02 December 2013

People who don't watch the Kardashians

from Wikipedia

Amish Farmers ~

"The Older Order Amish are known for their avoidance of certain modern technologies. Amish do not view technology as evil, and individuals may petition for acceptance of a particular technology in the local community.

"In Pennsylvania, bishops meet in the spring and fall to discuss common concerns, including the appropriate response to new technology, and then pass this information on to ministers and deacons in a subsequent meeting. Because of this flat governing structure, variations of practice develop in each community.

"Because of the early prohibition of electricity, individual decisions about the use of new inventions such as the television would not be necessary. Electricity is used in some situations when it can be produced without access to outside power lines. Batteries, with their limited applications, are sometimes acceptable.

" Electric generators may be used for welding, recharging batteries, and powering milk stirrers in many communities. Outdoor electrical appliances such as riding and hand-pushed lawn mowers and string trimmers are used in some communities. Some Amish families have non-electric versions of appliances, such as kerosene-powered refrigerators.

"The Old Order Amish tend to restrict telephone use, as it is viewed by some as interfering with separation from the world. By bringing the outside world into the home, it is an intrusion into the privacy and sanctity of the family, and interferes with social community by eliminating face-to-face communication.

"Amish of Lancaster County use the telephone primarily for outgoing calls, with the added restriction that the telephone not be inside the house, but rather in a phone "booth" or small out-building placed far enough from the house as to make its use inconvenient. These private phones may be shared by more than one family. This allows the Amish to control their communication, and not have telephone calls invade their homes, but also to conduct business, as needed.

"In the past, the use of public pay phones in town for such calls was more common; today, with dwindling availability of pay phones because of increased cell phone use by the non-Amish population, Amish communities are seeing an increase in the private phone shanties. Many Amish, particularly those who run businesses, use voicemail service. The Amish will also use trusted "English" neighbors as contact points for passing on family emergency messages. Some New Order Amish will use cellphones and pagers, but most Old Order Amish will not.


IMAGE CREDIT: Amish America. TEXT CREDIT: from Wikipedia ~ Amish Life in a Modern World.

Resourcefulness ~ Vietnam

The following was found on a Google+ discussion group, so I can't take credit for it.

Thought this was interesting.

New type of canoe? Nothing in Vietnam was ever wasted. The Vietnamese people don't waste a thing - this ought to be a BIG lesson to us!!!

Whatever happened to all those USAF fuel tanks that were jettisoned all over North and South Vietnam after the fuel was expended during their missions?

[As an aside, anybody who had been to the Mekong River delta region will likely never forget those red clay soils. ... and just in case you want to know more about Vietnamese soil types ~ go here > the UN's Food and Agriculture Oorganization's Country Pasture/Forage Resource Profiles (sorry, the nascent geologist in me just cropped up)]

Apparently they’re being put to good used as boats in the navigable rivers of SE Asia.

F-4 Phantom fully loaded with fuel tanks and arms …

You can find more about the F4 series of fighter jets at Wikipedia: McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II.

[Click on the image to the right to see the stats better] Note: Original amounts were in 1965 United States dollars. The figures in these tables have been adjusted for inflation.

A single one of these babies (the F-4C) would cost 27,888,870 USD to build today.

The fuel tanks before being, well, refurbished.

29 November 2013

People who don't watch the Kardashians

First in a series - people who have lives that make the frivolous frippery on TV a total waste of time.

Life on an oil rig

Excerpts from the website Marine Insight

"Life changes dramatically for the one who decides to step foot to work in this industry. Earlier life on an offshore oil rig was arduous and difficult but there has been a significant change and improvement in the living conditions. One needs to get outfitted to start work on the rig and hence safety glasses, hard hats, coveralls and steel-toed boots are issued on arrival. Regular safety trainings are given before and during employment. The work designated to a rig worker usually falls on an 8-12 hour shift with breaks for food in the morning, noon and night. One might have to do night shifts since this industry operates 24 hours a day and 7 days a week. But a two week work on the rig will earn the worker a holiday of almost three weeks."

Is Wal-Mart owned by the whores of Babylon?

True confession time, for what it's worth ~ On occasion I do shop at Wal-Mart - but I never shop there during holiday seasons.

And if there were ever picket lines in front one I was headed for, I would not cross the line to shop there either. Alternet reports on massive Black-Friday strikes planned by workers defying Wal-Mart.

Can we expect the management minions working for the Walton family to order arrests? It would not surprise me. Such malign abuses of power are typical when big corporations are met with protest.

Reports from inside of various Wal-Mart stores, gun sales are up today thanks, in part to stores offering up to a 20% discount on the sale price

Walton family PR flaks thought the mob scenes, fistfights and general chaos were indicators of a successful Black Friday Sell-a-thon.


IMAGE CREDIT: # 1 ~ OUR Walmart; # 2 ~

Holiday protests

Pledging fealty to Mammon

22 November 2013

Writer's Block

18 September 2013

it's hard work to make a scene

     The photo shoot had to have been difficult. Selecting the right "models" to evoke the atmosphere; arranging equipment rental and proper releases ~ in this case borrowing police equipment while carefully cropping out the key details [namely, what city allowed their stuff to be used this way].

     Then there's choosing the site so as to get the proper natural lighting; and time, to ensure that no unwanted intruders might accidentally stumble across the shoot and distract everyone. And then paying for everything, plus getting the idea marketed and properly, well, exposed to the target audience.

     But who is the target audience. And are we so certain that any of these actor/models required getting paid or did they pay to participate in this little imbroglio? Personally, I know people who would.

     After all, this tantalizing bit of soft-core porn remarkably resembles a bust of two guys caught in the act of, well, having their pants down for one thing. In the bushes [or so it would suggest] and busted by a couple of well-packed officers of the law. [Is the plainclothesman wearing C-in2 briefs as well? We'll never know.]

     There are, in fact, two "scenes" transpiring here in one tidy little picture. There's the photo shoot, presumably paid for by C-in2 and there's the sex scene with so many complicated layers of not so crypto homo-eroticism. Sex outside in the bushes; getting caught by authority figures in the act [good looking ones I might add ]; bondage and humiliation as well as the anticipated prison holding cell rape scene. No wonder the bad boy about to be cuffed is beginning to sprout a woody.

     Or am I reading too much into this? Maybe, as Freud said, "A cigar is just a cigar" and these guys are just trying to sell us underwear. perhaps the real message is, if you expect to be busted, wear clean shorts and cut down on the embarrassment.

     You tell me.

[Advert found in an old edition of the metrosexual oriented magazine GQ; I could only find a still of this advert but if you find this intriguing do yourself the favor and watch more recently released C-in2 video called Filthy and on Parole on YouTube.]

edible wild foods

Jerusalem Artichokes

     They can be eaten raw, steamed, roasted or fried, but these delicious little tubers are not artichokes and don't hail from Jerusalem.

     Growing wild in my yard, they are a hardy perennial and, once a bed is established they can grow up to seven feet [two metres] tall. Stalks with yellow daisy-like flowers top this delicious tuber vegetable plant.

     The plant originated in the Americas, and it's reported they were named artichokes because they have a taste similar to a globe artichoke, which belongs to the thistle family. Jerusalem artichokes belong to the sunflower family - which accounts for the first part of the name, a corruption of the Italian girasole (turning to the sun). They are healthful and easy to store come wintertime.

     They vary in size and can be cream, beige or yellow; some have a pink tinge. Easy to spot in the shops [though not always available], Jerusalem artichokes look similar to fresh ginger, but buy them now as they are at their crunchy best when the weather is cold.

Keep the tubers in a plastic bag or airtight container in the fridge as they will dehydrate when exposed to warm, dry conditions. Remove brown, stringy roots and scrub or peel before using. These tiny veggies discolour when cut, so they need to be placed in a bowl of cold water with a squeeze of lemon juice, or boil them with a teaspoon of vinegar or lemon juice added to the cooking water.

     Make a quick artichoke soup by sauteeing chopped onion and garlic, then adding peeled jerusalem artichokes and vegetable stock. When vegetables are tender, puree and serve with a splash of cream and chopped chives.

You can fancy it up by topping Jerusalem Artichoke soup with curried shrimp or prawns.

Here's another recipe ~ Jerusalem artichoke Casserole ~ Serves 4:
• Spray a 6-cup ovenproof dish with light olive oil. Peel Peel 1 pound [450g] jerusalem artichokes and slice very thinly. Peel 1 pound [450g] potatoes and slice very thinly. Finely slice half a peeled brown onion. Combine 1 cup [200g] light sour cream, 1/4 cup [100ml] skim milk, ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg, salt and cracked black pepper in a bowl.
• Spread 2 tbsp of sour cream mixture over the base of the ovenproof dish and layer about a fifth of the artichokes and potatoes over the sour cream and top with about 2 tbsp of the sour cream mixture. Continue to layer vegetables, salt and pepper and sour cream mixture, adding onion slices in between, to form five layers.
• Finish with a layer of sour cream mixture. Sprinkle with 150g grated gruyere cheese and bake at 390F [200C] for 1 to 1 1/2 hours or until vegetables are tender and top is golden. Cover with foil if cheese begins to brown too quickly.

