Growin' Blog

Gardenin', fishin', bikin', librarianin'. And migratin'

11.27.2007

The push

Now comes the school stretch. As pleasant as Thanksgiving weekend was, there were two trips to campus for information supplies and an afternoon spent at the Goat. I had a goal of having the rough draft of my term paper done on Sunday, but it was left woefully incomplete. Yesterday I worked on it for an hour before work, and then from 5 until 10 at the office. I stayed because I kept hoping to finish and turn my attention back to the illustrations, which I've been scanning out of atlases. I STILL didn't finish.

I fairly collapsed when I got home. I thought my bike ride would give me at least a half hour of energy to work on it. Nope. Part of the problem is that I have little investment in the topic of the paper. It's really hard to write when you're not interested in the topic anymore. Don't get me wrong--the fire class has been really interesting. Writing the paper, however, has not.

11.24.2007

Giving thanks for dead birds

We had our feast on Friday as people were driving down I-5 on Thursday. The PDX portion of the family has a retail worker, so J delayed her trip by a day. It gave us a chance to work on homework for the first part of Thursday (including a trip to the office to use the big scanner and snag a couple books). Late Thanksgiving night I put the bird in a brine of pineapple sage, bay leaf, and apple cider. Yesterday morning I got to work as everyone else went to breakfast. The menu:


  • The turkey
    which came out great. The first time I stuck the thermometer in, it was at the perfect temperature. Moist and well-salted, the only problem was that the skin didn't get a chance to brown because I left the bird covered the whole 3.5 hours. I put it under the broiler for a few minutes, but that didn't really satisfy.

  • Cornbread stuffing
    which was added to the family when my mother, who was a home ec teacher for years, taught in an African-American high school. They told her, apparently in no uncertain terms, that she left several key dishes off of the menu when planning the Thanksgiving feast. Hence, we've been having cornbread stuffing ever since. I made mine with canned green chilis in the cornbread, and added eggs to the stuffing for the first time. They added some nice body to the mix.

  • Mashed potatoes
    naturally. We may have gone without, but a special chanterelle gravy was made for the token vegetarian. She shared, and it was awesome. The mushroom juice was leftover from the roasted chanterelles we based a risotto on several weeks ago. The shrooms themselves were gathered by neighbors. The vegetarian raved (and shared too).

  • Beet and potato gratin
    with swiss cheese and gleaned rosemary from down the block. No one in Eugene should ever buy a $2 plastic pack of rosemary.

  • Glazed carrots
    with just a touch of balsamic vinegar. Not quite sure where I picked this one up.

  • Chard and leeks
    a 2 minutes veggie side that we picked up from neighbors of said mushrooms. L has fallen in love with it and requests it every winter.

  • Apple salad
    with pomegranate and candied pecans.

  • Pumpkin pie



All this was served on new china and eaten with Grandma Jablonski's silver, which was mailed just last week. The Christmas tablecloth sort of camouflaged the whole arrangement, so the photos don't really tell the story. But it was a lovely dinner. None of the nieces misbehaved. And we ended the evening much, much later after hours of visiting.

11.21.2007

Dating Japanese maps

Here's one for the map librarians out there. (And probably for catalogers too!)

Japanese maps typically have dates on them that use the reign of the sitting emperor for the year. So 昭和25年 would be the 25th year of Showa, aka Hirohito. Since he took office in 1926 (year 1), a map showing the above date would be from 1950.

This all comes up because it turns out I can read numbers and dates in Japanese now too. Pretty cool eh?

11.20.2007

Present spoiler

If you're Jake, don't read this before Friday.

Anyway, a little tear came to my eye last night when I went to Barnes & Noble to seek out birthday presents for my 10-year-old nephew. They don't really discriminate between children and young adult--they just have a section called 'Young Readers' that is labeled 8-12.

What got me all choked up is that prominently displayed was Lois Lawry's The Giver. I just read that about 2 years ago, and it's a fantastic book. My immediate inclination was to take it up to the desk and ask if it's really appropriate for a 10-year-old. They confirmed it's standard reading. And the Newbery prize stamp attests to the same. Granted, I'm not a daily part of Jake's life, so maybe this shouldn't come as such a surprise. But still--it's a serious book, and I haven't really thought of him as a serious reader yet.

11.12.2007

Inventory: 1st day

Mondays suck this quarter. There's only 3 hours scheduled to be unstructured to start with, and today that got sucked away pretty thoroughly by GIS Day preparations. (Happy Geography Awareness Week by the way.)

Anyway: it was a regular 9.5 hour day at the office, with a 1.25 hour evening professional meeting (I gave an interview for a colleague who has a column in a library journal) and a half hour of mixed work-personal email after that. Call half of that business and you get an 11 hour day.

11.11.2007

Cosmic confluences

Let's take a break from our time-task inventory to talk about the weekend.

Friday night I did a little bit of that web surfing that the kids are all talking about. I checked in with a few blogs of friends and then, before turning in for the night, went through some old favorites. A hometown writer, who was recommended by Kramer, is still at it. As I have always enjoyed his recommendations, I usually take a close look at his blogroll. What did I see? A link to this China blog that AZK recommended a couple months before I left for China.

Now how does that happen? And how am I supposed to describe those degrees of separation? Is it a loop? Is it a directed-node graph with me being a double parent? Or am I a convergence point in this network?

All this is perhaps in mind because I've been playing around with Facebook a bit and saw a neat-o keen Flash application that puts all your friends in a circle and maps them to each other. I got pretty sucked in.

So I started this by saying I would talk about the weekend a bit. This afternoon we took a little walk in the Coast Range with the 新朋友 and guests from Seattle. In the car on the way up, I was asked "how do you spend your weekends?" I wound up talking about chores and studying and just a bit about gardening. How boring I am.

So tonight I decided to come out to the Goat (where I am right now) and do my studying. I plowed through about 50 pages of my fire ecology textbook, and an article that I have some serious questions about. And to top it all off and make me all multi-task-y, this counts as entertainment too! Because after about an hour they started re-arranging the furniture for a show. First act: a solo singer, violist, accordian player. Very nice. (And face painted!) Now we're finishing up the second act--who I think I've seen here before. Accoustic duo (I love the accoustic bass guitar) with a singer with a pleasantly scratchy voice. And both have been talking up the headliner (one more song to go!) from PDX.

So a few minutes ago I decided to switch from coffee to beer (because really, there's only so much coffee you can drink in a night) and stick around for a few more songs. And here's where the recreational part really kicks in: the Goat hasn't always had beer. So I'm perusing the list and OMFG: they've got Lakefront. WTF? So now dear reader, I am sharing with you yet another cosmic confluence of events: Eugene bands (complete with spinny dancing and a face-painted accordionist) and a fine Milwaukee beer. How do I find myself in these situations?