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Number 85 - To see a tree asmiling.

 
 
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Thu 29 Jul, 2010 06:33 pm
@sumac,
this weather is crazy - hot to cool, cool to hot --- it's been hotter in Canada than down here in TX - but that's changing as we speak.

Good ship article sumac.

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In Remembrance
Please join me in remembering a great icon of the entertainment community. The Pillsbury Doughboy died yesterday of a yeast infection and trauma complications from repeated pokes in the belly. He was 71.
Doughboy was buried in a lightly greased coffin. Dozens of celebrities turned out to pay their respects, including Mrs. Butterworth, Hungry Jack, the California Raisins, Betty Crocker, the Hostess Twinkies, and Captain Crunch. The grave site was piled high with flours.
Aunt Jemima delivered the eulogy and lovingly described Doughboy as man who never knew how much he was kneaded. Doughboy rose quickly in show business, but his later life was filled with turnovers. He was considered a very smart cookie, but wasted much of his dough on half-baked schemes. Despite being a little flaky at times, he still was a crusty old man and was considered a positive roll model for millions.
Doughboy is survived by his wife Play Dough, three children: John Dough, Jane Dough and Dosey Dough, plus they had one in the oven. He is also survived by his elderly father, Pop Tart.
The funeral was held at 3:50 for about 20 minutes.

ehBeth
 
  3  
Reply Thu 29 Jul, 2010 06:56 pm
@danon5,
Very Happy

clicking

temps have moderated a bit over the last couple of days

word is, it's gonna get hot again

click

click
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 04:49 am
c;icked. Well, that
s about right. Supposedly is less humid today as cold front went through last niight.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 05:03 am
Dostoyevsky. For anyone steeped in the traditional canon of Western literature, his name elicits visions of bleak winters filled with contemplative despair. This common perception of Russian culture has fueled speculation about an underlying symbiosis between a predisposition to focus on negative feelings or experiences and a tendency toward depression. Grossmann and Kross have examined this purported linkage by contrasting self-reflective measures in Russians and Americans. Brooding correlated positively with depressive symptoms in University of Michigan students, but these were inversely related in students at Moscow State University even though the latter displayed a much greater propensity for rumination. Assessing the mode of self-reflection revealed that Russian students were more apt than Americans to examine their feelings from a third-person or observer's perspective, reconstruing the experiential details rather than recounting them from a first-person point of view. Distancing oneself in such a fashion mediated the opposite influences of American versus Russian cultures on the relation between self-reflection and negative affect.

Psychol. Sci. 21, 10.1177/0956797610376655 (2010).




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sumac
 
  2  
Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 06:35 am
A sobering assessment of the ecological health of the Gulf of Mexico. It might be entitled "Beyond the Oil Spill". It is too long to post here but the passages below gives the gist of it. Go to the link for the full article.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/30/us/30gulf.html?th&emc=th

July 29, 2010

Gulf of Mexico Has Long Been a Sink of Pollution

By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON

HOUMA, La. — Loulan Pitre Sr. was born on the Gulf Coast in 1921, the son of an oysterman. Nearly all his life, he worked on the water, abiding by the widely shared faith that the resources of the Gulf of Mexico were limitless.

As a young Marine staff sergeant, back home after fighting in the South Pacific, he stood on barges in the gulf and watched as surplus mines, bombs and ammunition were pushed over the side.

He helped build the gulf’s very first offshore oil drilling platforms in the late 1940s, installing bolts on perilously high perches over the water. He worked on a shrimp boat, and later as the captain of a service boat for drilling platforms.

The gulf has changed, Mr. Pitre said: “I think it’s too far gone to salvage.”

The BP oil spill has sent millions of barrels gushing into the Gulf of Mexico, focusing international attention on America’s third coast and prompting questions about whether it will ever fully recover from the spill.

Now that the oil on the surface appears to be dissipating, the notion of a recovery from the spill, repeated by politicians, strikes some here as short-sighted. The gulf had been suffering for decades before the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20.

“There’s a tremendous amount of outrage with the oil spill, and rightfully so,” said Felicia Coleman, director of Florida State University’s Coastal and Marine Laboratory. “But where’s the outrage at the thousands and millions of little cuts we’ve made on a daily basis?”

The gulf is one of the most diverse ecosystems in the hemisphere, a stopping point for migratory birds from South America to the Arctic, home to abundant wildlife and natural resources.

But like no other American body of water, the gulf bears the environmental consequences of the country’s economic pursuits and appetites, including oil and corn.

There are around 4,000 offshore oil and gas platforms and tens of thousands of miles of pipeline in the central and western Gulf of Mexico, where 90 percent of the country’s offshore drilling takes place.

At least half a million barrels of oil and drilling fluids had been spilled offshore before the gusher that began after the April 20 explosion, according to government records.

Much more than that has been spilled from pipelines, vessel traffic and wells in state waters — including hundreds of spills in Louisiana alone — records show, some of it since April 20.

