Books

Aug. 4th, 2025 11:03 am
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
* Project Hail Mary - There is going to be an extra meeting of my book club sometime this fall for it, but I wanted to read it early because some people were disappointed by how much was revealed in the trailer. So, I finished it last night and then finally saw the trailer. I am glad I read the book cold, not so much because of the obvious reveal, but more the smaller details. If you want to read the book before the film and have seen the trailer, maybe try to avoid watch it again.

I enjoyed it. For most of the book the way the science information was slowly built upon and discovered was really great, kind of felt like a really good video essay at times? But then there was a point where I really wanted the author to stop explaining experiments and just say the results. There is a whole section where most of what made the science bits work is just missing. It's not one element that's missing, it's several. This happens late in the book when there is a very small number of possible endings. I think a few 'amazingly, got the results that first time' instead of 'let me detail doing this same experiments six times' would really have helped.

I read it as an audiobook, but that format works really well for a couple of reasons. It's all first person POV of the main character.

Mild spoilers, barely any if you have seen the trailer )

I have one big note about the overall plotand it's a spoiler for the very last part of the book ) Okay maybe more than one note.

* What Moves The Dead - Finally got his read! It's also the next horror book club pick so I am somewhat on top of my book club reading. Really looking forward to the next book and also the upcoming book which I assume is the final one in the series? But, I am going to hold off until after book club. Her writing is really great. I definitely have some gender notes about this book and, uh I have an awkward feeling based on talk about it in book club discord that we might need to have a talk about the MC, pronouns and how Alex actually self ID's.

* Six of Crows - My reading of this was broken up by a few things including needing to power-read a book for book club. I am going to take a bit of a break between this book and Crooked Kingdom as these books are long and also I want to be able to focus on reading it unrushed and without pauses. Some aspects of the con/grist/heist stuff that was going on were very clear and well done, and making that all so clear is very tricky. But the physical aspects involving buildings... she kinda lost me there, but it might be due to reading it in chunks. I'll have to evaluate that on a re-read. Her character writing and some of the twists were amazing.

This book had a lot of reminders of how young some of these characters are, and also how young some of the characters in Shadow and Bone were supposed to be. I get it, these were written for the YA market, but at times it's like... really? For some of them, it tracks, for others?

* The Death of Jane Lawrence - Enjoyed it! The world building was tight and very interesting. I picked up on all of it despite consuming it as an audiobook. The print version uses formatting and a few other things to help clarify what's going on, but using my book club as a sample: some people who were audio-only got was going on and some people who read the print version didn't even notice things like sections without capitalization. The author was surprised that some of the people who read the physical version didn't even pick up on it.

I really enjoyed the author's skill in having such a shifting world/situation/etc, but it wasn't exactly my overall vibe. I will read some more by her

* My TBR shortlist right now is
- Ocean's Godori: I can't make the bookclub meeting for it, but I still want to read along
- A Dark And Drowning Tide: I don't typically like the romantasy club picks, but this interested me
- Jade City
- Deadly Education
- Left Hand of Darkness

Currently reading - The Shots You Take: It's the one Rachel Reid book I haven't read yet.

Birdfeeding

Aug. 4th, 2025 12:24 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is cloudy and mild.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches plus a male cardinal.

I put out water for the birds.













.
 

Monday Update 8-4-25

Aug. 4th, 2025 02:08 am
ysabetwordsmith: Artwork of the wordsmith typing. (typing)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These are some posts from the later part of last week in case you missed them:
Space Exploration
Birdfeeding
Photos: Coles County Community Garden
Photos: Charleston Food Forest Part 2 Left Side
Photos: Charleston Food Forest Part 1 Right Side
Emergency Food
Physics
Birdfeeding
Philosophical Questions: Threats
Survival Skills
Today's Adventures
Lightning
Cyberspace Theory
Birdfeeding
Crime Classics Bingo Card 8-1-25
Follow Friday 8-1-25: House
Today's Adventures
Birdfeeding
New Year's Resolutions Check In
Bingo
Poem: "Maho Shoujo"
Conservation
Birdfeeding
Juggling
Shanidar 1
Conservation
Genocide
Politics
Cuddle Party

"Philosophical Questions: Looks" has 48 comments. "Incompetence, Sloppy Thinking, and Laziness" has 75 comments. "Not a Destination, But a Process" has 148 comments. "The Democratic Armada of the Caribbean" has 97 comments.


