Monday Open Thread: February 18 is Julia Butterfly Hill's birthday
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February 18 is the 49th day of the year
Prickle-Prickle, Chaos 49, 3185 YOLD (discordian)
And let us not forget 13.0.6.4.10 by the Mayan Long Count
It is trivially easy to prove that there are no non-interesting numbers via a recursive reductio ad absurdum. As a result, it must be the case that both 18 and 49 are interesting numbers, but neither one interests me enough at this moment to spend much time on them here. 18 is the product of a prime and the square of a prime, and 49 is the square of a prime. They add up to 67, also a prime and the sum of 5 consecutive primes. Big W00t! Their product is 882, which is not even remotely prime, but it is the year in which Oleg of Novgorod captured Kiev, and made it his capital, forming the Kievan Rus'.
The Kievan Rus' is/are largely unknown in the US and little taught here, as is the replacing the 19-year-long Christianization of the "Rus' Khaganate" and its roughly 19 year long Christianiztion which the Kievan Rus' supplanted and replaced. This is, in part, due to a lack of certainty as to exactly who, ethnically, they were and in great part due to the fact that they are the source of the place names "Russia" and "Belarus" and the "Russian" language as in "native speakers of Rus". whose existence must be denied in order to support certain political narratives. The Kievan Rus, and the Rus Kaganate are interesting historical background that is worth looking into, at least a little, IMHO.
Twenty years of schooling and they put you on the day shift, look out kid, ...
On this day in history:
1268 – The Livonian Order was defeated in the Battle of Rakvere. Like the Teutonic order, their effect on history is underappreciated
1878 – John Tunstall was murdered by Jesse Evans, starting the Lincoln County War in New Mexico.
1885 – Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was published.
1930 – Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto.
1943 – The Nazis arrested the members of the White Rose movement, as governments tend to do with dissidents.
1957 – The British colonial government executed Kenyan rebel leader Dedan Kimathi.
1957 – The last instance of capital punishment in New Zealand.was carried out.
1970 – The Chicago Seven were found not guilty of conspiracy to incite riots.
1972 – The California Supreme Court invalidated California's death penalty.
2001 – FBI agent Robert Hanssen was busted for spying for the Soviet Union instead of spying on peaceniks and lefties.
Born this day in:
1745 – Alessandro Volta, physicist
1838 – Ernst Mach, physicist and philosopher
1848 – Louis Comfort Tiffany, stained glass artist
1898 – Enzo Ferrari, race car driver
1909 – Wallace Stegner, novelist
1914 – Pee Wee King, singer, songwriter, and accordionist
1921 – Mary Amdur, toxicologist and public health researcher persecuted for reporting on effects of smog
1922 – Helen Gurley Brown, journalist and author
1933 – Yoko Ono, performance artist, singer, and songwriter
1934 – Skip Battin, singer, songwriter and bass player
1939 – Bobby Hart, aka The Monkees, singer and songwriter
1941 – Irma Thomas, singer
1948 – Keith Knudsen, singer, songwriter, and drummer
1952 – Randy Crawford, singer
1952 – Juice Newton, singer, songwriter, and guitarist
1953 – Robbie Bachman, drummer
1953 – Derek Pellicci, drummer
1957 – Vanna White, woman of letters
1974 – Julia Butterfly Hill, environmentalist and author
Died this day in:
1455 – Fra Angelico, priest and painter
1546 – Martin Luther, famous religionist vandal
1564 – Michelangelo, sculptor and painter
1851 – Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi, mathematician
1910 – Lucy Stanton, activist, abolitionist and feminist
1915 – Frank James, businessman
1957 – Dedan Kimathi, Mau Mau rebellion leader
1973 – Frank Costello, businessman
2006 – Bill Cowsill, singer and guitarist
2013 – Kevin Ayers, singer, songwriter, and guitarist
Holidays, Holy Days, Festivals, Feast Days, Days of Recognition, and such:
Music goes here, iirc, well,
>
Yoko Ono
Skip Battin
Bobby Hart
Irma Thomas
Keith Knudsen
Randy Crawford
Juice Newton
Robbie Bachman
Derek Pellicci
Bill(y) Cowsill
Kevin Ayers
Image is a Monarch Butterfly
It's an open thread, so do your thing
Comments
Good morning, el; beautiful Monarch to start the day and
the fun music ... have to listen later as it's a busy day, therapy and all.
Thanks for this OT and have a good one.
Good morning, Smiley, hope yu have a good physical
therapy session.
Thanks for the interesting/fun tune.
Have a great day.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Good morning all
Another 1.75" yesterday and last night. We're supposed to have a bit of a break today, but more on the way the next several days. After several years of exceptional drought I'm not complaining. I had hoped to transplant a few things this week, but I don't dig if the soil is soaking wet....it ruins the natural structure. So, I'll just have to see how it goes.
Well, thanks for the music and info. Had to look up https://www.juliabutterflyhill.com/ to remember she's the one that lived in the redwood tree for over a year.