Runoff and waste from cornfields, sewage plants, golf courses and oil-stained parking lots drain into the Mississippi River from vast swaths of the United States, and then flow down to the gulf, creating a zone of lifeless water the size of Lake Ontario just off the coast of Louisiana.

The gulf’s floor is littered with bombs, chemical weapons and other ordnance dumped in the middle of last century, even in areas busy with drilling, and miles outside of designated dumping zones, according to experts who work on deepwater hazard surveys.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Fri 30 Jul, 2010 02:23 pm
@sumac,
sumac, thanks for the sobering article. I had known about the "dead zones" for decades, but didn't know about all the WWII stuff dumped out there. That's still dangerous.

Great clicking all.

Hoping Stradee and ehBeth stay cool and sumac gets more rain --- dance dance dance...............
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 06:50 am
All clicked, and with a weekend of decent temperatures and cloudy skies, perfect for outdoor work.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 07:24 am
@sumac,
Still hoping for a shower for you sumac..........

I just remembered, in the Gulf right off shore from around AL and the FL panhandle is the remains of a German Submarine from WWII.

Strange stuff out there in the Gulf. And, veeerry interesting.

0 Replies
 
High Seas
 
  3  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 07:28 am
@sumac,
Another one reporting clicking for the day - thanks for the planet news! There's an absolutely incredible exposition at the Air and Space Museum in DC called "Beyond" consisting of actual photographs of our neighbors in the solar system. This is an actual photograph of Io, one of Jupiter's satellites:
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/07/29/arts/0729MUSEUM1/0729MUSEUM1-articleLarge.jpg
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/29/arts/design/29museum.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=space%20and%20air%20museum%20solar%20system&st=cse
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 10:37 am
Aargh! Horned tomato caterpillars!! I hate them and they cause so much damage. Amd they were on my best patio tomato.
High Seas
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 01:35 pm
@sumac,
Sumac - somewhere on this forum our expert gardeners were posting information on the exact problem you're having. I'll see if I can find a link. If that's any consolation though, please raise your eyes to more spectacular vistas in "Beyond" (same link as before):
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/07/29/arts/0729-MUSEUM2/0729-MUSEUM2-popup-v2.jpg
This is our sun - as we can never see it with our own eyes, so the picture is taken in the infrared part of the spectrum.

Edit for Sumac's tomato plants: this is the thread I saw in passing, try asking there http://able2know.org/topic/26996-14
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 01:42 pm
@sumac,
they should do clinical studies about tv depression ads and how many people rush to their doctors for the latest happy pill cause they just know they retain all the symptoms...etc.

now that's depressing...

Stradee Psych 101: Life

0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 01:43 pm
@sumac,
Those are serious detriments to sealife and ecosystem no doubt

What amazes me is how nature utilizes all of it...turns ships into reefs, etc.
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 01:47 pm
@danon5,
Weathers nice today...80's

The porch and reading await Very Happy

The bay area peninsula generally hot during the summer are seeing much cooler temps. Sister called complaining of the Redwood City cold. Strange temps.

sue, ommmmmmmmmm
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 01:53 pm
@High Seas,

Fabulous photos, HS, thanks!

Wonderment
danon5
 
  3  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 08:53 pm
@Stradee,
HS, ditto the above Stradee post......... WOW!

I sat staring at the sun pic for a long time. Amazing. Everything and all things around us are made from that big ball of fire. The sun makes plants grow and eventually everything we eat is related to plant life.

The link pics are great also.

0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  3  
Reply Sat 31 Jul, 2010 09:02 pm
good day for clicking, gardening and napping on the porch <grin>

tea towels and a few other things are out on the official WildClicking clothesline here - always makes me smile to remember the origins of the clothesline

it started raining, the tea towels and pillowcases are going to be a bit smoother than I'd thought - and will take a bit longer to dry Laughing
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Sun 1 Aug, 2010 10:14 am
@ehBeth,
Hi ehBeth, glad to hear you are getting some decent weather these days. Hopefully the remainder of the Summer will be normal. We are experiencing some sizzling temps down here. Triple digits for a week.

Good thing I love early mornings.

sumac, looks like you are finally getting some good rain.

Hi to all good Wildclickers and thanks for making a tree smile.

danon5
 
  2  
Reply Sun 1 Aug, 2010 05:35 pm
@danon5,
HAPPY B'DAY AKTBIRD57!!!!!
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  3  
Reply Sun 1 Aug, 2010 05:47 pm
@danon5,
It was a great day to be in Toronto.

Big crowds downtown for Caribana, which left the b.e.a.c.h. nice and free for me and the dogs.

I took them down to the off-leash around 7:30 a.m. Cleo got in a number of her famous dip and swishes while Bailey wandered around and met lots of other members of the beach pack.

After about an hour and a half, we headed to the car to pick up my chair, book and breakfast - and snacks and water for the dogs. We all relaxed for another couple of hours before heading home. I know the dogs slept for a while. You'd have to ask the passers-by if I fell asleep Very Happy
 

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