simplyn2deep: (Hawaii Five 0::Steve::uniform)
simplyn2deep ([personal profile] simplyn2deep) wrote in [community profile] 1word1day2025-06-17 12:21 pm

Tuesday word: Pogonip

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Pogonip (noun)
pogonip [pog-uh-nip]


noun
1. an ice fog that forms in the mountain valleys of the western U.S.

Origin: 1860–65, < Shoshone paγɨnappɨh thunder cloud; compare soγovaγɨnappɨh fog (with soγo- earth), yaγumpaγɨnappih fog (with yaγun- valley)

Example Sentences
Fog is made of water vapor, yet sometimes ice particles can create the ephemeral mistWhen the air temperature is below freezing and relative humidity is greater than 100 percent—an infrequent combination—these ice crystals can form and hover to form a “pogonip,” or ice fog.
From Scientific American

Hoping to add our own pin to Rugg’s map of Bigfoot sightings, we charted a course for Pogonip Open Space Preserve.
From Washington Post

The outdoors seeming like the safest place to meet because of the pandemic, more walks followed, including along Twin Lakes State Beach in Santa Cruz and through Pogonip, a local park with a network of trails.
From New York Times
kat_lair: (BH - mitchell red)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2025-06-17 07:34 pm

Being Human Drabble: Home

***

Title: Home
Author:[personal profile] kat_lair
Fandom: Being Human (UK)
Pairing: Annie/George/Mitchell implied
Tags: Drabble, Dark, Codependency, Alternate Universe - Dystopia
Rating: T
Word count: 100

Summary: The house smells of old roses and dried blood.

Author notes: 
Prompt = "You don’t get to leave. Not again."

Home on AO3

Home )

***

Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 02:00 pm

Jesus Backpacker in Vilnius, Lithuania

In the vibrant and artistic neighborhood of Užupis, just a stone’s throw from the charming Užupis Mermaid, stands a small statue of the Backpacker Jesus atop the Vilnia River. It’s an imaginative tribute portraying Jesus as a fellow traveler, much like ourselves.

Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 01:00 pm

Dr. Wolf’s Wunderkammer in Hann. Münden, Germany

One of the chamber's rooms.

The moment you enter Dr. Wolf’s Wunderkammer, in the small town of Hann. Münden, you are overwhelmed by the sheer amount of objects contained within. You simply don’t know where to look first. A basilisk stares at you ominously from one corner while a wardrobe hides a hidden entrance to another realm and the glow of uranium glass beckons you from across the room.

Created in 2020, this chamber of wonders was created with the purpose of collecting and displaying curiosities of old, taking visitors to different times and worlds. Here, you can behold wall upon wall showcasing horned fishes, ornate carvings, obscure maps, and more, all while enjoying the charisma and enthusiasm of Dr. Wolf himself.

badly_knitted: (Dee & Ryo black & white)
badly_knitted ([personal profile] badly_knitted) wrote in [community profile] drabble_zone2025-06-17 06:32 pm

FAKE: At Liberty [Challenge 454: Liberty]


Title: At Liberty
Fandom: FAKE
Author: badly_knitted
Characters: Dee, Ryo.
Rating: PG
Written For: Challenge 454: Liberty.
Setting: After Like Like Love.
Summary: Dee and Ryo try to decide what to do with their unexpected half-day off.
Disclaimer: I don’t own FAKE, or the characters. They belong to the wonderful Sanami Matoh.
A/N: Double drabble.



At Liberty


tinny: Something Else holding up its colorful drawing - "be different" (Default)
tinny ([personal profile] tinny) wrote in [community profile] icontalking2025-06-17 06:52 pm
Entry tags:

Activity #95 - Ask The Maker

Ask The Maker Header 2025 featuring an icon by breyzyyin
this banner features an icon by breyzyyin


With a little bit of delay because I didn't feel up to it three weeks ago, here's this years Ask The Maker activity!

Ask The Maker is where you can ask your favorite makers about how they do that thing. You can ask for tutorials, guides/"How to", or ask any other questions related to their work. Check out the Maker thread (below) for makers who have signed up and are ready to answer your questions.

You can also ask questions to the community at large, and hope that someone is able to answer them. Do this in the Questions thread (below).

I am looking forward to interesting questions and discussions!

Please promote this activity!

You can use this code here:


The more participants the merrier! I will promote it at an official promo comm.

