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The Madwoman of Menotomy
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Magic Meme

Date and Time  - Mar. 28th, 2008, 02:59 pm

Current Mood  - mellow mellow
Current Music  - Dead Can Dance - Song of the Stars
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Snowy Night in Menotomy

Date and Time  - Jan. 15th, 2008, 12:14 pm

Current Mood  - okay okay
Current Music  - budgies in conference

arlington town hall in the snowy night
+12 )


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Free Crow Mood Theme

Date and Time  - Jan. 2nd, 2008, 11:39 am

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - budgies and tiels in conference

Crow Mood Theme
crow surprised
crow angry
crow awake
surprisedangryawake


intrustions for use )


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Shoveling Again

Date and Time  - Dec. 16th, 2007, 10:19 am

Current Mood  - groggy groggy
Current Music  - air purifier

Woke up about an hour ago, had a bowl of creamy mushroom soup and went outside to start shoveling. The snow had turned to sleet by the time I got out there. A good 5 inches of the mix, mostly loose snow, was on the ground.

I got some pictures of one of the dark-eyed juncos that have been hanging around yesterday, but the sun had went down too far to get good exposures. I'm going to try again Monday. Without my birding camera, I have to be sneaky to get close enough for a good shot. Sneaky in this case means feeding them on fenceless fenceposts near the window.

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Free Daffodil Wallpaper

Date and Time  - Nov. 13th, 2007, 04:01 pm

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - Cindytalk - Dream Ritual
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How to Deal with Cockroaches

Date and Time  - Nov. 5th, 2007, 09:57 am

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - air purifier

From the The Universal Household Assistant or What Every One Should Know (1884):

   Cockroaches — ways to destroy. — 1. The disagreeable odor which the cockroach emits, and which soon permeates all places that it inhabits, proceeds from a dark colored fluid which it discharges from the mouth. The cockroach loves warmth and moisture, hence its populousness in kitchens where fire and water are almost ever present. It is a night prowler, and swarms out from its secret lairs on the departure of daylight.
   For the destruction of the cockroach we recommend a mixture containing a tablespoonful of red lead, the same amount of indian meal, with molasses enough to make a thick batter. Set this on a plate at night in places frequented by the insects and all that eat of it will be poisoned. Another preparation is composed of one teaspoonful of powdered arsenic, with a tablespoonful of mashed potato. Crumble this every night at bed-time where the insects will find it, and it is said to be an effectual poison. Great care should be exercised in the use of such dangerous agents. An innocent method of destroying cockroaches is to place a bowl or basin containing a little molasses on the floor at night. A bit of wood, resting one end on the floor and the other on the edge of the vessel, serves as a bridge to conduct the insects to the sweet deposit. Once in the trap its slippery sides prevent retreat, and thus cockroaches may be caught by the thousands.
   2. The following i said to be effectual: these vermin are easily destroyed, simply by cutting up green cucumbers at night, and placing them about where roaches commit depredations. What is cut from the cucumbers in preparing them for the table answers the purpose as well, and three applications will destroy all the roaches in the house. Remove the peelings in the morning and renew them at night.
   3. Common red wafers, to be found at any stationers, will answer the purpose. The cockroaches eat them and die. Also, sprinkle powdered borax plentifully around where "they most do congregate," and renew it occasionally; in a short time not a roach will be seen. This is a safe and most effectual exterminator.
   4. Borax is a very good cockroach exterminator. Take some pieces of board, spread them over with molasses, only sufficient to make the borax when sprinkled upon it stick, and place the boards in their haunts. Gum camphor is a speedy remedy to clear the house of cockroaches.


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Things to Try

Date and Time  - Oct. 30th, 2007, 02:09 pm

Current Mood  - blank blank
Current Music  - Mazzy Star - Mary of Silence

From the The Universal Household Assistant or What Every One Should Know (1884):

   Things to try. — Try popcorn for nausea.
   Try cranberries for malaria.
   Try a sun-bath for rheumatism.
   Try ginger ale for stomach cramps.
   Try clam broth for a weak stomach.
   Try cranberry poultice for erysipelas.
   Try a wet towel to the back of the neck when sleepless.
   Try swallowing saliva when troubled with sour stomach.
   Try eating fresh radishes and yellow turnips for gravel.
   Try eating onions and horseradish to relieve dropsical swellings.
   Try buttermilk for removal of freckles, tan, and butternut stains.
   Try taking your cod liver oil in tomato catsup, if you want to make it palatable.
   Try hard cider -- a wine-glass three times a day -- for ague and rheumatism.
   Try taking a nap in the afternoon if you are going to be out late in the evening.
   Try breathing the fumes of turpentine or carbolic acid to remove whooping cough.
   Try a cloth wrung out from cold water put about the neck at night for sore throat.
   Try snuffing powdered borax up the nostrils for catarrhal "cold in the head."
   Try walking with your hands behind you if you find yourself becoming bent forward.
   Try a silk handkerchief over the face when obliged to go against a cold piercing wind.
   Try planting sunflowers in your garden if compelled to live in a malarial district.


