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

When last I reported on the mice they had just got a couple new toys, a bridge and a balsa-wood house. They still have them, and they're enjoying them a great deal based on how they're burying them and using them to hide from the world. They also have a couple small plastic igloo-shaped houses that they keep turning upside-down, so they're more like a bird's nest than a sheltered area. They've done this consistently enough we have to suppose it's a deliberate choice and I think [personal profile] bunnyhugger has given up on trying to set it right.

But they have something new as well. [personal profile] bunnyhugger was satisfied that they were not fighting, at least not seriously, and had settled on what they figure their social arrangements should be. And so that encouraged her to put in the sort of toy that mice might fight over. That is, of course, a wheel, which every kind of animal, not just mice, turns out to like.

The mice took to it quickly, like you'd expect, particularly with the brown mice doing a lot of running. At least one of them was taking to it, at least; we haven't figured how to tell the two apart. We might have to wait until they're grown more and hope some clear difference shows up. But at least one of them would build up a lot of speed and then stop running, letting the momentum spin them around. We don't know whether that's a deliberate choice or just a failure to understand momentum yet. But it's also easy to suppose they find that fun.

Which made it odd that after a day or two they stopped running the wheel. Investigation revealed that they'd gotten paper caught in it, keeping the wheel from spinning freely, and once that was moved mice were back on the wheel and doing well. Besides the brown mice we've spotted the grey one. We don't have a confirmed sighting of our original, white, mouse on the wheel. I know I often saw her running the wheel when I got downstairs at like 7:30 am, but since it's been only a couple days since she had the option I haven't had the chance to observe whether she is running in the morning. I'll have more on this mouse activity stuff as it comes to pass.


Now let's look at a thing that has passed, photos of Marvin's in our November visit. Don't worry, there's another to come.

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One of the mechanical contraptions, the ``Michigan Anteater''. I forget whether it was actually working which leaves me wondering just how it was that it didn't hunt well.


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A head of Elsie with the explanation that cows have two stomachs and use cud to aid digestion.


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[personal profile] bunnyhugger coining up on Attack From Mars. And why was she doing this at this moment? That will be revealed shortly.


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Some of those old Chuck E Cheese figures. I forget their proper name and also the name I gave them in jest like a year ago so I won't bother calling them anything.


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Another of the Chuck E Cheese figures. They aren't operating at Marvin's.


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And this isn't Chuck E Cheese but rather FunHouse's Rudy as the Three Stooges.


Trivia: The United States Lines shipping company was formed in 1921 by the United States Shipping Board as a government-owned corporation. It was sold in 1929 to the P W Champan Company, which soon defaulted, and the government had to foreclose. Source: Box Boats: How Container Ships Changed The World, Brian J Cudahy.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

Library Update #12: Painting Complete

Sep. 26th, 2025 06:05 pm
lovelyangel: Euphie from TenTen Kakumei, Ep 12 (Euphie Smile)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Living Room, South End, Painted
Living Room, South End, Painted
iPhone 13 mini photo

Painting the library took all week, and the crew finished at 2:00 pm today. The room hadn’t been painted in 23 years, and the refresh is sleek and bright. All the brown wood trim and off-white front and back doors are gone. The room looks radiant.

Living Room, North End, Painted
Living Room, North End, Painted
iPhone 13 mini photo

Also, the red brick fireplace was painted black:

Fireplace, Painted
Fireplace, Painted
iPhone 13 mini photo

At various times during painting, we had restricted access to the kitchen, the new storage cabinets, and the front and back doors. I’m glad the noisy, messy week is over. I’m pleased with the result.

Next week: Bookwall installation.

Shaggy Mane mushroom

Sep. 26th, 2025 02:43 pm
weird: (Default)
[personal profile] weird posting in [community profile] common_nature

Found on an industrial estate in middle England

(click for bigger/better quality)

I Would Like You to Dance

Sep. 26th, 2025 12:10 am
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Thank you, dear [personal profile] bunnyhugger.


