notes on The Residence finale

Jul. 8th, 2026 05:43 pm
jazzfish: book and quill and keyboard and mouse (Media Log)
[personal profile] jazzfish
Paul William Davies et al, The Residence

A cosy whodunnit set at the White House during a state dinner. About six hours' worth of material, spread over eight hour-long episodes. Rapid-fire dialogue reminiscent of Howard Hawks's screwball comedies, a fun birding-obsessed detective, and a great cast. Recommended.

Three thoughts after the last episode:

1) That last episode is emblematic of the Netflix Way. The detective gathers all the suspects to walk them through the crime, as is traditional for the genre (though she's doing it to see who will give themselves away, rather than because she knows). So she takes them all through a recap of everything that's come up in the series so far. Then, just in case you missed it, she spells out explicitly how the murder was committed, again, for the big reveal. Dumbed down, for people who've been half watching and half scrolling. Kudos to the writers for managing to keep the rest of the show interesting, but I was about ready to gnaw my arm off to escape yet more Here's What Happened.

I recognise that audiences can't be trusted anymore, what with the proliferation of videos explaining the ending of even fairly straightforward movies. I just wish it weren't so.

2) I did not so much call the culprit as really really want it to be that person.

3) The whole series demonstrates how mysteries are a fundamentally conservative genre. spoilers follow ) I have no beef with this in general; it's just really obvious, and not a little frustrating, in this instance.

Busy day doin' nothin'

Jul. 7th, 2026 05:52 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

So, that was a full day. I am encouraged by Lorie at Glendarragh Farm, who very carefully explained that lavender likes full sun, sandy soil, and a little lime for flavor. Also, on my walk around the farm, I was able to observe for myself that bumblebees love them some lavender. I'm back to thinking planting lavender in the place where the pool used to be, which is still stoopidly sandy. However! I did not buy a lavender plant today. Today I bought: a couple lavender sachets (one of which has found its forever home in the car, a t-shirt (I know, but! purple), a dark chocolate lavender bar, lavender-peppermint soap, a bunch of dried lavender destined to be placed in a vase and put in Steve's office, lavender lip balm, and lavender hand balm.

. . . I think I was quite conservative, really.

I walked in the gardens, and visited the lavender drying shed, which I would like to live in for the rest of my life. I had several in-depth chats with ZuZu, who is one of those little white dogs that everyone adopts immediately they retire and decide to travel. We talked about cats, ZuZu and I -- that cats, yes, do sleep a lot, and that she was just about as big as Rookie -- and also the fact that I had been raised by dogs, and that, yes, it was very very interesting and exciting to meet new people. I spoke for myself and ZuZu's owner translated for her, because -- you know this, right? -- I am one of those people who will talk to a dog for twenty minutes and never directly speak to the dog's owner.

Onward!

From Appleton, then, to Lincolnville Beach, where the tide was out and people were doing beach things, and thence to Belfast, where two full-color posters of kittens greet the traveler coming into town from Route One from the South, announcing the availability of Maine! Coon! Kittens! No, I didn't stop, and because I am an uncharitable person, I take leave to doubt that anyone with Maine! Coon! Kittens! needs to advertise their availability via street-corner posters.

Stopped at Nautilus for lunch on the covered patio, as reported elsewhere. The haddock Reuben was very tasty, though I admit I had some doubts.

After lunch, I went up the hill to the co-op and did some shopping -- fresh onions, cherries, three kinds of salads (curried chicken, potato, and pasta pea), local cheese, a bottle of alcohol-free wine, which -- I will, as it happens, quite happily drink alcohol-free wine, but it costs the earth, comparatively -- a loaf of Borealis rye bread for the freezer, bar shampoo and moisturizer.

After shopping -- ice cream! Homemade strawberry from Wild Cow, which I carried back to the public landing and ate while sitting on a bench overlooking the bay.

Then, it was time to come home, which is where I am now, and where I will be staying, rather than drag my weary self to the library.

Things that were missing from my day.

1 Crowds of tourists. It is now after July 4th and I was on Route One. Frequently the only car on Route One. Belfast was a little thin of people for even a off-season Tuesday, never mind a fine July afternoon, and there were ... less boats than I had anticipated in the harbor. There was no line at the restaurant during the Prime Hour for lunch. More! There were parking spaces available at the public landing.

2 Seagulls. There were no seagulls at Belfast. None. I'm trying to remember if there were any at Ducktrap -- sorry, Lincolnville -- and that probably tells the tale right there.

Well. Maybe the Seagull Militia is forming up elsewhere. Maybe that's where the missing tourists are, too.

Rookie was waiting for me when I came in, and! There was a drinker at the front-garden hummingbird bar. Score!

And there we have my news.

What's yours?

Lavender!

...with bonus poppies


The first day lilies of summer

Jul. 6th, 2026 03:21 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Monday. Breezy, sunny, and pleasant.

Wrote 1,000ish words today. Sadly, they replace the 1,000ish words I wrote yesterday, which had been predicated upon a misremembered history set forth in Balance of Trade. At least now the new scene is right, and I still get to keep Billy Wilde, who I so wanted on account of his ship is AcesWilde (or maybe WildeAce, to make a match with WildeToad), and not because I have any particular fondness for Billy himself. Well. Except that he has a piece of news that the other characters need.

Writer math.

What else? Vacuumed, performed my duty to the cats, took a walk, gathered the trash and recycling into the garage for tomorrow's migration to the curb, scheduled a haircut for Thursday. Ate lunch. Broke a favorite (of course) plate. After I finish this letter to the internets, I'll sit down with my notes for the WIP and refresh myself, now that I've broken 100 pages. Twice.

In neighborhood news, it looks like the new owners are moving into the big farmhouse. A car towing a trailer and a truck with the bed full of stuff arrived as I was getting lunch together.

Tomorrow is supposed to be a little cooler than today, so The Amended Plan is to arise and do breakfast, set out the trash, and go to Appleton early. After I've lavendered my fill, I'll skate over to Belfast, hit the co-op and forage for either lunch or ice cream, and be back home in time for needlework.

And that? Would be all of my news.

What's your news?

And!  Let's give it up for the first day lilies of summer, Cat Farm Time:

 


crafting

Jul. 6th, 2026 12:42 pm
unicornduke: (Default)
[personal profile] unicornduke
Hey all, if you'd like to join the crafting hangout, it is tonight from 6-8pm ET!
 
Video encouraged but not required!
 
Topic: Crafting Hangout
Time: Mondays 6:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
 
Join Zoom Meeting
 
Meeting ID: 973 2674 2763

weekend

Jul. 6th, 2026 12:13 pm
unicornduke: (Default)
[personal profile] unicornduke
Friday afternoon, my aunt hosted the 4th party. I'm really unsure why friday at 2pm was the time, but I closed up the register at 1, did some plowing, ran the irrigation pumps, then showered and headed up. The heat was miserable to work in all week and a lot of my time was spent running irrigation. 

The party wasn't any cooler, my aunt and uncle don't have AC, not even window units so their house was pretty warm even with the fans running. Most of us just migrated to their porch because it was just as warm outside as in and there was a decent breeze plus a view of the orchard. A small storm rolled through but it didn't even do a tenth of an inch but it hailed 20 mins away so I'm okay with it. I left around 7 to do tractor setup for the neighbor to help me and went to bed early after my mom decided to have a lot of feelings about the upcoming trip at me. I did not appreciate this, I was so tired. Being cranky back wouldn't do anything, so I just went to sleep. 

Saturday, we were open, I still haven't gotten someone to cover weekends, so I was on register. It was only 85F, positively cool! But I got up early to finish the plowing, wrapping it up just before we opened at 8 and by the time I got off work at 1pm, I was already tired. But I ran the irrigation for an hour, packed, put away all the equipment that shouldn't get wet, then pulled the pumps, showered and hit the road to my brother's. I almost didn't go. I was so hot and tired. 

The drive down sucked. It is becoming clear that my truck AC is not keeping up anymore and I mildly sweated all the way down the turnpike. I stopped and used the bathroom at a rest stop solely to wake myself up. Despite the day, there was basically no traffic and the drive was easy down near Philly. I arrived at my brother's place around 5pm where they reheated food for me and I ate a ton of fruit. My dad and I kept an eye on the weather back home via the weather station app and the radar, which was 0.6 inches of rain in 20 mins plus high winds. I have to go out this afternoon and start cleanup on some of that.

We hung out, watched the thunderstorms that rolled through, I got the tour of their new place which was absolutely beautiful and cool. The younger crowd of us stayed up until 1am playing Bomb Busters which is basically fancy collaborative go fish. It was a lot of fun! 

I slept in until 9am on the couch but was one of the first up anyway. I got lots of dog snuggles, ate brownies for breakfast (absolutely amazing gluten free brownies) and we all slugged around until after lunch. I hit the road, taking the long route and avoiding the turnpike and the traffic snarls on 95 and got home just about in time to get an inch and a half of rain in about 45 minutes. I had checked on the pumps and the creek levels as soon as I got home, then decided to fully pull the pumps and pipes after that rain came through. One of the creeks had risen over a foot due to the storm. It's back down now, but we still have a flood watch. Rain total for the weekend is three inches and we're getting more tonight.

We are hitting the point of desperately behind, the corn maze is not in the ground yet, there is time sensitive spraying to be done and one of my main farm employees just texted that he has a fulltime job starting next week. And my parents are out of town this week. Great. Well, oh well. I'll figure it out. Or not. 

Books read in 2026

Jul. 5th, 2026 09:10 pm
rolanni: (Reading is sexy)
[personal profile] rolanni

39  The Gathering Edge (Theo Waitley #5), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
38  Alliance of Equals (Korval in Exile #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
37  Dragon in Exile, (Liaden Universe® beginning the Korval In Exile arc), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
36  Soudough, Robin Sloan (e) (bookclub)
35  Necessity's Child (standalone in the Liaden Universe®), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens.
34  Dragon Ship (Theo Waitley #4), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
33  Ghost Ship (Theo Waitley #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
32  Saltation (Theo Waitley #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
31  Fledgling (Theo Waitley #1), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
30  The Talisman Ring, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Joe Jameson
29  A Gentleman Far from Home (Lord Julian 11) Grace Burrowes (e)
28  Black Sheep, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Natalie Simpson
27  Cotillion, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Raj Ghatak
26  Platform Decay, (Murderbot) Martha Wells (e)
25  A Gentleman in Moscow, Amor Towles (e) (bookclub)
24  Fair Trade (Jethri Gobelyn #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
23  Ribbon Dance (Liaden Universe #26), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Alex Picard
22  Trade Secret (Liaden Universe #17), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller (e)
21  Sea Wrack and Changewind, Sharon Lee, narrated by Alex Picard
20  When the Wolves are Silent (Sebastian St. Cyr #21), C.S. Harris (e)
19  An Heir of Distinction (Bad Heir Days #5), Grace Burrowes (e)
18   Longeye (Fey Duology #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller***
17   Duainfey (Fey Duology #1), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller***
16  *Crystal Dragon (Liaden Universe® #10), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
15  *Crystal Soldier (Liaden Universe® #9), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
14  Seeking Persephone (Lancaster Family #1), Sarah M. Eden (e)
13   Theo of Golden, Allen Levi (e) book club
12  *Balance of Trade (Liaden Universe® #8), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
11  *Scout's Progress (Liaden Universe® #6), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
10  *Local Custom, (Liaden Universe® #5), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
9   *I Dare (Liaden Universe® #7), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
8   Cuckoo's Egg, C J Cherryh, (audio first time)
7   *Plan B, (Liaden Universe® #4), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
6   Getting Rid of Bradley, Jennifer Crusie (audio first time)
5   *Carpe Diem (Liaden Universe® #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
4   *Conflict of Honors (Liaden Universe® #2), Sharon Lee & Steve    Miller
3   *Agent of Change (Liaden Universe® #1), Sharon Lee & Steve                 Miller
2   A Gentleman in Possession of Secrets (Lord Julian #10), Grace             Burrowes (e)
1   Spilling the Tea in Gretna Green, Linzi Day (e)

________
*I'm doing a straight-through series read in publication order

**I screwed up and moved right on to I Dare from Plan B, therefore deviating from publication order.  I will now amend myself and go back to pick up Local Custom.

***I'll be re-issuing Duainfey and Longeye as an e-omnibus later this year, and so I need to read them!


The angels have stolen my red shoes

Jul. 5th, 2026 05:59 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

What went before: Sunday. Sunny, breezy, and ... seasonal. Hopefully, the heat wave has broken. We're not built for heat waves up here in the northlands.

At the end of today's writing session, I can report that! (1) I wrote 1590 new words, and! (2) the WIP has broken 100 pages, standing at +/-23,700 words.

Time to eat lunch, do my duty to the cats and some housetending.

I was surprised at the relatively low fireworks action last night. There was a display at Rummel's Field, a couple blocks over, which I could hear, and also see some of the sky displays out the front window. Next year, the trees will be tall enough to block them.

Rookie sat on the cat tree in that window, and watched the show. Firefly retreated to Steve's office, and Tali valiantly stayed with me on the couch, pressed against my leg, ears twitching at each boom! Every so often, she looked at me with a kind of "Are you sure about this?" expression. I would squint my eyes, and she would sigh and put her head down again.

So, there's that.

Tomorrow, I may go to the lavender farm in the morning. Or not. I am fluid as to timing. I do need to find particulars of the boat tour of the Messalonskee on Saturday, but I can't call the Adult Ed office until tomorrow.

I hope everyone is having a relaxing day.
#
Forgot I was out of bread. Guess I'll make this box of Scottish Toasting Bread.
#
A notable day. Not only did George RR Martin (if that really was you, George--thanks) write to praise Diviner's Bow and the entire Liaden Universe, but Steve's In Memoriam on the SFWA site lists as his co-author/wife some woman named Sharon Lee Miller.

OTOH, the bread's out, and it's being very hard to resist, and I'm working toward a solution for all the photographs Steve just pitched willy-nilly into paper boxes and shoved into the back of his closet. I had had a go at straightening them out a couple years ago, and gave up, but this time, I have A Plan of Attack, so maybe the photos can at least get ordered by Where/When Was This Taken, which will do for a rough first sort, and if I want to fine it down, I can do that later.

All that said, I'm kind of tired, so -- shutting down for the evening.

Everybody have a good night. Stay safe. I'll check in tomorrow.

Today's blog post title comes to you from Elvis Costello, "Red Shoes."


Saturday at the Cat Farm

Jul. 4th, 2026 01:30 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Saturday. Sunny and not quite so hot as previous days.

I'm trying to up my daily word count, at least for this bit right here, where I really feel like I know all of our old friends Who, What, Where, and Why. So! The goal is 1,000 words for each writing session.

I do have some more Writer's Days Off upcoming. Monday or Tuesday, for instance, I wish to visit the lavender farm in Appleton. And on Saturday, the boat tour of the Messalonskee I signed up for in Coldest January, will finally take place. Also, there's the gem show in Oxford on Sunday. Which is almost looking like Too Much Fun, but! Summer is short and Winter is long.

Speaking of word count, today's efforts produced 1,098 new words, for a WIP total of 22,110. Ish.

After lunch, which is up realsoonnow, I need to change out the cat fountains, feed the cats, scoop the boxes, and do some bookkeeping. A Theme!

Tomorrow, I may be able to return to writing after lunch, if I'm very ambitious this afternoon.

So! box lunch out of the freezer today. Yesterday's hot dog from FiveGuys hit the spot, and the vanilla milkshake, too, so I should be good on the radioactive poison front for the next few months.

The cats all joined me in Steve's office for my writing session, and they're all still there, napping in sun puddles, and living their best lives. Or so I hope.

How're you doing today?


Heat Wave

Jul. 4th, 2026 12:39 am
wotw: (Default)
[personal profile] wotw
The air conditioning unit that cools my great room died a few days ago, and it's been very very hot in there ever since. The HVAC people say they can't come till late next week. Fortunately, the three other units that cool the rest of my living space have been working great.

Today I was out walking and I passed by that dead condenser unit, which gave me the idea to take a look at it and see whether there was a tripped breaker in there. I started trying (and failing) to open the unit up when I noticed the "Danger: High Voltage" sign and decided I should probably go trip off the breaker in the house before trying to tinker with the unit.

You might see where this is going. The breaker in the house was already tripped off. Somehow that possibility had never occured to me. I turned it back on a couple of hours ago and my great room is icy cold, just the way I like it.

Whale and Puffin Watch Report

Jul. 3rd, 2026 05:47 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

OK, then! Here is my Whale Watch Report.

Thursday, July 2, 2026. The second really hot (for Maine standards of "hot") day in a row.

Woke up at the insistence of the alarm, and left the house a little later than I had planned. The instructions from the chartering company, Cap'n Fish, was that I arrive for priority boarding (yes, I paid extra for priority boarding, because I had A Plan that required me to arrive on-ship ahead of the madding crowd) one hour before departure. Despite several times being sure that I was going to be late! Oh, late!, I pulled into the Cap'n Fish Whale Watch Parking Lot at precisely 8am, one hour ahead of the projected 9am departure. I was the very first customer in the parking lot, and a sleepy young man showed me where I was to park, and then collected 50 small, which was A Moment, but! (1) he was able to take a credit card and (2) it was for all-day parking, and, by the time I was done having adventuring, worked out to about $7/hour.

It was already hot at 8am, and the booth that said "Cap'n Fish" was still closed. On the other side of the parking lot was the gathering point for the ferry to Squirrel Island, which was filled with what looked like the contents of a house, and half-a-dozen people. The ferry arrived while I was still noodling around, waiting for the booth to open, and two people came up the ramp to carry all the stuff down the gang plank.

I should mention that tide was out, so there was an acute tilt to all gang planks.

Around 8:15, the Cap'n Fish booth opened, and I presented myself, whereupon I was directed to "follow that crewman" who happened to be passing by, to Fisherman's Wharf and the Harbor Princess.

It was now 8:25, and the booth at Fisherman's Wharf was womaned. I was informed that boarding would begin "right about 9" and that I could take a walk or hang out at the picnic benches. I had decided that the better part of valor was to take a Tylenol to pre-empt any complaints from my back about four hours on a hard metal bench, so I walked toward the picnic benches, whereupon I was accosted by a toddler, running at full speed, chased by a woman who was calling, "Harry! Harry, where are you going? You don't know that man!"

Nice to know I still got the mojo.

Harry having been collected by his keeper, I rummaged in my bag for the pill bottle, took my dose, and then wandered about the immediate environs, window shopping and reading the menu at ... McSeagull's, I believe it was.

By this time, about 9:40/9:45, people were starting to queue up, so I found the Priority Boarding area, and stood in the shade, people-watching. People certainly choose to wear odd things on a whale watch (I had on tennis shoes, jeans of many pockets, and a t-shirt with a denim Korval shirt on over it, with the sleeves rolled, and Steve's Tilly hat). Most people were wearing shorts and sandals of some kind, many opting for low- , even very low, cut shirts with short or no sleeves. There were some baseball caps, but not many, and nothing as untoward as a Tilly hat (I had decided my big grey hat was going to be too much -- too big, too warm, too, too). There was one "Not that Doctor, the Other Doctor," tshirt among those gathering, and two tiny babies in strollers, with their household slaves and a Dodge Charger's worth of necessities in their train. I suppose the adults in their party were doing this on purpose, but it seemed ill-advised to me (a long-term non-parent).

The babies, let it be said, sensibly directed their slaves to establish them in the lower salon, so I saw no more of them until we were debarking, when they were in line to exit at the same time I was approaching the gate from the other direction. I courteously stepped back to allow the strollers their right-of-way, and after they were cleared and halfway down the ramp, stepped forward -- and was thrust back by a tardy slave, who yelled in my ear, "I'm with the babies!" as she rushed by. Happily, the nice young woman directly behind me caught my arm.

But I'm ahead of myself.

Returning to the boarding area, it came to be 9am and a man with a spanner in one hand, and what looked like the cap from, oh, a car's oil tank in the other, came up the ramp and rushed to the booth, from whence he emerged with two helpers, who accompanied him back down the ramp, words like, "the second engine" wafting in their wake. The mistress of the booth came out to tell all of us waiting the procedure, and where those who had ordered box lunches, or had rented binoculars might be united with these items.

About 9:05, the captain came up the ramp, unlatched the fence, nodded to me, the sole occupant of the priority boarding area, and told me I could go down the ramp and give my name to the young lady waiting on the boat -- who waved at me.

Tide was out; the angle of the down ramp was acute, and it required some attention to descend. The ramp up to the boat was also acute, and required some attention in the opposite direction.

I gave the young lady my name, she checked me off her list, and told me where the stairs to the upper deck was. I ascended, and took over the left end of the last bench, so I could turn and look over the rail without having to stand at the rail.

The boat filled up pretty quickly, and we were backing out into the harbor by 9:07ish.

Boothbay Harbor is a busy, busy place. It's like the town extends out into the water, and it was still plenty hot as we headed for St. George and Eastern Egg Rock, which is where the puffins make their base in southernish Maine, as we were told by Lexie, who was our narrator/naturalist.

A word here about Lexie: She was an excellent narrator: informative, upbeat and patient. I don't know if there's a minor in theater or storytelling required when you're taking a naturalist degree, but she was awesome. And it was Lexie whom I tipped, as she was indeed at shipside when we filed off to tell everybody good-bye.

Back to the Adventure, and!

Disclosure One: I had no idea puffins were so tiny. I had pictured large sturdy birds, at least the size of a seagull. But, not, it turns out that the glass puffin I had made last summer isn't much smaller than your full-grown puffin. There were lots of them in the water, but taking a picture was difficult, and made more so by the plentiful whitecaps (it was, I think? a rough day on the water, and at least two of our number succumbed to seasickness while we were journeying from Eastern Egg Rock to the first canyon where whales are known to hang out.)

At Eastern Egg Island, we also saw terns, and eider ducks, and our first of several Giant Sunfish. If you, like me, went fishing when you were a kid, and brought home sunfish for mom to fry up? These are not those.

Onward to the first whale hang out, which -- the whales were not hanging out there yesterday. Cap'n Andy was undeterred, however, and took us out to The Kettle, which is a stretch of startling green water in the middle of what yesterday seemed to be an obsidian ocean.

Disclosure Two: I had expected the whales to be ... closer. Understand that my expectation was based on internet photos of humpback whales amusing themselves by towering over tour boats. We saw no humpbacks, though The Kettle was the place to be yesterday, if you were a fin whale. They stayed at a distance, and a good thing, too, given the size of the things. We all of us topside quickly got very good at spotting spouts. We also saw the odd porpoise or three, and a bunch of shearwaters (shearwaters are birds), who were apparently playing with the whales.

I don't know how long we stayed in The Kettle, but eventually it was time to go back to dock, which we did, full throttle, leaping over the whitecaps. I fear I fell asleep for a bit, the boat was rocking so nicely (please don't tell the folks who got seasick).

My Plan to sit gazing over the rail mostly worked. Early on, someone stepped into the "empty" space at the rail, but they were willing to play "Pretend that I am actually standing there," and even guided a couple other people out of my line of sight. When we got to the Actual Whales, I did have to stand up and physically take over my spot at the rail. The seas were such that this meant I could either hold onto the rail with both hands, or try to take pictures, and lose my phone overboard. This to explain why there are no pictures of spouts, porpoises, or diving whales in the distance.

Random odd things: The woman sitting down-bench, who had a perfectly see-through handbag. I could count the $50 bills, which I'm not sure I would have handled my fifties that way, myself.

One guy came aboard with his two teen kids, one girl, one boy -- it was, in fact, the boy of this family with whom I had the first discussion about the rail. The father talked almost constantly to his daughter, but said nothing -- nothing -- to his son until it was time to debark, and that one quick sentence about not forgetting his jacket.

So -- whale watch. Summing up: A great day to be on the water -- out in the Atlantic, it was chilly enough that I rolled my sleeves down, but I never did put on my hoodie or my gloves. I learned some things, saw some things, and had a day that was different from most of my days. Would do again. After the piggy bank is replenished.

After we debarked, I found myself a nice fish sandwich, some chips, and a Pepsi for lunch, then took a walk around town. It was hot. Even unpleasantly hot. I did find and walk across the footbridge, though I somehow failed to find ice cream. I left the packed full parking lot right around three o'clock, and took Rtes 1, 27, and 37  home, with a smol side trip to Ocean Point before properly getting outta Boothbay.

Pictures, such as they are, here


rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Aaaand home. Very tired. Whale watch was lovely. Water was rough enough to induce seasickness in at least two of our number. I had staked out an end seat on the bench in the back, so I could turn and watch over the rail without having to hang on for dear life. Someone of course immediately stepped into the "empty" space at the rail. Happily, they were able to enter into "Pretend I'm standing right there." When we got to Actual Whales, it got crazy, and I had to stand up. At that point I could either grip the rail and scan for spouts, or lose my phone over the side. I opted to grip and scan.

It was cooler in Boothbay Harbor than here in Central Maine, but by no means cool. I did eat lunch, take a walk across the footbridge and visit a couple shops in town -- including, yes, Enchantments. One place was having a BOGO on sweatshirts and I'm afraid I burst out laughing.

And I think that's all I've got right now.

Everybody have a good evening. I'll check in tomorrow.


(no subject)

Jul. 2nd, 2026 12:45 pm
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
Mom died 12 years ago today.

I forgot to look up her yard site. I probably missed it. My day is already fairly committed. I'm committed to being in a frog suit at the black cat call time 6:45
I doubt I'll be able to dial into a minion at a time that works.

Then again, I guess I probably could dial into Friday evening services tomorrow.

Nadine of Amphipha fame teaching art as protest three today flare, which is just North of National Gallery East wing.

Tomorrow, there will be a frog announcement of an upcoming press conference in which there will be an amicus brief submitted relating to frogs and ecology and the duck pond actually not duck pond reflecting pool.

At 10:00 not 1:00 meeting I can get out to far Virginia easier on Friday as well as it will hopefully be slightly less hot especially in essentially a mobile tent in the Sun

Last night after a late dinner we four adults we're still talking in the hotel lobby and the child was half asleep on the couch. A lady came up to us asking for hugs. Interestingly, one of the guys had noticed her because of the Mickey mouse t-shirt; I had noticed she had barbell piercings under the Mickey mouse t-shirt. But we each gave her hugs and I asked are you okay what's going on she said she didn't want to start crying but she said we lifted her heart and she left.

I am good at farming

Jul. 1st, 2026 10:45 am
unicornduke: (Default)
[personal profile] unicornduke
this morning I broke one of the sprayers in a way that my dad has literally never seen before.

the glass front pressure gauge on the top of the sprayer spontaneously shattered its face about 30 seconds after I turned the pto/pressure on. my dad sprayed with it last night and nothing hit it or was laying on it. I can't find the missing glass chunks anywhere

(I was several feet and facing away and also I wear goggles for mixing chemicals)

so I just capped it and sprayed anyway since we knew the pressure was fine but also 

how

Books read in 2026

Jun. 30th, 2026 02:52 pm
rolanni: (Reading is sexy)
[personal profile] rolanni

38  Alliance of Equals (Korval in Exile #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
37  Dragon in Exile, (Liaden Universe® beginning the Korval In Exile arc), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
36  Soudough, Robin Sloan (e) (bookclub)
35  Necessity's Child (standalone in the Liaden Universe®), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens.
34  Dragon Ship (Theo Waitley #4), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
33  Ghost Ship (Theo Waitley #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
32  Saltation (Theo Waitley #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
31  Fledgling (Theo Waitley #1), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
30  The Talisman Ring, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Joe Jameson
29  A Gentleman Far from Home (Lord Julian 11) Grace Burrowes (e)
28  Black Sheep, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Natalie Simpson
27  Cotillion, Georgette Heyer, narrated by Raj Ghatak
26  Platform Decay, (Murderbot) Martha Wells (e)
25  A Gentleman in Moscow, Amor Towles (e) (bookclub)
24  Fair Trade (Jethri Gobelyn #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Eileen Stevens
23  Ribbon Dance (Liaden Universe #26), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, narrated by Alex Picard
22  Trade Secret (Liaden Universe #17), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller (e)
21  Sea Wrack and Changewind, Sharon Lee, narrated by Alex Picard
20  When the Wolves are Silent (Sebastian St. Cyr #21), C.S. Harris (e)
19  An Heir of Distinction (Bad Heir Days #5), Grace Burrowes (e)
18   Longeye (Fey Duology #2), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller***
17   Duainfey (Fey Duology #1), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller***
16  *Crystal Dragon (Liaden Universe® #10), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
15  *Crystal Soldier (Liaden Universe® #9), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
14  Seeking Persephone (Lancaster Family #1), Sarah M. Eden (e)
13   Theo of Golden, Allen Levi (e) book club
12  *Balance of Trade (Liaden Universe® #8), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
11  *Scout's Progress (Liaden Universe® #6), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
10  *Local Custom, (Liaden Universe® #5), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
9   *I Dare (Liaden Universe® #7), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller**
8   Cuckoo's Egg, C J Cherryh, (audio first time)
7   *Plan B, (Liaden Universe® #4), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
6   Getting Rid of Bradley, Jennifer Crusie (audio first time)
5   *Carpe Diem (Liaden Universe® #3), Sharon Lee & Steve Miller
4   *Conflict of Honors (Liaden Universe® #2), Sharon Lee & Steve    Miller
3   *Agent of Change (Liaden Universe® #1), Sharon Lee & Steve                 Miller
2   A Gentleman in Possession of Secrets (Lord Julian #10), Grace             Burrowes (e)
1   Spilling the Tea in Gretna Green, Linzi Day (e)

________
*I'm doing a straight-through series read in publication order

**I screwed up and moved right on to I Dare from Plan B, therefore deviating from publication order.  I will now amend myself and go back to pick up Local Custom.

***I'll be re-issuing Duainfey and Longeye as an e-omnibus later this year, and so I need to read them!


rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Tuesday. Back to not sleeping well. I did fall deeply asleep around 4 am and woke up again at 8. Does it count as sleeping late if you only got 4 hours of sleep?

Breakfast was oatmeal with raisins and a dab of maple syrup. Steve always used to put maple syrup in his oatmeal, but this was a first for me. It was good. And being as I have maple syrup, still, from Steve's stash, it will be a repeat. Lunch -- is hours away.

Trash and recycling are at the curb. Lawn guy is here doing lawn things. Rook and Tali are helping me here at my desk, where I have some stuff that has to be done this morning (bad planning, me). I do believe another cup of Russian Caravan Tea, the new favorite, is in order.

What else? I need to put gas in the car, and get smol bills at the bank, as I'm warned that tips will be needed on the whale watch (the boys in the basement provide a helpful graphic of tucking a five dollar bill under the whale's belt. Thanks, guys.), and stop at the grocery. I can do all of that except the bank on my way home from needlework, and I can do the bank on my way in. Ta. Da.

I intend to get at least a couple hundred words written today, despite it all, and depending on how long these morning tasks will take me.

Almost done reading Alliance of Equals. I like it. And, as usual, I adore Daav. One does not give the Uncle a coin merely because he asks for it. Indeed. Indeed, one does not.

Also, may I just say -- Shan?  My ghod, Shan.  And to the people said nobody would want books about traders, because traders are boring?  Pfft, I say.  PFFT!  

How're we all holding up today?

Today's lyrics from "The Wellerman," because -- a theme.  Here's a link


Crafting hangout

Jun. 29th, 2026 02:42 pm
unicornduke: (Default)
[personal profile] unicornduke
Hey all, if you'd like to join the crafting hangout, it is tonight from 6-8pm ET!
 
Video encouraged but not required!
 
Topic: Crafting Hangout
Time: Mondays 6:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
 
Join Zoom Meeting
 
Meeting ID: 973 2674 2763

Then I am the King of the Cats!

Jun. 29th, 2026 08:49 am
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Nonsense first.  Back when, I collected retellings of "The King of the Cats."  This one came across my FB feed last night.  I'm not sure the link will work, but on the off-chance:  The King of the Cats
#
I've been needing a lot of extra therapy sessions lately.  Happily, my counselor is flexible:

#

Monday. Sunny and starting to warm up toward our climactic Unsafe Heat Event, scheduled for Thursday.

Plans for the day include calling the peach ripe, cutting it up and having it for breakfast with cottage cheese. Because I can. After, I'll go on back to Steve's office and do some writing.

Yesterday afternoon went pear-shaped. I threw the bedclothes in to wash and the washing machine lost its mind -- it entered the spin cycle, and then would start over with a rinse, over and over and over (the water district sent me a message last night that my water use was 2.5X over the average, and I might have a leak). I finally managed to get a half-spin, and dragged the soggy sheets out to the wooden laundry dryer I'd gotten out of the basement and set up on the (sunny at that point) deck, and -- long story short; everything worked out, but I always feel like it's somehow my fault when stoopid technical stuff happens, and that if Steve were here, it wouldn't have happened.

Which! Is patently wrong, and I can very vividly remember several times when Technology Struck and Steve was standing Right There.

Given the above, I did not attempt to double-string my mobile, but settled down with my ice tea and a book, and then there was the non-thunderstorm, and from there it just all spiraled into an unhappy evening.

Hoping for better today.

I'm about 230 pages into Alliance of Equals, which I recall many people complaining about. So far, I'm finding it much better written than Dragon in Exile, which surprises me, and not at all off-putting. Of course, I don't mind books that jump around, so long as the author makes clear where we are, and so far the author has done so. Well. Maybe it all falls apart at the end. We'll see.

And all that said? I'd best get breakfast and start the day.

What's the weather where you are?

And, for those who are still with me -- here's the rest of the story:


Drive by

Jun. 28th, 2026 08:23 pm
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
I just want to mark that
1) Don Stallone's Memorial yesterday was really amazing. And hopefully I will have time to write more about that later.

2) I am mostly out of the boot but I did not go to Acro today because many reasons.

3) I am still losing to a mouse but I found another placement. Have before that I dealt with. Across the street neighbor had initially offered to bring cats over, but then apparently not. There's still in the middle of moving to Laurel at some point. And I'm sad not to have an across the street neighbor I'm friends with at that point.

3) I'm going mildly crazy trying to figure out how I'm working the end of the week. I had originally had plans in for Virginia, a friend's farm and another friend's Farm actually, but now I'm looking at maybe trying to get back to see the fiasco of fireworks given that they are even closing off a good deal of the river for more barges. But I doubt I can actually get home at that point even though they're not starting the fireworks until at least 10:30.

4) I've been doing a lot of emergency apartment reorganization what with maintenance coming in tomorrow, and I managed to leave my dome light on Tuesday when I parked on the street so a friend could use my spot on Wednesday and I still haven't gotten the car going again. Because.

5) which did mean I was on a bike to try and look at the flyover at 6:30 on Thursday in time to see the Royal Air Force (10 of them) go directly over my head right outside Audi field where I was about to get back on the bike to try and get closer to nats Park and then turn on their smoke and then swirl around and I guess that's when they went over to nats Park to do their real flyover from behind the school board. Which means I had an unique perspective of them filling my vision... And I had not been clever enough to already have the camera open on the phone and failed to get it out in time. Incredibly pissed about this aside from everything else about how I detest this phone so much I need to do something about it

6) the watch and the phone keep losing connection to each other which is incredibly inconvenient, but I don't know if it's the watch or the phone or both so I'm sort of thinking of just getting like a $40 smartwatch which I did not know existed but then what do I do with the sort of working otherwise

7) Nadine is amazing. Otherwise known as Amphifa. Washington Post had a profile on team algae who have been hanging out at the reflecting pond, pool for a while. There was a memorial mass today morning the now absent algae.

There's all sorts of shows that the black cat starting tonight and going through all week. Today was go-go. There's a WrestleMania on Thursday that'll probably involve one belt that involves frogs and the reflecting pool. And there's a whole lot of Civic engagement and lobbying and training and everything else all week during 7 Days in dc. Here's the schedule link: 7DaysInDC.com

Recent Things

Jun. 28th, 2026 01:42 pm
marthawells: Murderbot with helmet (Default)
[personal profile] marthawells
I was traveling for most of June in Spain and the Netherlands, it was awesome, but I am really tired.



* A video interview with me by Jean Marie Ward, from 2019 and never posted until now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bI94yU7J-k


* Story Oracle, a fundraiser for Clarion West: https://www.clarionwest.org/story-oracle/


* ‪This was originally posted a while back and there might be new people who haven’t seen it: Feelings Redacted: What Happens When Murderbot and ART talk to Instagram

https://reactormag.com/feelings-redacted-what-happened-when-murderbot-and-art-talked-to-instagram/


* A short (non-spoilery) podcast interview about Murderbot with Paul and Chris Weitz and Alexander Skarsgard

https://nextbestpicture.com/the-next-best-picture-podcast-interview-with-murderbot-star-alexander-skarsgard-and-writers-directors-executive-producers-chris-paul-weitz/

Half-a-Sunday

Jun. 28th, 2026 11:58 am
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

Sunday. Sunny and warmer than latter days.

This morning's work was going through Kin Right in search of those errors and fixing them. I herewith report progress: One was not an error, merely the time has not yet arrived. The other two ... can be explained, in-world, and therefore are not errors.

The last load of towels is drying and the bedclothes are washing.

I have retired the trade station while Further Thoughts are Thunk.

I believe that I shall, as they say, Take The Rest of the Day Off. Perhaps I shall descend to The Studio and have a go at double-stringing my stars. After that, maybe I'll make a big glass of iced tea and read a book.

Decadence, thy name is Rolanni.

The cats are distributed thusly -- Tali is in the box on the corner of Steve's desk; Firefly is in her Usual Position at the top of Mount Circular Logic, also in Steve's office. Both are napping.

Rookie is curled up on top of the cedar chest in my office. He is -- surprise! -- napping.

They may be on to something.

What are you doing today?

Addendum: Sigh.

<complaint> I am getting Deeply Tired of the folks who are convinced that every piece of writing that's come out since Steve died is a "wrap up," or "the final." We're not at The Final yet, right? I'll tell you when.</complaint>


January 2026

S M T W T F S
     123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 9th, 2026 04:45 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios