Kindred Spirits

"Marilla is a famous cook. She is trying to teach me to cook but I assure you, Diana, it is uphill work. There's so little scope for imagination in cookery. You just have to go by the rules. The last time I made a cake I forgot to put the flour in."

Monday, October 31, 2005

Monday (Reformation Day) Quote

I decided that for Reformation Day I should turn to Martin Luther for our Monday quote. Since it is a holiday, I shall share several! A disclaimer: Only one of these quotes I found myself in an original source; the others I found on an internet page claiming to be quotes from Martin Luther. Just so you are fairly warned...
Many things as seen by God are very good, which as seen by us are very bad.
A nice way to put it. Our perspective is finite; God's is not!

Faith is a living, daring confidence in God's grace, so sure and certain that a man could stake his life on it a thousand times.
I think my faith often looks more like a timid awkward pseudo-confidence, sadly.

I am more afraid of my own heart than of the pope and all his cardinals. I have within me the great pope, Self.
I like this turn of phrase, too. I'm afriad I DO have an "infallible pope" inside me!

Pray, and let God worry.
This is for me, the chronic worrier. :)

You should not believe your conscience and your feelings more than the word which the Lord who receives sinners preaches to you.
Here is another apt word for me. I often listen to the Accuser who tells me I'm too wretched to be a child of God. Conscience is a gift, and the Holy Spirit's convicting power is real and is God's best for us. But I know that sometimes I let conviction lead me not to true repentance, but to faithless despair.

Friday, October 28, 2005

Happy Birthday, Rachel!

Here's what I was going to get you, but unfortunately it wouldn't come in time, so I had to find something else.

Happy happy birthday, from all us to you
we're glad that it's your birthday, so we can party too

Love ya! :)

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Advice Needed

The Baseball Season is over, and it is time to choose a new website for my homepage (during the Season I open my browser to mlb.com).

Any fun suggestions, girls? What do you all have as your homepage?

Thursday Links

Ipod news: Well, it's not really news, but here are some Halloween costume ideas for you iPod. Um....yikes.

I saw some great "Oops pictures" at the Mattsons' last night, but this morning, I found this whole page of them. Great stuff.

This a great little flash game. Be sure to concentrate REAL hard!

Yoda hip-hop dancing. Yoda rocks.

A fun little riddle-type game. Slightly addictive.

Cool liquid drop pictures.

"I promised that from now on I would write only for the Lord." Guess who?? I'm not sure that I'm particularily excited about this book.

See the entire city of San Francisco made out of Jello. Um....why?

That's all I got. Have a great Thursday!

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Checking in

Ellis Seagull Sepia

Well, I made it back in one piece on Monday night. Thank you SO much Melodee and Amanda for being my taxis. It was so nice not to have to park up at the airport. As promised, I came back with exactly one trillion pictures. I posted just a fraction of them to Flickr, so if you are so inclined, go check them out. I hope they reflect at least to some degree the great time I had. We had so much packed into our days, my head is still spinning and I'm still trying to catch up on sleep. Here's a brief rundown of what we did.

Wednesday: Jen worked, so I stole her car and drove to Philly to check out the Body World exhibit and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. I also had time to take a walk down past the Water works and Boathouse Row.
Thursday: Again, I stole Jen's car and drove down through Amish Country in Lancaster County. I experienced covered bridges and the town of Intercourse. *Insert obvious sick joke here* The foliage wasn't extraordinary, but it was still pretty. I especially enjoyed the farmland. I guess you can take the girl out of Eastern Montana, but not Eastern Montana out of the girl. That evening, Jen and I drove to Newark to pick my mom up from the airport and we headed to our hostel in NY City.
Friday: We awoke at 5 AM and headed to Fox & Friends studio to hold up a handmade sign that says, "Big Timber MT loves Fox News". Then, we walked down and see Ground Zero, Wall Street and get on the ferry to see the Statue of Liberty. Then, we headed back stopping off at Ellis Island to look up my great grandma in the manifests. Then, we stood in line for 2 HOURS to go up into the Empire Statue building (it was so NOT worth it), took a carriage ride through Central Park and then grabbed a quick dinner and headed off to Fiddler on the Roof, which by the way, is the COOLEST thing I have ever seen. I literally had to pick my jaw up off the floor afterwards. We headed back to Reading after that and made it home around 3 AM. Good on Jen for driving the whole way!! 22 hour days rock.
Saturday: Gettysburg. It was rainy and miserable, but we were in the car for most of the day doing the battlefield driving tour, so the rain actually added to the ambiance and made for some great pictures.
Sunday: Back to Philly for the historical sights - Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Betsy Ross' house, Ben Franklin's grave, etc. I had no idea how much history is in that town. Very cool. We also HAD to stop off for a Philly Cheese Steak sandwich for lunch. Yum.
Monday: Mom flew back to MT in the morning and I had a rental car and a few hours to kill, so I drove down to Delaware to see the beaches. Wilma made the weather a little crumby, but I was still able to say that I dipped my feet in the Atlantic (which I never had done before). Then, I headed back to Philly to catch my plane.