[community profile] sunshine_revival has concluded. See you next July! Review the schedule, meet the moderators, and use the master post to navigate the event. Meet new folks in the friending meme. Make one last sweep through the community posts to catch anything you missed.

Sunshine-Revival-2025-Banner-3.png

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 1: Light
Poem: "The Pleasure of Escaping the Responsibility"

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 2: Tunnel of Love
Poem: "Legs of Grass, Feet of Flowers"

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 3: Food

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 4: Fun House
Poem: "The Bee Tree's Gift"

* Sunshine Challenge 5: Carnival Barker

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 6: Game Night
Poem: "A New Twist"

* Sunshine Revival Challenge 7: The Ferris Wheel

Sunshine Revival: Sunset


[community profile] summerofthe69 is open! You can see the calendar here and the current themes are 69 Accommodations and Alternate Sexy Parts 69.


There are no open epics at present.


The weather has been less hot and wet here. Seen at the birdfeeders this week: a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches, a pair of mourning doves, a pair of house wrens, a male cardinal, a gray catbird, a fox squirrel, and a bat. Currently blooming: dandelions, pansies, violas, marigolds, petunias, red salvia, wild strawberries, verbena, lantana, sweet alyssum, zinnias, snapdragons, blue lobelia, perennial pinks, impatiens, oxalis, moss rose, yarrow, anise hyssop, firecracker plant, tomatoes, tomatillos, Asiatic lilies, cucumber, yellow squash, zucchini, morning glory, purple echinacea, black-eyed Susan, yellow coneflower, chicory, Queen Anne's lace, sunflowers, cup plant, gladioli, firewheel, orange butterfly weed. Tomatillo and pepper have green fruit. Wild strawberries, mulberries, tomatoes, and cucumbers are ripe. The second crop of blackberries is ripe. I think the ball carrots might be ripe, but haven't had time to uproot any.
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
[personal profile] mistressofmuses
My favorite part of the Denver Zoo is the Tropical Discovery building. It houses most of the reptiles and amphibians at the zoo, as well as the fish. There are a few other animals in Tropical Discovery as well, but for the most part it's my cold-blooded friends.


I was very taken with the teeny tiny mushrooms on the branch. (And of course, the teeny tiny frogs.)


Vietnamese mossy frog. It sure is!


25 more pictures:

Spotted ray. :) And a spotted fish.


Posing nicely for a closeup.


Monkey frogs. They look so serious!


Golden frogs. They're very endangered in the wild, so glad to get to see them here.


So cute!


I love how unique all of their markings are. None of them look the same!


King cobra. :)


Intense eyes.


Gaboon viper. This one made me laugh, because Alex was looking at it and then said "It's weird that he has his head under a leaf." I looked for a second and said, "Wait, his head is the leaf!" Camouflage be camouflaging!


A few resident mammals. Capybaras! (They are very friend-shaped.)


And a monkey!


One of my favorites. It looks like a little dragon!


Upside-down jellies, and the prettiest opal fish.


Not a "good" picture, but it made me laugh. The instant I got my camera up, he spun to look at me, haha.


Such a stunning pattern on this guy!


Pretty angel.


I know lionfish are pests, but damn they're pretty.


Clownfish and anemone.


Nice big eastern diamondback.


Absolutely massive alligator snapping turtle. This guy standing up like this is between four and five feet tall! (Shortly after this there were several kids who came up and were very excited to get their pictures taken in front of the turtle.)


Boreal toads! :D They're native here, but very endangered in Colorado. The Denver Zoo does a lot of conservation work with them, and has done several big releases of captive-bred populations into the mountains.
(I shared that field note at Roxborough where someone said they'd seen a boreal toad on the trail there (cute!), but they're rare enough it seems more likely they saw a woodhouse toad.)


This is Maple. She's a baby pancake tortoise! Another endangered species, and it was quite exciting when she hatched this year.


Komodo dragon! SO BIG!


Serious side-eye.


Lake Titicaca frogs, my beloved weirdos. (Extremely endangered, glad this is one of the few facilities that has a breeding population!)


I'm glad we spent a decent amount of time going through. The way we typically loop through, this building comes toward the end of our visit, and we often have to rush through the last bits of it as we approach closing time. It was nice to do it toward the beginning... even though it wound up being most of the day!

Hopefully we'll go back fairly soon to catch the things we missed on this trip.
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
Horrible POS Matt Rife has *not* bought the Conjuring House. Lots of new sites are making mistakes because they are not familiar with the world of paranormal investigation.

The actual story is much worse. He, with a business partner, have bought The Warren's home and museum that contain the artifacts and allegedly haunted items that the Warrens collected over the years. (The Warrens were the exorcists in the 'true stories' of The Conjuring House and Annabelle films) He is now the 'legal guardian' of Annabelle. All the artifacts are in his care. he plans to open it to tours and overnight stays. Link.

So sleepover party with the real Annabelle anyone?

(Warrens were pieces of shit scammers with the best PR ever in the form of their books and those movies. But there are people within the paranormal space who think that the Annabelle doll is haunted, but not by a demon and the ghost had been stuck being treated like a demon since the Warrens intervened. There is a whole 'Free Anabelle' contingent.)

The whole cottage industry around paranormal investigations and renting locations seemingly being a booming industry remains interesting to me.

Space Exploration

Aug. 3rd, 2025 06:41 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Underground life on Mars? Cosmic rays could make it possible

Research challenges long-held assumptions about where life can exist in the solar system.
Cosmic rays from deep space might be the secret energy source that allows life to exist underground on Mars and icy moons like Enceladus and Europa. New research reveals that when these rays interact with water or ice below the surface, they release energy-carrying electrons that could feed microscopic life, a process known as radiolysis. This breakthrough suggests that life doesn't need sunlight or heat, just some buried water and radiation
.


*laugh* Took them long enough. Earth has an ecosystem around the black smokers that runs on heat and chemistry instead of sunlight.

Birdfeeding

Aug. 3rd, 2025 03:00 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is mostly sunny and mild, a beautiful day. :D

I fed the birds. I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches, plus a fox squirrel screaming at me from the top of a tree.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- My partner Doug mowed the house yard and paths to the fly-through feeder and new picnic table.

I picked up a branch in the house yard.

I did more work around the patio.

I've seen a pair of mourning doves foraging in the cut grass.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- I did ass-busting amounts of effort to haul the hose around, watering the septic garden, new picnic table garden, patio plants, old picnic table garden, and a few other things around the house yard.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- We did more ass-busting amounts of effort to remove the old stretchy hose from the reel, then get the new tape hose onto the reel.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/3/25 -- I watered the telephone pole garden and savanna seedlings with a watering can. Both of this year's pawpaw seedlings are still alive! :D

As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.
mxcatmoon: A and C under umbrella (Good Omens - rain)
[personal profile] mxcatmoon
Written for prompt, Shuffle, at [community profile] drabble_zone 
Title: Shuffling Vaguely Down the Aisle
(Alternate title: It's nine o'clock on a Saturday, the regular crowd shuffles in)
Fandom: Good Omens
Author: Cat Moon
Characters/Pairing: Aziraphale/Crowley
Rating: PG
Words: 300
Summary: Crowley once sauntered vaguely downwards; now he's shuffling somewhere else.
Notes: Every Now and then I see a challenge word, and a fic immediately comes into my mind (I love that). In this case it happens to be a silly little play with words.


Shuffling Vaguely Down the Aisle )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These pictures show the Coles County Community Garden on Saturday, August 2. (Begin with Part 1: Right Side, Part 2: Left Side.)

Walk with me ... )
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
These are pictures from the left side of the Charleston Food Forest on Saturday, August 2. (Begin with Part 1: Right Side.  Continue with Coles County Food Forest.)

Walk with me ... )

Emergency Food

Aug. 2nd, 2025 10:25 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
The Best Emergency Food Kits

Emergency food kits containing easy-to-prepare, shelf-stable meals can also give you peace of mind, especially if you live in a region where weather events may disrupt your access to fresh food. These meals last for years (sometimes up to 30), they are easy to prepare, and many come in lightweight, portable pouches. Sure, shelf-stable meals don’t provide a gourmet dining experience, but they’re often nutritionally dense and packed with protein. So they can keep you going during a time of great stress.

Read more... )

Monday, July 28: The Denver Zoo

Aug. 2nd, 2025 08:13 pm
mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
[personal profile] mistressofmuses
(I guess now it's the "Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance," but I still just think of it as the Denver Zoo, lol.)

On Monday we went to the zoo! We very much ran out of time, and really made it through less than half of the zoo as a whole, so we'll probably try to go back pretty soon. (We are able to get in quite cheaply because Alex gets food assistance... though they raised the price on those tickets and now limit what hours you're allowed to come. Still glad to have the program, since otherwise we couldn't afford to visit at all, but it sucks that you can't come early and spend the whole day.)

This was also an extremely hot day, one of the hottest we've had in a while (it did briefly hit 100°!) so lots of the animals were taking naps in the shade, or went to their indoor enclosures.

We spent most of our day in Tropical Discovery (my favorite, the building mostly devoted to reptiles, amphibians, and fish), so this post will be everything that wasn't in Tropical Discovery. (That still means this post only has like, a third of the pictures I took, but it was the best way to break it up that I could figure out.)

One of the things we keep wanting to do, but always end up running out of time for (even when we used to be able to come earlier) was visiting Stingray Cove. It's a seasonal exhibit where you can pet stingrays (and potentially sharks, though none of them came up for petting while we were there.) It costs a couple extra dollars, and for a couple extra more you can get some fish to feed them, too. This time we decided to do this first, so we couldn't run out of time to do it!


Such a variety of colors!


Four more of the rays:

Cownose rays really do just have a perfect " :3 " face.


I know that's their gills, but they also have a perfect " >w< " face.


Baby ray perfectly lined up with one of the adults.


In addition to the cownose rays, there are also southern stingrays. They're so much bigger!


Then we headed toward the Tropical Discovery building, but took a detour to see more animals:


There's a baby giraffe! :D


Four more pictures:

All four giraffes!

Then up "Harmony Hill," where you can see a couple native animals:


The grizzly bear!


The pair of leucistic raccoons. One splooting in the heat, the other heading to the water dish.

And over to the new flamingo habitat:


Flamingos! :D (I like that you can see the big lego sculpture flamingos in the background, ha.)


And then we spent a few hours in Tropical Discovery, haha.

After that, we tried to do a speed loop through the rest of the zoo to see some favorites, but had to skip basically 80% of the rest of it.

Possibly the weirdest "favorite" animal I have is the Malayan Tapir. (And yes, I have been thriving with all the adorable videos of the baby tapir at the Point Defiance Zoo.) I don't know that I can say I have a true favorite animal, because I really do love so many. Point me toward a frog or a snake or a bird and those are all my favorites, find me a cool bug and that's my favorite, bats, giraffes, okapi, foxes, cheetahs, etc. All favorites. But I do have a very specific soft spot for Malayan tapirs.

Tragically, almost every time we've come to the zoo, the tapirs aren't out in their enclosure. The only time in recent memory that one of them was was the time that Alex wasn't feeling well and stayed home. So he hasn't seen the tapirs in forever. I used a Malayan tapir sticker in my tracker this week, solely in the hopes of summoning it, haha.

Success!


She was napping!

It was really very hot out. Everyone was napping.


Two more nappers!

A napping zebra.


A napping hyena.


Alex's request for his other favorite thing to try and visit before closing time was "Primate Panorama" where the great apes are. (The apes are not typically my favorite, but they're neat to watch, and he humored me with my favorites, so to the apes we headed!)


There is a baby orangutan, not quite two years old, and she is very cute. (Not a great picture with the reflection on the glass, but oh well.)


Three more of the apes:

She climbed into the bucket, haha.


Though eventually climbed back out and onto mom.


And a gorilla!


It was a bummer we didn't have longer, but it was still a lot of fun. We'll have to go back sometime soon and see if we can get through all the parts we missed this time around.
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
I thought that going to Labubu Fest would be fun and I'd get some cute pictures. Oh dear god.... it was so crowded I literally gave up and pushed through some people to see more than one booth. There was lines 15-20 deep just to *look* at some booths and if you tried to sneak a peek to even see what they sold, people were not chill.

Also, when I left I walked by a guy in silver pants, a white tank top, a giant purse with a whole colony of Labubu on it, power walking towards the fest and puffing on a vape as hard as he could.

Anyway, I typically would not post pics like this from events, I don't post pics of just what people sell I try to have that not be the focus on a shot, but I did snipe a picture of the samples at the tattoo booth and also I went around the back of the tooth gems booth to see a Labubu being worked on:





I had planned to do a do a youtube short. I had hopes of cute pictures I could give captions to. That is not how the day went. The Labubu crowd is feral.

Then I went up to the Fremont Fair, which was a neighborhood street fair with 150 vendors. It was cute.

On my way home I hit up some stores I'd been meaning to hit, and also went to the Portland Aquarium. The Portland Aquarium is small, unremarkable, but I'd always meant to drop by:

Saw a shark:




I liked the glowy sea spider:


And I got some very Portlandy stickers and a pin:


The back of the souvenir guidebook has a timeline of Mike Bennet's careers from his days of 'guy who makes random art' to Crypto-Zoo which was a covid-safe project during lockdown where he made a walk-through 'A-Zoo' of cryptids in North Portland to give kids an activity to do, and then shows his other projects since then including Wonderwood Springs, Dinolandia and now an aquarium that benefits conservation efforts. Amusingly, some of my pictures of his work pre-date what's in the guide in the back.

Wrong Guesses

Aug. 2nd, 2025 08:49 pm
yourlibrarian: Chrisjen is burdened (Expanse-Chrisjen Burden -swannee)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian
1) Just a quick follow-up note to the [community profile] sunshine_revival's Challenge 6 which asked about gaming. One thing I started doing earlier this year was crosswords. I'm rather surprised I never did them as a kid given how much I read and how verbal I was, plus I liked puzzles. I guess no one ever introduced them to me, though I suppose puzzles for kids was a less discoverable publication.

And trying them now I can see that even stuff labeled as "for the whole family" would have been too hard. One definitely needs to learn the conventions and accept that some clues are not only unguessable but the creators sure take a lot of license with words used. Read more... )

2) Have started posting photos of our stay in Agate Beach at [community profile] common_nature

3) Back in December I began having arm pain centered around each elbow which would radiate down to the right hand sometimes. I brought it up at my annual checkup in April, at which time I had already been doing PT exercises for it for months, wearing braces on both hands to sleep, to exercise and to type at the computer, and yet it wasn't any better. Read more... )

Poll #33458 Kudos Footer-533
This poll is anonymous.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 4

Want to leave a Kudos?

View Answers

Kudos!
4 (100.0%)



Beethoven and Ducks

Aug. 2nd, 2025 09:32 pm
mxcatmoon: Moon tree (Moon tree)
[personal profile] mxcatmoon
The visuals on this video are very cool. Check it out. It's about Beethoven.

In other news, I've gotten so sick of how AI is everywhere and Conservative propaganda is seeping into ads, and can't even Google something anymore without all the results being for-profit companies' websites and other crap. I've used DuckDuckGo in a tab in other browsers, but now I've finally downloaded the app -- and wish I'd done it sooner.


Physics

Aug. 2nd, 2025 04:36 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Rutgers physicists just discovered a strange new state of matter

The finding could lead to advanced technological applications and new quantum devices.
At the edge of two exotic materials, scientists have discovered a new state of matter called a "quantum liquid crystal" that behaves unlike anything we've seen before. When a conductive Weyl semimetal and a magnetic spin ice meet under a powerful magnetic field, strange and exciting quantum behavior emerges—electrons flow in odd directions and break traditional symmetry. These findings could open doors to creating ultra-sensitive quantum sensors and exploring exotic states of matter in extreme environments
.


Yep, that's useful in many advanced technologies including supercomputers and rovers for space exploration.

Birdfeeding

Aug. 2nd, 2025 04:22 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Today is mostly sunny and mild.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches plus a mourning dove.  The thistle feeder was about half empty.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I took some pictures of the metal tray birdfeeder.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I watered the old picnic table plants.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I visited the Charleston Food Forest.  Grapes are ripe, which is why we went.  These are tiny white grapes -- pea size or a little bigger -- seedless and very sweet.  :D  I picked 3 bunches and there are plenty left for other folks.  I also got a few asparagus berries, a few white marigold heads, and quite a bit of wild indigo seedpods.  Some wild indigo has tiny bluish seedpods, while others have thumb-sized brown seedpods.

One of the peach trees has completely overgrown the path behind the welcome sign and is covered in peaches.  They are still hard and green.  I hope that I can get some from that tree when they ripen, in hopes of sprouting the seeds.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/2/25 -- I trimmed around the goddess garden.  One of the silver thyme plants is almost white now.  :D

As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.

Philosophical Questions: Threats

Aug. 2nd, 2025 12:40 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
People have expressed interest in deep topics, so this list focuses on philosophical questions.

What is the biggest threat to the social contract in our country?

Read more... )

Survival Skills

Aug. 1st, 2025 11:36 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
I Built a House From Free Scrap Materials in the Forest

I built a beautiful and cozy house in the woods—using only leftover materials found in nature, and hand-crafted tools.No machinery. No noise. Just patience, precision, and the quiet companionship of nature. Each log, each joint, each decision—shaped by instinct, guided by simplicity.

Read more... )
Page generated Aug. 4th, 2025 08:04 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios