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[profile] bard_bloom says I should show you guys a picture that I took during a hive inspection today. It's the first time I've taken a camera out to the hive when I've been in there, and this was mostly to help me figure out what's going on in there, but maybe you are curious.

In any case, you can see some little bee faces just about ready to emerge from their cells, and some little bee butts where the bees are working inside the cells.


Bee heads and bee butts Bee heads and bee butts

beetiger: (Floosh!)
Made today:

1)Blueberry ice cream from U-Pick blueberries

2)Gumbo from many many vegetables from the farmshare and shrimp and chicken that really needed to come out of the freezer

3)Marinara sauce from all the tomatoes that were still left after making a vat of gumbo and basil and parsley from the farmshare

4)Three containers of lavender balm using scraps of beeswax from the hive.

Yay.
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There's some new art over at the Crowdsource site. Thanks, all you art-making people!

Also, we added a donate button over at the readings page, since people seem to be going there without visiting the main page.
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Hey there! When we first put out the Crowdsource Tarot back in June, there was a decent amount of interest in people doing art for the project, but we haven't actually ended up with much new art beyond the early submissions.

Crowdsource Tarot, is, in fact, a community project. We'd love to include anyone who would like to participate!

Anybody working on anything/want to work on anything? We'll put your work on the art page with a credit, a link to your portfolio, and many many piles of thanks and appreciation.

In any case, here, have a reading.
beetiger: (beetiger by ninjahijinx)
I was going to just give away all of my perfume that wasn't in big bottles today. But I went through, and got all nostalgic,and still ended up with about 100 imps I just wasn't ready to let go of yet. But I did cull a big pile, and I'd love it if one of you wanted them.

Friends first, 'cause I hope I can get this to someone who would enjoy it quickly and not do the ebay deal.

65 sample vials (imps) of perfume, mostly general collection BPAL with a smattering of limited edition/rare stuff and some stuff from from other companies. Fill ranging from brand new to enough for at least a few wearings. I'll also send you an extra ammo case which holds 50 of these little bottles.

Not going to take the time to list them individually, but it's mostly stuff I loved but had doubles of or stuff I liked but don't wear anymore. Nothing I think is terrible; those disappeared long ago.

I'd love to get $45 for these, plus shipping. Barter for equivalent value would be fine. If you don't have money but desperately want these, tell me. I mostly just want to get them into appreciative hands.
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About a week and a half ago, I bought a Zune, because it was on sale at Woot, and because I've been decluttering and the overloaded CD racks were getting to me, and because my tech enabler [personal profile] lediva has been bugging me that I should for a while. I'd been avoiding getting a portable music player for a long time mostly because --well, because I don't like earphones, mostly, and I don't like being tuned out from my environment. But I noted that Microsoft has done a pretty functional FM transmitter for it, and I noticed that I'd been taking long drives listening to my Sirius radio, not on the hundreds of stations available on it, but basically only on 4 stations: contemporary jazz, 80s, 90s, and kids.

I was pretty impressed with the organizational abilities of the Zune software, once I ripped a pile of what was on those overflowing CD racks. Then I went ahead and started the 2 week free trial of the Zune Pass, Microsoft's music rental service. I've been having fun downloading all this stuff that people have told me I should listen to but never have --Polyphonic Spree, Great Big Sea -- and finding out what some artists I liked a while ago have been doing for the last few years.

And suddenly, I'm all nostalgic, downloading all the stuff I had on vinyl before CD's existed. I downloaded a pile of Blondie. And I downloaded Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell.

Bat Out of Hell was the very first record I bought on my own, with my own money, when it came out in 1977, which means I was not quite ten years old. I don't recall at all why I bought it, whether I'd heard songs on the radio, or someone had told me about it, or whether the biker chick genes from my mother that I didn't realize I had yet were starting to surface, or if I just saw the album in the store and thought the name Meat Loaf was funny or something. But I do remember listening to it over and over on my little Peter Pan turntable in my bedroom, being fascinated by the images of love and relationships it presented, nodding my head to the drums, unaware of the level to which everything on there was really tongue in cheek. I imagined sitting in a car, Paradise By the Dashboard Light-like, and I think it was the first time I realized that boys were supposed to say yes, and girls were supposed to say no.

I played it for my son, in the car, while I drove him to camp yesterday. He told me that they shouldn't really say "ain't", and that it would be funny if they called it "Bats Out of the Summerlands". He loved the sound, and utterly missed anything about the lyrics entirely.

And now I'm playing "Heart of Glass", which a boy from the Catholic school down the road from where I went to school used to play for me over the phone, while I sat on my little bed and somehow wished I could be Debbie Harry. And it makes me feel like I've been around a while, and like that's a good thing.
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[livejournal.com profile] projectmothra asked a question in the car today.