Hope you all have a good day, and those of you that still work have president's day off!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Good morning, Lookout. We've had rain, rain and more rain,
but none today and none predicted for today. Yy, I guess. Our drought is officially over, hope yours is too. Like you, I am reluctant to get into the garden, wet as it is. Today, with no wrning, we had a mini-freeze - micro ice crystals glistening here and there, and frozen water in the Scrub Jay's feeding station. Birdbath/fountain was trying to freeze, but failed.
Ms. Hill is perhaps better known and more profoundly remembered/admired and/or hated in redwood country than elsewhere, and then secondly, throughout west coast timber country than elsewhere, but she's a hero to many of us.
Have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Yellow Wood Sorrell
a.k.a. Oxalis stricta, that is the stuff growing everywhere around here. "disturbed areas" lol yeah
By 6th Happiness - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
Sixth! right on
The Doobie Brothers - "What A Fool Believes"
RIP Keith Knudsen
nice pirate shirt
well alrighty then
no withdrawals
or else
Endorsements (read and weep already)
I followed the first stinky link. PU:
D-Values
Pepsico, Unilever and Nestlé accused of complicity in illegal rainforest destruction
teenage wasteland
good luck
PEACE
Oxalis...
adds a nice flavor in salads (just don't use too much).
http://www.eattheweeds.com/oxalis-how-to-drown-your-sorrels/
The kids call it sour grass.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Stomachic. oh! new word trivia
Herb: Wood Sorrel
thanks, Oxalis has loads of medicinal properties, it's a good one. I might try applying externally to the never healing sore on my shin bone. Pretty little flowers too:I wouldn't ingest anything near the silent spring sprayed all over lazytown clovertucky again this year, maybe I shouldn't apply it externally either. Xperience brawndo for real man, it's no wonder the human cruelty goes on forever in Sonoma County California... denying shelter while giving millions of dollars to charity. Donor class trickle brains, starvation creators, mass migrators.
ignore nest shit
demand growth
good luck
I find Aloe to be the trick for skin ailments
I split the leaf blade, place it gooey side down over the wound and tape or use an ankle wrap to keep it in place. The moisture will be absorbed and the wound heals quickly. That's this herbalist advice.
https://www.americanschoolofnaturalhealth.com/heal-skin-trauma-irritatio...
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Good morning, eyo. Every winter oxalis completely takes
over our yard and then we begin beating it back. I've already pulled a bunch, but that doesn't help at all. We start with the plantings, and then spread, and it takes all summer .
Thanks for the morning music.
You'll not that the dem party rules are a revision of old established practice, which is that withdrawing candidates can pledge their delegates to the remaining candidate of their choice, while now they go to the pre-selected establishment conservadem who will be the presumed front-runner most of the time. Fuck 'em.
teenage wasteland indeed!
Have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
I excel
at 'wild plant' gardening. That is saying nothing though since those types of plants, commonly known as weeds, garden themselves. Plants like dandelion, stinging nettle, prickly pear cactus, and thistle, take care of themselves, so I can claim no credit. I do though, harvest them at times. I really enjoy wild plant harvesting, it makes you appreciate that gift.
Your discussion of Oxalis brought this on and I went to the tubes to check out Stinging nettle in more detail (not related, but that's how my mind works). I have read about stinging nettle before and have been using it in my soup stock for some time but I just found out that it can be dangerous for dogs (not in stock, but on their skin). https://www.wikihow.com/Identify-Stinging-Nettle
So thanks for that tangent you inadvertently sent me on, it was very helpful.
Thanks for the OT this morning. I have butterflies on the mind...Julia Butterfly...etc. Our butterfly garden here is hopefully brewing. I hope to see some tiny little plants coming up soon. I have more milkweed seeds in the fridge getting ready for a planting. My fennel and dill will be donated to caterpillars...provided they sprout.
Here's to insects and little creepy crawly things....we need them.
Good morning, randtntx. I'll be happy to search diligently for
all of oxalis' putative uses if it would stay the hell out of our yard and garden. You can't kill it unless you remove and replace all of your topsoil, then, a lone volunteer and off it goes. ptui!
We have a milkweed that we cannot be certain isn't "bad milkweed" and need to find a certified groovy replacement. We had quite a patch of it going. Dill and fennel we don't plant, but we'll gladly share any parsley that comes up with the butterfly/caterpiller species that love it.
have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Thanks
I have my own love-hate relationship with cactus, so I can empathize.
I found out that you are supposed to plant the milkweed that is native. Asclepias curassavica is the tropical variety and may disrupt monarch migration. I bought my seeds from https://parkseed.com/common-milkweed-seeds/p/52153-PK-P1/
The variety I got was Asclepia syriaca. I also bought some Joe Pye Weed seeds. I don't know much about that so we shall see. Supposedly pollinators are fond of both.
I have some locally acquired, sworn to to native, but it looks
a great deal like Asclepias curassavica. It isn't an exact match, to my eye and limited knowledge and botanical ID skills, but rather than take chances I'd like to find a local, organic, native plant source and go get something that is a sure thing, unless it looks exactly like what I already have. If Berkeley Horticultural nursery is still in business, I might try them, or see if the UC Botannical Garden ever has any on sale.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Let's laugh at a late 80s snuff film...