Flowering plants from Garrett Hoyt's Five Sprouts Farm weblog

Wood Gas as an internal combustion vehicle fuel

Why settle for bio-desiel when burning wood will do? I'm not sure I would ride a Hog that had a small wood furnace for a sissy bar, but who am I to argue? The picture was taken as part of a story in a Florida newspaper in 1981. Anybody know more about this guy's efforts and what came of them?

Wikipedia has a helpful starting description of this technology. A wood gas generator is a gasification unit which converts timber or charcoal into wood gas, a syngas consisting of atmospheric nitrogen, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, traces of methane, and other gases, which - after cooling and filtering - can then be used to power an internal combustion engine or for other purposes. Historically wood gas generators were often mounted on vehicles.

Brown University's Projects in Engineering Design website has an interesting page with good visuals and descriptions about a "gasified go-kart" which states that

"This project will serve as an example of the alternative fuels that can be used to run internal combustion engines. Our goal is to make a gasifier that is small, safe, and convenient at low cost. This gasifier will be mated with a standard go-kart engine and mounted on a go-kart frame. The output gases from the gasifier will serve as the engine's only fuel input.".

The US Federal Emergency Management Agency published a booklet, in 1989, on this technology, in terminology understandable by someone with basic mechanical engineering skills. Unfortunately, although there are other articles about emergency generators, I've not been able to find the publication on the FEMA website.

Therefore, the following links have posted pdf format copies of the 1989 FEMA booklet:
 • Available at DROPBOX
 • Posted on the Australian based Library page of Soil and Health.org - this one takes awhile to download (free, but they ask for a donation to help support the site's work)
 • Found at Pole Shift Survival Information Gasifiers links page.

You could also by a USED copy reprint of the same document on Amazon.com for only $100.

For more info on wood fueled engines, check out the website woodgas.net. If this still piques your interest you might want to ask to join the Yahoo Discussion Group known as WoodGas ( Wood Gas Discussions

22 July 2013

New Deal Art History - Harlan, Iowa

Harland Iowa's post office is one of those blessed with a New Deal Era painting. Entitled "The Farmer Feeding Industry" it was painted in 1937 by Richard gates. The photo was found at The Living New Deal Project which is hosted by the Department of Geography at the University of California, Berkeley. Part of an ongoing project to document the many public works of art produced during that time.

A quote from the site:

"The investment America made in New Deal seventy-five years ago is still working for the American people—and our economy—today. The legacy of the New Deal has much to teach about farsighted leadership and what can be achieved when our country rallies to serve needs of ordinary people in troubled times. What is more, it provides a shining example of what positive government can achieve when it invests in public works that serve the collective good. Yes, government can work for all the people by creating useful infrastructure, job for the unemployed, and things of beauty like public murals and elegant buildings."
...well worth pondering considering the times we are going through. Again, the picture was found at the Living New Deal Project,a site worth visiting.
IMAGE CREDIT: The Farmer Feeding Industry - photo by Jimmy Emerson

20 July 2013

news and commentary found on the 'net

Landmark Paris Hotel and gallery destroyed by fire
The Huffington Post reports PARIS -- Fire has partially destroyed a landmark mansion on Paris' Ile Saint Louis that once belonged to the Rothschild dynasty.

The Hotel Lambert, a 17th century mansion overlooking the Seine river, suffered "serious damage" in a fire that broke out early Wednesday morning, according to deputy Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo. Televised images showed billowing grey smoke pouring out of the building's roof while helmeted firemen clambered across balconies trying to extinguish the blaze. Fire department spokesman Philippe Durieu said the fire was put out by 7:30 a.m. He said the building's roof was almost completely destroyed.

Accoridning to Art NewspaperThe fire has destroyed a series of frescoes made around 1652 by the artist Eustache Le Sueur. The blaze caused the rooftop to collapse on to the Cabinet des Bains (bathroom) area immediately below. Its vaulted ceilings were decorated with Le Sueur’s designs depicting Greek gods and nymphs.