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Two Trips to Mount Auburn

Date and Time  - Oct. 21st, 2007, 07:06 pm

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - budgies in conference

I've been to Mount Auburn Cemetery twice this weekend. Yesterday, I went with Ila. We walked up the winding paths and climbed to the top of the tower. The sky was overcast, which served to deepen the reds, gold and purple that extended to the horizon in one directions and to the Boston skyline in the other.

Today, Skye had her bi-weekly lupron shot. After the shot, [info]purpleglitter and I took her to Mount Auburn. This time we drove to the tower, and I walked Skye to the top. Today was sunny and bright and Skye was treated to what some have called the best view on the continent. She loved every minute of it up there. Skye in the sky.

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Saint Paul's Cemetery in Autumn

Date and Time  - Oct. 19th, 2007, 12:50 pm

Current Mood  - groggy groggy
Current Music  - Cindytalk - Through Flowers

spiderwebs on the fence of saint paul's cemetery
+5 )


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Autumn Birds at Arlington Reservoir

Date and Time  - Oct. 7th, 2007, 07:30 pm

Current Mood  - cheerful cheerful
Current Music  - lake humming my funny valentine

My birding camera is still giving me a lot of grief. I'll get it working only to lose power again in less than a minute. I'm more and more convinced the problem is internal, and the prospects of getting it fixed anytime soon are dim. Even so, I was able to get a few shots with it at the Arlington Reservoir today.

canada geese in flight
+3 )


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50 Years in Space

Date and Time  - Oct. 4th, 2007, 12:51 pm

Current Mood  - blank blank
Current Music  - budgies in conference

The USSR launched Sputnik 50 years ago today, starting the space age.

Poll #1065940
Open to: All, results viewable to: All

In the next 50 years, humans will...

View Answers

set foot back on Luna.
7 (35.0%)

set foot on Mars.
7 (35.0%)

set foot on another planet or moon.
2 (10.0%)

establish a strong civilian presence in space.
6 (30.0%)

establish a lunar base.
8 (40.0%)

establish a base on mars.
5 (25.0%)

establish a colony off earth.
5 (25.0%)

detect gravitational waves.
7 (35.0%)

mine an asteroid.
5 (25.0%)

begin terraforming Mars.
1 (5.0%)

be capable of interstellar travel.
3 (15.0%)

be capable of faster than light travel.
1 (5.0%)

detect extraterrestrial life.
4 (20.0%)

detect an earth-like planet.
9 (45.0%)

make contact with an extraterrestrial civilization.
3 (15.0%)

not advanced much father than they have already.
7 (35.0%)

kill themselves off.
7 (35.0%)



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Household Hints

Date and Time  - Oct. 4th, 2007, 10:54 am

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - air purifier

From the The Universal Household Assistant or What Every One Should Know (1884):

   Household Hints. — Do not deposit wood ashes in a wooden vessel or upon a wooden floor.
   Never use a light in examining a gas-meter.
   Never take a light into a closet.
   Never read in bed by candle or lamp light.
   Never put kindling wood on top of the stove to dry.
   Never leave clothes near a grate or fire-place to dry.
   Be careful in making fire with shavings, and never user any kind of oil to kindle a fire.
   Keep all lights as far from curtains as possible.
   Always fill and trim your lamps by daylight, and never near a fire.
   Good nice pie-crust can be made by always observing the following rule. One-quarter of a cup of shortening to every cup of flour used; to be mixed as dry as possible with cold water, and mixed only with a knife.
   Take sweet butter only for baking purposes, and never fail to thoroughly beat together your butter and sugar, if you would be sure of good results in cake baking.
   Have metal or earthen vessels for matches, and keep them out of reach of children. Wax matches are not safe.
   Ground mustard mixing with a little water is an excellent agent for cleansing the hands after handling odorous substances.
   Cut hot bread or cake with a hot knife, and it will not be clammy.
   Salt extracts the juices of meat in cooking. Steaks ought therefore not be salted until they have been broiled.
   In boiling dumplings of any kind, put them in the water one at a time. If they are put in together they will mix with each other.
   Do not cut lamp-wicks, but trim them by wiping off with a scrap of paper.
   Never boil vegetables with soup stock, for if you do it will certainly become sour in a short time.
   Boil your cream for coffee, and see if the coffee will not taste better, as well as keep hot longer.
   Pin-cushion covers made of cheese cloth embroidered and trimmed with lace, wear well and keep their looks.
   Some one says that leaves of parsley, eaten with a little vinegar, will destroy the odor of breath tainted by onions.
   Hot liquid lye is recommended for removing obstructions in waste pipes. Or let the potash dissolve over night in the pipes.
   To wipe dust from papered walls, take a clean, soft piece of flannel. Of course it must not be damp, but the dry flannel will remove the dust.
   Varnish the soles of your shoes, and it will render them impervious to dampness, and will also make them last longer. This is a good plan.
   Clean the mica in stove doors with vinegar. Take clinkers out of stoves by putting a few oyster shells into the grate, when they will become loosened, and may be removed without injuring the lining.
   Save the droppings from spermaceti candles, tie them in a cloth, and keep to smooth rough flat-irons.
   Never starch napkins.
   An old black bunting or cashmere dress may be made to serve a further period of usefulness by being made into a petticoat.
   Between two evils choose neither.
   Writing a will does not shorten life, and yet many men fear it will.
   Save old suspender rings, and sew them on the corners of kitchen holders to hang them by. It will be easy then to flip them on to a nail, and they will not be so likely to get lost.
   Powdered borax with a little sugar, blown into the cracks and crevices with a small bellows, will drive away house-ants.
   Have a high stool in the kitchen to sit on when tired, to continue your work if necessary. Perched on its top you can wash dishes or iron with ease. A low stool placed on a wooden chair forms a substitute, but a poor one. A soft sheep-skin mat is restful to stand upon.
   There is nothing better for cleaning brass or copper than coal ashes. They are also good to scour knives and forks with. For tin, whiting or fine sand is best.
   To cleanse jars or jugs or any earthen vessel slaked lime is good, or warmed lye.
   To keep a stove smooth, take a coarse and pretty large piece of flannel, roll it hard, and dip it in fine sand. Proceed to rub your stove whenever you are through cooking. Almost any stove will look better for being done the same way occasionally. Boiled starch is also very good to keep a stove looking well; put it on where it will not burn off — around the back and sides where it doesn't get very hot.


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Free One Pass Icons

Date and Time  - Oct. 3rd, 2007, 03:11 pm

Current Mood  - blank blank
Current Music  - Poe - Haunted

These icons play their animations only once. Some return to their initial states, others remain changed after the animation has played out.

angel icon from the angel art of lake rain vajra    sunset    melting leonardo da vinci's mona lisa    past and future

angel icon from the angel art of lake rain vajra    blessed by the sun    shattered angel    dilating eye

dilating eye    dilating eye    dilating eye    dilating eye


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The Washington Elm

Date and Time  - Sep. 25th, 2007, 04:57 pm

Current Mood  - chipper chipper
Current Music  - Changelings - Melusine

I took these pictures of the Washington Elm in Cambridge Common last week while I was sitting under it with Jeff last week. It is the same tree which General George Washington stood under when he took command of the Continental army in 1775. That old tree has seen a lot in its time.

washington elm
+1 )


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Free Looping History Icon

Date and Time  - Aug. 13th, 2007, 10:43 am

Current Mood  - awake awake
Current Music  - REM - It's the End of the World...

looping history


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Humans

Date and Time  - Jun. 29th, 2007, 03:41 pm

Current Mood  - discontent discontent
Current Music  - HIM - Join Me in Death

Last week, [info]purpleglitter and I found that the landlord at her old place had murdered a nest of starlings, ripping apart the nest and throwing the babies down to the ground like they were worthless. Just getting their down in, eyes never opened. They never saw the sun. We buried them in the back.

Today, the tree cutters came to the back yard here. Supposedly just to cut the branches overhanging the neighbor's, they instead cut main branches which may have had one or two subbranches overhanging the neighbor's yard, but most of which were not over the fence at all. Renting, I have no real control over any of this.

I don't understand the reason people need heavily nitrogenated death-yards. "Kill everything but grass. A dandelion! Kill it! Kill it! No flowers here! Nature is just weeds. Throw on more chemicals on... pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer... everything! It surely won't run off anywhere. Must have that perfect patch of stale green nothing, because lord knows if anything wild and free grows it'll be anarchy! Nature is ugly and must be controlled, but oh yeah, save the rain forests — nature is only ugly if it's where I can see it."

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