going, which takes less strain than you might expect when everybody's pedalling. And it gets going really fast, even with some people losing their footing and bowing out of the pedalling; the only thing to really slow people down is their exhaustion and their fear of how fast they have got the thing moving. It felt to us like it was going as fast as the Crossroads Village or the Cedar Downs carousels, although maybe that's an illusion created by how much of a hand we have in it. You don't get many amusement park rides that are rider-powered (the museum had a couple Venetian swings, out of service, though, one of the other kinds of rides you can just go on until you or the ride operator lose patience).

I'm sorry only that we were in too small a group for there to be two cycles on the velocipede carousel; I'd have loved to get a movie of the whole process. But surely other tourists have taken videos and put them wherever you get videos online. It is something else.

After this the tour was over. I hung back to get some last pictures of the Popeye and Mickey Mouse bootleg stuff. [personal profile] bunnyhugger (and many of the other people) used the chance to go to the bathroom, a thing I totally missed and would slightly regret, as the Gare de l'Est had pay toilets and we had no coins and weren't going to use credit cards to pee. Sorry to end on such a mundane note but there's only so much interesting to say about thanking Marianne(?) and agreeing it was a fantastic tour.


And now at last, another end, this one of the Jackson County Fair pictures! Or is it?

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I have no explanation for this elephant.


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The pink elephant, that I can explain.


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Green I don't remember from Dumbo.


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This time I noticed there's several models of Timothy Q Mouse and they rotate around semi-freely. You can see two of them in this shot.


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Elephant making sure everybody sees how Timothy hasn't got pants.


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And one of the crows asking, basically, Mmmmmmmmyes?


Trivia: Coleco paid Cinematronics two million dollars for the home rights to the Dragon's Lair video game. Source: The Ultimate History of Video Games, Steven L Kent.

Currently Reading: The Invention Of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America, Steven Johnson.

PS: Don't you want to know What’s Going On In The Phantom (Sundays)? What’s this B-17 crash doing? March – June 2025 gets explained to you in fewer words than it took to read this here.

Abstract Art on a Northern Lake

Jun. 17th, 2025 06:39 pm
jesse_the_k: Flannery Lake is a mirror reflecting reds violets and blues at sunset (Rosy Rhinelander sunset)
[personal profile] jesse_the_k posting in [community profile] common_nature

I’m staying near a northern Wisconsin lake at 45.658965, -89.497625, where I’ll be revelling in 15:45 hours of daylight on the summer solstice. The logged-over forest is mostly red pine, and wow they’re pollinating—creating very abstract art near the dock

Pine pollen forms semi-opaque circles over shallow sandy beach described in entry

two more pics )

Dogwood Leaf Beetle

Jun. 17th, 2025 09:27 am
pauraque: bird flying (Default)
[personal profile] pauraque posting in [community profile] common_nature
off-white beetle with dark markings resembling calligraphy

Getting into my car after a walk, I found this elegantly decorated beetle on my shirt. It has the very appropriate scientific name of Calligrapha philadelphica, also known as the Dogwood Leaf Beetle.

When it opened its wings to fly, I was surprised to see its inner wings were red. I guess that could be the wax seal on the parchment. :)

photo showing the red wings )

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