Whew. Just writing about it makes me tired. But I suppose I should get back to work and get SOMETHING done today.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Pakistan again

There are no good reports about this, are there? This Fox news story about the quake has some pictures that are horrible without being grotesque - everyone just has a look of such desperate need.

So anyway, this is a reminder to myself and you guys to keep praying for them (or help in whatever way we can).

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Thursday links

Andrea asked me to post Thursday links for her, so don't expect too much this week! A few of these she sent me before her trip...

iPod news: Have iPod, will travel. Use Yahoo directions so you have a map on your iPod! Andrea can navigate her way around Philly with this thing.

Is it pop or soda? Or coke? Find out what to call it where with this map of regional soft drink names.

And in search engine news, someone named his son after Google. No, I'm not going to do that! (The Google blog is an entertaining read sometimes, by the way. They even post recipes!)

This is too cool! Watch what happens when you pop a water balloon in space.

added
This is too wild not to include: Bush's "speechwriter"...he reminds me of David Spade kind of. I thought it was hilarious, so hopefully no one will be too offended that it's poking fun at the President. (Whom I hope watches a winning World Series game in Minute Maid park next week! ;) ) Thanks to Ari for the hat tip.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Wednesday Science: Bioluminescence

Man, I love my job. :) This morning I got to experiment with ostracods, dried ocean crustaceans from the Sea of Japan. When mixed with water and crushed, they glow blue. That's because they release a protein, luciferin, that can react with oxygen in the water, and an enzyme, luciferase, which works as a catalyst to kick off the luciferin's reaction. The resulting energy is released as glowing blue light. Completely cool, literally - the energy is almost all light, rather than light and heat like incandescent light.

About 90% of deep-sea creatures use bioluminescence for things like finding food, attracting a mate, and protection from predators.

Check out these images of bioluminescent ocean life!

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Checking out


I'm off to the city of brotherly love to visit the sister. See y'all on Tuesday! Be prepared for picture postings of colorful leaves and old covered bridges. Hopefully!

Monday, October 17, 2005

Under the Wire: Monday's Quote

I just remembered that I needed to post a Monday quote. And since I just finished watching Game 5 of the NLCS, I can only say:

It ain't over till it's over. - Yogi Berra
(P.S. I could perhaps also mention my very strong affection for Mr. Pujols...)

Friday, October 14, 2005

Matthew's Pictures

For those of you that know Matthew and want to see his Europe pictures in their entirety, click here. He finally got them uploaded to the Internet.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Thursday Links

This pie-eating game is ridiculously addicting. My best is 16 bites. Simple minds are easily amused, I guess.

Christian had an awesome story posted on Monday that you have to read about a speech made at Dartmouth college. Also be sure to read how his peers responded to him. It'll make your blood boil. It did mine!

iPod news: New iPods to come!! What's next? A video iPod?? An iPod-ready car?? (as always, hat tip to Slashdot)

Amanda, we totally need one of these while we are "working".

Hilarious video. I love cold pizza, but this is a little extreme.

I'm asking for this for Christmas. Long live Calvin and Hobbes!!

Are you tired of calling your bank and talking to a machine and having to press a zillion buttons to reach an actual person?? This find-a-person website is for you!! I'm not sure if any of these work, but it is definitely worth a try.

101 things you did not know about rock-n-roll.

Dear God, ....I don't know if these are real, but some of them are pretty cute.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Wednesday's Science Story

And a fact or two thrown in, maybe.

First, for those who won't read about the rest, here's an interesting tidbit about why leaves fall. The article doesn't mention cold as a factor, but considering all the leaves that fell in the snowstorm, it seems like that's part of it. Yay for crunchy leaves underfoot!

Monday was an exciting day at work. I got to do not one, but TWO dissections. Our next newsletter is going to have science teaching tips and projects about reptiles and amphibians...I discovered that herpetology projects you can do at home are not so easy to find. (So no one steal this idea! :) ) But my dad - my boss, for readers who don't know me - thought hey, maybe we could do a comparative anatomy activity. Hence me spending the afternoon with scissors, a scalpel, and some smelly preserved specimens.