Here are the rules:

1) Maker-Driven

rules for makers who want to sign up )


2) Question-Driven - I have a question and anyone can answer

rules for questions to the community )

What's What

question categories and examples )

Maker thread

Questions thread


This activity will run to mid-July, maybe the end of July, depending on how many requests there are.

If you want to work on a challenge while Ask the Maker is running, you can find currently open challenges in our sticky post. And our previous activity, Technique Waterfall, is also still open until the end of Ask the Maker.
hrj: (Default)
hrj ([personal profile] hrj) wrote2025-06-17 09:00 am
Entry tags:

All Projects Go

I'm still in the phase of "settling into a retirement rhythm" and working on good habits, but it's feeling more settled now. Less of the background radiation of anxiety now that the money stuff is in place. I even looked at my "special expenditures" projection and decided to get a hotel room for BayCon after all. (Commuting is cheaper than a room, but more exhausting, and it was going to make participating in the first online WSFS business meeting very complicated.) It's probably too late to try to pick up a roommate, though.

The "activity category tracking" spreadsheet is being useful, not only as a gamified incentive to Get Things Done, but as a reminder not to get too focused on any one topic. I'm up to 13 categories and generally do something in 5-9 of them on any given day. But it's ok to take days off when I'm down to 2 or 3, and it's fun (but not required) to hit all 13, which I've done twice. The most regular activities are exercise, working on the Lesbian Historic Motif Project (overlaps 3 categories: reading, writing, and promotion), reading for fun, housework, yardwork, and somewhat surprisingly, socializing (though having a calendar full of conferences and conventions has helped with that). The categories I've hit least are "do art" (which is primarily being checked off when I do embroidery during zoom meetings) and "do music" (which should be easier to check off since currently it's limited to "play through one etude on the flute and stop when my chin cramps up").

To the extent that I have a template for the day (for days when I have nothing else on the calendar), it ideally goes something like this:
* work on fiction over breakfast
* post the current LHMP blog and publicize it
* bike ride
* mid-ride, stop at a coffee shop and do some reading/note-taking for the LHMP
* on returning home, before showering, do yard work
* relax a bit with some fun reading (lunch optional)
* do some Medieval Welsh translation
* housework/household-organization
* write up the day's LHMP notes (alternately, work on the next podcast script)
* play music
* dinner & tv
* work on some sort of data organization project with tv in the background
If I hit all those, that only leaves "do art" and "socialize". Socializing is largely dependent on things outside the formal structure.

Mind you, I rarely actually do all of the above on a given day. But having a default template makes it more likely that I'll come close.

I'm making good progress on the current fiction project: the Skinsingers collection. I have one more specialized proofreading pass to do, then I need to decide whether I think it needs an outside proofreader as well. After that, I'll start working on learning the D2D system. I should search around to see if someone has come up with some handy templates for "this is the standard front/back matter for different types of books." Mostly I'm looking at books I have on my shelves. But then there are e-book specific questions like "in a print book, the publication history of the stories in the collection generally come next to the copyright page, but in an e-book the practice seems to be to put most extraneous matter at the end." Can I format the two differently? Do I want to, or do I want consistency?

The plan is to launch at Worldcon, but have it ready enough in advance to get some pre-publicity out. Though I'm not planning a significant publicity campaign for this "test book," just a chance to limber up the muscles.
tyger: Axel and Roxas' Avatar Kingdom chibis, holding hands, with a heart. (Axel/Roxas - chibis)
Tyger ([personal profile] tyger) wrote2025-06-18 02:29 am

So many stickers!!!

So for my tidying today I sorted my sticker collection.

I have... so many stickers now...

Most of them I was able to divide into little A5 plastic pockets, except for the Homestuck Kickstarter ones - most of them were just a tiiiiiny bit too big, goddamn US print sizes - and the pokemon ones, because there was just too many. But with those two sets in a transparent hard case the effect is much the same (though it's kinda annoying that I couldn't split them up but OH WELL).

I probably have more stickers around in places, but at least now I can put them away without having to second-guess myself about it! :3

Also got a call from a recruiter, which was encouraging! Clearly all my applications are doing SOMETHING, even if I haven't heard anything back from a specific job. We'll see how it goes, anyway.

kay_brooke: A stack of old books (books)
kay_brooke ([personal profile] kay_brooke) wrote2025-06-17 12:19 pm

May 2025 Books

Late again. It was kind of a ho-hum reading month, with nothing rating higher than 3.5 stars, and I didn't feel particularly eager to write up this entry. Still, I read eight books in May, no DNFs.

