Bookmarque’s Padded Cell 2024 - Shock Therapy (1)
This is a continuation of the topic Bookmarque’s Padded Cell 2023 - It’s a kind of madness (2).
This topic was continued by Bookmarque’s Padded Cell 2024 - Shock Therapy (2).
TalkThe Green Dragon
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1Bookmarque
Welcome to the Undisciplined Reading Room!
2024 is the 10th year I’ve had a personal thread and although I haven’t been as active on it as in years past, I appreciate all the camaraderie and silliness of the GD. Now that we have a better charts and graphs page, you can click this link to have an idea of what I am into for listening and reading (but as usual, exhaustive info will be coming) -
https://www.librarything.com/stats/Bookmarque/overview
You can find my previous threads here if you want to catch up on past insanity.
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
I still participate in the Annual Books Read in lists so here they are (a list of lists!) -
Books read 2023
Books read 2022
Books read 2021
Books read 2020
Books read 2019
Books read 2018
Books read 2017
Books read 2016
Books read 2015
Books read 2014
My thread tends to be photo heavy since I am a photographer and am usually out in all seasons although lately it’s been stick season (no snow at all!!) and so I’ve been uninspired. Instead I’ve dusted off my jewelry benches and have gone back to creating modern designs in sterling silver & gemstones.
In the last couple of years I've dived headlong into audio dramas and so the number of actual "books" I've been reading has gone down. Plus I've also gotten more into shooting video and editing that takes up time as well as processing regular photos. Phew! So much for being retired.


So here goes another year in the pub!
2024 is the 10th year I’ve had a personal thread and although I haven’t been as active on it as in years past, I appreciate all the camaraderie and silliness of the GD. Now that we have a better charts and graphs page, you can click this link to have an idea of what I am into for listening and reading (but as usual, exhaustive info will be coming) -
https://www.librarything.com/stats/Bookmarque/overview
You can find my previous threads here if you want to catch up on past insanity.
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
I still participate in the Annual Books Read in lists so here they are (a list of lists!) -
Books read 2023
Books read 2022
Books read 2021
Books read 2020
Books read 2019
Books read 2018
Books read 2017
Books read 2016
Books read 2015
Books read 2014
My thread tends to be photo heavy since I am a photographer and am usually out in all seasons although lately it’s been stick season (no snow at all!!) and so I’ve been uninspired. Instead I’ve dusted off my jewelry benches and have gone back to creating modern designs in sterling silver & gemstones.
In the last couple of years I've dived headlong into audio dramas and so the number of actual "books" I've been reading has gone down. Plus I've also gotten more into shooting video and editing that takes up time as well as processing regular photos. Phew! So much for being retired.


So here goes another year in the pub!
3clamairy
Happy New Year & New Thread. And Happy Reading in 2024!

I obviously found this online, but you deserve an awesome pic, and I am not the person who can create it.

I obviously found this online, but you deserve an awesome pic, and I am not the person who can create it.
6Meredy
Here's to another great reading year and thread. Thanks for all the beautiful visual art distributed here and elsewhere.
9Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. If it would snow I'd be out there, but alas, bare ground. There are tons of Trumpeter swans on the river out back, but they're a few hundred yards away on the opposite bank. Uncooperative birds.
It's chart and statistics time. Yay!!
I "read" 122 "books" this year. Have to use the quotation marks because a lot of what I consumed were audio dramas or audio books. For that reason I broke out a new category in my tracking that I'll get to later. For openers, here's how the year went -

And because I brought up format, here's the breakdown there -

The strong audio trend continues and physical books are at an all time low -

Not sure how long this will continue, but it's like this now and I don't feel at all bad about it. What I listen to makes me happy and suits my life in terms of the other stuff I do like photo and video editing, chores, workouts and jewelry making.
It's chart and statistics time. Yay!!
I "read" 122 "books" this year. Have to use the quotation marks because a lot of what I consumed were audio dramas or audio books. For that reason I broke out a new category in my tracking that I'll get to later. For openers, here's how the year went -

And because I brought up format, here's the breakdown there -

The strong audio trend continues and physical books are at an all time low -

Not sure how long this will continue, but it's like this now and I don't feel at all bad about it. What I listen to makes me happy and suits my life in terms of the other stuff I do like photo and video editing, chores, workouts and jewelry making.
10Sakerfalcon
Happy New Year and Happy New Thread! I'm looking forward to more gorgeous photos and book talk here!
11mattries37315
Happy New Year and Happy New Thread! Fun fact, last year was my first time I posted in the "Book Read in 20.." list, planning to do so again this year.
12Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Glad you're joining us on the Books Read in List. It's kind of fun to see what floats to the top and to see if you and anyone else are reading the same thing.
Here's my category buckets for genre -

And LT's estimation -

I had to put the totals there manually in the screenshot since the function doesn't exist despite my begging. They're pretty close. Recent non-fiction is dumb though and I wish we didn't have to have it in our information. It's meaningless.
Here's my category buckets for genre -

And LT's estimation -

I had to put the totals there manually in the screenshot since the function doesn't exist despite my begging. They're pretty close. Recent non-fiction is dumb though and I wish we didn't have to have it in our information. It's meaningless.
13Bookmarque
I mean to write about this when I first noticed it, but somehow failed. Not surprising, but if you take a look at the Audible Plus catalog you'll notice this -

Check the narrator.
It's a large language model reader for audio books. I hesitate to say AI because that's not what it is, but I think that's how it's announced when you click the sample.
For the most part, it's not noticeable that it isn't a person/actor. Mostly the nuances and pauses, pronunciation and cadence sounds right and normal. Mostly. I think that for most books this could be ok, especially if it's older or there isn't money to hire a professional. Certainly this would be preferable to some authors reading their own work. But not always and I wonder how this is going to affect how books get narrated or read in the future.
So far I've sampled a few and they're all women, some too breathy and weird, but others ok. There seems to be just a few voices so the narration is exactly the same for everything it's used for. There was one with an English accent, but the others I've heard are American accents. Mainly the books are very genre (romance, fantasy, etc) and seem to be "women's books", but I haven't investigated that far. Anyone else see this? Have you listened to one? How did it go if you did? Maybe you didn't know!

Check the narrator.
It's a large language model reader for audio books. I hesitate to say AI because that's not what it is, but I think that's how it's announced when you click the sample.
For the most part, it's not noticeable that it isn't a person/actor. Mostly the nuances and pauses, pronunciation and cadence sounds right and normal. Mostly. I think that for most books this could be ok, especially if it's older or there isn't money to hire a professional. Certainly this would be preferable to some authors reading their own work. But not always and I wonder how this is going to affect how books get narrated or read in the future.
So far I've sampled a few and they're all women, some too breathy and weird, but others ok. There seems to be just a few voices so the narration is exactly the same for everything it's used for. There was one with an English accent, but the others I've heard are American accents. Mainly the books are very genre (romance, fantasy, etc) and seem to be "women's books", but I haven't investigated that far. Anyone else see this? Have you listened to one? How did it go if you did? Maybe you didn't know!
14littlegeek
>13 Bookmarque: I swear the audio book I'm listening to is AI, although it claims to be a person. It's uncanny valleyish and weird. I'm considering DNFing it.
15clamairy
>13 Bookmarque: Oh. I will have sample some of these...
16Bookmarque
Yeah, I'm not sure how an artificial human will do for long periods. I think the verbal subtleties of a real voice are something we notice the absence of. People are so attuned to this kind of thing that it might be grating to listen to an artificial human for long (Bishop aside).
So more juicy stats and charts for you. Most of the media I got through was audio and here's how it went -



New authors only get that status for the first title then move to repeats after so some of the new ones were only for a moment. I got into a few new series like some of the Dresden Files comics at the end of the year and the Pleasant Green Universe which I didn't realize went beyond the Lovecraft Investigations.
The borrowing was mostly from Audible Plus or other streaming/subscription services. Because so many of the borrowed titles are audio dramas and women represent the usual small percentage of producers or directors for any kind of drama, the numbers are low compared to actual books.
So more juicy stats and charts for you. Most of the media I got through was audio and here's how it went -



New authors only get that status for the first title then move to repeats after so some of the new ones were only for a moment. I got into a few new series like some of the Dresden Files comics at the end of the year and the Pleasant Green Universe which I didn't realize went beyond the Lovecraft Investigations.
The borrowing was mostly from Audible Plus or other streaming/subscription services. Because so many of the borrowed titles are audio dramas and women represent the usual small percentage of producers or directors for any kind of drama, the numbers are low compared to actual books.
17Bookmarque
Started a new and pretty darn funny drama series -

Don't know if the source novels are as funny, but the performances in these dramatizations are pretty hilarious. The mysteries, such as they are, as definitely secondary.