In the humor blog mines this week: strange noises in the neighborhood, a strange discovery over by the sink, I pick a fight with none of my readers in Gil Thorp, and Jimmy Rabbit gets a wheelbarrow shakes my concept of the whole Arthur Scott Bailey novelistic universe.


How about we look in on Marvin and the Mechanical Museum from back in Mnovember?

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Stuff in the back, including a claw game and that large Mannequin Doctor who is both not electric and pleasant.


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And here's someone trapped in a pillar. It happens.


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Cardiff Giant beside some of Marvin's Tiny Staff. (That's the area with the grill and soda machine and such.)


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This proclaims itself a replica of Thomas Edison's carbon filament lamp and I don't see any reason to doubt that, particularly. I like that because of the reflection you get to see the filament from two angles.


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Never seen before! In my pictures. The men's room at Marvin's. Inside the toilet stall is a sign about John F Kennedy's record as fastest public speaker, once recorded at 327 words per minute if you believe that.


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And some of the stuff on the walls, above the hand dryer that has ballyhoo about how it's an experimental jet engine. The tiles underneath this are four M's in a row, but you can't see them.


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Back on the game floor. Alas, once again, the Cedar Point roller coaster simulator was down. The thing offers six rides, two of which --- Mean Streak and Mantis --- have been reconfigured into different rides (Mantis only slightly, by changing from a standing coaster to a seated one; Mean Streak by a total rebuild). Gemini, Blue Streak, Magnum, and Iron Dragon are still as they would have been when the video was recorded. Note the music's by Peter Frampton.


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More stuff you see by looking up, including a pig and a railroad engine plan.


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Not sure I ever photographed this before but the vestibule had a big M in the tile, partly obscured by the floor mats.


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A full-on Marvin's logo mat. I don't know if they ever sold these but it would've made sense.


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More stuff on walls, including for some reason a gorilla chauffeur that doesn't read even slightly racially coded in any way, and a poster from the 4th Exposition de la Locomotion Aerienne, 1912.


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Humpty Dumpty dressed for Halloween and looking like Pac-Man. Also you see the slushies they had on tap.


Trivia: The 62-mile Lancaster Turnpike, completed 1794, was built by a private joint-stock corporation. Of 2,275 applicants for stock only 600, chosen by a lottery wheel, were allowed to subscribe. Source: Engineering In History, Richard Shelton Kirby, Sidney Withington, Arthur Burr Darling, Frederick Gridley Kilgour. The book says the price was $7,000 per mile, which seems like a lot if that's 1794 dollars but not enough if that's in the dollars of the book's 1956 publication. Like, I'm not sure there was $434,000 in the whole country in 1794.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

Birds, At Home and Not

Sep. 25th, 2025 01:24 pm
yourlibrarian: Ghost Duck Icon (NAT-Ghost Duck-yourlibrarian)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] common_nature


From earlier this summer, a view of a local hawk.

Read more... )

A Thousand Stars: Episode V, Part 18

Sep. 25th, 2025 12:39 pm
matril: (Default)
[personal profile] matril
As Luke sets up camp on Dagobah, his sense of the eerie continues. Notice how even with all his technology, it's visually overshadowed by the misty swamp that surrounds them. Artoo has already gotten so muddy he's starting to blend in with the organic world. It's strange and unsettling, though Luke can't quite put his finger on it.

Then this little guy shows up. Luke, jumpy and suspicious, responds with his weapon. He hasn't learned Dagobah's lesson that nothing is what it seems. Even as his suspicions dissipate, his reaction turns to amusement and dismissal. And can we blame him? The tiny newcomer behaves like a silly child, rooting through Luke's things and fighting over a trinket with Artoo. When he insists that he can help Luke, no wonder he's skeptical, looming over him in superior height and, he assumes, superior knowledge.

Yet when Luke reveals that he's looking for a Jedi, the visitor knows that he's speaking of Yoda. Luke is astonished, and then realizes if he wants to fulfill his quest, he'll have to play nice. If he'd ever read any folk tales he should have already known, you never dismiss the strange little man who shows up on the roadside. You never know what his unassuming appearance might be concealing. Luke has a lot to learn.