Previous books posts:
Books 1-9 (January)
Books 10-15 (February)
Books 16-24 (March)
Books 25-33 (April)

As usual, cut for length, not spoilers. Any spoilers that do make it in will be marked.

34. Holdout by Jeffrey Kluger - 3 stars )

35. Patient Zero: A Curious History of the World's Worst Diseases by Lydia Kang and Nate Pedersen - 3 stars )

36. Let Him In by William Friend - 2.5 stars )

37. Admiral by Sean Danker - 3.5 stars )

38. The Women Could Fly by Megan Giddings - 2 stars )

39. Weyward by Emilia Hart - 3 stars )

40. Face by Joma West - 2 stars )

41. Terminal World by Alastair Reynolds - 3.5 stars )
shipperslist: Jiang Cheng on a purple background by abyss_valkyrie (ragequit in purple)
ship ([personal profile] shipperslist) wrote in [community profile] 100ships2025-06-17 07:15 pm

100 cql/mdzs ships, post 2

Welp, I've completely forgotten to post these!


good sir, that IS a demon (751 words, prompt #25 thistle, Lan Jingyi & Little Apple, rated G)
When Hanguang-jun takes off with the crazy man, the juniors are left with dealing with the consequences. As in the demon. No, it’s not a donkey, no matter what Sizhui says.


at war with love (2,881 words, prompt #58 ash, Jiang Cheng & Wei Wuxian, rated T)
Jiang Cheng has finally found his wayward first disciple and everything is going to be alright again.

…or is it? As they pay their respects to Mother and Father at the Jiang Ancestral Shrine, Jiang Cheng hears Wei Wuxian say something he sorely wishes isn’t true. But it is. And it changes—not everything but definitely a lot.


warming up (2,483 words, prompt #47 frostbite, Lan Qiren & Wei Wuxian, rated G)
It takes a cold winter for Lan Qiren to finally thaw to Wei Wuxian. (Pun intended.)


food from the heart (441 words, prompt #21 rhythm, Jiang Yanli & OC, rated G)
The kitchens become Yanli’s safe haven.


the memory of lightning (1,133 words, prompt #49 electric, Wei Wuxian><Yu Ziyuan, rated T)
The memory of lightnings lives under Wei Wuxian’s skin.


live, not just survive (1,045 words, prompt #80 metal, Lan Sizhui & Wen Ning, rated T)
Wen Ning in the world that is both new and old.


a good pour (311 words, prompt #15 tea, Lan Qiren & Lan Xichen, rated G)
Lan Qiren, A-Huan, and a pot of tea.


snug as a bunny — 31 days of domestic wangxian, Chapter 13 (135 words, Lan Wangji/Wei Wuxian, prompt #54 rainbow, rated G)
Wangxian, on the roof, under a rainbow.
(strictly speaking, ch13 is the fill for this prompt but basically it's this whole flash fiction collection)


petals in a storm (19,544 words, Nie Mingjue/Qin Su, prompt #6 lust, rated M)
It’s not Meng Yao who saves Qin Su during the Sunshot Campaign but Nie Mingjue.

Quite many things change.


best friend and confidant (1,825 words, prompt #1 adamant, Jin Ling & Fairy, rated G, MCD)
Jin Ling and Fairy, from the beginning to the end.



spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
it only hurts when i breathe ([personal profile] spikedluv) wrote2025-06-17 12:03 pm
Entry tags:
stonepicnicking_okapi: ChopSuey (chopsuey)
stonepicnicking_okapi ([personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi) wrote2025-06-17 11:51 am

Views & News: School's (almost) out for summer

1. Last day of school for the boys is tomorrow. There was supposed to be a picnic at Minisculus' but it's too wet. Tonight is a ceremony at the middle school (not a graduation--they have stressed that) and then Minor is staying for the 8th grade dance.

2. I noticed something interesting (to me) last week during the ceiling catastrophe. I missed drinking any coffee Tuesday because I was in exile, but I didn't notice it. I didn't get that nail-being-driven-in-the-temple headache I normally get. Like, nothing, no physical sign that I was caffeine deprived. So maybe the anxiety adrenaline of the ceiling held it at bay? I don't know. I'm just making an observation. I started to feel it on Day 2 but I got some coffee and of course it went away

3. I'm about halfway through The Seamstress by Maria Duenas and enjoying it. It's an epic life story of a woman from Spain who lives in Morocco during the Civil War. I'm at the even of WWII now. Finished Bridge to Teribithia with Minisculus and now we're reading something called Clementine which is the typical 'kid does pranks and gets into trouble' story.

