Thursday, October 29, 2009

Preparing for Winter I

(Picture from here.)

The weekend was mostly home stuff. I had to kill a couple of chickens-- which, I suppose, deserves an explanation.

We raise chickens for the eggs. We'd use relatives, as suggested by Woody Allen in Annie Hall, but we actually do need the eggs and the relatives just don't have the capacity.

This year, we purchased a lot of chicks, about 25 or so, that were supposed to be all hens. We raised them and sold some. Then, mid-summer, a raccoon got into the chicken enclosure and slaughtered all but two of our chickens: Sam, the rooster and Abigail, the oldest hen.

The hens went from being for sale to being our egg producers.

Chick sexing is not an exact science and we ended up, after John Carpenter's The Raccoon, with three roosters. One of them had completely kowtowed to Sam and they get along. The remaining two were kept separate. We had an idea that somebody might want them and we could give them away.

Nobody wants roosters.

Personally, I like the crowing. But I can see it can get on someone's nerves. Long ago when we first did this we got half a dozen young roosters. Wendy thought she might not be able to handle dealing with eating the birds we had raised. But after the summer of half a dozen competing and crowing roosters, she didn't have any trouble.

But now it's nearly winter. It's time. It's done.

Other pre-winter activities included: replacing the canopy over the chicken house, gathering up and mulching the leaves, making more wine-- or, rather, racking the wine that's already being made. (See here.) The "white" is now very dry. It's going to need aging but I think it'll be fine. The "red" still has a specific gravity of 1.060 so there's still a lot of sugar. I racked it but then pressed the grapes. So it still had a lot of sediment left in the fluid. So I'll have to rack it again later in the week.

Still a few more things to do until winter proper gets here. Battening down the hatches as it were.

Then, bring it on.
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Britons say teach both evolution and creationism


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Ur Death
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Most distant object yet detected
Einstein right again! Heavens not askew! Savants not agog!
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Autoimmune disease vs cancer
Stem cells and infertility

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Ares I-X Successfully Launches


(Pictures from here.)


Yesterday, the Ares I-X successfully launched, reached its target height, separated and hit the water. The Ares I-X site is here. If you watch the video at separation the "second stage" (A dummy) bent backwards. There were some issues. Recontact appears to have happend on separation. One of the parachutes failed. A fairly good analysis is here. Recontact is a potentially catastrophic problem. I don't know if the recontact was a product of a dummy second stage or something more sinister. Staging issues are discussed here. From the video (on the main site above. Hi res here.), it looked like the second stage folded back on the first stage.

But, by and large, a successful test flight of the first stage. There were a lot of concerns over vibration, etc., of the first stage. Now we have real data to evaluate those concerns.
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Football
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10 Seconds with Jesus
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Monday, October 19, 2009

Wining Time Again!


(Picture from wikipedia, here.)

It's that time of year again. I fought through the wasps to get to my Marechal Foch grapes. They matured early this year. The wet spring made some of the pears near them split, which attracted the wasps, which dined on the grapes, which were intended for the wine that Steve drinks.

I sprayed the grapes with Surround, a form of kaolin clay. It's supposed to rot the little buggers stomachs out.

It didn't seem to work for a few days. Then, about a week later, the wasps disappeared. I harvested as quick as I could. A few days after that, the yellowjackets reappeared but they were much smaller. I suspect the Surround decimated the wasps but not the larva already sealed in the nest. I finished and got about 4 gallons or so of M/F grapes. Not a great harvest.

The Concords matured later after the weather changed so I didn't have the same problem. About 8-10 gallons there.

I bundled them all up and put them in the freezer. Wendy said that's it. There's no more room in the inn for more grapes until I use what I had.

So: last night I pulled out all the grapes and weighed what I had.

150 pounds of grapes.

That's from this year, last year and some unlabeled years.

I pulled out 50 pounds of what I think are the oldest grapes and they're waiting for me to work on them tonight.

It's going to be a long night.

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Idiots On Parade


(Picture from here.)


Mostly, I ignore them. I mean, I don't like people like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, Faux News, etc. But while they are toxic and destructive they are not traitors. They are just idiots.

But it's possible I'm missing something.

Newsmax is a conservative rag that lives on the internet. I don't bother to fact check it like I do Coulter or Buchanan. It's just too low on the food chain. They are somewhere below Glenn Beck on the evolutionary scale. You know that scale: Politicians, tapeworms, Glenn Beck, cesspool bacteria, Newsmax. Unpleasant but probably inevitable.

However, at the end of September one of their contributors essentially said a military coup against Obama might be a good idea. The original entry was pulled-- you can see where it was, and the relativistic velocity of the Newsmax backpedal, here. Fortunately, the internet never forgets anything. You can read his actual text here.