Don't know if the source novels are as funny, but the performances in these dramatizations are pretty hilarious. The mysteries, such as they are, as definitely secondary.
18clamairy
>17 Bookmarque: I'm sure my mother-in-law gave me The Quiche of Death 30 years ago and I found it very amusing.
19pgmcc
>18 clamairy:
That sounds like one of jillmwo's experiments with poison. Do not be giving her any more ideas. She has plenty of her own.
That sounds like one of jillmwo's experiments with poison. Do not be giving her any more ideas. She has plenty of her own.
20clamairy
>19 pgmcc: Mum's the word!
21jillmwo
>19 pgmcc: and >20 clamairy: Too late! A new (and highly practical) book on poison arrived just today! Wait'll you hear!
22MrsLee
>21 jillmwo: I thought of you when reading a post on FB the other day. The woman had painted the trim of her kitchen "Arsenic Green."
23hfglen
>22 MrsLee: Er, Lee, in the 19th century Scheele's Green was a very common colour for paint and wallpaper. It was based on arsenic, and contributed to Napoleon's early demise. I'd be acutely wary of eating anything that had been in that woman's kitchen.
ETA: more notes on pigments in my own thread.
ETA: more notes on pigments in my own thread.
24MrsLee
>24 MrsLee: Yes, this FB group is made up of Old House owners who are renovating their homes. Literally EVERY post has several folks who give the warning of arsenic, lead and asbestos. :) The paint this woman used is a modern, arsenic-free paint, only colorfully named. Is arsenic green? Jill? Have you learned that yet? I always assumed it was a clear or white crystal or liquid.
My imagination went wild thinking of a woman who grows a special garden of deadly plants, then works arsenic into the paint of her kitchen. Possibly other poisons into other parts of her kitchen? Could be a real nutjob like the aunts in Arsenic and Old Lace. "Insanity runs in the family, in our family it practically gallops." *loose quote*
My imagination went wild thinking of a woman who grows a special garden of deadly plants, then works arsenic into the paint of her kitchen. Possibly other poisons into other parts of her kitchen? Could be a real nutjob like the aunts in Arsenic and Old Lace. "Insanity runs in the family, in our family it practically gallops." *loose quote*
25Bookmarque
Is arsenic green anything like the avocado of yore?
26jillmwo
>24 MrsLee: and >25 Bookmarque: Apparently green was a shade difficult to create in a dye for some reason. In the 18th century, arsenic was part of the dye formulas that were developed; there were two varieties, Scheele's Green and Paris green. The dyes containing the arsenic were largely unstable. Time and exposure to moisture tended to launch the deterioration and release the gaseous toxicity. So it's not that arsenic is by itself green; it was the combination of the one with other dye elements that made it so. None of my sources really go into much more detail than that. (Chemistry as a science was developing throughout the 19th century trying to catch up with all the various crimes committed through various forms of poisoning. There is a book entitled The Inheritor's Powder that probably could tell you more about arsenic.)
Edited to add the following: Scheele's Green was invented in 1775 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele, who was a Swedish chemist. It was an artificial colorant that was made by heating up sodium carbonate, adding arsenious oxide, and stirring until the mixture was dissolved. Copper sulfate was then added as the final ingredient which ends up giving it its vibrant green color. According to color historian Victoria Finlay, Scheele invented this green “almost accidentally.” A year before the color went into production, he wrote to a friend that he thought users might want to know about its poisonous nature. “But what’s a little arsenic when you’ve got a great new color to sell?” Slightly paraphrased quote shown in this edit was found here: https://laafa.edu/poisonous-pigments-scheeles-green/
Edited to add the following: Scheele's Green was invented in 1775 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele, who was a Swedish chemist. It was an artificial colorant that was made by heating up sodium carbonate, adding arsenious oxide, and stirring until the mixture was dissolved. Copper sulfate was then added as the final ingredient which ends up giving it its vibrant green color. According to color historian Victoria Finlay, Scheele invented this green “almost accidentally.” A year before the color went into production, he wrote to a friend that he thought users might want to know about its poisonous nature. “But what’s a little arsenic when you’ve got a great new color to sell?” Slightly paraphrased quote shown in this edit was found here: https://laafa.edu/poisonous-pigments-scheeles-green/
27Bookmarque
OMG that is SO cool. Chemistry is the answer to everything, isn't it?
There is a mushroom in North America called the Amethyst Deceiver (here's one in the yard a few years ago) -

By itself it is not harmful and is a delightful purple/lavender color, totally natural. Also natural is its ability to absorb and concentrate normally occurring arsenic in the soil, thus its name. Kind of benign, but not really.
There is a mushroom in North America called the Amethyst Deceiver (here's one in the yard a few years ago) -

By itself it is not harmful and is a delightful purple/lavender color, totally natural. Also natural is its ability to absorb and concentrate normally occurring arsenic in the soil, thus its name. Kind of benign, but not really.
28MrsLee
>25 Bookmarque: Not the same shade. I am no artist or colorist or I would be able to describe better, but to my eyes it had more blue in it, somewhere in the nature of a green turquoise or teal. It was in a home from the 1950s if that helps. There is a movement called Mid Century Modern and they use a lot of the atomic styles and colors from that time.
You know what gets my goat? The young whipper snappers in this group that keep talking about "vintage 90s."
You know what gets my goat? The young whipper snappers in this group that keep talking about "vintage 90s."
29jillmwo
>24 MrsLee: and >25 Bookmarque: Just a quick follow-up to the discussion of arsenic green. I was looking at something today about Samuel Johnson and there was a quick note to the effect that the use of arsenic green paint was known to be hazardous (poisonous) so that those painting walls with it got what was essentially "hazard pay". Today's little odd factoid of history.
No worries. I will now cease disrupting the photographic discussion.
No worries. I will now cease disrupting the photographic discussion.
30pgmcc
>29 jillmwo: , do not hold back about a topic you are so passionate about. If poisoning is your thing, and you have expertise in the subject, go for it.
31Bookmarque
>29 jillmwo: Oh I love a good poison story even if it isn't deliberate! Kind of like the amethyst deceiver up there. Have you read A is for Arsenic? It's a book reviewing the poisons Agatha Christie used in her novels. Quite fun.
32Bookmarque
Now the last of my charts and stats. A new one for this year and one I had to think about to set up. I know sometimes genre strays into things it shouldn't like graphic novel or children's book. Those don't tell you what type of story it is and so I've tried not to use them except as labels for other things. Like how a straight narrative is different than a drama with actors. So -

I used narrative rather than novel because I read a few non-fiction things and novel wouldn't fit those. I wanted a term that describes basic, straightforward story telling without sound effects or pictures. I did separate it from a short story, which is a slightly different form, but could fit into the straight narrative bucket, but how else to separate unless I include novels somewhere, but I got stuck. If anyone can fine tune this or think of better ways to categorize this, I'm open to it.
And since so many of these are audio and I tracked the places I "borrowed" from as part of a subscription service -


I used narrative rather than novel because I read a few non-fiction things and novel wouldn't fit those. I wanted a term that describes basic, straightforward story telling without sound effects or pictures. I did separate it from a short story, which is a slightly different form, but could fit into the straight narrative bucket, but how else to separate unless I include novels somewhere, but I got stuck. If anyone can fine tune this or think of better ways to categorize this, I'm open to it.
And since so many of these are audio and I tracked the places I "borrowed" from as part of a subscription service -

33Bookmarque
I've been busy at the workbench and have lots of new goodies in the Etsy shop. You know I don't flog my stuff here that much, but I thought I'd let you guys know I'm having a sale -

Gift boxed with free US shipping by 1st class mail. I can and have shipped out of country and it's no problem, just costs a bit.
http://thewiresmith.etsy.com

Gift boxed with free US shipping by 1st class mail. I can and have shipped out of country and it's no problem, just costs a bit.
http://thewiresmith.etsy.com
34Karlstar
>33 Bookmarque: Great stuff, I have bookmarked it for when I need gift ideas.
35clamairy
>33 Bookmarque: Lovely stuff, as usual!
36Bookmarque
Thanks peeps.
Just started a new audiobook with one of my favorite narrators - Stephen Hogan. He's an English actor, but has narrated a lot of books and does work with BBC Radio for dramas and stuff. I just hope the book is as good.
Just started a new audiobook with one of my favorite narrators - Stephen Hogan. He's an English actor, but has narrated a lot of books and does work with BBC Radio for dramas and stuff. I just hope the book is as good.
37catzteach
You make beautiful things. I’ve also bookmarked the page so it’s handy when I need it. :)
38Bookmarque
Here's another in the works -

It's a piece of beach glass (the real thing) in a sterling silver prong setting. It's not done, but about 1/2 way through the process. I'm making three; one each for me and my two oldest friends who love the ocean (one lives on an island in Maine). It's a surprise for them - one is a February birthday and the other will just be a Valentine's gift.

