Not “Only Connect”
Saturday, 30 January 2021

Murky day, so I strolled and contemplated…this and that rather than focusing on something…substantial.

Nandina and mahonia. For example.
Far more exciting than one-foot-in-front-of-the-other. Possibly?
Saturday, 30 January 2021

Murky day, so I strolled and contemplated…this and that rather than focusing on something…substantial.

Nandina and mahonia. For example.
Far more exciting than one-foot-in-front-of-the-other. Possibly?
Friday, 29 January 2021

I imprinted on my Midwestern childhood weather patterns and January is not supposed to have pleasant, warm, sunny days. Warm meaning over 50°F. [Ah, yes, below freezing overnight…that fits.]

However, I try to work (huffing and puffing, I admit) against type and accept my present reality. With blooms! And a t-shirt as I do my (present goal) 4mi walks.
Sarcasm is tricky even face-to-face. Recorded pundits struggle to make it work…without ambiguity. In text, in the written word, perhaps even more tricky. I bow to reality…and I very much enjoyed today’s weather. Without any Brexit BS involved. heh
Thursday, 28 January 2021

Stiff wind and I was nearby, so I deemed it safe enough to visit the BeltLine…not many people, and MaNachur was moving any and all germs right along, away from meeee….

I only traversed two short blocks…which was enough to remind me what I’ve been missing…the many public art installations along the route! I am uplifted!
Wednesday, 27 January 2021

Currently binge-watching “Lupin,” which has nothing to do with flowers.
Picture…is it thyme? Or not-thyme?
Tuesday, 26 January 2021

Heavy rain struck in the wee hours, with thunder booms, enough noise to awaken us.
Daytime, no rain. 😘
Prediction overnight: another wave of rain. 🌧
I’m expecting to awaken again…yawn. 🥱
Monday, 25 January 2021

I came across this…”ten million trillion trillion” and mentally stopped dead.
Finding phages is not in itself particularly challenging: they are by far the most abundant biological entities on earth. According to one estimate, there are ten million trillion trillion phages, which is more than every other organism, including bacteria, combined. The average teaspoon of seawater holds five times more phages than there are people in Rio de Janeiro; for every grain of sand in the world, there are a trillion phages. But the best place to find phage that will kill drug-resistant bacteria is where people or animals have shed them—in other words, sewage.
That’s a gigantic number—actually, exceeding an “order of magnitude” greater than gigantic….
Quote is from “When a Virus Is the Cure,” by Nicola Twilley, in the December 21, 2020 issue of “The New Yorker,” and dated December 14, 2020. [This link may work.]
Sunday, 24 January 2021

I walked past this wall a time or two…then I began to cross the street when I came to it because it seemed a bit…menacing. Now I see that specialists have been called in to remedy the excessive lean/destabilization.
Is this sequence/situation a metaphor for the White House?
Saturday, 23 January 2021

I found today’s sunlight almost summer-ish in its intensity. Here’s a backlit leaf, although it’s hard to tell that’s what it is.
Friday, 22 January 2021

Not a today-photo.
Ebullient Anthony Fauci talking to RMaddow in front of my eyeballs right now. It is a good thing.
Thursday, 21 January 2021

Drippy kinda day…yet I managed to get out between waves of mistiness and showers. We’re in the floral doldrums, and this droplet bedecked blossom is brilliant amidst the drab brown.