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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-12 02:56 pm

Inflated bandshell

We're leading up to a concert by the city band in the park this evening. Wonder if they'll have a supply of iced water for the band members and audience. Digital thermometer on that side of the house reads 94 F at the moment.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-12 06:51 am

Dying of the light

Air temperature 66 F, wind near calm, sunny. We languish under a heat advisory again, with forecast of mid 90s F. Air quality "moderate" and AQI 57. Foraging morning, from air-conditioned house to air-conditioned car to air-conditioned store and back. May not get a walk in.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-11 05:07 pm

Suicidal urge?

I've seen two people out jogging in this hellish air. Heat stroke is a thing, people . . .
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-11 03:31 pm

Dante visiting

Air temperature 94 F at the airport, 98 on the north side of our house and 100 F on the south side. Heat pumps doing their thing keeping the inside habitable.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-11 12:46 pm

(no subject)

And he hasn't even had to burn down the Reichstag to do it.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-11 06:46 am

Oppressor ruling

Air temperature 65 F and dew point 63, wind near calm, sunny. Air quality "good" with AQI 13. Supposed to get up over 90 F today and the next couple of days. Walk early or not at all?
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-10 06:55 am

Doldrums summer morn

Air temperature 61 F, wind north about 1 mph, partly cloudy. Air quality "moderate" with AQI 74, PM2.5 imported fresh from Canada with no tariff. Walk rather than bike ride, and if I have the energy after I'll snip some more used-up hosta flower stalks. Messy plants, but the bees and hummingbirds like them.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-09 07:20 am

Maine's brief inferno

Air temperature 61 F, wind south about 7 mph, sunny. Supposed to get up into the 80s later, so walk early. Next week, 90s and cowering in the breeze from our heat pumps.
pegkerr: (But this is terrible!)
pegkerr ([personal profile] pegkerr) wrote2025-08-08 05:27 pm

2025 52 Card Project: Week 31: Smoke

The weather was so perfect last weekend. Not too humid. No rain. No clouds. Temperature in the upper seventies.

And we couldn't be outside enjoying any of it because smoke from the Canadian wildfires filled the air with choking haze, giving us the second-worst air quality in the entire world. I spent the weekend inside, huddled up close to my HEPA air purifier, furiously resenting that I couldn't be out enjoying my front porch.

The headline in the local paper pretty much summed it up: we're sick of this.

Image description: Background: an urban landscape, barely discernible through a thick layer of smoke. Text reads: 'This summer has been hot, smoky, soggy. Minnesotans are sick of it. Slightly more than half of days since mid-May have featured heavy rain, high heat, bad air or some combination in the Twin Cities. Twin Cities summer weather has dealt miserable conditions.' Below is a graph indicating days with poor weather conditions. Bottom Center: an Oransi air purifier.

Smoke

31 Smoke

Click on the links to see the 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021 52 Card Project galleries.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-08 11:07 am

Friday roadkill report

Couple of mummified squirrels on my route, one bit of flattened fur that I would call a woodchuck if it wasn't for the pale underside so it could have been a marten, a patch of feathers gray and white that I think was one of my standard mockingbirds. Or maybe a youngster from that family, operating on a student pilot's license . . .

Usual late summer flowers, tansy and goldenrod and chicory and Queen Anne's lace. City has mowed some milkweed, tough luck monarchs.

No interesting metal birds out at the airport/base. Only air traffic was a noisy light plane landing.

Got out on the bike, across town and back over the hills and dales. Air temperature either 77 or 82 F, depending on which thermometer you choose, excessive for elderly cyclists and gonna get worse. Did not die.

15.69 miles, 1:28:34
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-08 06:55 am

Lawns are going brown

Air temperature 57 F, wind near calm, sunny. Trash out, to include a fall web-worm nest extracted from our flowering crab tree out back. Bike ride later, last before the heat stomps us with 90s F forecast for Sunday and into next week. We might get some thunderstorms next Thursday. Or might not.
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David D. Levine ([personal profile] davidlevine) wrote2025-08-07 11:16 am

Gaudeamus Igitur: A Misktatonic University LARP Report

I am writing at the airport on the way home from Philadelphia, where I played in the Miskatonic University North America LARP organized by Chaos League in conjunction with Reverie Studio. This was a Live Action Role Play game loosely based on the stories of H.P. Lovecraft, which took place at Miskatonic University in Arkham, Massachusetts in 1924.

This report contains SPOILERS.

Read more... )
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-07 07:08 am

*Clever title here*

Air temperature 59 F, wind near calm, partly cloudy. With no rain in the forecast until next week (maybe), have hauled water to the salvia transplants out front. Walk later.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-06 05:05 pm

Careful with those captions

Just had a bit on the evening news about Border Patrol arresting two "Indians" . . .

Turns out they meant citizens of India. But we have three Native American tribes up here, four if you separate out MicMac and Maliseet . . .
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-06 04:12 pm

Food that fights back

Chopped up an onion for the "Spanish" rice and my eyes still smart and my nose is running. Don't usually have this violent a reaction. Fresh spring harvest?
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-06 11:45 am

Wednesday avian report

Six geese by the cemetery pond, all looked like adults. Maybe they left the kids with Aunt Maude and are taking some quiet time. Or maybe the raccoons and mink got the eggs . . .

Saw a couple of the pale purple asters along one roadside, none elsewhere. Lots of tansy and chicory and the damned loosestrife. Cattail heads continue to fill in.

No roadkill, unless you count the DOT crew out filling the road shoulders through the bog. With flaggers, and alternating one-way traffic, which is a hell of a lot of fun for a bike on a road with no paved shoulder . . .

Got out for my ride, upriver to the country club and over to the road through the bog and home. Did not die.

15.31 miles, 1:24:33
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sartorias ([personal profile] sartorias) wrote2025-08-06 07:13 am
Entry tags:

Some reading!

This replacing of the floors is turning out to be a long project, since most of the grunt work has to be done by us, two olds. It's basically packing to move sans truck. I'm doing more culling, noting my own inconsistencies in regard to what I keep and what I toss. What seemed a ream of letters from one person went out, except for a slim batch of early ones when X visited a country they felt strongly about. But the rest had begun so well, with many book and writing discussions, then became a long downhill slide over the years until I reached the point when I dreaded seeing their handwriting on an envelope. Out those go--those letters served their purpose at the time, but are not worth keeping to revisit.

And yet, I cannot toss old letters from relatives, which are largely reports on their daily doings. Some of those letters are more than fifty years old, so they've become curiosities, little reminders of what life was like in the late sixties/early seventies. But mostly I won't toss those letters because to do so is to silence those voices forever. Sorry, kids, you'll have to toss them when you toss whatever I leave behind.

Not much time for reading as I tear this place apart, and also cull more books. So far I've completely emptied three tall bookcases, and there's a lot more to go!

I've begun reading Emily Eden, whose writing shows influence from Jane Austen. Also, there's the monthly Zoom discussion of Anthony Powell's twelve volume roman fleuve A Dance to the Music of Time; I missed the August live discussion due to conflicting appointments, but they record it, and I'm listening in pieces. So far the talk re this book, The Valley of Bones seems to be circling around how much it's a roman a clef.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-06 07:01 am

Which is the why now?

Air temperature 55 F, wind near calm, sunny. Air quality "good" with AQI 23. No rain in the ten-day forecast so I should water the replacement salvia out front. Bike ride on the morning schedule.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-05 06:57 pm

(no subject)

Wonko the Sane was right.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-05 03:10 pm

(no subject)

Looking out the window, saw a small upside-down bird-shape working its way down the trunk of an ash tree. Nuthatches are fun.