Things

Feb. 20th, 2026 06:14 pm
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
[personal profile] vass
Books
Finished (last week) Ursula Whitcher's North Continent Ribbon. As everyone said, it really is very good (and, moreover, I really liked it.) What impressed me the most was the structure: I was expecting a collection of short stories linked by theme and setting. I hadn't known the order of the stories and their timeline would amount to a novel in itself.

Finished (last week) Asterix and the Golden Sickle and didn't really... get it. I don't think I know anyone who read the Asterix books and didn't love them, but I feel like I'm missing something.

Maybe it's that the literary conventions of comics have moved on over the decades, to the extent that the level of exposition makes me feel like a modern science fiction reader reading pulp SF from the 1930s, or a modern TV viewer grappling with the stage conventions of Elizabethan or even ancient Greek theatre. As in: oh, you're explaining that again, alright. Oh, you're explaining that too? Okay.

Unfortunately I'm also unfamiliar with the history, societies, and cultures of Gaul in 50 BCE, so I'm probably missing most of the charm, to say nothing of the Easter eggs.

Read (this week) Balancing Stone by Victoria Goddard, and it was okay. I have now read all of the Greenwing & Dart books currently available, and have a clearer idea of what's happened yet in that part of the Nine Worlds, which is useful for fandom purposes. But I don't really like G&D. It's not for me. But I like some of its fans.

Finished (this week) KC Davis' How To Keep House While Drowning. Mainly a mixture of things that wouldn't work for me but which I could see working for someone else; concepts and skills that do work for me that I'd already learned but could have been absolutely vital if I hadn't learned them yet; and a few nuggets I didn't know as well as plenty that I knew but for which I could use a refresher or some reinforcement.

Reading Sarah Kurchak's I Overcame My Autism And All I Got Was This Lousy Anxiety Disorder on audiobook. I forget who recommended it (Rydra?) but I'm surprised at just how much I'm relating.

Fandom
Received this lovely, meditative story by [archiveofourown.org profile] justjourneys for Fanoa'ary: Love Beyond Definition.

I wrote Charting a Course for [archiveofourown.org profile] Crackfoxx, on the prompt "I want the version of Kip being Fitzroy's wingman that includes the joy and the spreadsheets. Let me be very very clear. This expression of love must actually include spreadsheets.", went nearly entirely for rule of funny over characterisation or plausibility, and had way too much fun with the CSS and HTML.

Side note: who here knew what AO3's HTML parser does if you didn't close a <strike> tag?

...Bad, isn't it? (If you guessed "Everything from the open tag down to the end of the chapter is struck through", you're... well, you're not wrong, but you are underestimating the scope of the problem.)

Links


Garden
Still alive, producing about a handful a week of tiny ripe cherry tomatoes.

Cats
Are a serious threat to the local plastic mouse from KMart population. Are also very good alarm cats when it's time to wake up in the morning and I don' wanna, very alarming.

(morning writing)

Feb. 19th, 2026 08:11 am
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

Glad i showed myself i could follow through and -- over the past week and a half -- did get grass seed down in orchard in time for rains and warmth to help get it started. Pruned the fig and blue berries, pruned two apples and have attempted training some branches (probably using inappropriate materials).  Two apple trees and the persimmon remain, well, and the elderberries but the elderberries have leafed out and they grow like weeds.

Then had 36 hours of executive function vacation.

I continue to fear whether i am productive enough, competent enough at work, which yes, evidence says yes i am, but plenty of evidence that people who seem competent and productive and critical to understanding things get laid off. On the other hand, no big layoffs seem promising. The fear makes me look closely at retiring sooner rather than later: two years and a month and a few more days is the earliest i could sensibly retire and receive what appears to be a reasonable health care benefit from my employer.

So part of my mind is saying: just hang on and then .... what.

Admittedly, part of my mind remains amazed that all the economic engines continues as they have for decades. Climate forecasts for 2030 made when i was in college were missing -- as the scientists noted then -- factors that would offset the warming the models predicted. Which was pretty dire. And peoples around the globe have made efforts to slow our impact, and the models refined and we found -- for example -- the ocean had even more capacity to be a heat sink.  Nonetheless, I suspect though that i will always feel a distrust of planning for the future: particularly  trusting investment income as a stable foundation.

Another part of my mind makes a loud echoing "tick" when i take my morning and evening pills and i feel the time pass. I didn't contact any family members, haven't done anything to include myself in a community that takes care of each other. Yesterday i read the yoga center in town is shutting its doors (and selling its property to be redeveloped). I know the people who make the community there, who i felt might be local community i could connect with, aren't going away, but the locus of an intention has dissolved.

I see something that i think would trigger Christine's elephants. I know she is working on her elephants, i see her improving coping skills increasing capacity. I watch the news of more anti-trans efforts come in from Erin in the Morning and can't imagine the day to day toll that puts on Christine. And i know that the anti-immigrant, racist, anti-gay, anti-women energy is there, too.

I now i can do that thing, have grief and worry and frustration and still hold in my heart the beauty of the early Crocus tommasinianus and Iris reticulata and anticipation of a Chickasaw plum (Prunus angustifolia) covered with flowers. I also appreciate my colleagues, my friends here, and my friends across the country.

May we all find the capacity to hold our personal grief and our global worries at the same time as appreciation and gratitude, that we find joy as we also open ourselves to witness others suffering and have compassion for all living things. Maybe not stilt grass in North Carolina. Nope, not sure i can find compassion for that plant. It's always something.

Astronomical fact of the day

Feb. 17th, 2026 10:23 pm
jbanana: Badly drawn banana (Default)
[personal profile] jbanana
You could to jump into space.

OK, that claim needs some backup, doesn't it? You can't jump that high on Earth. Big rockets are needed to get into space here. The moon isn't as big, so you could jump higher but you'd still come back down. We need to go somewhere smaller.

Mars has two moons, Phobos and Deimos, and they're quite small, particularly Deimos. Wikipedia says:
Escape velocity from Deimos is 5.6 m/s. This velocity could theoretically be achieved by a human performing a vertical jump.


On Deimos you could jump so high you'd never come down, and you'd be stuck out in space for ever. Scary, but then Deimos is named after the Greek god of fear.

Wait a minute - "theoretically" is a weasel word there. I bet most of us can't jump that well. Only elite athletes need worry.
allekha: Figure skater Miyahara doing a spin with her torso laid back (Satton spinning)
[personal profile] allekha
Z and I had a nice visit with my parents. He wasn't feeling great for a lot of it, unfortunately, but I wasn't exactly objecting to sitting around and watching hours of figure skating with everyone, or putting up some long Youtube videos. Since I am the one with the mystical knowledge of how to VPN into Canada, I also streamed other random events for my dad and Z, which was more fun than I initially expected. The one event where the skiiers look like they're jogging uphill much of the time seemed incredibly exhausting. Humans enjoy doing such weird things, haha.

(CBC has their own commentators this year instead of Belinda & Olly. They are better than Tara and Johnny - not to damn with faint praise - but they are also behind on rules that were changed in 2018 and think it's beautiful and romantic that someone with severe injury issues was basically told he had to come back to try to win a medal. I do find it amusing how much they kept hammering Berulava on his shitty lifting technique.)

The figure skating has sure been up and down with some surprises. I was so happy for Ellie and Danny in the pairs team event - landing those throw jumps! - and while they weren't quite as on fire today, the pairs free as a whole was great. Delighted for M/K, especially given how distraught Ryuichi seemed after the mess-up in the short! Now to emotionally prepare myself for the women....

Otherwise, we've been doing a few boring things around the house (had to chlorine shock our water, that was a process) and had a quiet Valentine's day with each other. I also bought the game Dead Letter Department and had to return it a couple hours later because it gave me a migraine, which is a first, even after turning off the annoying flickering in the accessibility menu. I think it was a combination of the effects + the core gameplay loop being to read a bunch of text that is often tiny and/or hard to read. Thankfully Steam let me have a refund even though I was slightly over the two-hour limit. To be honest, I was unimpressed with the ending I got anyway, which was basically a 'you lose' screen after struggling to read something that was intentionally made unreadable, so I don't think I would have played more even if it didn't turn out to physically pain me to do so.

(cooking)

Feb. 14th, 2026 12:10 pm
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

So i have some no-fat ricotta that i no longer need for the original reason. I figured maybe i could make something a little sweet and maybe it could satisfy my sweet tooth -- and it seemed like a good use for my dehydrated mulberries. I found some spice bush berries from 2024 in my pantry, preserved in sugar, and thought that might be a lovely combination. So: ground the mulberries, ground about a teaspoon of spicebush berries, and tossed the sugar from the jar in. Then spooned ... maybe half the small container into the bowl. I mixed, tasted, and ... brain churned, tastebuds argued, and... ah. It wasn't sugar, it was salt the spicebush berries were preserved in.

Oh my. So i mixed the rest of the ricotta in -- still really very salty -- and i read the internet. Apparently there is a drained, salted, and "aged" cheese called ricotta salata. So, i have put it in a filter bag and the tofu press and maybe it will be nice in salads?

what elegant stars

Feb. 10th, 2026 04:33 pm
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
[personal profile] ursula
I'm writing a story for What Elegant Stars, an anthology of stories about space opera and fashion (or textiles!) that's Kickstarting right now.

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