The frog was actually a lot of fun. I started with her first, because I knew I could do it. (Plus, there were instructions.) Although I didn't manage to find the gall bladder and some other important organs, the ones i did see were pretty cool. This specimen had a huge blue liver, an easily-identifiable stomach (Annie said to cut it open to examine the contents, but I forgot about that until just now), and other colorful parts that photographed nicely. The most interesting feature was the clump of round blackish eggs inside, sort of nestled loose between the intestine and the back of the abdominal cavity (or whatever you call it).

The snake was a lot harder. There are NO good snake dissection guides on the entire World Wide Web!! So I had to kind of make up how to do it. (Moral: when you slice open a snake specimen, do one incision up the middle of its belly, rather than cut the skin along each side of the belly and then try to lift it off.) Snakes have a see-through, slimy-looking membrane inside to hold all their organs in place, which makes sense considering all the twisting and slithering they do. So most of the dissection was spent removing the membrane from various organs.

Unfortunately for our warehouse crew, I was in the midst of slicing and dicing when they took their break. After staring in fascinated horror for a minute, most of them turned around and headed back to the warehouse. Sorry for that!

After 30 minutes or so the fumes were starting to get to me, so I decided it looked about right and declared myself done. My dad came to look (he's wanted to dissect one of these guys since we started carrying them last year, I think) and decided it looked a little too amateurish. So he proceeded to take the specimen more apart and find other organs I hadn't, namely the kidneys, testes, gall bladder, and pancreas. That's about half of the main organs, in fact. (Locating the heart, an empty stomach, trachea, lung...most snakes have only their right lung...and large and small intestine is not too hard.) Good times.

It was a worthwhile project, though: the external and internal anatomy of a frog and snake are interesting to contrast. The frog guts look a lot more complicated, but then it doesn't spend it's life crawling on its belly and swallowing its food whole, either.

Speaking of which, check out this kangaroo-meets-constrictor slideshow Andrea found for me! It's wild.

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Pakistan

America got hit by some devasting hurricanes, but I don't think it can compare to what's happened in Pakistan/Kashmir. I hope that people here are more inclined to reach out after Katrina, but it appears from what I've read that there's not an abundance of aid pouring in yet. (Not to mention that it's going to be hard getting it there - the affected areas are also experiencing hard rains.)

I haven't done anything yet, either, but after reading the news this is just scaring me.

Monday, October 10, 2005

Songs

Melodee tagged us for this fun little "ditty".
"List five songs that you are currently enjoying. It doesn't matter what genre they are from, whether they have words, or even if they're any good, but they must be songs you're really enjoying right now. Post these instructions, the artist and the song in your blog along with your five songs..."

Ok, this is WAY too hard, so I'm just listing the last five songs I played from my library. After looking at them, I realized what a wide spectrum of moods I have gone through this morning. I'm such a girl sometimes...

Love Will Come Through - Travis
Crash - Twelve Stones
World So Cold - Mudvayne (Screamer music is sometimes the best to code to)
High - James Blunt (iTune's freebie last week. It's pretty alright.)
My Immortal - Evanescence

And since Amanda didn't tag anyone, I'm tagging both Ainsley and Random Mind.

Monday's Quote

This cracked me up:

How beautiful to die of broken-heart on paper! Quite another thing in practice. (Thomas Carlyle, Sartor Resartus)

And now for George Eliot's impression of the kind of people who write novels where people die of broken-heart:
It is clear that they write in elegant boudoirs, with violet-colored ink and a ruby pen; that they must be entirely indifferent to publishers' accounts, and inexperienced in every form of poverty except poverty of the brains. (Eliot, "Silly Novels by Lady Novelists")

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Music Meme

Melodee tagged us for this one...I guess I'll start. (Does this mean you get to list five more songs here, Melodee?)

"List five songs that you are currently enjoying. It doesn't matter what genre they are from, whether they have words, or even if they're any good, but they must be songs you're really enjoying right now. Post these instructions, the artist and the song in your blog along with your five songs..."

1. "Pieholden Suite" by Wilco
2. "Rattle and Hum" - U2 (this is an album, but about 1/2 the songs have been stuck in my head this week!)
3. "One Headlight" - the Wallflowers
4. "Beverly Hills" - Weezer annoying but fun, and the lead singer is awesomely nerdy
5/ "Soul Meets Body" - Death Cab for Cutie (Have you heard their new album, Sarah?)

Friday, October 07, 2005

Really old flasks...

I just found this page with Syrian glass "sprinkler" flasks from the first couple centuries AD. Cool! Maybe I should go back to my 12-year-old dream of being an archeologist like *cough* Indiana Jones.

Ok, I don't really have anything to say, I'm trying to make up for my lack of science fact this week. ;-)

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Thursday Links

I've discovered that one of my favorite things about my iPod is that I can listen to audio books with it. In my search for great deals, I ran across this promotion. You NEED to check it out. I signed up and I got the whole unabridged Bible read by Max McLean, the unabridged version of Great Expectations and a two-for-oner of C.S. Lewis' Abolition of Man and The Great Divorce. All for FREE! My iPod just got a whole lot cooler.

In other iPod news: Why would someone do this? Why? Why?!? Also, here's a hilarious tip to get more storage capacity out of your iPod Nano.

Best practical joke EVER. Well, this one was pretty good too. "Don't forget your coffee!"

This is a great marketing ploy. The next party I plan will definitely involve this!

The Mona Lisa made completely out of rubik's cubes.


Did you know that 400 quarter-pounders can be made out of 1 cow? That and other completely useless facts found here. (I really don't know how 'factual' they are, but they're fun!)

Mmmmm.....appetizing.

This is for you, Amanda. In case you were a little homesick for Africa...

Cute doggie/kitty video of the week. Well, maybe it's more creepy then cute.

In case you wanted suggestions for buying that bum that you see on the way to work something, check it out.

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Rude Awakening

For those that don't know, Billings got several inches of wet wet snow yesterday and last night. I hate these early snows. They are always so much more damaging. I was laying in bed last night at about 10:30 in between awake and asleep, when all of a sudden, my bedroom window lit up with this red glow and I could hear a loud snap, crackle and pop from my backyard. I jumped out of bed and ran to my window to look out and there was a fireworks display going on in my backyard. My electricity kept flickering on and off with every pop. I pulled on some shoes and grabbed a coat and my dog and ran out back. My favorite tree in my backyard was so weighed down by snow that one large branch was starting to crack and pull down one of the weighed down power lines in my backyard. All I could picture was my house and all my belongings going up in smoke. It's funny what follows your thoughts of your house burning up. The first thing I thought of was all my grandpa's homemade wood working projects, which accounts for 75% of all my furniture. Then, I thought of all the plastic ducks in my bathroom and how they would just be melted yellow mounds. Weird, I know. My pictures and scrapbooks and keepsakes didn't even enter my mind. I ran back into the house to grab my car keys and cell phone, when I remembered that I left my cell phone at work and that my car keys wouldn't do much good because I have an ELECTRIC garage door opener. Great. So, now my house AND my car are going to go to get burned up. And I can't even call 911. The snapping and sparking in my backyard had quit and now the electricity was totally out. I grabbed a flashlight and tried to tromp through the snow to see the damage. One line was totally down, but the others were fine, just hanging low from the snow on top of them. I figured the fire danger was pretty much over and since I couldn't drive anywhere or call anyone, and it was too late to go to the neighbors, I just hung out in my house. So, I layed in bed, fully clothed, with a flashlight next to me and listened to all the other neighbor's trees cracking and falling down. I did eventually fall asleep and my electricity was on this morning when I woke up (I assume the downed line is a phone line), so it all turned out fairly ok. One huge branch is broken on my favorite tree in my backyard and this may be the end of the whole tree. And I have to find someway to fix the downed line in my backyard, but my house is still standing. My electricity is on. My car and my dog are safe. So, it's all good.

Ugh. I really wish I could enjoy this first snow better. It's just not as pretty as it should be...

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

In case you were wondering what the weather is like tonight:

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

And the photo for the week is this. (I believe it was touched up, but it is still beautiful.)

Not for the faint of heart

Check this out. They are so cute.

This is not Tuesday's picture...

I am here to apologize. I haven't forgotten about finding a picture to post today, I just haven't had time. When I get home tonight, it will still be Tuesday, and I promise I will post one then. Please don't punish me too harshly!!

Monday, October 03, 2005

Monday's Quote

Here's some bonehead economics for you this morning, friends!


Socialism: You have two cows. Give one cow to your neighbor.

Communism: You have two cows. Give both cows to the government and they may give you some of the milk.

Capitalism: You have two cows. Sell one cow and buy a bull.

---Anonymous