It's a piece of beach glass (the real thing) in a sterling silver prong setting. It's not done, but about 1/2 way through the process. I'm making three; one each for me and my two oldest friends who love the ocean (one lives on an island in Maine). It's a surprise for them - one is a February birthday and the other will just be a Valentine's gift.
39clamairy
>38 Bookmarque: Oh, lovely! I have a lot of this, understandably. (But there isn't as much to be found as there used to be.)
40Karlstar
>38 Bookmarque: Very nice and very cool!
41Bookmarque
Thanks guys. The first one is done! Now on to the second.






42MrsLee
>41 Bookmarque: Lovely!
43Bookmarque
Thanks much!
While making it I mostly listened to Charles Paris: A BBC Radio Collection starting Bill Nighy. While fun and laugh-out-loud funny at times, I found the mysteries/crimes themselves to be pretty shallow and uninvolving. The characters and situations (all ridiculous) are more the focus than is figuring out who done it. It wasn't a total bust, but I'm not going to get the second collection right away. Oh and Nighy does a brilliant drunk.
While making it I mostly listened to Charles Paris: A BBC Radio Collection starting Bill Nighy. While fun and laugh-out-loud funny at times, I found the mysteries/crimes themselves to be pretty shallow and uninvolving. The characters and situations (all ridiculous) are more the focus than is figuring out who done it. It wasn't a total bust, but I'm not going to get the second collection right away. Oh and Nighy does a brilliant drunk.
44Alexandra_book_life
>41 Bookmarque: Looks beautiful!
45MrsLee
>43 Bookmarque: I need to find more things with Bill Nighy in them. I like him a lot. Not up for radio dramas at ghe moment though.
46Bookmarque
Nighy is a hoot. We just saw him in Role Play which is a tolerably bad movie on Amazon Prime, but Bill is great in it. Steals the scene totally.
47pgmcc
>45 MrsLee:
Forgive me if I have mentioned these films before:
- Page Eight
- Turks & Caicos
- Salting the Battlefield
The above three films constitute "The Worricker Trilogy".
- Wild Target
I love him in the above films.
Forgive me if I have mentioned these films before:
- Page Eight
- Turks & Caicos
- Salting the Battlefield
The above three films constitute "The Worricker Trilogy".
- Wild Target
I love him in the above films.
48Bookmarque
He was in Galaxy Quest? Are you sure you don't mean Alan Rickman?
49pgmcc
>48 Bookmarque:
Sorry. Slip of my memory. You are correct.
Bill Nighy was also in the UK version of State of Play.
Sorry. Slip of my memory. You are correct.
Bill Nighy was also in the UK version of State of Play.
50ScoLgo
>47 pgmcc: I heartily will second the Worricker Trilogy recommendation. I watched all three of those films last year and greatly enjoyed Nighy's take on the spy game. (I actually think he may have been portraying one of the denizens of the pub, but can't say for sure).
Um... I think you may have meant to say Wild Target, with Emily Blunt, Martin Freeman, and Rupert Grint?
Um... I think you may have meant to say Wild Target, with Emily Blunt, Martin Freeman, and Rupert Grint?
51pgmcc
>50 ScoLgo:
You spotted my other deliberate error.
You spotted my other deliberate error.
52MrsLee
>47 pgmcc: Noted. Thank you! My personal favorite (because I haven't seen that many films with him in) is The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. I thought he did such a great job of being two different men. One with his critical wife, and another with a woman who is learning to explore her world with an open mind.
53Bookmarque
Audible has refreshed their monthly sale titles and I picked up -

Pandora's Jar by Natalie Haynes which reframes, refocuses and reorients Greek myths telling the stories of now villainized women such as Pandora who did not do one thing we attribute to her evil ways. Ditto with Medusa, Clytemnestra, Jocasta and others. Well, maybe not Medea, but she is a lot more nuanced than the ruthless child killer we know. Mostly these myths, like that of Eve, have been drastically changed so to make women the scapegoats for all evil and let men off the hook of responsibility, merely victims of our wiles and unable to help themselves (burkas anyone?). So far it's great. And I love the cover.

Pandora's Jar by Natalie Haynes which reframes, refocuses and reorients Greek myths telling the stories of now villainized women such as Pandora who did not do one thing we attribute to her evil ways. Ditto with Medusa, Clytemnestra, Jocasta and others. Well, maybe not Medea, but she is a lot more nuanced than the ruthless child killer we know. Mostly these myths, like that of Eve, have been drastically changed so to make women the scapegoats for all evil and let men off the hook of responsibility, merely victims of our wiles and unable to help themselves (burkas anyone?). So far it's great. And I love the cover.
54pgmcc
>52 MrsLee: That is not a programme I have watched, but I did note it has an amazing cast.
55Alexandra_book_life
>53 Bookmarque: It's been a couple of years since I read Pandora's Jar, but I still remember how much I enjoyed it. A fascinating read.
56clamairy
>53 Bookmarque: I'm definitely tempted!
57Bookmarque
So far it's pretty great and surprisingly funny. Worth the $6 for sure.
58clamairy
>57 Bookmarque: I will look for the next time the sale notification pops up on my phone.
59MrsLee
>53 Bookmarque: I read a book by Robert Graves a few years ago and in it he proposed the theory that all the women of the myths had been downgraded because they represented the female goddess worship which was in place before the Greeks took over with their male gods. Something like that. He had quite the fixation over it, but I don't know how much of his theory is followed today.
60haydninvienna
>59 MrsLee: You're probably thinking of The White Goddess. I used to have a copy decades ago, and Graves did indeed have something like a fixation about it, but he wasn't taken seriously by mainstream archaeologists even then.
61MrsLee
>60 haydninvienna: I dumped my lazy bone and checked my library. It was The Greek Myths, vol. 1. He seemed to work that theme into every myth.
62Bookmarque
Haynes brings up Graves a few times in the book, not flatteringly. I quite liked it and was glad that she didn't go too heavily into the underlying feminist theme of female oppression at the hands of men. We are oppressed and have been for thousands of years, we know it, we know it's better now, but not gone and I'm glad that it didn't veer into ranting territory. Light barbs and sharp rejoinders were about it. I may move on to some of her other books, she has a follow up to this one called Divine Might that basically does the same thing, but with goddesses instead of more-or-less regular women. It has an equally excellent cover, although how you fight a battle with all that hair blowing around is beyond me!

63Bookmarque
My husband gives the best Valentine's Day presents -

64clamairy
>63 Bookmarque: Nice!
65Alexandra_book_life
>63 Bookmarque: I'm applauding :)
66MrsLee
>63 Bookmarque: Well done him! I got a pot of tulips from the half off shelf. :D I am not complaining, I intend to plant them and enjoy in the future.
67Bookmarque
Thanks guys - we haven't had the movies in ages since we had them on laserdisc. Yes, we are old, but before DVD was a thing it was that or VHS. Once we got at TV bigger than 26 inches, it was really obvious how bad VHS was, so laserdisc. Am looking forward to seeing them again even though George Lucas is the devil with this complete revisionist treatment of Han. Funnily enough, there's a website that lives for the Original Trilogy and there's a guy who has spliced in the original scene in the bar where in fact, Han did shoot first. With proof (not sure what that is yet) that you own Star Wars legitimately, he will send you a download link for the format of your choice (MP4, etc.). I'm seriously tempted. Damn you George Lucas! I hope he took out the stepping on Jabba's tail thing too. Oy vey.
68Bookmarque
Some of you might remember this scene from earlier in late spring and fall. Yesterday I woke up to a few inches of snow, so practically bolted out the door. With temps getting into the 30s and 40s next week, it's not long for this world.

70MrsLee
>68 Bookmarque: Glad you got some snow!
71Alexandra_book_life
>68 Bookmarque: So pretty! We've had lots of snow this winter, but for now it has melted.
72Narilka
>68 Bookmarque: So pretty!
73Sakerfalcon
>68 Bookmarque: So beautiful!
74Bookmarque
Thanks guys! It got into the low 40s today, so the snow is on its way out unless something drastic happens. Here's another shot at the river, but looking downstream from a different location.

As I type I'm anxiously awaiting the delivery of a new camera. Fed Ex tells me it will be delivered today, a day early, but the box hasn't been scanned since yesterday so who knows. Have been too distracted to do much besides watch videos and clean stuff. I did finish up a couple of earrings though -

Just a down and dirty cell phone pic, but maybe tomorrow I can shoot them properly with the new rig!

As I type I'm anxiously awaiting the delivery of a new camera. Fed Ex tells me it will be delivered today, a day early, but the box hasn't been scanned since yesterday so who knows. Have been too distracted to do much besides watch videos and clean stuff. I did finish up a couple of earrings though -

Just a down and dirty cell phone pic, but maybe tomorrow I can shoot them properly with the new rig!
75MrsLee
>74 Bookmarque: I love the color contrast of the light in the sky and the snow on the ground.
Pretty bling, too. :)
Pretty bling, too. :)
76Bookmarque
Thanks much. Hope you're feeling better, btw.
Went out with the new camera today and this brave little American Goldfinch came to show off his winter plumage.
Went out with the new camera today and this brave little American Goldfinch came to show off his winter plumage.

77Alexandra_book_life
>76 Bookmarque: What a lovely photo!
78pgmcc
>76 Bookmarque: Very pretty.
79jillmwo
>76 Bookmarque: Excellent display of goldfinch plumage in that photo!
80clamairy
>76 Bookmarque: Great shot. It might just be wishful thinking on my part, but I thought that I noticed that the male goldfinches here looked a little bit brighter than they did a month or so ago.
81Sakerfalcon
>76 Bookmarque: Adorable! I love seeing the differences between birds with the same name but on different continents.
82Bookmarque
Thanks guys, here he is again -


I wasn't right on top of him, but he knew I was there and was a bit wary, plus keeping an eye out for predators or maybe a prospective mate. They go around in little herds together during the winter. 1/2 a dozen birds or so. Very cute.
I know what you mean Sakerfalcon - every time I see an English robin, I shake my head and say that's not a robin, but I know it is. Same with a tit - that's a chickadee!!


I wasn't right on top of him, but he knew I was there and was a bit wary, plus keeping an eye out for predators or maybe a prospective mate. They go around in little herds together during the winter. 1/2 a dozen birds or so. Very cute.
I know what you mean Sakerfalcon - every time I see an English robin, I shake my head and say that's not a robin, but I know it is. Same with a tit - that's a chickadee!!
83Karlstar
>82 Bookmarque: Thanks for the pictures, nice to see colorful birds this time of year.
84Bookmarque
Thanks much! He'll be brighter come spring/summer when he puts on his breeding duds.
Here's one of our resident rodents wishing I would go away already.
Here's one of our resident rodents wishing I would go away already.

85MrsLee
>84 Bookmarque: Your squirrel is very black compared to our greys. My daughter lives in Redwood City and she also has black squirrels. I've never seen them up here.
86clamairy
>84 Bookmarque: Beautiful shot. I had tons of black squirrels in Connecticut, but I have not seen one here yet on the Isle of Long. I do miss them.
87Alexandra_book_life
>84 Bookmarque: Awww. So cute! I've never seen a black squirrel irl...
88Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Insofar as species go, this is still a gray squirrel, but a black morph. It's thought that this particular variation came through interbreeding between gray and fox squirrels - only fox squirrels have a gene that causes this pigmentation. Black ones are concentrated in the northern part of the species range, and especially around the Great Lakes.
89pgmcc
The Red Squirrel is the native Irish squirrel. For many decades they have been on the decline with the invasive American Grey Squirrel dominating and pushing out the Red Squirrel. In recent years there has been a campaign to plant more traditional Irish woodland trees and these suit the Red Squirrel and the Pine Marten more than the fir trees that have dominated for commercial reasons since the 70s. As the reinstated natural Irish woodlands are becoming more common and covering more ground the Red Squirrel and the Pine Marten are seeing resurgence.
90clamairy
>89 pgmcc: This is good news. I was pretty horrified to learn within the last few years why Ireland had lost so many of its native woodlands. As this might swerve into politics I will stop here, but I am still angry about it.
91Bookmarque
Hm, you don't often hear about North American species invading Europe, it's almost always the other way around. Bad both ways though.
Here's a bendy little White-breasted nuthatch. I love these little dudes.
Here's a bendy little White-breasted nuthatch. I love these little dudes.

92Alexandra_book_life
>91 Bookmarque: This one is so cute!
93tardis
That is such a perfect pic of a white-breasted nuthatch :) I did a christmas card of the WBN one year, in exactly the same position, but from a photo of my own. I love them.
94MrsLee
>91 Bookmarque: My children used to call them the upside down birds.
95Sakerfalcon
>91 Bookmarque: Oh how lovely!
96Bookmarque
Thanks guys. They are such little clowns. Here's the same one only sillier -

97Sakerfalcon
Awww! When I was at home during lockdown I was able to watch a family of British (orange breasted) nuthatches on the tree outside my window. They were absolutely delightful!
98pgmcc
>94 MrsLee:
The ones I saw last summer were always upside down.
The ones I saw last summer were always upside down.
99jillmwo
Oh, I really like that photo in your >96 Bookmarque:
100Narilka
>96 Bookmarque: Such a great capture of the nuthatch looking right at the camera :D
101Karlstar
>96 Bookmarque: Cute!
102Bookmarque
Thanks guys. It's crazy warm today so I hung out in the yard with some critters -

If you sit long enough, critters get curious about you. After a while this little one walked so close to me I could have touched it. Very cute.

If you sit long enough, critters get curious about you. After a while this little one walked so close to me I could have touched it. Very cute.
103jillmwo
>102 Bookmarque: Is it the way he was standing or are there surprisingly fat cheeks on that chipmunk?
104Bookmarque
Fat cheeks stuffed partly full of seeds to take back to the borough. Like hamsters they can pack a ton in there. 2 acorns is about the limit -

106Alexandra_book_life
>104 Bookmarque: Awwww. Such a cute one! This is a great capture, too.
107Sakerfalcon
Those are great photos! It's amazing how close creatures will come if you stay still for long enough.
108Bookmarque
Thanks guys - the first is from yesterday, the second is from a few years ago, but still in the yard and might be a direct ancestor. They only live about 2 years.
109Bookmarque
I thought I posted this one, but it's also from the side yard and I kind of like the two shots together since they have a similar palette -

It's a 12-image stack of an Indian Pipe flower after going to seed. I loved it because it has a couple petals still attached when the usual thing at this stage is for them to be shed. While I was taking the bracketed images I heard a splash a snort and a squeak just behind me. Our local otters were none to pleased at my presence in their favorite part of the backyard. Funny.

It's a 12-image stack of an Indian Pipe flower after going to seed. I loved it because it has a couple petals still attached when the usual thing at this stage is for them to be shed. While I was taking the bracketed images I heard a splash a snort and a squeak just behind me. Our local otters were none to pleased at my presence in their favorite part of the backyard. Funny.
110MrsLee
>107 Sakerfalcon: Mostly what joins me when I sit a long time in the yard are ants. lol
111Karlstar
>109 Bookmarque: Great picture!
112catzteach
I never tire of your pictures! I’ve never seen a black squirrel, either. We have gray squirrels like crazy here. And those chipmunks! Super cute!
113Bookmarque
Thanks everyone, glad you like the pics. I'm hoping we just slide into a nice early spring at this point.
Today I'm heading to the bench to work on some jewelry for the shop - Mother's day is coming up so if you'd like to get something from me, that would be great. If you don't see what you want or would like something modified, let me know.
And since practically everyone here in the GD has swooned over the Murderbot Diaries, I've decided to take the plunge. The first couple of books are available as part of the Audible Plus library so I've added the first part of the first book. Weirdly the first book is divided into four separate, but unabridged, audiobooks while the latter part of the series is in much longer installments. But for free, I'll give it a try even though Science Fiction isn't really in my wheelhouse.
Today I'm heading to the bench to work on some jewelry for the shop - Mother's day is coming up so if you'd like to get something from me, that would be great. If you don't see what you want or would like something modified, let me know.
And since practically everyone here in the GD has swooned over the Murderbot Diaries, I've decided to take the plunge. The first couple of books are available as part of the Audible Plus library so I've added the first part of the first book. Weirdly the first book is divided into four separate, but unabridged, audiobooks while the latter part of the series is in much longer installments. But for free, I'll give it a try even though Science Fiction isn't really in my wheelhouse.

114Alexandra_book_life
>113 Bookmarque: Well, I hope you will like Murderbot! It's one of my favourite series, but I do know that it's not everyone's cup of tea.
115Bookmarque
So far I like it and have moved into the 2nd part of the 1st book -

The break between comes when Murderbot leaves Mensa (sp?) and goes off in its own.