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=042FuXVRheU]
And sadly these assholes haven't changed a bit, only now they subject private school kids to this kind of crap. The moron droning on and on in the documentary also supported Roy Moore. Gee, I wonder why? I think I'll include this in my next essay I'm currently working on.
Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.
Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.
Good morning, Aspie. Of course they do. Private schools
have specific fuctions:
1) keep your kids away from those people (black, mexican, poor, etc.)
2. brainwash and indoctrinate them (mostly religious, racist, reactionary, fascist)
3. Regimentation and acclimation to regimentation
R&R is/was, of course, free, licentious, rebellious, etc. In a word, evil.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
More Juice:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akPPGMenqqA width:400 height:240]
We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.
Good morning, Az, thanks for that. Good clip, especially
right after coffee.
Have a great one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Staying sane.
Never really realized how much stuff I do right handed till now. Left arm is Sore as hell...
But enjoyed some old Baking that I loved from when I was a Kid. Always nice to do something fun with my own kids.
and my little comment on the news...
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXAvNLTWNMM]
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
Good morning, detroit. The universal song of US foreign
policy, wash, rinse, re-run. Thanks.
Baking is always good, even when it ruins your diet. Be careful when compensating for the bum collarbone, or any other one-side injury, not to overtax and strain (or worse) the other side. I get into these cycles of ding one side, over compensate, and by the time it is healed, the other side is giving me grief.
Have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Holy Lunie Monday Batman
Just carefully watch their eyes Robin. Hope y'all are making out OK today. I'm almost ecstatic. The transplantation of seedlings in to their own pots yesterday seems to be a success.Brought them up from the basement to a south facing window in the kitchen. Touch and go there for awhile. Used chop sticks to support the floppies, fed them B12 to ease the transition, played mellow jazz and gave them a grow light. Seem to be standing so far!
Sleet, snow and power drops today. Have a fire and cooking Boston baked beans.
Life can be good sometimes.
Good morning, QMS, good to hear. I have a few plants I could
try to start indoors, but I'm reluctant because I have extremely few seeds of the chosen varieties. I built a grow lamp station years ago, it is in the shed since it lost its counter space in the garage - perhaps I should remedy that. Hmmm. OTOH, the garage is unheated, so it is arguably no better than a cold frame, if it is even that good. Mellow Jazz sounds like a good thing, or perhaps "Mozart for Morning Coffee".
One of the species I'm tempted to start is taprooted, and, per the package, goes into the ground in April, so it is probably too soon to start it, but that April target date is almost certainly for some other distant climate zone.
Hope you enjoy your beans. Never a favorite of mine, too sweet. I prefer mine seriously savory or, or course, hot. A chacun son gout.
Have a great one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Thanks, el, for the
Doobie Brothers, my First concert back in the day, won tickets off the Local radio station.
I was twelve at the time, had to ride with my sister and her boyfriend. Ended up right in front of the stage singing along to Most of the songs and dancing. Good Times, then.
Hard freeze here with two more inches of snow at our elevation, clear and sunny, though, for the first time in weeks.
I hope everyone has whatEver kind of day they wish to have.
Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .
Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .
If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march
Good morning, TBU. I suspect that my first "concert"
was either Kingston Trio or Limelighters because concerts, back then, were for listening. Rock was mostly for dancing and done in "halls" and such as opposed to auditoriums. I remember a few at the War Memorial (San Diego), but not the bands, until, I guess, the Kingsmen. My first real rock concert would've been once I got to Berkeley and would'be been Country Joe and the Fish, The Grateful Dead, Big Brother, The Airplane, Quicksilver or somebody like that, probably a double or triple bill. Once I got up here things became something of a blur and all ran together.
Hard freeze would be bad news here, but we would've been warned. I guess it depends upon if your're ready for it. Some plants love it. Good that you have sun, it always brightens the day.
Have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
imagine what would happen
https://www.juliabutterflyhill.com/imagine-convergence-march-21-24-2019/
Happy Birthday Butterfly
om
I'd like to imagine affording a conference on Orcas Island, but wouldn't burn the world to get there. each/own
peace
Agree
morning el...
et al.
Frost here too. Windy. No rain on the horizon. Oxalis always comes in the spring. I ignore it and it dies back but the bulbs are everywhere in the soil if you dig. Was told not to eat it but I guess in small bits it’s okay. Chickens love it. My friend takes bunches home with her for them. Nasturtiums and borage both volunteer here and are good in salads. Yum. Have a best one...
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Afternoon, magi. When I was a kid, we would sometimes
chew on the flower stems, only, but that was short lived. IIIrc, Borage is supposed to be great for "chop and drop" mulching, but needs full sun, which is pretty much absent in our yard.
Have a good one.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
a Julia butterfly...
This is the non-hominid Julia butterfly:
They are one of the tropical Longwing (Heliconian) butterflies like the Zebra often seen at butterfly cages, zoos, events, etc.. But their wings are even longer and narrower. Perhaps 4" across wingspan, very impressive in person. Julia butterflies in the U.S. are found mostly just in south to central Texas and southern Florida.
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein