nopin

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

This is Interesting!

Today's Anchorage Daily News has an article on a 1956 pocket guide to Alaska, from the military. The military apparently used to issue these pocket guides to their servicemen being sent to faraway places. The Alaska one is pretty factual and even culturally not too dreadful, considering how bad exoticism and racism were during that unenlightened era. Yes, there are references to Alaska as an untamed wilderness until its "discovery" by White people, but it does also say "So far we have been discussing white Alaskans. The original Alaskan population is important, too." On the whole, the way it talks about Alaska Native people is surprisingly modern. The mass slaughter of Alaska Native people by Russian settlers is noted with a hint of compassion, and it says to treat modern Alaska Native people with respect. "You should accept your new fellow citizens — just as they are — and they will accept you.” Regarding Alaska Natives, employ the correct term for individual Indigenous populations and never cheat them. As the guide says, “Some Alaskan natives serve in the Armed Forces. Maybe a few will be in your outfit. Get to know them.”

I am especially taken with this illustration:

Source: 1956 Pocket Guide to Alaska


I also like this illustration here:
Source: 1956 Pocket Guide to Alaska


You can view the whole thing here.

Saturday, June 25, 2022

Whoops! Plant ID correction!

I submitted my photo from the last post to the Local Environmental Observer (LEO) Network as "the earliest blooming fireweed I had ever seen". Katie Spellman, one of the ecologists who manages the LEO Network and one of the liveliest researchers I know, emailed me in response that I might have made a mistake.

"... the typically prominent stigmas are missing, the corolla is too tightly packed, the four dark pink sepals are missing, the leaf joint on the stem is too sheathed... I think this is a species of Cardamine (which usually does bloom before fireweed). Those mustardy long seed pods and the color can masquerade as fireweed!"

This cluster is along our morning run route, but it's hard to make careful observations when you are trying to outrun mosquitoes! But I observed it more closely, and yes, it's sure not a fireweed! I took a better photo today, a low-mosquito day:

Here is an actual fireweed, which are just now starting to bloom, right about on time.
Look! My first columbine of the year!
It hit the peak of its beauty and then dropped its first petal in two days. Harsh life, columbine!
These will produce flowers for the first time this year. I started them from wildly hybridized seeds, so I don't know what colors I will get!
It's too hot to bake bread or boil potatoes, and sometimes even the rice pot seems to hot. Noodles are our primary starch on hot days.
From Orient to Occident. Pesto shrimp with tomatoes for the next pasta.
We hardly ever eat non-Alaskan seafood. It seems like a waste of money and climate change gases. Not to mention, Alaskan seafood is extremely tasty anyway! I mean look at those spot shrimp in the photo above! But every now and then, I do crave an ahi staek. My sister says avoiding ahi is good for avoiding mercury, too, but how tasty it is!
I got a lovely bunch of radishes from our CSA last week. I made a pseudo- do chua. It was really tasty!
The girls love our stir-fries most of all because they have so many veggies to sample--carrots, bell peppers, bok choy...
Mmmmm BOKCHOY!!
IALSOLOVEBOKCHOY!!

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Summer keeps rolling along

This is the earliest I've ever seen a fireweed bloom! This is the prettiest Cardamine I have ever seen, blooming right on time, and it's not in fact a fireweed!
The World's Most Neglected Doghouse got very prettily decorated by Mother Nature.
Wild Jacob's Ladder. Very pretty, is it not? I think this year I'll collect some seeds and put them in my yard.
As after every winter with high snow accumulation, the mosquitoes have been horrible!

Monday, June 6, 2022

Summer has blasted in

It seems that we didn't get much of a spring! The difference between groaning under a record snow dump and bone-dry cracked earth, radiating sun, and buzzing insects was two weeks! The first flowers to show up were dandelions. DL always wants to weed-whack them, while I try to promote them not as weeds but as flowers! At this time, they are the first and only food for the bees!
And I am done trimming dog toenails until September! The road files them on our runs and walks. They don't have dewclaws, or else I'd have to trim those. Mushers remove dewclaws so they don't interfere with booties. There is a very narrow window to do it--when the pups are 2-3 days old. If you wait any later, it becomes a very invasive and painful procedure.
I love trains! So I took a photo of the train as it happened to cross in front of me.
Look at the brilliant green and blue! It's visually very beautiful, isn't it? I, however, am quite uncomfortable due to record birch pollen. I have never been allergic to any kind of tree pollen before; only the flower pollen that comes much later in the year. However, this year ugh! I don't know whether it is permanent, or just this year because there is so much of it. It's coating cars, windows, and all outdoor surfaces with yellow dust. But when I squint through my itchy eyes, I can perceive that the world is very beautiful. :D
Far less couch time nowadays! The floor is much cooler in the cabin.
Poor Miss Thistle! She has the thickest coat, and she sheds the latest! She is finally starting now in earnest, so I comb her daily. She used to hate being combed, but I think she trusts me more now to do Annoying Things to her. We've been together just over two years now!
I have a BELLPEPPER!!!
Cricket LOVES BELLPEPPER!
Thistle LOVES BELLPEPPER!
Thistle gots the crazy eyes!
My Lazy Person's Garden is coming along nicely. I have a patch of fireweed, a patch of bluebells, and a patch of wild delphiniums. The planted stuff is all low-maintenance perennials: Columbines, rhubarb, lilies, and um... I don't recall, but I'll see when it comes up!
These columbines are second year, so I'll see what color flowers they are for the first time!
Roses have appeared Very Abruptly! They are very sweetly fragrant.
And these are my new lilies! I'm super excited!
This photo popped up in my "memories" box today. My favorite outtake from the official photo session of the therapy dogs.
I sure miss my soft, special Starbuck-A-Roo Bear. It has been over two years now, and I still feel a dull ache when I think about her. I've tried to reason my way through the pain, but I cannot. I think there is no way out of it, and that's just how life is. The only ways to avoid pain are:

  • Do not love. (Not desirable)
  • Forget about your loved one. (Not desirable)
  • ??

So, it seems that the pain is inevitable, and everyone who lives a loving life knows it. It's part of living a good life, where we love all we can, even knowing it'll hurt at the end.