The break between comes when Murderbot leaves Mensa (sp?) and goes off in its own.
116Alexandra_book_life
>115 Bookmarque: It's nice that you are enjoying the books :)
117Bookmarque
It's less alien and forced than I expected. I find a lot of fantasy & sf quite a struggle since the whole "worldbuilding" is too removed and weird for me to accept. Most of it feels like authorial showing off, but this feels a bit more about story than about effects.
And some stuff that will be going into the shop -

Cat hair sold separately.
And some stuff that will be going into the shop -

Cat hair sold separately.
118Bookmarque
Ok, on further investigation I guess all those 3 hour audio books are the full books - novellas really. Some folks on Audible wished they were all in one release since it looks like the later books are 3 and 4x as long. Glad I checked here to see exactly how the series is constructed. I'm especially liking ART as a character.
119Alexandra_book_life
>118 Bookmarque: Yes, almost all of the books are novellas, with one full-length novel (Network Effect). ART is wonderful, I agree!
120Bookmarque
Done with the first novellas in the series and what's part of the Audible Plus library. Pretty good. Murderbot as a construct and as a character reminded me of a lot of different things, primarily Data from Star Trek in the sense that both weren't fully human, but similarly composited of organic and mechanical parts. The difference is that Data actively wanted to be more human while Mb does not. It's actually kind of grossed out when it has to grow hair...funny. But in the end, it does sort of get attached to certain humans and can even (gasp) make eye contact and doesn't mind being touched. That reminded me of some autism characteristics, too. But I really wanted it to "do the thing with the hand" or something like it a la Bishop in Aliens. That was a scene played for laughs as well as to illustrate how an artificial person could function and since Mb really has no sense of humor (only of irony), it would have been hard to take. Anyway...that's my journey so far. I'll see if I want to dive back in again. A solid 3 stars for the four installments.
And a dose of cute as a bonus -
And a dose of cute as a bonus -

121pgmcc
>120 Bookmarque:
Fantastic picture.
Fantastic picture.
123Narilka
>120 Bookmarque: Chipmunks are so much fun to watch :) Great photos!
124Bookmarque
Thanks peeps.
As usual, spring is perverse in Wisconsin. After a winter of high temps and basically no snow, we're now getting snow and temps in the teens. Typical. But it can make for some fun photos when I get a cooperative subject -

This is a male Wood Duck vocalizing to a nearby female who was checking out a possible nesting site. It's an old Woodpecker nest that is in hot contention every spring - Woodies, Hoodies (Hooded mergansers), various woodpeckers like Pileated, squirrels and even Kingfishers have a go at it. I never know who gets it since the canopy grows in and it's impossible to see the opening in the tree. But I love to see the ducks flapping around and checking it out. The blowing snow really adds something to this shot which I got by opening a window and shooting straight across the backyard.
As usual, spring is perverse in Wisconsin. After a winter of high temps and basically no snow, we're now getting snow and temps in the teens. Typical. But it can make for some fun photos when I get a cooperative subject -

This is a male Wood Duck vocalizing to a nearby female who was checking out a possible nesting site. It's an old Woodpecker nest that is in hot contention every spring - Woodies, Hoodies (Hooded mergansers), various woodpeckers like Pileated, squirrels and even Kingfishers have a go at it. I never know who gets it since the canopy grows in and it's impossible to see the opening in the tree. But I love to see the ducks flapping around and checking it out. The blowing snow really adds something to this shot which I got by opening a window and shooting straight across the backyard.
125clamairy
>124 Bookmarque: Awesome photo. And yes, it's Second Winter here too, after First False Spring.
126Sakerfalcon
>124 Bookmarque: I love this! It would make a nice Christmas card!
127MrsLee
>124 Bookmarque: Love the photo, and the story that goes with it.
128Alexandra_book_life
>124 Bookmarque: This is a great photo, I love it!
We had some snowfall yesterday and the day before, most upsetting. Someone who is in charge of the weather has forgotten to note that it's almost April, lol.
We had some snowfall yesterday and the day before, most upsetting. Someone who is in charge of the weather has forgotten to note that it's almost April, lol.
129jillmwo
>124 Bookmarque: and >126 Sakerfalcon: I think Sakerfalcon is right. It would make a delightful card for any winter holiday.
130pgmcc
>129 jillmwo:
Hear! Hear!
Hear! Hear!
131Bookmarque
Thanks guys, glad you like it. They're such gorgeous birds.
So I bet you thought I forgot all about my Stephen King project, but I haven't! I finished Secret Window, Secret Garden the other day.

Read in the original hardcover (Four Past Midnight) again, this one took me forever to finish and it was mostly because Shooter is such a cruel villain. Just couldn’t put that into my head for a while, but I got through it. All I could see was Johnny Depp and John Turturro though since I’ve seen the movie, too. A theme King explores quite a bit in his stories is where they come from and this falls into that collection. This bit reminded me of Lisey’s Story which also deals with where ideas come from - “They seemed to feel there was a Central Idea Dump somewhere (just as there was supposed to be an elephant graveyard somewhere and a fabled lost city of gold somewhere else), and he must have a secret map that allowed him to get there and back, but Mort knew better.” SW,SG deals with guilt as well, specifically guilt about plagiarism, but also I wonder if Mort felt guilty about his success. At one point he talks about his ex-wife writing a novel that quietly died and never saw the light of day, so by contrast his success could make him feel a bit guilty.
Anyay, the pacing is good and I really liked that just when King gives Ted a break he deals him a hell of a crack on the head with Mort’s suspicions of why Shooter is tormenting him. There’s a great description of him on p. 327 - “...he saw Shooter, saw him clearly, standing in the bathtub in his black round-crowned hat and his yellow shitkicker work-shoes, his lips split over his mail-order dentures in a grin which was really a grimace, sweat trickling down his own face, running down the deep lines grooved there like water running down a network of galvanized tin gutters, with the hammer from the toolshed raised to shoulder-height like a judge’s gavel. Just standing there in the tub, waiting to bring the hammer down. Next case, bailiff.”
Considering that Shooter is really Mort, it’s a pretty telling portrait of how he really sees himself.A mere 10 pages after this we get our first real whiff of madness. Outsiders witnessing what Mort doesn’t believe is really happening. It’s a nice moment and I wish it ended just as delicately, but it doesn’t and Shooter - the name, the pronunciation and what it sounds like is just the warm up act. When the ex comes into the cabin and finds the destruction and chaos and that name scrawled on every conceivable surface, it’s a nice moment. Penny dropped hard. It goes a little nuts there, but the epilogue comes quickly and with a little lick of the supernatural at the end. Uncle Steve just can’t resist.
I have Rose Madder going now and sometimes have to skim over the revolting and basically irredeemably twisted Norman parts, but I like Rose's blossoming to push a metaphor. I haven't read it since 1995 when it first came out, but I remember a little of the central idea of the story and I think I'll enjoy revisiting that.
So I bet you thought I forgot all about my Stephen King project, but I haven't! I finished Secret Window, Secret Garden the other day.

Read in the original hardcover (Four Past Midnight) again, this one took me forever to finish and it was mostly because Shooter is such a cruel villain. Just couldn’t put that into my head for a while, but I got through it. All I could see was Johnny Depp and John Turturro though since I’ve seen the movie, too. A theme King explores quite a bit in his stories is where they come from and this falls into that collection. This bit reminded me of Lisey’s Story which also deals with where ideas come from - “They seemed to feel there was a Central Idea Dump somewhere (just as there was supposed to be an elephant graveyard somewhere and a fabled lost city of gold somewhere else), and he must have a secret map that allowed him to get there and back, but Mort knew better.” SW,SG deals with guilt as well, specifically guilt about plagiarism, but also I wonder if Mort felt guilty about his success. At one point he talks about his ex-wife writing a novel that quietly died and never saw the light of day, so by contrast his success could make him feel a bit guilty.
Anyay, the pacing is good and I really liked that just when King gives Ted a break he deals him a hell of a crack on the head with Mort’s suspicions of why Shooter is tormenting him. There’s a great description of him on p. 327 - “...he saw Shooter, saw him clearly, standing in the bathtub in his black round-crowned hat and his yellow shitkicker work-shoes, his lips split over his mail-order dentures in a grin which was really a grimace, sweat trickling down his own face, running down the deep lines grooved there like water running down a network of galvanized tin gutters, with the hammer from the toolshed raised to shoulder-height like a judge’s gavel. Just standing there in the tub, waiting to bring the hammer down. Next case, bailiff.”
Considering that Shooter is
I have Rose Madder going now and sometimes have to skim over the revolting and basically irredeemably twisted Norman parts, but I like Rose's blossoming to push a metaphor. I haven't read it since 1995 when it first came out, but I remember a little of the central idea of the story and I think I'll enjoy revisiting that.
132Karlstar
>124 Bookmarque: Great photo!
133Bookmarque
Because I loved it on my first reading and Marissa has been doing a deep-dive into Elizabeth Hand’s work and I suggested we read it together, I’m 88 pages into Mortal Love. Which puts me in mind of that old song, 88 Lines about 44 women and this is almost as nutty. I remember it a bit, but it’s such a convoluted novel with so many threads and timelines, that it’s only impressions. So far we have several storylines that seem a bit too disconnected to make sense, but the threads are there and eventually will weave into a whole. More or less.

I have my notebook from the first time I read it and this time different things jumped out at me (blue glowing fingernails, the brachet appearances (also scars obliquely referenced a second time) and of course the acorns. The first time I didn’t write down anything about Nick’s bizarre behavior after specifically inviting Daniel to meet Larkin and then getting hostile and warning him off. To no avail, but why put them together in the first place? I think my feminist hackles are more easily raised than they first were and I was really insulted and incensed by the opening scenario where a woman is locked up in a mental hospital for being alluring and sexually open. She seems to have no say in the matter. Infuriating.
Anyway…I also noted how sad Val’s story was from start to finish. It seems like it hangs out in the middle of everything, but it bridges the past and the present quite well and I’m pretty sure the other threads will be attached like spokes on a wheel. All in all quite mysterious and satisfying. I like this so much better than a lot of her other books. My purchase date is some months after my first reading dates, so I must have gotten this from the library and then decided I needed a copy.

I have my notebook from the first time I read it and this time different things jumped out at me (blue glowing fingernails, the brachet appearances (also scars obliquely referenced a second time) and of course the acorns. The first time I didn’t write down anything about Nick’s bizarre behavior after specifically inviting Daniel to meet Larkin and then getting hostile and warning him off. To no avail, but why put them together in the first place? I think my feminist hackles are more easily raised than they first were and I was really insulted and incensed by the opening scenario where a woman is locked up in a mental hospital for being alluring and sexually open. She seems to have no say in the matter. Infuriating.
Anyway…I also noted how sad Val’s story was from start to finish. It seems like it hangs out in the middle of everything, but it bridges the past and the present quite well and I’m pretty sure the other threads will be attached like spokes on a wheel. All in all quite mysterious and satisfying. I like this so much better than a lot of her other books. My purchase date is some months after my first reading dates, so I must have gotten this from the library and then decided I needed a copy.
134Bookmarque
To keep following my re-read of Mortal Love with Marissa, check out this thread - https://www.librarything.com/topic/359711#n8489466
In the mean time, I am having a good time with an Audible collection of BBC Radio adaptations of the entire Holmes canon -

Unlike with Poirot, I don't associate a specific actor and voice with either Holmes or Watson so the two gents in these roles are just fine to me. Some complained about Holmes's maniacal laughter in the reviews, but it doesn't bother me. I've always found his character pretty manic and off-kilter so it suits. The production is good and the adaptations seem spot on, although they did have to squash full-length novels down a bit more than I might have liked. Everything works though and there are some bits of info about the productions sprinkled between when relevant. I particularly loved the one with Brian Blessed! Who wouldn't? The man's a treasure. Anyway...27 hours and 47 minutes to go!
In the mean time, I am having a good time with an Audible collection of BBC Radio adaptations of the entire Holmes canon -

Unlike with Poirot, I don't associate a specific actor and voice with either Holmes or Watson so the two gents in these roles are just fine to me. Some complained about Holmes's maniacal laughter in the reviews, but it doesn't bother me. I've always found his character pretty manic and off-kilter so it suits. The production is good and the adaptations seem spot on, although they did have to squash full-length novels down a bit more than I might have liked. Everything works though and there are some bits of info about the productions sprinkled between when relevant. I particularly loved the one with Brian Blessed! Who wouldn't? The man's a treasure. Anyway...27 hours and 47 minutes to go!
135Bookmarque
And another episode featuring Brian Blessed!! Woo hoo. Quite a lot of fun even without him.
136Bookmarque
Went out into the yard for a while today since it was warm and mostly sunny, something it will not be tomorrow. If I sit quietly long enough, many birds get brave so I was happy that the light cooperated for this male House Finch as he eyed me with suspicion. He would often vocalize to a nearby female, but you could barely hear him. She eventually joined him, but never posed so nicely and then the light quit being so nice.

It also was good to test some of the memory cards I'm bringing to Norway in a couple days. Not that you can't get memory cards there if needed, but I doubt I could get these really fast ones that I need for certain things. Anyway...I also have a brand new Prey novel with Lucas and Letty Davenport. That will find a way into my bag I'm pretty sure!

It also was good to test some of the memory cards I'm bringing to Norway in a couple days. Not that you can't get memory cards there if needed, but I doubt I could get these really fast ones that I need for certain things. Anyway...I also have a brand new Prey novel with Lucas and Letty Davenport. That will find a way into my bag I'm pretty sure!
137MrsLee
>136 Bookmarque: Even I'm excited about your upcoming trip and I don't get to go! :) Hope you have a marvelous time whatever the weather, and I know you will share some of it in photos with us.
138Karlstar
>136 Bookmarque: Thanks for the picture and have a great time on the trip!
139pgmcc
>136 Bookmarque: I was in Norway a few times, but for work, and I never got to see the fjords or any of the other fantastic landscape. It is a place I have drempt of going to cruise the fjords. I hope you enjoy it. Your photography skills will certainly do justice to the landscape, so I am looking forward to seeing the pictures you share from the trip.
140Sakerfalcon
>136 Bookmarque: What a lovely little bird!
Adding my voice the good wishes for your trip, and looking forward to some photos!
Adding my voice the good wishes for your trip, and looking forward to some photos!
141Bookmarque
Thanks peeps! Leaving tomorrow afternoon for an overnight to Amsterdam and then to Alesund which is the region we'll be in. It's going to be rainy basically the whole time we will be there, but that should make for dramatic skies and decent waterfall light and so I'm hoping for the best. I've never been to Norway so it will be a new experience and one I hope I can do justice. The landscape looks incredible. We will have two boat excursions on fjords and a lot of driving either right on the coast or up in the hills.
Oh and I've been corrected - the bird is a Purple finch, not a House finch.
Oh and I've been corrected - the bird is a Purple finch, not a House finch.
142jillmwo
>141 Bookmarque:. We're all going to be waiting for the photos you are able to take! Crossing my fingers that this trip fulfills all your hopes for it! It's got to be exciting!!
143clamairy
>136 Bookmarque: Lovely capture! He's got great color. Every once in awhile I see one that's more vivid than the others, and I get excited because I think it might be a Purple Finch. (But it never is.)
144Bookmarque
Thanks ladies. I hope the build up won't make the reality a disappointment, but I suspect that even Stevie Wonder couldn't take a bad photo in Norway. And before anyone gets all upset at me for that, Wonder himself did Canon commercials back in the day (and Kannon, too) and said basically the same thing. It was funny and he knew it.
Anyway...I've never had Purple finches until I moved to Wisconsin. I guess they will have to make up for the lack of Cardinals, Tufted titmice, Mockingbirds, Brown thrashers and Red-breasted nuthatches - all of which were in the yard almost daily in NH. Oh well.
Am still making my way through the Holmes dramatizations and just listened to one with one of my favorite character actors in BBC radio - Ed Bishop! He was American, and is most closely associated with Philip Marlowe since he read a bunch of the novels and played Marlowe in many BBC adaptations. I just love him. He didn't have much of a screen career however he did have a small role in 2001: A Space Odyssey. It's always a treat to hear his distinctive voice in the older BBC productions.
Oh and I never realized how many times Holmes lets off criminals because they committed their special crimes for "good" reasons. A righteous revenge on a horrible human is mostly the reason.
Anyway...I've never had Purple finches until I moved to Wisconsin. I guess they will have to make up for the lack of Cardinals, Tufted titmice, Mockingbirds, Brown thrashers and Red-breasted nuthatches - all of which were in the yard almost daily in NH. Oh well.
Am still making my way through the Holmes dramatizations and just listened to one with one of my favorite character actors in BBC radio - Ed Bishop! He was American, and is most closely associated with Philip Marlowe since he read a bunch of the novels and played Marlowe in many BBC adaptations. I just love him. He didn't have much of a screen career however he did have a small role in 2001: A Space Odyssey. It's always a treat to hear his distinctive voice in the older BBC productions.
Oh and I never realized how many times Holmes lets off criminals because they committed their special crimes for "good" reasons. A righteous revenge on a horrible human is mostly the reason.
145Karlstar
>144 Bookmarque: I could take a bad photo in Norway, but I suspect you'll do much, much better.
146clamairy
>144 Bookmarque: I had Purple finches in Northern Illinois. I also had all those other birds you are saying you don't have. I use the Merlin app, and it says I have Brown thrashers and Red-breasted nut hatches here, but I have yet to see them with my own eyeballs.
No pressure on the photos. We just have faith in you because we have seen what you are capable of.
No pressure on the photos. We just have faith in you because we have seen what you are capable of.
147Bookmarque
Thanks guys. I am notorious for creating so much anxiety over my travel photos, but in the last few 'big' trips, I've relaxed into the moments and things went better. Balancing taking photos and immersing myself in a place is tougher than it looks. Oftentimes the camera can act as a barrier between me and what I'm doing or seeing and I have to realize that I don't have to photograph absolutely everything. Another long and hard-learned lesson is not to fight the light or conditions. Going in with too many expectations is never good - take what there is and make it work. Part of my long, unending journey as a photographer.
Here's a decent example. I was sitting by the feeder (same session as Mr. Finch above), but the Juncos were more shy and since they feed on the ground, they didn't perch as showily. So I decided to sit and watch a bit and after a while I realized that they would sometimes have a little kerfuffle that made one go up into the bushes. By making the intervening trunks and branches work for me, I got this shot -

It relates their behavior and my experience more fully rather than trying for the same photo as the finch when they don't act like finches. Silly old me would have been frustrated and angry that I couldn't get a more typical portrait. Smarty new me likes this unusual view of a very usual bird.
Here's a decent example. I was sitting by the feeder (same session as Mr. Finch above), but the Juncos were more shy and since they feed on the ground, they didn't perch as showily. So I decided to sit and watch a bit and after a while I realized that they would sometimes have a little kerfuffle that made one go up into the bushes. By making the intervening trunks and branches work for me, I got this shot -

It relates their behavior and my experience more fully rather than trying for the same photo as the finch when they don't act like finches. Silly old me would have been frustrated and angry that I couldn't get a more typical portrait. Smarty new me likes this unusual view of a very usual bird.
148clamairy
>147 Bookmarque: That is perfect. They are definitely more elusive than finches. I have noticed that this year I have some eating from my feeders, though. I guess they can adapt!
I agree about trying to enjoy the moment instead of constantly trying to take photos. I'm not even using a camera, just my phone, but I am trying harder to just appreciate what I'm seeing.
I agree about trying to enjoy the moment instead of constantly trying to take photos. I'm not even using a camera, just my phone, but I am trying harder to just appreciate what I'm seeing.
149MrsLee
>147 Bookmarque: I think it was somewhere midpoint in my first son's wedding event that I realized I was missing the moment trying to capture every moment. I may have swung too far the other direction now because I rarely take photos of people and events anymore.
150Bookmarque
Thanks folks. They are such sweet little birds and I love having them around. Got a good night's sleep in my own bed last night and so I've begun sorting through my Norway pics. This one is from the very last full day there and it's on the island town of Alnes. These little buildings caught my eye while walking the beach and watching the surfers. Yeah, Norwegian surfers, who knew?

151MrsLee
>150 Bookmarque: One of the things I love when looking at photos of Norway are the huge rocks by the dark sea. The little building with the cheerful red roof sort of highlights the heaviness of its surroundings. So beautiful.
152Alexandra_book_life
>150 Bookmarque: Beautiful! Norway is a special, special place.
153Bookmarque
Thanks guys. Norway was indeed special. We had a lovely time. Not a photography trip, per se, but of course I took a lot of shots. None were especially thoughtful or planned, but I have enough "seat time" as my old track driving instructors called it, to be able to adjust to different subjects and conditions as they arise. Like with these two Eurasian Oystercatchers that flew onto this rock on the same beach. It's not the best shot ever, but the one facing us didn't cooperate for long because it tucked its head and one foot in for a nap for the rest of the time we saw them.

154Sakerfalcon
>153 Bookmarque: I love oystercatchers and that's a great photo!
155Bookmarque
Thanks Sakerfalcon - I was very happy to see them and that they picked such a great place to land that wasn't too far from the path.
Finally finished the Sherlock Holmes drama collection and as a palate cleanser I'm onto one of John McWhorter's Great Courses lectures -

Admittedly I'm a McWhorter fan, but damn he's so much fun to listen to. This lecture series came out last May and includes a nice PDF as well (I think all the Great Courses do) and is up to his usual standard of organization and delivery.
Finally finished the Sherlock Holmes drama collection and as a palate cleanser I'm onto one of John McWhorter's Great Courses lectures -

Admittedly I'm a McWhorter fan, but damn he's so much fun to listen to. This lecture series came out last May and includes a nice PDF as well (I think all the Great Courses do) and is up to his usual standard of organization and delivery.
156Karlstar
>150 Bookmarque: >153 Bookmarque: Awesome. I'm glad you had a good trip.
157pgmcc
>153 Bookmarque:
I love watching oystercatchers.
I love watching oystercatchers.
158hfglen
>153 Bookmarque: Saw Black Oystercatchers at Saldanha Bay (Western Cape) some years ago. Your Norwegian ones are clearly related. Picture excellent as usual.
159Bookmarque
Thanks guys. I think it was my first time seeing oystercatchers of any kind so it was special.
So here's a 2-image stitch of the road (1 1/2 lanes at its widest here) into Oye, Norway on the Hjørundfjorden where we stayed (it's a village of about 25 poeple). These huts are scattered throughout this region, but not so many are so well preserved. This and another few nearby are now historical landmarks. They were used by young women and girls who tended cows that grazed up the mountains. The girls would lead them down, milk them and then deliver the milk to other folks to pick up and bring to town for sale or to be processed into butter or cheese. They slept in the huts overnight and then brought the cows back up. It was a rough, hard existence for the most part and I believe it continued into the 20th century.

This valley is one of the most narrow in all of Norway and one of the narrowest accessible by road. Avalanches occur regularly and when the sun is strong, you can hear the ice crack, break off and fall down the steep slopes. We heard many stories and saw some roadside monuments to villages that were destroyed by avalanches either directly or indirectly when rivers were blocked and villages flooded.
So here's a 2-image stitch of the road (1 1/2 lanes at its widest here) into Oye, Norway on the Hjørundfjorden where we stayed (it's a village of about 25 poeple). These huts are scattered throughout this region, but not so many are so well preserved. This and another few nearby are now historical landmarks. They were used by young women and girls who tended cows that grazed up the mountains. The girls would lead them down, milk them and then deliver the milk to other folks to pick up and bring to town for sale or to be processed into butter or cheese. They slept in the huts overnight and then brought the cows back up. It was a rough, hard existence for the most part and I believe it continued into the 20th century.

This valley is one of the most narrow in all of Norway and one of the narrowest accessible by road. Avalanches occur regularly and when the sun is strong, you can hear the ice crack, break off and fall down the steep slopes. We heard many stories and saw some roadside monuments to villages that were destroyed by avalanches either directly or indirectly when rivers were blocked and villages flooded.
160Alexandra_book_life
>159 Bookmarque: The view is amazing! Breathtaking!
161jillmwo
>159 Bookmarque: Now that's a very special photo! And the accompanying stories are interesting -- the young women having to stay overnight in the huts and the avalanches!
162Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. This is where we ended up, but looking back from where we came - this is the town of Oye on the Hjørundfjorden, population 25. The hotel is the yellow/red building at the curve in the road (still 1 1/2 car widths). Strangely the sauna is on a pier in the harbor so you have to walk down to it. You can, however, take a plunge in the fjord if you so desire. Husband desired, me, not so much.

And here is the view right behind me and to the right -

Those are boathouses on the harbor of the fjord.

And here is the view right behind me and to the right -

Those are boathouses on the harbor of the fjord.
163Karlstar
>159 Bookmarque: >162 Bookmarque: Awesome!
164Sakerfalcon
Such amazing landscapes! I love the mossy roofs of the huts.
165Alexandra_book_life
I love these views! They are almost surreal.
169Bookmarque
Thanks guys. Am still working my way through them. I won't post them all here, but you can look at them on Smugmug as I get them done - https://wickeddark.smugmug.com/Travel/Norway-2024
And a teaser -

This was shot while on a cruise in the Hjørundfjorden with a local boat captain. He was great and told a lot of stories about the villages and farms on the fjord.
And a teaser -

This was shot while on a cruise in the Hjørundfjorden with a local boat captain. He was great and told a lot of stories about the villages and farms on the fjord.
170Karlstar
>169 Bookmarque: Thanks again for sharing. I used to have a manager from Norway, after seeing these pictures, I'm not sure why he left.
171Bookmarque
Thanks Karlstar. It's a beautiful country, at least the bit I saw, but harsh environment and rugged terrain. Nothing that different from where I've always lived weatherwise, but you have to be tough.
Recently finished another Lisa Lutz book as an audio - The Accomplice. I'm a bit hit-or-miss with her and I liked the surprising ending and tone to the book. Recommended if you like a slow-ish burn mystery with distinctive characters who are odd, but not cartoonishly so.
Recently finished another Lisa Lutz book as an audio - The Accomplice. I'm a bit hit-or-miss with her and I liked the surprising ending and tone to the book. Recommended if you like a slow-ish burn mystery with distinctive characters who are odd, but not cartoonishly so.

172catzteach
Norway looks amazing! Definitely have to put that on my bucket list. Thanks for sharing photos.
173Bookmarque
Thanks guys, it was a gorgeous location with great hotels, restaurants & guides. I wish we had a few more days in each location, but husband isn't fully retired and so...
Lots of little birds back around including our resident pair of Northern Flickers. Another tree came down in a storm a few weeks ago and this guy is loving it. I have a little bit of video of him hammering away when the Mrs. came by to take his place. She had dirt all over her beak from digging in the lawn. Funny.

