(It's happened again: tadpoles growing on the beach. This time it's a brackish puddle by the headlands. I don't know if frogs breeding in this dangerous, inhospitable zone is new, or I just never noticed it before.)
Wednesday, 22 July 2015
WW: Tadpoles again
Thursday, 16 July 2015
Summer Trip

Here's a really now happening, courtesy of the Rusty Ring Experience:
- Type the word "psychedelic" in Google Search.
- Press Enter. (Some browsers do this automatically.)
- At the top of the search results page, click on "Images".
- Like, groove, baby!
Word up to all my fellow survivors of the 70s. Keep on truckin'.
(I wonder, if I replaced my desk lamp with a blacklight...)
(Artwork courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous artist.)
(I wonder, if I replaced my desk lamp with a blacklight...)
(Artwork courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and a generous artist.)
Topics:
game,
July,
psychedelic trip,
the 70s,
The Rusty Ring Art Gallery
Wednesday, 15 July 2015
Thursday, 9 July 2015
Rock Groups 2015

Time again for the yearly crop of Awesome Rock Groups Waiting To Happen. Same rules as ever:
- Anybody who wants one of these can have it. There is no trademark, copyright, or grigri on any of them.
- Remember that people often steal my names without telling me, or even waiting for me to think of them. So vet any you want carefully to make sure someone else isn't already that.
- All clients of mine (which you become the moment you assume one of these identities) are entitled to tell everyone that they were named by a Zen hermit monk.
Where a name suggests a possible genre I've included that information as a serving suggestion.
So.
Rock Groups 2015
The Next of Kin
Antofagasta (Spanish rock)
The Blacks (political rap)
Y2K
Massive Transit
Under Where
Взвод
Notochord
Flags of the World
Referendum
Hoe
Fork
Gravesend (English folk rock)
Finisterre (Celtic rock)
Crabapple (American roots rock)
Umlaut (without one; irony-parsing metal group)
Goana (Oz group)
The HouseMartians
Polysynthetic (electronica)
The Caecilian Mafia
Man Ray
Left For Dead
Squeegee
Earthpig
Zoot Suit Riot (hot brass'n'sax swing)
Morticia (emo girl group)
Tucúquere (Andean roots rock)
Chompipe (Guatemalan roots rock)
Zopilote (Mexican roots rock)
Chew
The Axes of Evil
Urban Renewal (Motown revival group)
Kleever
Cheap Meet
Camouflage (alt country)
Whammy Bar
Too Wellington
Back 40 (rockabilly)
Jigsaw
The Virtual Uninhabitants
Bomb Vomit
Gregory Go Boom
Lothar and the Hill People
Tumour Spoon
No Jump Julie (Seattle sound)
Bluegill (country)
Watermelon (psychedelic)
Sundial
Titular Lizard
Biff Blake and the Parasitic WASPs
(Photo courtesy of Kathy Reed and Wikimedia Commons.)
Wednesday, 8 July 2015
WW: Ironically good news
(When I was a kid, there were no sea otters on this coast. At all. They'd disappeared completely by the 1920s, relentlessly exterminated to the last individual by trappers. In the 1970s, they came under federal law, and today killing a sea otter, or even possessing so much as a bone, carries a crushing fine and/or ten years in prison. And lo, some days ago I found this on the beach. I'd heard rumours they were out there again. I don't know what killed this one, but it wasn't a trap or a rifle. So as I've often noticed, environmental regulation works. From the bald eagles that have gone from oddity to pest, to oil-free sand, to the now-rarity of dead birds and marine mammals on the tidelands, the beach is visibly better off than it was when I was a boy.)
UPDATE, 9 July 2015: Evidently this is not an isolated incident. Experts don't know why sea otters (and other marine mammals) are washing up on the North Coast in unusual numbers this summer. They first suspected domoic acid, a toxin that builds up in clams this time of year, due to a seasonal algae bloom, but now they seem to have written that off. Nevertheless I've noticed a remarkable number of dead razor clams in the surf of late. And sea otters live on clams. Anyway, the story is here.
UPDATE, 9 July 2015: Evidently this is not an isolated incident. Experts don't know why sea otters (and other marine mammals) are washing up on the North Coast in unusual numbers this summer. They first suspected domoic acid, a toxin that builds up in clams this time of year, due to a seasonal algae bloom, but now they seem to have written that off. Nevertheless I've noticed a remarkable number of dead razor clams in the surf of late. And sea otters live on clams. Anyway, the story is here.
Thursday, 2 July 2015
Hermitcraft: Beach Peas
We're at the height of beach pea (Lathyrus japonicus) season here at the top of the planet, and that means I'm eating them by the fistful. They're common – in fact, ubiquitous – on my beach, and I gather them up on walks to toss into soups, sauces, and salads, or just shell and eat sur place.Seeds that can survive five years in seawater have made beach peas native to virtually every shore north of the Equator, and a hearty willingness to grow elsewhere has seen them introduced to many southern ones as well. Their vines and fruit bear a marked resemblance to the domestic sort (Pisum sativum, late L. oleraceus), to which they are closely related. Their flowers too are very like those of garden pea, but striking lavender, blue, or violet. (Sweet pea [L. odoratus] is another close relative.) The pods are generally smaller and heavier than the garden variety, and the peas inside tiny by comparison. These don't reach harvestable size until overripe, and so have the waxy texture and slightly copper-penny taste of past-due garden peas. Not the tender sweetness we associate with their tame cousins,
but entirely acceptable. They also have the notable advantage over most wild greens of coming on all summer long, so that the harvest window is months, rather than days.As a wild food, beach peas catch their due portion of Chicken Little trolling, invoking in this case the spectre of lathyrism. Nervous readers may be assured that the chemical cause of that disease is meagre in beach peas, and leaches readily out in cooking; that you'd have to eat masses of shot-like peas over masses of time to present symptoms; that like scurvy, pellagra, beriberi, and other maladies of nutritional extremity, lathyrism cannot be contracted casually; and finally, that I have eaten these things all my life, both raw and cooked, in conventional quantities, and my butt still works. (See the Wikipedia entry linked above.) Always remember: any food can be proved "poisonous" by a determined crank. If you don't bring some reason to the table, you'll starve to death.
Any road. If you're around beach peas, toss some into something. They make for pleasant collecting, and welcome variety.
Topics:
beach,
hermit practice,
hermitcraft,
summer,
wild edibles
Wednesday, 1 July 2015
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