"Is a king size bed the biggest bed?" We tell him it's the biggest common bed, that there's a less common one called a California King.

"But what if you want a bigger bed for more people?"

"I guess you have to push beds together or get a special bed made custom."

"What if six people want to be in the same bed?"

"Then I guess you could just push two beds together."

I look at him curiously, after he goes on about the six-person bed for a while. I can't help but ask. "Who are these six people who want to share a bed?"

"Well, what if there are two people --like a husband and wife -- and each of them has a friend, and each of their friends has a husband?"

I'm not sure exactly what this says about how we are raising him.
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[personal profile] projectmothra and I are going to be in town this upcoming weekend, probably from midday Friday the 10th and through the evening of Sunday the 12th. Would any/many of you like to see us? It's mostly a seeing-people kind of a trip, except without any actual plans of people to see yet. :)

Let me know by any of the usually approved methods.
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You guys are full of awesome. We already have 3 pieces of art for the deck. Only 84 more cards to go! :)
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Hi! [livejournal.com profile] bard_bloom and I made you a thing.
The Crowdsource Tarot.
We got 87 words overall from all of you, two the same, so there are 86 cards. Everything fell into place very nicely. Making order out of chaos and playing with archetypes is just incredibly fun.

Enjoy, and pass it around. And thank you all. This couldn't exist without you.
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Hey there!

I'm going to be going to a Spencer Tunick photo shoot at 4 am Monday morning in Montauk. I know being naked in the ocean at four in the morning on a workday is a hard sell, but would any of you be interested in joining me? It's going to be awesome, but driving company or being there company would make it even cooler.

Tofu!

Jun. 17th, 2009 11:20 pm
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I have been buying Otokomae Tofu as a treat for myself for a while, every time I make the pilgrimage to Mitsuwa Marketplace. It is awesome with local maple syrup on it as a high-protein dessert. But only now that it has been featured on Serious Eats do I realize it also has an insane website, and that its name loosely translates as "Hot Dude".
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Not a new meme, but a good offer to make every once in a while.

From everywhere:

"The problem with Livejournal is that we all think we are so close, but really, we know nothing about each other. Hence, I want you to ask me something you think you should know about me. Something that should be obvious, but you have no idea about. Then post this in your LJ and find out what people don’t know about you."

So… ask. Something you think you should know, but don’t.
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One of the key functions of Tarot, or other divination decks, is to be a tool by which the Universe can communicate with us by allowing our conscious and unconscious minds to pull order out of chaos, because it is human nature to find patterns, to make associations, to make meaning out of what we perceive. Humans love systems, especially when we are looking for answers.

Some decks facilitate the process by having complex imagery, or rich histories, or a certain aesthetic which lends itself to coming together nicely. Some decks limit themselves by having an unbalanced set of images. Tarot decks which use the traditional imagery but take out the male-energy cards, or the dark cards, frustrate me. Some decks add extra stories: the Egypt Urnash Tarot's 99 of Pentacles tells stories that would be inconceivable to a medieval reader, but are evocative to a modern videogame player. Some decks are limited for reading purposes by tone, such as the Hello Kitty Tarot. Some decks can only be truly read by their creators, such as Maggie Hogarth's Balance Cards.

A good reader can work with anything. I've given readings with the Cat Wisdom deck which people have informed me changed their lives. But the set of images which you have available unquestionably colors the things you can and cannot say.

[profile] bard_bloom and I were joking about archetypes that would be fun to have available in a divination deck, such as Zucchini. Upright, it's obviously an abundance card; reversed, it represents being overwhelmed with the opportunities available to you. And as any of you who have hung around with either of us very much know, we love systems. We love puzzles. And we love randomness with a certain kind of order imposed on it.

So we'd like you to help us. We're going to have this poll up for the next 48 hours. Each person gets one word. Any word. (English language only, please.) We'll take either the first 78 (the number in a traditional tarot deck), or whatever you give us in that time frame if it's fewer than that. We're going to keep the poll unviewable, because we don't want you riffing on each other intentionally or building the patterns in advance. We'll use every idea somehow, though we may combine ones that are similar, or tweak them a little bit. We won't add any new images that don't come from you guys. We may divide things into suits, or number them, or do gods know what with them. We'll try to construct divinatory meanings that make sense for each card. We won't force them into a balanced deck in any traditional sense, though we may balance things that look like they want to do that. When we're done, we will at the very least indulged ourselves in a puzzle, and perhaps amused you. At best, perhaps we'll have built an image of what our community is like, and the kinds of things we want the Universe to talk to us about.

