Don't count me among the Little Green Men. |
Fred talks about writing, food, dogs, and whatever else deserves the treatment.
Thursday, June 30, 2022
Return of the UFOs.
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
Irony.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Pate.
Monday, June 27, 2022
Pear-shaped.
Non-optimal, unless you are an actual pear |
Sunday, June 26, 2022
Kafka IRS.
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Cursing and cussin'.
The patron saint of swearing without actually cursing |
Friday, June 24, 2022
Endorsement deal!
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Time for plan B.
On one hand, the Great Peach Preserves Incident convinced Barbara that canning was not for her. But on the other, she received a call to go work for SpaceX a few days afterward. |
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Power glower?
Note how Marvin's power pose makes him look more manly. |
If you are already lacking self-confidence, you might reason that the ends justify the means. Acting like a heartless jerk for a few minutes may be a small cost to pay for your dream job or a promotion, right? Although it is tempting to conclude that power posing might be a way to trick our nervous system into feeling powerful, research by Pablo Briñol, Richard Petty and Ben Wagner has shown that that this strategy might actually backfire among the people who need power the most. In a paper published prior to the power pose work described above, they examined the possibility that power posing might make people more confident in their own thoughts–even if those thoughts were negative! As predicted, Dr. Briñol and his colleagues found that power posing increased self-confidence, but only among participants who already had positive self-thoughts. In contrast, power posing had exactly the opposite effect on people who had negative self-thoughts. In fact, it actually decreased their self-confidence as potential professionals. In other words, power posing backfired among half the participants.
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Thank you, Stanley!
What could be better than tomahawks AND dragon fire? |
Monday, June 20, 2022
Why are girls so crazy?
Sweet but clumsy Hillary Hippo has a number of silly misadventures when she goes shopping. |
Besties Aisha and Tammy, who love detective stories, get on the case when a dognapping ring steals Aisha's standard poodle, Miss Curlz. |
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Baby feets!
I will put enmity between you and the woman,and between your offspring and hers;They will strike at your head,while you strike at their heel
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Lost masterpieces of art.
Georges Seurat, Man on Call with IRS |
Stained glass, Cathedral der Zutenheim, St. Dude |
Rembrandt van Rijn, Nederlands Meisje (Dutch Babe) |
Friday, June 17, 2022
He did that.
Thursday, June 16, 2022
Update on Fredcoin.
My friends, once again I, Fred, of Fredcoin, write to you in the hope of assuring you that Fredcoin is the safest cryptocurrency investment you can make. And here I go: Fredcoin is the safest cryptocurrency investment you can make. There! I said it!
The latest news about the drop in the value of Bitcoin and the layoffs at Coinbase indicating an upcoming "Crypto Winter" should in no way indicate shakiness on our part here at Fredcoin. Our value remains what it always is, and that is the value that it has always been! Surely there's no more rock-solid guarantee than that.
Look at that honest face! |
I would especially like to take this time to refute the scurrilous, nay, infamous remarks of our competitors, most of all those hornswoggling rascals at -- ugh! it pains me to say the name! -- HodagCoin.
BOO! |
The CEO of HodagCoin, Hans Hinderminder, has dared to refer to Fredcoin using such libelous terms as "fake money" and "not real" and "funny-looking." Well, Hinderminder, let me just say, you're not exactly Cary Grant yourself, you know. Plus, HodagCoin is a failed crypto from a failure of a sham of a company with a failed investment profile and a faily fail fail failure of a CEO. On the Street they say the portfolio is mostly Blockbuster and Bank of the United States, but surely even Hinderminder isn't that stupid. OR IS HE?
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
The test.
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
Monday, June 13, 2022
Enabled-bodied citizens.
Sunday, June 12, 2022
Terror in the streets!
Saturday, June 11, 2022
Friday, June 10, 2022
Extruder alert?
Thursday, June 9, 2022
Tip off.
No, she doesn't take Fredcoin either. |
Wednesday, June 8, 2022
Not a fan.
A friend of mine, a football enthusiast, when asked if he is a Giant fan, likes to say that he is actually a small air conditioner.
I thought of that joke when I saw this by a neighbor's trash can.
I would not have parted with the fans. On several occasions in this house we have found ourselves suddenly without air conditioning -- when we moved in and the weather got hot and we found out the condenser had never been hooked up; when the cheap unit that came with the house completely crapped out; and when we discovered recently that the replacement unit had been leaking coolant for years because it was installed improperly. All these things were unexpected.
Just saying that, while there are many things I am nostalgic for from the days of my youth, nights with no air conditioning are not among them.
