Half-Price Sale in Polychrome Heroics

Apr. 14th, 2026 09:54 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Damask smiling over their shoulder (polychrome)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
The April 7, 2026 Poetry Fishbowl met its $300 goal, so there will be a half-price sale in Polychrome Heroics from Monday, April 20 through Sunday, April 26.  Mark your calendars, and I hope to see you then!

At a different residence tonight

Apr. 14th, 2026 09:51 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
One of the staff has the same name as one of the residents, and it took me an embarrassingly long time to figure that out.

Book Review

Apr. 14th, 2026 08:40 pm
kenjari: (Me again)
[personal profile] kenjari
A Reckless Match
by Kate Bateman

This historical romance was slight but enjoyable. It takes place on the border of Wales and is an enemies to lovers story featuring the eldest children of two families that have been feuding for centuries. Gryffud is recently home from the Napoleonic wars and has retreated to his country estate after a scandalous duel. Maddy is trying to figure out how to help her family recover from a financial disaster without having to enter into a loveless marriage for money. They grew up teasing and pranking each other as children and now that they are grown harbor a secret attraction to each other. When they stumble on a smuggling ring, the ensuing adventure brings them closer together and their mutual attraction ignites.
This romance lacked a little depth and development - we don't really learn much about Gryff or Maddy's pasts or their inner lives, and there isn't a lot of character development. Still, the banter is good, the smuggling plot adds drama and suspense, and their relationship is charming.

Scratch One Big Boy

Apr. 14th, 2026 04:32 pm
kayla_allen: Old style railway sign on a heritage line in the UK (Beware of Trains)
[personal profile] kayla_allen
We were expecting the Union Pacific Big Boy steam locomotive to come charging through Fernley this morning, but it was not to be. Due to the heavy snow over Donner Summit, Union Pacific sent the Big Boy east the way it had come: over the former Western Pacific Feather River Route via Portola and Beckwourth Pass (almost 2,000 feet lower than Donner), with all "whistle stops" cancelled.

Good thing that Lisa went over to Gerlach to see the train rolling into town there. It's a pity we won't get to see them as speed this time around, but it's understandable. I had sort of wondered if there were a bunch of disappointed photographers up around Donner who had been planning to record the Big Boy in the snow, which would certainly have been an impressive sight.

第五年第九十四天

Apr. 15th, 2026 08:15 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
水 part 25
游, to swim; 渺, tiny/vast (...); 湖, lake pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=85

词汇
保护, to protect; 保证, to guarantee; 环保, environmental protection pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
找回来的希望渺茫, the chances of getting it back are remote
谢谢你把我当弟弟一样,照顾我,保护我, thank you for taking care of me and protecting me like a little brother

Me:
湖里禁止游泳
你能保证她不会受伤吗?

Spring Has Sproinged

Apr. 14th, 2026 05:56 pm
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
Here are five things about the warmer weather that make me happy, or that I look forward to, every year.

1. More greenery on the trees

2. Outdoor craft markets and farmers’ markets

3. Yard sales

4. Outdoor cafe seating and picnics

5. Dog owners spending more time outside with their dogs, and giving me more time to make friends

I would probably love to enjoy any of these things with you, if we can.

Affordable Housing

Apr. 14th, 2026 04:48 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
You Have More Land Than You Think

Clever design creates more housing on small sites.

You might assume that squeezing small units onto small lots might end up feeling claustrophobic, but a few simple design principles can actually lead to housing that is welcoming, comforting, and feels spacious. Best of all, a smaller house is more affordable, and land costs are spread amongst more units, creating greater affordability without subsidy.

Read more... )
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

This has become a bit of a staple of our rotation for when the veg box is made of brassica, and also brassica, and finally some brassica (I do frequently actively opt in to this, to be clear, but also... brassica). However! As you might have noticed, I have just developed a special interest in picking things up and putting things down again, and this in turn means I am going hmm about eating more protein.

When previously mentioning this recipe I have noted that As Usual my household thinks it wants about twice as much veg as written for the quantity of noodle. To this the protein variation essentially adds: some tofu that you've tossed with soy sauce and five-spice or other flavouring of your choice and then baked; and some edamame beans.

Base recipe can be found at Ocado or the Graun, and a fuller write-up will appear under a cut at Some Point in the Hopefully Near future (if only so the instructions are in the order that I want them to be in!).

When You Can’t Lose

Apr. 14th, 2026 02:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysrelated_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read When You Can’t Lose

My mom was picking me up from middle school one terrible day. I was picked on all that day and was just looking forward to going home and licking my wounds for the next day. She saw that I was depressed and wanted to cheer me up.

Read When You Can’t Lose

petrea_mitchell: (Default)
[personal profile] petrea_mitchell posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
Actual headline: Why Tho: My birthday kid wants to invite everyone in class to his party - but not this 1 boy

Dear Lizzy,

My son is in third grade, and his birthday is coming up. He’s told me he wants to invite his whole class to his party (at a park) except for one kid.

This kid is a menace, if I am honest. He breaks things in class and yells and hits. He is actually quite mean to my son. I want to respect my son’s wishes here, but is it fair to invite everyone except him?

To Exclude or Not to Exclude


Read more... )

This week on FilkCast

Apr. 14th, 2026 04:16 pm
ericcoleman: (Default)
[personal profile] ericcoleman
Hallie Dolin, Marty Burke, Flash Girls, Linda Short, Pair O'Dice, Moss Bliss, Rhiannon's Lark, Puzzlebox, Playing Rapunzel, Two Bard Party, John Anealio, Ookla the Mok, Phoenix

Available on iTunes, Google Play and most other places you can get podcasts. We can be heard Wednesday at 6am and 9pm Central on scifi.radio.

filkcast.blogspot.com
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

It started in 2012 on the Union Pacific bridge over I-45 when an anonymous tagger put the slogan "Be Someone"  a message that seemed to resonate with many Houstonians on their daily commute. So much so that it appeared on shirts, hats,  stickers and all manner of knick-knacks. The slogan has been tagged over many many times. "Be Sus", "Be Mattress Mac", "Wash Your Hands" (during the pandemic), "George Floyd", and "No War Know Peace" being some of the more notable changes.

No matter how many times, the phrase "Be Someone" reliably returns to the bridge side. There have apparently been many attempts to make it a protected landmark.

Fossils

Apr. 14th, 2026 03:28 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Mammal ancestors laid eggs, and this 250-million-year-old fossil finally proves it

A 250-million-year-old fossil egg just revealed how an ancient survivor beat Earth’s deadliest extinction.

In the aftermath of Earth’s most catastrophic extinction event, one unlikely survivor rose to dominate a shattered world: Lystrosaurus. Now, a stunning fossil discovery—an ancient egg containing a curled-up embryo—has finally answered a decades-old mystery about whether mammal ancestors laid eggs. Using advanced imaging technology, scientists confirmed that these resilient creatures did reproduce this way, likely producing large, soft-shelled eggs packed with nutrients
.


In terms of world domination, Lystrosaurus was arguably the most successful lifeform on Earth.

Vegging (the garden kind)

Apr. 14th, 2026 01:06 pm
hrj: (Default)
[personal profile] hrj
I can't remember if I've posted any of this before and am too lazy to look back.

I experimented this year with putting in some "winter crops" with variable success. Cabbage probably needed to be planted earlier because one of the varieties is bolting and the other, though not bolting, looks unlikely to set heads. The edible pod peas are doing ok, in part I suspect because I planted them next to the fence, so they aren't getting excessive sun. I harvested a handful of pods today and suspect I can get a handful per week until they give up. The third experiment was some mixed greens (NOT KALE) recommended by the nursery salesperson. I pulled them out when they started to bolt and will do something with them this week.

Because I had to trim some overly enthusiastic grape tendrils, I picked off the leaves, parboiled them, and made dolmas. Very successful (except for not rinsing the rice sufficiently, so the filling is a bit too sticky). Since I had more filling than grape leaves, I pulled some of the bolting cabbage and did cabbage rolls. (The dolmas cooked in broth and lemon juice while the cabbage rolls cooked in broth and crushed tomatoes.)

Last spring, I spotted some asparagus starts at the nursery, having failed to find any sets, and put them in the circular bed around the persimmon tree. I'd more or less had that in mind and hadn't planted anything else in the circle except for some random gladioli. More than half the starts survived the year and then this year I did find asparagus sets so I added them into the mix. It looks like they get enough water from the lawn irrigation system, though I've been supplementing with an extra sprinkler last year, both for their benefit and to help the persimmon get a good start. It'll be a couple more years before they'll be established enough to harvest (and who knows how many years before I'll start getting persimmons).

When I watch various of my friends and acquaintances flit about from place to place, I think about how significantly my life plans are affected by my love of growing things. And how tragic it would be if this property eventually went to someone who didn't value the investment.

The tomatoes are in the ground now--the usual 18 varieties. (Well, except I doubled up on Sun Gold cherry tomatoes because they're my absolute favorite.) Some years I've carefully documented which varieties I plant and how they perform. This year I didn't even make a list. I made my usual sacrifice to hope over experience and planted summer squash and eggplant.

I still need to pick and process the second half of the Seville orange crop. (The first half went to Chaz and has been turned into marmelade.) The lemons that were sacrificed to a bout of pruning have been juiced and frozen as cubes (for summer refreshment), plus zested and packed in sugar (for baking use). There are still a few juice oranges on one of the trees. The strawberries are trickling in. And it's time to update the garden calendar with all of this for data tracking purposes.

I swear only this city knows

Apr. 14th, 2026 03:32 pm
sovay: (Silver: against blue)
[personal profile] sovay
Because I had a doctor's appointment downtown, from Storrow Drive I saw the cherry trees on the Esplanade blooming like soft fireworks in white and sugar-pink. The weather has catapulted itself into summer: asphalt-simmered air, huge tufts of cloud stacked over a haze-blue sky, lines around the literal block for Ben & Jerry's Free Cone Day. Sails all over the Charles. Afterward [personal profile] spatch and I ate Greek takeout on a picnic bench by Spy Pond, watching a solitary Canada goose glide across the water as our summer in accelerated miniature looked like building toward thunderstorm. It is my father's seventy-fourth birthday.

There's no knowledge but I knows it

Apr. 14th, 2026 08:09 pm
oursin: Drawing of hedgehog in a cave, writing in a book with a quill pen (Writing hedgehog)
[personal profile] oursin

Have just out of the blue had an email from a meedja person about what a cause of death on early C20th certificate MEANS, a colleague of theirs contacted me - what must have been in days of yore - and I was really helpful. I think that may have been a case in which Sid was involved, this was not, but we do our best in posing as a Nexpert.

I was able to flash a bit more relevant knowledge in the question portion of online seminar this pm (even though I dozed off, did not sleep well last night, during part of the actual seminar).

Have got off my desk and conscience something that has been hanging over me, to wit, second review of article I did a previous review of some weeks ago. Was somewhat prejudiced about it (it is actually not at all bad doing what it does) because it rather glances over the amount of work that went into getting the archive used into usable condition (personal interest there noted) and role of archivists in between the creators of the records and the end-users.

Think I mentioned some while ago possibility that longtime academic friend and self may be editing for publication Important Work on Significant and Highly Relevant Subject of friend of ours who died very unexpectedly last year. We have now received the draft manuscript and it seems more of a manuscript (rather than notes and materials) than we had feared.

Still have review that has been hanging over me and keeping getting put off to do.

Have podcast to record later this week.

Also must begin to turn my thoughts to being instructive yet entertaining on the history of ye baudruche (and finding illos, fortunately I already have quite a few).

musesfool: Barry Allen is the fastest man alive (what if you had wings and flew)
[personal profile] musesfool
Today's poem:

A Dictionary Names the Wind in the Trees
by Susan Cohen

Psithurism because
what else would we call sound embedded
with leaf mold and breath
zithering just below the daily drone
of power saws and chippers,
eons of air shifting
like an old Chevy through leaves,
riffling papery corn fields
and the eucalyptus,
stuttering through windbreaks,
jittering an aspen
in a beam of breath,
lisping nothing pins me down
in the language of the Huron,
in Olmec, in Sanskrit, chittering
all its unpronounceable names,
its tunes with the shiver of pine needles
and the moves of a river?
Psithurism comes as close
to the clash of wind and trees
as orgasm comes to the friction
of muscles, nerves, bodies,
which is to say when so many words
cannot catch it,
those of us always searching
for just the right one may
as well stop speaking
and lift our heads
like mule deer, ears twitched
for the smallest sound.

*

(no subject)

Apr. 14th, 2026 02:31 pm
watersword: Audrey Tautou, in Amelie, lying in bed and gazing upward (Stock: bed)
[personal profile] watersword
+ gorgeous sunny warm day
+ MULTIPLE asparagus spears emerging!
+ finally managed to book 2/3 of my birthday trip flights
- something in how I configure my browser means I cannot interact with the airline website and must do everything on the library computers
- I bragged to my therapist yesterday about how productive and upbeat I am now that it's properly spring and today I think my everything is made of molasses
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Four South African Nobel Peace Prize winners

In the middle of the V&A Waterfront, a section of Cape Town known for its shopping and restaurants, are the statues of four men who contributed to the end of Apartheid in South Africa: Albert Luthuli, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, F. W. de Klerk, and Nelson Madela.

It's a sobering reminder of how recent Apartheid was in effect--and it makes one slow down to appreciate them, in the midst of all the activity in the area. 

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pegkerr

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