We're writers, not visual artists, so we won't draw the cards for you. But we will describe the images. The output's probably going to look kind of like [profile] bard_bloom's Hacker Tarot, unless of course it doesn't.

One word per person. Send your friends. Choose carefully.

ETA: Um, you guys gave us 86 words when we weren't looking. There are some that are similar enough to others that they can probably be combined, but please stop now. :) And...thank you. A lot. You are all awesome, and this is going to be fun.

[Poll #1412603]

Bee pics

May. 28th, 2009 03:26 pm
beetiger: (cartoonbee)

Beehive, front entrance,  May 28 Beehive, front entrance, May 28
The front door of my beehive, mid-afternoon. The bees that look like they have little orange saddlebags are carrying pollen into the hive.

Ouch.

May. 26th, 2009 01:28 pm
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I was trying to be all Zen about the hive inspection. But when I took the sugar syrup feeder off the top of the hive, I apparently didn't notice the two center frames stuck to it until they fell to the ground. Hard. And apparently I didn't do nearly as good a job securing my bee jacket as last time, either.

Now I have about two dozen stings on my stomach and neck, and am again left hoping I didn't smash the queen on the ground, and I probably smushed a bunch more bees when I threw the lid on and ran away. I did get a chance to see that they hadn't touched the outermost frames yet, so they don't need the next deep super right now. So that's something.

So I'm taking Benadyl and ibuprofen, feeling sore and itchy and very very disappointed with how this went. As long as they look like they are foraging normally from the outside of the hive, I'll leave them alone for a week or two, and hope for the best.

Sigh.
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A week ago today I got a call I had been waiting for, from a little place outside Albany. My bees were ready, and I had to come get them *right now*. I got [livejournal.com profile] bard_bloom to come home from work, and got on the road for the three-hour drive up to where the bees were. They were packed on five frames in a nucleus hive, a polystyrene box with a screen duct taped across the top, there were around fifteen thousand of them, and we pushed the front passenger seat as far forward as it would go so they would be relatively secured in the back. They hummed every time I decelerated quickly. When I got home, I put them in the backyard, in the dark, next to the wooden hive that would be their home soon, and opened their door. I'd been told that as long as I placed the box within 17 inches of the permanent hive, any foragers that were out would find their way home.

The next afternoon, I put on long gloves, a thick white jacket with an attached hood and veil, and a heavy pair of jeans, fired up a smoker I didn't really know how to use, and opened up the box. Bees everywhere, everywhere. I suppose I was supposed to look at the frames and try to find the queen and be extra careful with her and all that. But it was really just Bees Everywhere, and I said a little prayer to the Mistress of Animals and hoped for the best and moved the frames as quickly as I could. My fingers squished some bees in the process, and I somehow got one sting in the crook of my arm, just like the experienced beekeepers told me I would. One sting, the first time. An initiation, and a confirmation that I don't seem to be allergic.

There were a lot of bees left in the box. I looked in and none of them looked like a queen to me, and I shook the box over the hive and not a lot of them came out, so I shook shook shook the box and tried to be gentle trying to scoop some of them out of the box. Then I put the feeder box on top of the hive, and I managed to squish some more bees that way. But bees who had been flying around proceeded to line up and squeeze their way into the little door of the hive over the course of the next hour, which I took as a good sign.

The spot I picked in the yard for the hive doesn't get as much morning sun as I thought it did, so I think my bees have been a little lazy as far as wakeup time goes. But usually by mid-morning there are a lot of bees flying around. I can stand at the side of the hive, watching bees with their legs full of yellow pollen, landing and walking in to the hive, and they don't seem to mind. They don't seem to have eaten the sugar syrup I gave them since the first day, so I guess they are finding enough to eat outside. They aren't drinking from the little birdbath I gave them, so I hope they are getting their water form some natural source around here and not congregating at my neighbor's pool. I can tell roughly what temperature it is outside by looking out the window, seeing how busy it is out there.

Tomorrow I'm going to open up the hive again, see if the bees have built up the new frames I gave them and whether they need the second box that goes on top of the first one. I'll see if I can find my queen this time, maybe, or at least look for any new queen cells that would prove they've lost their queen and are trying to make a new one. I'll take the feeder off and put the regular lid on. I'll try not to squish any more bees. I'll try to do a better job with the smoker.

There's a sunny little box in my backyard, and it's very, very alive. Watching them, I feel a little more alive as well. And that's a good thing.
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I just signed my son up to do a taste test at the local consumer facility next week, and agreed to share the cash with him. I'm curious to see what he chooses to do with $25.
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Does anyone have experience with Montessori school at the elementary school level? I'd love to talk to you about your experiences.
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