Tuesday, June 7, 2022
Chipmunk off the stone block.
My neighbor has a retaining wall made of large stones, and mine is the mirror image of his. These were put in place because our houses were built on a slope.
The one thing he had that I did not were chipmunks living in the wall. UNTIL NOW.
I saw one of the little critters going in and out of the holes. And, as with the yellowjackets that have nested in the wall in the past, you know that when you see one, there are others.
So I made inquires.
Monday, June 6, 2022
Latvia #1!
My wife, the master yarn crafter, was watching a video online about Latvian mitten knitting by a woman who had studied the art.
It would appear that Latvia is especially renowned for its mittens. Who knew?
Well, a lot of people, I guess. Ravelry has a ton of pages devoted to it, and don't even ask about Etsy. And of course there are books, like Lizbeth Upitis's Latvian Mittens: Traditional Designs & Techniques.
As the kiddies would say, It's a THING!
Here are some now! |
Of course, that begs the questions: Why mittens? Why Latvia? Why now?
Flag of Latvia |
The CIA World Factbook says that the former Soviet Union republic only has mild winters, and indeed the nation's Environment, Geology and Meteorology Centre confesses to an average winter temperature of about 24 degrees Fahrenheit -- not exactly the Arctic freeze one would associate with the need for the world's finest knit mitts. So it's not a matter of cold-weather survival that has made Latvia #1 in mittens.
Latvian version of the foam #1 finger (artist interpretation) |
According to Latvians.com, a site dedicated to Latvians and their culture:
Latvia is famous for the fact that the oldest mittens have been found here by archaeologists. They are estimated to be approximately ten centuries old. The tradition of knitting mittens stems from the cold weather of Northern Europe; although it is worth mentioning that centuries ago mittens played a decorative role as well. By fastening them behind the waistband, they were worn in summer as a bijouterie and adornment. For several centuries they were the main form of gift and endowed with magical significance.
Nowadays Latvian mittens, so diverse in their colours and patterns are still an essential part of our winter clothing. Although there is always the possibility to wear synthetic gloves, the originality, tradition, warmth and sense of Latvia that is knitted into a mitten will be always worth a compliment.
But it isn't just the craftsmanship, even the one-upmanship, that might come from knowing your mittens are better than someone else's that make mittens so important in Latvia. There is also a tradition connected to weddings, according to this Latvian site:
An ancient Latvian wedding tradition says that unmarried girls have to fill up their hope chests before entering the marriage. It’s an old tradition, that was respected by their mothers and grandmothers, so from early childhood girls were taught to knit, embroider, crochet and sew to be able to fulfill their chests with knits and other handicrafts. Knitted mittens were one of the most important things of the chest and also an indicator of girl’s skills. They represented patience and imagination, because every mitten had to be knitted in a different design using different patterns, otherwise the brides were laughed at. The most lavish chests contained several hundred pairs of hand-knitted mittens. This could not have been done if not the rich and diverse Latvian ethnographic culture. Each pair of mittens has its own story, his own unique pattern and what is most important – each pair of mittens holds his own meaning and comes with it its own wish.
As these mittens were given as a gifts, every girl was trying to do their best and was competing among themselves to create as many as possible creative patterns, color compositions and shades.
That seems to have created an atmosphere as brutal and bloody as one of our more crushing competitive events, like the Super Bowl or the Scripps National Spelling Bee. Can you imagine being a bride and getting laughed at on your wedding day because your mittens suck?
"Ha! Ha! What is on those mittens, Hello Kitty? Are they from the ostruble store?"
"You should never know the kiss of true love with mittens like that!"
"We laugh at you, bride! Ha! Ha! Ha!"
Think of the pressure! As someone who has the manual dexterity of a left-handed ox, I'm glad I was not born a Latvian girl. My wedding would have gotten more laughs than the Depp-Heard trial.
So it seems that this is just one of those things. It started out to keep warm, and turned somehow into an important cultural statement, like the shtreimel. I've seen ultraorthodox Jewish men wearing those fur hats in the summer on the Sabbath, and if you ask me, when July rolls around, I'd rather have mittens fastened to my waistband than a fur hat on my head.
Sunday, June 5, 2022
Saturday, June 4, 2022
Bug off.
Fungus gnats (Orfelia and Bradysia species), also called darkwinged fungus gnats (Sciaridae), are dark, delicate-looking flies similar in appearance to mosquitoes.... They eat organic mulch, leaf mold, grass clippings, compost, root hairs, and fungi.
Gnathole |