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

Last Friday we got to RLM Amusements for another Grand Rapids all-night pinball tournament. We'd been thinking to get back there and see the regression to the mean from my second-place finish last month, and besides, a couple of Lansing Pinball League folks were also planning to go out. How could we not join in 517 night in Grand Rapids?

So, skipping to the results: I did not repeat my finals performance. I didn't even make it to playoffs. I started out with a loss on 300, a bowling-themed electromechanical, and that's one of the three games I consider my pocket games, the ones I can always pull out a win on. I got to play three of my pocket games this time --- 300, Fast Draw, and Genesis --- and lost on each of them. I also lost to fellow Lansing player DG on Indianapolis 500, a game that, if I may be immodest, I rule on in its Pinball Arcade virtual version. On the other hand, I did beat PCL, also from Lansing, when we played on Dune, a boutique pinball game that we're not sure actually exists. RLM Amusements has a bunch of games that seem like they can't be real (Labyrinth, Evil Dead, Baby Pac-Man) and this is just one more in the line. I had gone in figuring, we're playing fourteen rounds, if I get seven wins I'm in playoffs, and I started out losing six games of the first eight. So I had to win five of the last six and what do you know, but that last six started with me playing [personal profile] bunnyhugger.

We haven't had to play head-to-head much at RLM, and we prefer it that way because c'mon. The game was Total Nuclear Annihilation, a retro 80s style game with a theme of ``light up a nuclear reactor and blow it up, nine times over''. It had been one of her strengths when the game was at The Pyramid Scheme in Grand Rapids, but at RLM Amusements she hasn't got its wave. This time around, I had the groove. I so had it. My first ball I got a nuclear reactor lit and blown up, and the second ball I got a multiball going that let me blow up a second reactor. [personal profile] bunnyhugger tried but, demoralized, couldn't get much of anything together. I beat her horribly, and then, with ball three --- and my best game ever, in that I'd never gotten a second reactor blown up --- I kept on going. This irritated her because I ran up what was already a ridiculous win. And I ended up on the high score table, both for points and for speed in blowing up reactors two and three, which I didn't even know was a possible achievement.

This set me going on a bit of a winning streak; I was able to beat JTK --- who'd come out when he heard we were visiting --- on Uncanny X-Men next, and I'd go on to beat PCL and someone else on Buck Rogers. But I took a loss on Evil Dead, where I couldn't find the shot to get anything started, and in the last round lost on Fast Draw, somehow.

And [personal profile] bunnyhugger? We kept comparing notes over the night; she started with a pair of disheartening losses, and then it became four losses before she finally got to Fast Draw and won. She got another win after that, but then took three losses in a row, sinking her below where she could expect to make playoffs. But then she started winning, racking up three victories in a row before the final game, on Terminator 2, an early-90s game that's always something of a coin flip on location like this. And she lost the flip, ending up just below me. (For the curious, we've played at RLM Amusements six times this year; I've finished ahead of her four times, she's finished ahead of me twice.)

We hung around a while, particularly because both JTK and PCL did make playoffs. Both lost in the first round. DG didn't make playoffs either. But we talked some, gossiped some, played against each other some --- we did a four-player game of Dune where once again, somehow, I know how to play Dune? For some reason? I don't know.

In other pinball, before and after the tournament I did a lot of playing on Baby Pac-Man, hoping to figure out something about that cursed game in case I get called up on it, during qualifying (random draws) or during playoffs (when specific games are chosen). I can't say I'm good at it, but I did put up a couple respectable games and one really good one, getting to the third maze, which is farther than I've done playing Ms Pac-Man. Possibly a few more sessions and the game won't be an easy loss for me.

I also finally played some of the video games, in-between rounds, trying to soothe my disappointment at lost pocket games. That Bust-A-Move/Puzzle Bobble game? That's pretty fun, I like that.


Now, more of my antepenultimate visit to Marvin's at the former Hunters Square mall, back in November:

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A sequence of Broom Hilda drawings to support someone's Academy of Music. I'm curious how the Academy came to seek Russell Myers's attention.


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No Smoking sign alongside a giant cigarette.


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Big Head that I can't swear was ever used in a Detroit Thanksgiving Day Parade. Probably not; it's a bit big even for the Big Heads.


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King Cobra, once again not up to the challenge of striking at anyone's hands.


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Some of the old magician posters, like the renowned ... Virgil, I assume with the astounding Aeneid. Plus a reprint of one of those Beatles at Shea Stadium advertisements.


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And it wouldn't be a Marvin's visit without a picture of the Cardiff Giant tucked away in his box.


Trivia: In 1917 the draft bureau reported that about one-third of all the American men called to serve were physically unfit, many with diet-caused conditions like rickets or bad teeth. Source: A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression, Jane Ziegelman, Andrew Coe.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

Happier Birthdays to [personal profile] puppetmaker!

Sep. 24th, 2025 07:40 pm
dewline: Exclamation: "Hear, Hear!" (celebration)
[personal profile] dewline
I am grateful that you are still with us among the living.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

No time to write stuff today, so please enjoy a double dose of Marvin's pictures from back in November. We're finally almost inside! Also please read up on What's Going on in Gil Thorp? Why Is Gil Thorp All Political Now? June - September 2025 as I get all the politics going.

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Pinball playfields used as decorations on the vestibule. Left to right theese are F-14 Tomcat, Fire, and Ali.


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These I don't know as well because they're Gameplan games and who ever sees them? The one on the right is Captain Hook, from 1985. The one in the center is a game called Agents 777, from 1984, like you'd imagine.


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Sorry to spend so much time on Agents [sic] 777, but I think you'll agree the more you look the more you're mystified, starting with the three 7's in the car.


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See, a gambling-theme game makes sense as it is, and a heist or gangster-themed game, sure. Cops-versus-gangsters, yeah, I get that. And then ...


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You know it's pinball because there's a sexy bell.


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I assume, given the slot machine theme, that's a cherry that has those cherry breasts.


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Enough of that. Getting inside here, and the Pinball Row lineup ahead of league night.


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The airplanes on the conveyor belt ready for someone to put a quarter in and make them go. Those darned zeppelins, always tipping over.


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From over near the men's bathroom, lots of stuff, including two carousels that might or might not be for sale.


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And trophies! These would be awarded the next month, as league finals, to the top three finishers in A and the top finisher in B. You know the champion of B.


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League night getting organized, so much as it ever does.


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More of those planes and, of course, Ghost Homer choking Pirate Bart.


Trivia: On 23 September 1948 the FCC issued ``the freeze'' of new TV channel authorizations. Source: The Forgotten Network: DuMont and the Birth of American Television, David Weinstein. 123 already-authorized stations were allowed to continue, although only a couple dozen were on the air in 1948. A bit over a hundred of them were on by the time the freeze was lifted in spring 1952.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

“Go and love some more.”

Sep. 23rd, 2025 04:21 pm
lovelyangel: (Dancing Angel)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Twenty First Ave Kitchen & Bar
Twenty First Ave Kitchen & Bar
NW 21st Ave • Portland, Oregon
September 21, 2025
Sony RX100 VII • Zeiss 24-200mm (35mm equiv) f/2.8-4.5
f/4 @ 38mm • 1/8s • ISO 1600

The worst thing about going to Cinema 21 to see a movie is finding street parking. I’m not thrilled about the hunt – and I’m not so great at parallel parking into the tight spaces. I thought I would take a chance on Cinema 21’s Parking Recommendations and use the Legacy Parking Garage on NW Kearney.

I padded my schedule in case I needed to do a street parking search. Sunday, I left home at 6 pm, and Google suggested that the scenic route on SW Barnes Rd and W Broadway would be the fastest – and I prefer that route to the Sunset Highway any day.

An Evening at the Movies )
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

I mentioned this the other day but wasn't explicit about it. Last weekend we went to [personal profile] bunnyhugger's parents to spend a day grilling-and-chilling, as the phrase goes. At one point her mom had asked us to go to Meijer's and get whatever vegetarian burgers or whatever we wanted cooked, but that changed by the time we actually went down there. They provided way too much to eat, several burgers each and two or three hot dogs each and so much potato salad and so many baked beans that we are still, over a week later, finishing off leftovers.

As usual the highlight of the day, for their dog, was [personal profile] bunnyhugger walking the dog. She takes the dog on an extra-long walk, all the way across the river (they're on the riverbank) to the park opposite it, and over to where we're in sight of downtown but not really there. She gets so many chances to smell interesting things and to pee and then scratch at the ground in completely random directions, like she knows you can use this motion to spread your scent around but not how to do it effectively. Also to meet other dogs and show every possible reaction from being really chill to being surprisingly offended that the dog is there.

Two curious things happened along the walk. One is that near the end of the walk [personal profile] bunnyhugger tried to turn down a different street than she always uses, and the dog wasn't having it. The dog just stayed on the correct sidewalk until we shrugged and figured if it was that important to her, fine. You wouldn't think a dog would get that particular especially about a walk she gets every couple weeks at most. The other strange thing is at one point I got ahead of [personal profile] bunnyhugger and the dog and turned back toward them, and the dog got very suspicious of this, growling as if she didn't know who I was or what I was doing there. She shook it off, but, wow, I've been visiting this dog every month or so for close to a decade. You'd think I'd have made some impression.

Last time we had gone over we wanted to bring a roleplaying board game, Aftermath, but couldn't find it. This time, we found it --- I thought [personal profile] bunnyhugger had found it while looking for something else, but she didn't, so I guess we have to suppose it was the Eternals hiding something and returning it so we would make a bad decision differently --- and didn't have anywhere near the time to play. Maybe next time, unless it goes missing again. We should get back to them in the next couple weeks.


Next up: a visit to Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, as it stood in early November last year. Hoping its replacement stands soon.

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The front door of Marvin's, promising nothing nicer anywhere and advertising the recommendation of its owner.


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One of or maybe the Marvin's truck, in case you need mechanical stuff delivered somewhere.


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The ghost of the Hunter's Square sign, reflecting the ancient history of this as an indoor mall that became a strip mall and now a nothing, replaced with a Meijer's or something.


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I know you're thinking that's a big red-bodied spider up there.


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But no, it's the Marvin's clock, which has the hours run backwards. The second hand runs backward too. It wsa nowhere near 11:00 when I took this photo; I'm not sure whether the hour and minute hands didn't work at all or if they were just so far out of time it didn't matter.


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And the hours for the museum, including the note about how they intend to be open through the end of the calendar year (they got past that by a couple days) and intended to reopen in a new location.


Trivia: NASA's seal and ``meatball'' logo were principally designed by James J Modarelli, head of the Research Reports Division at the NASA Lewis Research Center (now the Glenn Research Center), with the assistance of the Heraldic Branch of the Army Office of the Quartermaster General (now the Army Institute of Heraldry). Source: Emblems of Exploration: LOgos of the NACA and NASA, Joseph R Chambers, Mark A Chambers. Monographs in Aerospace History no 56.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

Clown Town by Mick Herron

Sep. 22nd, 2025 11:13 pm
[personal profile] quippe
The Blurb On The Back:

Spies lie. They betray. It’s what they do.


Slow horse River Cartwright is waiting to be passed fit for work. With time to kill, and with his grandfather - a legendary former spy - long dead, River investigates the secrets of the old man’s library, and a mysteriously missing book.

Regent’s Park’s First Desk, Diana Taverner, doesn’t appreciate threats. So when those involved in a covert operation during the height of the Troubles threaten to expose the ugly side of state security, Taverner turns blackmail into opportunity.

Over at Slough House, the repository for failed spies, Catherine Standish just wants everyone to play nice. But as far as Jackson Lamb is concerned, the slow horses should all be at their desks.

Because when Taverner starts plotting mischief people get hurt, and Lamb has no plans to send in the clowns. On the other hand, if the clowns ignore his instructions and fool around, any harm that befalls them is hardly his fault.

But they’re his clowns. And if they don’t all come home, there’ll be a reckoning.


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

The 9th in Mick Herron’s SLOUGH HOUSE spy thriller series is a game changer for the slow horses as they take casualties (including a fatality) and scores are settled. It has the sharp wit, savage violence, and political skewering of the previous books but some of the writing isn’t as clear as it could be, and some of the slow horses remain underdeveloped. That said it still held my attention and the stunning ending makes me impatient for book 10.

A Reminder re: Hey!Cafe

Sep. 22nd, 2025 09:41 am
dewline: (canadian media)
[personal profile] dewline
I'm maintaining an account on that Penticton, BC-based social media service, partly as a fallback measure in case I lose access to Mastodon, Bluesky and Twitter-as-was, and partly as a means of supporting made-in-Canada social media. You can find my account here:

https://hey.cafe/@dewline

Yes, I expect to set up something with Gander as well, for similar reasons.

Happier Birthdays to [personal profile] matociquala!

Sep. 22nd, 2025 09:37 am
dewline: Exclamation: "Hear, Hear!" (celebration)
[personal profile] dewline
Hoping you're doing well these days!
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
[personal profile] austin_dern

Small mouse update. I mean the update is small, but so are the mice. After a couple days of the mice getting to be at peace with each other it was time to start adding toys, which [personal profile] bunnyhugger had.

The first is this wooden bridge, a set of small logs with a stiff wire connecting them so you can give it some shape, even if (as happens in our case) neither end is held to anything. So it's more of a thin, hollow hill than a bridge, but it gives them access to some height. This was a big hit, as the mice quickly examined it and decided they quite liked going up the hill, and down the hill, and peering down from the apex of the bridge. The eldest mouse also started to build a new nest under one of its feet.

The next day came a new toy, and a practical one. It's a balsa-wood house, two levels with a bunch of 'doors' and 'windows' all of soft wood that probably feels great to chew. This, set in the corner, was also a big hit right away and we got to watch a lot of excited mouse exploration of how to get in, how to get out, and how to squirt from the second level to the roof. (There's no direct way to get from the first level to the second, yet, but they can chew it open in time.) It was also fascinating watching them pull litter that [personal profile] bunnyhugger had tossed into it back outside and set on the bridge.

This morning they'd rebuilt things, building up bedding material to pretty near the top of the first level, making the ramp up there redundant. Also they'd taken some craft paper and pulled it over one of the entrances, which can now be used in privacy. So they seem to have things largely figured out. The next thing to add: a running wheel. This had been held back for fear that it would give them something to fight over as they establish the pecking order. If that's gotten established and they don't have serious cause to quarrel anymore, they can get to running.


And now, early November, you know what happened? We adopted a pet rabbit is what and here's the pictures from meeting her! Which I might have already run but ask me if I have the energy to check that when I can just upload a half-dozen pictures again.

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Athena in her carrier, ready to be let loose!


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And here she is, getting her first view of her new living space!


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And here she is, running away from her living space!


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No ... no, bunny, don't go wedging yourself into the labyrinth of cables from our component stereo! Not with your cable-eating habit!


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There, we've dragged her out and coaxed her into trying out her pen, now at the cleanest it will ever be.


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Finally I give in and take a flash photograph so she isn't just a featureless black blob, and you can see how she has eyes and everything! Isn't that adorable?


Trivia: In 1546, two Portuguese agents stationed in Venice reported that 650,000 pounds of spice, much of it from Aceh, had landed in Cairo, bound for Venice. This would be enough to supply Europe for a month. Source: A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped The World, William J Bernstein.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent.

RIP: Bernie Parent

Sep. 21st, 2025 02:32 pm
dewline: A marker of my age and my sports interest (hockey)
[personal profile] dewline
Another piece of my childhood sports-watching life gone...

https://www.cbc.ca/sports/hockey/nhl/bernie-parent-obit-1.7639630

I don't care if it's decadent

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

We'd had a tentative plan for today to go down to the beach at St Joseph, Michigan. Really we'd had the plan for it a month ago but other stuff came up with a higher priority. And then we took a serious look at the weather, finding that most likely it was going to start raining around 5 pm and only get heavier. Even getting up as early as was plausible that would give us maybe five hours at the beach and then we'd have to pack up under a raincloud and drive home through thunderstorms, so, we cancelled that. Maybe next weekend if the weather stays okay.

As it turned out the forecast for rain on the shore was right, although it looks like the storms are just hugging the coastline of Lake Michigan, so the drive home would've been okay. Meanwhile at home it's smelled like rain but looked like sun. We'll see what develops.


For pictures today, let me give you Halloween, including a little walk around the neighborhood and the costume contest at our local hipster bar. You'd enjoy that, I expect.

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House up the street wrapped up in spiderwebs.


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Not decorated for Halloween: building a building.


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Part of the really big Michigan Avenue Reconstruction Project. They tore up the street down to the old trolley tracks and cut down every tree that was on the street as part of the redesign work and I sure hope it pays off.


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For a while the street was completely shut off and you'd see things like this when you tried to walk along the way. It was rough for the businesses in the neighborhood, but it was all better when the road was finished and they discovered there was a bike lane now.


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It was wild seeing how far down they dug; you don't think of the sidewalk as a thing you have to hop up to.


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The end of the road on Clemens.


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Meanwhile, going on at the local hipster bar? The Fear and Trembling tournament. [personal profile] bunnyhugger made these trophies for the winners, and people also got door prizes of the Stern Pinball glasses and the Godzilla translite and I think something else but who remembers what?


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For the Halloween season the bar added this inflatable two-headed dragon to their performance stage.


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Halloween night I spotted this obvious trap on the sidewalk outside the bar.


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Here's [personal profile] bunnyhugger the jackalope playing The Beatles.


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And here she is on stage with a bunch of other costumed characters waiting for first-round judging from the audience. [personal profile] bunnyhugger didn't make it through to the next round.


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Another view of the stage. I think one of the contestants went as that Olympics Breakdancing woman, remember her? That was popular and [personal profile] bunnyhugger was annoyed at such a costume but I pointed out there was absolutely no other time that you could possibly have done that.


Trivia: The Guernsey Lily came to that island in the mid-1650s when a Dutch East India company returning from Japan was wrecked off its shore, and a Cape [ of Africa ] Lily salvaged from it were presented was presented by grateful survivors to the Dean of Guernsey. Source: Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution, Lisa Jardine.

Currently Reading: Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, Daniel Okrent. Today I learn Warren G Harding commuted Eugene V Debs's (bogus) Espionage Act conviction, on condition that Harding meet the socialist, and did. Okrent says Harding pardoned Debs, though Wikipedia says Debs was never pardoned, possibly because Debs viewed asking for a pardon as an admission of guilt. Which is fair; the US Supreme Court ruled that one can refuse a pardon on exactly those grounds. Still, that Harding did that raises my estimate of a guy, I'll admit, I don't think of highly. Also raising it: that in a 1921 speech in Birmingham, Alabama, Harding said that Black men should vote. He didn't do anything about it, because Harding was not a person to do things, but he did decide it was worth his saying it.

lovelyangel: (Ichijo Night)
[personal profile] lovelyangel
Cinema 21 is having a Centennial Celebration featuring a film festival this month, and one of my favorite films, Harold and Maude, will be shown. I don’t remember the last time I saw the movie in a theater, so I bought a ticket for Sunday.

I am very fortunate in that I have the Harold and Maude Criterion Collection Blu-ray, which is now out-of-print at Criterion. But it’s always a treat to see a favorite movie on the big screen, with an audience.

I went to Cinema 21 more frequently in the 1980s and 1990s but have rarely gone in this century. I guess the last time I went was in 2013. (Maybe I’ve been once or twice since and didn’t blog about it.) It will be nice to revisit an old friend in town.

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