“It’s a complete disaster,” Alexandre Cojannot, an architectural historian, told Le Journal des Arts. Following extensive restoration, begun in 2010, “the Cabinet des Bains was in a perfect state, an excellent example of ‘Parisian Atticisme’ [a 17th-century movement drawing on classical Antiquity]”, Cojannot adds. The French culture minister, Aurélie Filippetti, said that the Cabinet des Bains has been “completely destroyed”.

The building, part of a Unesco World Heritage site on the River Seine, has been unoccupied since it was bought in 2007 by a brother of the emir of Qatar and has been undergoing a controversial renovation.

The philosopher Voltaire courted his mistress, the marquise du Châtelet, at the hôtel Lambert in the mid-18th century.

It fell into disrepair and was being used as a warehouse, when, in 1843, Prince Adam Czartoryski, an exile after the failed Polish rising of 1830, bought the building after Delacroix brought his attention to it. The family collection, including Leonardo da Vinci’s Lady with an Ermine, around 1489, was housed at the celebrated residence; frequent visitors, meanwhile, included Chopin and Balzac. In 1975, the mansion was sold to the Rothschild banking dynasty.

In 2007, the Qatari prince Abdullah bin Abdullah al Thani bought the hôtel Lambert for around €60m. The sheikh’s plans to modernise the residence prompted protests from conservation groups; according to reports, the Qatari royal family has pledged to help restore the building following the fire.



IMAGE CREDITS: Hotel Lambert - Euro News

17 July 2013

weather weirdness

Posted on to You Tube by the Suspicious Observers

Mourning reflections

I'm still wishing I could be with my friend, yet knowing, or beginning to recognize that isn't possible.

On the plus side, his absence has sparked within my mind a profound sense of those things that are important as contrasted with those that are not ... as a result, the TV set is off most of the time and at work I have even less patience for foolishness from others - be they patients, staff or unfeeling administrators. HMM. Have to work on remaining diplomatic if that be the case.

Thinking beyond 10% of your brain

Bill once mused
"If it's true that most people only make use of 10% of their brain, what is like ~ how does the person who uses 12% of their brain see things?"

The art work of Louis Wain
http://youtu.be/sUzSZyB0z4s

18 June 2013

farewell my friend ~ William James Pelletier ~ 24 January 1954 - 13 June 2013

It's never easy to say goodbye. The following is an assortment of photos and images that was shown at the funeral today. The captions are written as if Bill were actually narrating this display, and in some instances, it is what he said of each item


Powers in the Universe - This was a painting done by Will. The image is my face, sort of. We had been taking about auras around the time he did the painting.


Bill in Bristol 1985. Can't recall the cat's name; I got Will into being a read cat person too.


Freedom isn't Free. A decal that was in the window of an old historic house.


Inside Devil's Hopyard State Park


Spirit Mask


Miemioux - A cat that lived with Will and I (1990)


My exercise bike - I was getting pretty good, several minutes each day - without getting winded.


New plants at 300 East Main


North on I-91 - On the way from Will's house to mine.


Big Boy goes demon


Delia and me


Me as a brooding rock star


My new dream car - a baby blue Beemer ragtop


Christ on Black velvet


Eagle Lake, Maine - from a trip we took in September 2009


Manta Rays swim with sharks unmolested. Will told me I said that if there is reincarnation
I wouldn't mind coming back as a manta ray, but I don't remember if I said that for sure.


My Tiger, who Will kept calling Red,
but sometimes he'd answer to Little Guy and other times he would not answer at all


Luminaria ~ flying above the city by a group of people who did this to pay homage to people who have died.
Walnut Hill Park, New Britain CT, We saw them floating in the sky
and were able to find out where they were being lifted from.


Dawn from the window at 300 East Main Street, New Britain CT


Will manages to get a picture, even though I am usually shy about being in a photo.


Checking out the seahorses at Mystic Aquarium.
It is Will's favorite from that visit.


Visiting at cousin Connie's in Fort Kent, Maine


Meriden Mountain from Route 9, Middletown CT


Another view from the window at 300 East Main Street, New Britain C


Cashier/Blood Drawing ~ if they can't get you one way they'll get you another


TV shot of Wold Wrestling Entertainment ~ sometimes they actually had real matches on the show


UFOs are out there


Will took this shot. Final resting place of my physical being. Next to Rita and Rudy