Sure, he's an moron. That's a given. But this is the logical end point of the conservative religion. It starts with denying that those that disagree are not real Americans. It proceeds (along Ann Coulter lines) to calling them traitors. It continues with people going to presidential events armed with handguns. It ends with a call for revolution.

I didn't call for a coup when Georgie was in office. I didn't call Ann Coulter a traitor, though she called me one by proxy.

Look, folks. Like it or not I'm an American. Believe it or not, I love my country and I voted for Obama. I like him still. That doesn't make me a traitor. It doesn't require me to where a golden "L" on all my clothes. And it sure doesn't empower idiots like John L. Perry to call for a coup.

Tom Tomorrow said it here.

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Monday, October 5, 2009

The Modern Conservative Religion


(picture from here.)

I was waiting for the reaction to Obama's getting the Nobel Prize before I put out this blog.

Now, let us recall the Conservatives of Yesteryear response, as exemplified by the poster boy of Yesteryears, John McCain: Congratulations. (See here.)

But that is yesteryear. We miss the Republicans but they are gone forever.

The modern right has a different take on it: no matter what happens, it's a) Obama's fault and b) we hate him. I heard pundits on Faux News say not only that he didn't deserve the award but that he should reject it. One pundit suggested given the prize to Obama was intended as a snub to Bill Clinton. In Lakeville, a swastika was found carved into the grounds at a country club. (See here. They got the wrong swastika.) Michelle McPhee was the most rational of this group. She acknowledged "getting the Nobel Prize was not Obama's fault. We can't blame him this time." (Yes. That was a quote. I heard her myself.)

Hm, I said. This is interesting.

I've only seen this sort of obsession in two kinds of situations.

One is the "Walk on Water" point in a relationship. You know this one. It's the point in a relationship going south where nothing can be done to salvage it. The other person could walk on water and it wouldn't help. But, that doesn't apply here. Not only do the New Conservatives (known affectionately as "idiots") ever have a relationship with Obama, they've never wanted one and would only be pleased were a meteor to suddenly strike Washington with him in it. Preferably when Congress is in session and the Republicans are all out of town.

The other situation is religion. Not your friendly, accepting religion as, say, between Episcopalians and Methodists. No. I'm talking about fire and brimstone preaching, if you've only done your job if there's nothing left but scorched earth and green glass, Southern Baptist, style religion. Religion that takes no prisoners and makes no compromises even in the face of actual fact. Religion that lies about the other side because that side is bound for Hell and standing downwind is enough contact for contamination.

Sound familiar?

It's important to understand that the current right is a religion and not politics as usual. They don't want progress. They don't want cooperation. They don't want to actually do anything. Like crooked evangelist preachers, they want to save your soul and fill the collection plate. Nothing more. Certainly, nothing less.

And I wish, as Oral Roberts threatened, a higher power would bring them home.
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Thursday, October 1, 2009

Consideration of Works Past: Childhood's End


(Picture from here.)

I was a little hesitant to talk about this book. Childhood's End is considered by many to be a seminal work in the field. Certainly, it's one of the two most famous works by Arthur C. Clarke, the other being 2001.

The link above is a good synopsis of the story as is the link from which the picture came. Quickly: The Overlords come and stop human exploration of space along with our tendency towards self destruction. Time passes and things get really, really good but not too interesting for humanity. Then, the children of a later generation become super sentient, uberpowerful and join with the universal Overmind and the ultimate purpose of the Overlords intervention, to shepard humanity into this stage, is revealed.

Okay, then.

It's a thin book. The characterization is sketchy at best. There is a whole lot of Clarke's vision of what an idyllic world should look like. But, by and large, the book is boring.

I didn't expect that at all.

I enjoyed the book as a child. It wasn't my favorite of Clarke's work-- that would probably be The City and the Stars or perhaps The Deep Range. In fact, I would go on to say that most of his books are better than CE. Certainly, CE was an early work. It was only his fifth novel.

Clarke was never known for deep characters but even against those measured standards, CE falls pretty short.

I suppose I gleaned something of the possibilities of SF from CE. But as I read it now, I didn't learn much else. The path I followed was much more in keeping with his other works than this one.

It's interesting how Clarke returned to the same themes again in 2001. Others have also. Even John Wyndham did, by a back door approach, in The Midwich Cuckoos, aka, Village of the Damned. (BTW: A really interesting take on the Wyndham idea is in Freakangels. Go look.)

I would have liked to say there was more influence on me by CE than there actually was. It's such a staple. But, in all honesty, it didn't move me in any particular direction. I've actually gone in an antithetical direction.

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