4. I cracked open a new jigsaw: Around the Word in 50 Plants.

5. No news from the Visiting Angels. :( I'm hoping everything is okay. I uploaded the COVID vaccine info per request but it's been crickets for a week.

6. I REALLY need to get cracking on my casefic for the exchange.

7. I like train ambient channels:



6.
Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 12:00 pm

Butter Cow Statue in Toledo, Iowa

Sign next to the cow-calf sculpture describing the life of Norma "Duffy" Stong Lyon

This life-size bronze sculpture of a cow and a calf sit on a knoll next to an old oak tree in Toledo, Iowa. The sculpture was cast in homage to Norma “Duffy” Lyon, who, for many years, sculpted the number-one attraction at the Iowa State Fair—a life-sized cow made of butter. Duffy became somewhat of an Iowa celebrity for her work, appearing on national television shows and traveling to create butter sculptures.

Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 11:00 am

Stonehaven Boardwalk Sculptures in Stonehaven, Scotland

The coastal village of Stonehaven lies between the towns of Aberdeen to the north and Dundee to the south, along Scotland’s Eastern seaboard. It is most famous for being the home to Dunnottar Castle,  a medieval ruin that played an integral part in the country’s rich and turbulent history.

The town also showcases a number of nautical-themed metal art pieces along the sea-faring harbor. These meticulously detailed works of art depict vehicles that reflect the community’s ties to the ocean. Currently, there are about half a dozen in all, each with a whimsical nod to the surrounding watery environment. Most of the objects illustrated are vehicles and are captained by a marine sea creature—one even includes the cartoon character Spongebob Squarepants.

What makes these artworks so unusual is that the artist (or artists?) prefers to remain anonymous. Often referred to by the locals as ‘The Stonehaven Banksy,” the sculptures will suddenly appear overnight. The first piece was revealed sometime at the beginning of the new millennium.

jesse_the_k: Photo of Pluto's heart region with text "I" above and "science" below. (I love science)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2025-06-17 10:33 am
Entry tags:

music: A Wistful Satellite Song

I’ve been a Karine Polwart fan for decades, which led me to her recent collaboration with Julie Fowlis and Mary Chapin Carpenter. "Looking for the Thread" mixes Scots Gaelic and US country and a little bit of rock’n’roll.

I was moved by this farewell from the POV of a dying satellite—can you tell me if this matches an actual satellite that circled our planet?

Stream here on YouTube )

Or on SoundCloud or on Spotify.

Lyrics in the cut )

prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
prettygoodword ([personal profile] prettygoodword) wrote2025-06-17 07:34 am

torrefy

torrefy or torrify (TAWR-uh-fai, TOR-uh-fai) - v., to dry or roast with fire, parch, scortch; in particular: a) (pharm.) to dry or parch (drugs) on a heated plate; b) (mining) to roast (ores) to evaporate volatiles.


The Latin root (taken on around 1600) is torrefacere, to make dry or hot, equivalent to torre-, stem form of torrēre, to dry up/parch/scorch + facere, to make/cause. Given the sense of intense heat that I'm getting from this, despite the pharmacological use probably being not all that hot, I don't think the kitchen toaster quite counts as a torrefier (or even a torrefrier).

---L.
lb_lee: A B-movie blond young man with a pompadour, resembling a Cabbage Patch Elvis, grins weirdly into the camera. (wowzy wow wow!)
lb_lee ([personal profile] lb_lee) wrote2025-06-17 10:03 am
Entry tags:

Every Time We Move

This is a post about the Kafka-esque process of moving while living legally disabled in Massachusetts.

Every time we move, we have to update our address, not just with our bank and phone people, but also the myriad social services agencies who control our existence. Since we have to move every few months to few years, depending on our housing luck, this is a cyclical, regular occurrence. We have streamlined our procedure over the course of a decade plus, studying the augurs of obscure bureaucratic paperwork errors, reading the signs in the entrails of the bald eagle.

Of course, the exact procedure changes every few years, and there is no way to find out except by accident or error.

Please put on a recording of Yakety Sax or the Gonk for the proper emotional effect of this post. Thank you. )
Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 10:00 am

Heritance Tea Factory in Kandapola, Sri Lanka

Leather belts running from the generator to the fans on the top floor.

