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elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, June 16th, 2013 08:09 am
Yesterday's junket was unsatisfying. While the drive was lovely, the destination was overrun by some sort of "rock and run" event. "Gladiator Rock'n Run is teaming up with Talk About Curing Autism (TACA) for the wildest, muddiest, most challenging & intense mud run ever! True to the grand scale of this event, we will be in need of a HUGE number of volunteers..." I wouldn't have minded the music, but there was no way to access the trails that were not being used for the run. I wouldn't have minded that, but the "ranger" at the booth where we paid for access to the park said there would be access to the trails. I did spend time watching and photographing the western tiger swallowtail on the California buckeyes. (I probably saw the echo blue butterfly as well, but it flitted far too quickly for me to catch with the telephoto.) A California quail perched in lovely silhouette, unfazed by the amplified rock. Still, i couldn't get in a good stroll, as i was confined to a few creek bridges and the lawn of the old Grant home.

The drive home had a miserable stretch through shopping mall and strip mall traffic, and i realized why i stick to the parks that i can get to without having to drive through suburban sprawl.

There are two routes to Grant Park though, and i now have a preferred route. Grant Park is a stopping place along the way to Mt Hamilton, the highest peak in the area. If i could prepare myself on a Friday night, i could wake early and be in the vicinity near dawn. It's a matter of planning the trip so i have a plan on Saturday morning.

At least now i have a refreshed memory of the route in my mind: i think we drove to Mt Hamilton six years ago?

On my junket list to the eastern side of the county is Sunol Regional Wilderness and Henry Coe. Maybe i can have a plan of junkets on the third Saturday and fifth Saturday, waking earlier.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, June 2nd, 2013 04:07 pm
I seem to have successfully found bloggers and teachers about nature photography, but i also would like to find a blogger about nature writing. Specifically, someone who writes about *how* to write about nature -- the craft of writing -- more than someone who writes about nature. A blog simply about writing nonfiction would be a good pointer as well.

By the way, there's a free app for preparing iPad eBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ibooks-author/id490152466?ls=1&mt=12

Edited to add the "monthly report is under procrastination" tag.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, June 2nd, 2013 01:19 pm
ARGH. Procrastination.

Feel desperate need to take shower and not get to work.

I've curated my eBooks not quite to death, but more than i needed to. I know have the first volume of the antique natural history journal Zoe on my iPad. I read numbers 1 and 2 yesterday, and note that Mendeley's app for reading on the iPad is a miserable experience.

Yesterday i also read Rob Sheppard's A Nature Manifesto. I feel that the goal of the project i'm starting on resonantes a bit with his call, in that my goal is to help people see the diversity of life in their locale.

Anyhow, first step is opening my work computer.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Saturday, June 1st, 2013 07:22 am
Yay, my computer is back. I hope i have made reasonable partitioning decisions. One terabyte. Not that we don't have other terabyte drives in the house, but this is in *my* machine. The crossing the benchmark takes me back to when i bought my first real computer (not the Timex Sinclair) and had a whole one gigabyte drive, and my awe at that size of disk.

Viva Moore's Law, and all that.

Christine is off to see her siblings and her mother for an early celebration of her mother's birthday, and possibly a last chance to see her. The doctor said earlier this week that her mother has entered late-stage Alzheimer's. I am so happy we could send Christine off to NC at short notice: doubly happy that, for once, there was a Delta flight at a reasonable time so i could use up some of the accumulated points.

I was sick yesterday: i seem to have had a 28 hour cold. This morning there's no headache and little congestion.

I have plenty to keep me busy, as i need to get some of the work due yesterday done before Monday.

Yesterday i tracked down more lupines of the Bay Area, finding more "lost lupines" and a few "new lupines." My current theory is that the lost lupines are at the southerly end of the range in the early 1900s and the new lupines are at the northerly end of their range. Lupines of the central valley in the 1900s could be moving west by creeping up the elevation of the coastal range. It's a hypothesis. The counter-hypothesis is that the lost lupines are simply unobserved or extirpated by development, but i'm left with the question of the new lupines, ones now reported but not reported in the early 1900s. As i go through the key, i'll be able to see if the new species might have been lumped in with another observed species, explaining the more recent occurrence.

I have recognized that what am thinking about as my next career is that of essentially being a writer-photographer. I need to begin paying attention to my writing, and so i've moved Virginia Tufte's book on style next to my pillow. I have little hope that the proximity is all that is needed to improve my writing, but it is an indication of awareness.

One of the glorious benefits of this clarity is that i know how to trim my interests. Should i network with python developers? Big data analysts? More identity management folks? No. I may still need to learn python and analyze the data i collect, and i have no idea how long i will remain working in identity management, but i should follow my heart to botany, writing, and photography.

I have lists of things i need to learn to give depth to my writing: topmost is more about the practice of botanical nomenclature. Physics has its egotists and adventurers, but botanists seem to have a bit more drama about them.

If i was to state my interests right now it would be in the interaction of natural history with social history in limited geographies.

Off to start the dungeons and desktops game for the day.