Strictly speaking, Heritance Tea Factory is a hotel, but it is much more than that. Traces of this building’s former self as Hethersett Factory are evident everywhere. The inner courtyard at the basement level is entirely occupied by an enormous generator in mint condition. Every evening, it is turned on manually, the weathered leather belts start traveling up and down the court, and two gigantic fans on the upper floor begin to rotate (these were used to dry the tea leaves). This so-called National Generator is an 80-horsepower single-cylinder engine. Like other machinery on the property, this behemoth was imported in the early 20th century from the United Kingdom. It is not known how it was transported to this remote location, but the most credible hypothesis is that elephants were deployed.

The National Generator definitely steals the show, but obvious traces of the era are evident throughout the structure, from the old-fashioned gate-style lift with visible mechanics to the girders and original ironwork perfectly integrated in the architecture of the building, from the hardwood flooring to the fuel cylinders that now adorn the dining room.

On the immediate grounds surrounding the main building are more heavy-duty tools, such as iron rollers, a twin cylinder engine, and the TCK 6685 train carriage that once used to travel on the Udupussellawa line. A little further is the actual small but functioning tea factory, which can be visited under the supervision of a guide. Here, the journey of a single leaf of tea from the plant to the teabag is spelled out in detail, from plucking to withering, from rolling to oxidizing, from drying to sifting. Apart from plucking, which is still done by hand, all other steps require dedicated machinery, the mechanics of which has not changed much since the 19th century.

Perhaps the most stunning aspect of this factory is the setting. Twenty-five acres of tea plantation belong to the Heritance Tea Factory, which is relatively small, but the main building is located on the top of a hill, with commanding views of the nearby hills and beyond, and as far as the eye can see, it is a sea of tea plantations, with the occasional vegetable garden nestled in, and a few spindly trees here and there. Given that the Heritance Tea Factory is at a considerable 6,500 feet of altitude, it is not uncommon that in the morning banks of mist hide and reveal sections of the landscape at irregular intervals. Once the day warms up, the mist usually disappears and what follows is an explosion of all the different shades and hues of green that the human eye can appreciate.

lsanderson: (Default)
lsanderson ([personal profile] lsanderson) wrote2025-06-17 08:16 am

2025.06.17

Sen. Klobuchar condemns Utah rep for misleading social posts
Plus: Killer had ‘hit list’; political violence on the rise; photos of makeshift memorial; and more.
by Peter Majerle
https://www.minnpost.com/glean/2025/06/sen-klobuchar-condemns-utah-rep-for-misleading-social-posts/

MyPillow’s Mike Lindell ordered to pay $2.3m in voting machine defamation trial
Eric Coomer, who worked at Dominion, sued Mike Lindell for spreading conspiracy theories that upended his life
Rachel Leingang
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/16/mypillow-mike-lindell-defamation-trial

'He's a mess': Trump says he won’t call Tim Walz after Minnesota shootings
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2025/jun/17/donald-trump-g7-iran-israel-ceasefire-us-politics-live-updates?CMP=share_btn_url&page=with%3Ablock-685166618f08a82a824fa17d#block-685166618f08a82a824fa17d Read more... )
Atlas Obscura - Latest Places ([syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed) wrote2025-06-17 09:00 am

Yamataka Jindai Zakura in Hokuto, Japan

In a country famous for its cherry blossoms, few are more renowned than the Jindai Zakura outside Otsuyama Jisso Temple. This tree of the long-living Edo-higan species is 1800 to 2000 years old, making it possibly the oldest cherry tree in the entire country. It is also Japan’s first designated National Natural Monument, earning the honor in 1922, and is considered one of the Three Great Cherry Trees of Japan.

Legend holds that the Jindai Zakura was first planted by the folk hero and prince Yamato Takeru while subduing the people of Eastern Japan. The tree has had its ups and downs since then, not always being in the best of states. In the 13th century, it is said to have been saved by the famous Buddhist priest Nichiren when he prayed for its recoveries.

More recently, it was feared in the 20th century that the tree was on the verge of death as many branches were falling off. A temporary protective roof only made the issue worse. The decline was eventually found to be due to thick soil depleting the roots of oxygen and nutrients. This was remedied by replenishing the soil with nutrients, and the tree has turned around somewhat since then.

Thanks to the tree’s fame, its seeds were taken to space on the ISS module Kibo, testing how they would grow after being exposed to weightlessness. Out of 120 taken to space, only two seeds germinated afterwards. One of them has been planted nearby as a “space cherry tree.’

Although the Jindai Zakura is a sight to behold any time of year, it is best viewed during spring when it is in bloom. That coincides with the blossoming of yellow trumpet daffodils nearby, creating a beautiful contrast of colors.