I shot this straight out an open window (the stump is about 15 feet high) and that's the river behind him.
Lots of little birds back around including our resident pair of Northern Flickers. Another tree came down in a storm a few weeks ago and this guy is loving it. I have a little bit of video of him hammering away when the Mrs. came by to take his place. She had dirt all over her beak from digging in the lawn. Funny.

I shot this straight out an open window (the stump is about 15 feet high) and that's the river behind him.
174Sakerfalcon
That is stunning! And so is the fjord. But what a great pose from the bird!
175littlegeek
Ah memories of beautiful Norway! I took that same boat trip. Did you take the train to Bergen?!
176Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. It appears the pair are excavating a nest in the very top of the stump so I hope to get some photos as they raise the babies. Hopefully our normal activities in the yard don't spook them away, I'd hate it if they had to abandon all their work, or worse, eggs or nestlings. They're skittish, but we'll be sensitive to them.
Here are a few more shots from Norway, first a closer look at those little herder huts -

And a couple of abandoned farms on different fjords -

Here are a few more shots from Norway, first a closer look at those little herder huts -

And a couple of abandoned farms on different fjords -


177Alexandra_book_life
>176 Bookmarque: Great photos! I love the landscapes of Norway.
178pgmcc
>176 Bookmarque: Fantastic pictures from Norway. You must have had a great time.
In Ireland there is a law against photographing nests, eggs in nests or nestlings. It is an attempt to minimise the disturbance of nesting birds. It is hard to resist taking such photographs, but it is for the best. Having had nests very close to the house and the office it is a job to, as you say, avoid spooking them away.
There was one year a swallow nested just outside my sister's front door. They had to use the door but the swallows obviously got used to my sister and family going in and out while they were building, so when the young arrived they were used to them too. It was just how things were. They happily carried on raising their young while the house occupants carried on with their daily life. It was amazing to walk out the front door and see five swallow chicks in a row watching you. Amazing experience.
In Ireland there is a law against photographing nests, eggs in nests or nestlings. It is an attempt to minimise the disturbance of nesting birds. It is hard to resist taking such photographs, but it is for the best. Having had nests very close to the house and the office it is a job to, as you say, avoid spooking them away.
There was one year a swallow nested just outside my sister's front door. They had to use the door but the swallows obviously got used to my sister and family going in and out while they were building, so when the young arrived they were used to them too. It was just how things were. They happily carried on raising their young while the house occupants carried on with their daily life. It was amazing to walk out the front door and see five swallow chicks in a row watching you. Amazing experience.
179Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Here's the female of the pair after a hard session carving out her nest cavity.

180catzteach
Those are beautiful birds! And those Norway pictures! The mountains in the back of the farm are spectacular.
181pgmcc
>179 Bookmarque:
Beautiful bird.
Beautiful bird.
182clamairy
>176 Bookmarque: Those abandoned farms are gorgeous. How old were the stone buildings? Any idea?
Flickers are very shy and skittery under the best of circumstances. Best of luck getting photos without spooking them. I can't wait to see them.
Flickers are very shy and skittery under the best of circumstances. Best of luck getting photos without spooking them. I can't wait to see them.
183Bookmarque
Thanks peeps, she's a beauty for sure.
Not sure how old the stone buildings are exactly, but probably 1800s or early 1900s. There was a sign somewhere, but I don't think it talked about dates, but just what they were used for and generally when. All the signs we saw for historical stuff had an English translation which was nice.
Oh and I don't know of any laws outlawing nest photography or such, but probably there are. Being the softie and amateur naturalist that I am, I wouldn't disturb anything knowingly. We've had robins and Phoebes nesting near doors and stuff without issue and my mom had a similar situation with finches I think. They nested on a decoration on her porch. No problems, everyone just rubbed along.
Not sure how old the stone buildings are exactly, but probably 1800s or early 1900s. There was a sign somewhere, but I don't think it talked about dates, but just what they were used for and generally when. All the signs we saw for historical stuff had an English translation which was nice.
Oh and I don't know of any laws outlawing nest photography or such, but probably there are. Being the softie and amateur naturalist that I am, I wouldn't disturb anything knowingly. We've had robins and Phoebes nesting near doors and stuff without issue and my mom had a similar situation with finches I think. They nested on a decoration on her porch. No problems, everyone just rubbed along.
184Karlstar
>176 Bookmarque: >179 Bookmarque: Great pictures of Norway and birds, thank you. Your pictures are bringing to life the scenes in We Die Alone.
185Bookmarque
Thanks Karlstar. The yard keeps me as busy as these guys -

I know it's just a humble Robin, but I still love having them around. Found some egg shells the other day, so one couple has some kids.

I know it's just a humble Robin, but I still love having them around. Found some egg shells the other day, so one couple has some kids.
186pgmcc
>185 Bookmarque:
Beautiful
Beautiful
187Sakerfalcon
Loving the landscapes and bird photos! The flicker is beautiful.
189Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Those robins really are beautiful even if they are so common. And the flickers keep excavating - I can see stuff flying out of the hole even if I can't see the bird sometimes. It's hilarious. More photos and video coming of both birds. I found the nearest robin's nest so have been watching and shooting their activities there. Unfortunately there are lot of grackles, jays and red-winged blackbirds around that the parents have to chase off several times a day. Tiring work.
In the meantime, the King Project continues. I have completed Rose Madder and boy it was a toughie. I won't go into it here, but my review is up if you want to read that.

https://www.librarything.com/work/1168877/reviews/4850249
I think Salem's Lot will be next.
In the meantime, the King Project continues. I have completed Rose Madder and boy it was a toughie. I won't go into it here, but my review is up if you want to read that.

https://www.librarything.com/work/1168877/reviews/4850249
I think Salem's Lot will be next.
190Bookmarque
Oh and I watched Misery recently as well. I'd never seen it before because for the longest time I avoided all King adaptations like the plague. But while listening to the guys discuss it on the King Cast, I realized that because it was directed by Rob Reiner and starred James Caan as well as Kathy Bates, I better give it a try.

Overall I liked it, but felt it missed the mark more than Reiner's other King adaptations. It was interesting to watch Caan play second fiddle to Bates though. Brave and a fantastic show of self-confidence after playing such iconic badass dudes. If I remember rightly, this is the only King movie to win an Oscar with Bates taking home the trophy.

Overall I liked it, but felt it missed the mark more than Reiner's other King adaptations. It was interesting to watch Caan play second fiddle to Bates though. Brave and a fantastic show of self-confidence after playing such iconic badass dudes. If I remember rightly, this is the only King movie to win an Oscar with Bates taking home the trophy.
191Bookmarque
Ok so the demons of coincidence are visiting today. I'm listening to -

as part of the Audible plus catalog, and the thief in question (named Smiley, really! Smiley!) was born and raised in my hometown of Bedford, NH. Listening to the descriptions of the town from its earliest history through the 1980s was a bit surreal. Then, Smiley nearly buys a house in Harpswell, ME in the late 80s. One of my oldest friends (from Bedford when we were kids) lives in Harpswell after buying a house there in the early 1990s. He could have been considering the same house for all I know. Kinda weird.

as part of the Audible plus catalog, and the thief in question (named Smiley, really! Smiley!) was born and raised in my hometown of Bedford, NH. Listening to the descriptions of the town from its earliest history through the 1980s was a bit surreal. Then, Smiley nearly buys a house in Harpswell, ME in the late 80s. One of my oldest friends (from Bedford when we were kids) lives in Harpswell after buying a house there in the early 1990s. He could have been considering the same house for all I know. Kinda weird.
192Bookmarque
Yesterday I joined a group of hikers exploring wildflowers on part of the Ice Age Trail here in Lincoln county. We started out at about 20 folks, but broke up into smaller groups as the hike went along. And I say hike, but it was really a saunter with purpose if you know what I mean. Going slowly makes you notice all kinds of things that a dedicated mileage hound wouldn't, like say this little one -

It's a baby Barred owl that just fledged. It probably flap-fluttered its way to the ground and then walked up to this perch. It's head height basically and right on the edge of the trail. I kept to about 15 feet from it and was SO GLAD my camera kit is light and portable and so I had my medium telephoto with me. No need to scare it more by getting closer. A parent was way up in a nearby tree keeping watch, and junior kept either looking at us or it all the time. After a bit it gave me this direct stare and it's the best of the shots I took. It's barely cropped at all and it was such a privilege to spend time with this big, fluffy baby. After a little bit, we all walked away slowly and left them in peace.

It's a baby Barred owl that just fledged. It probably flap-fluttered its way to the ground and then walked up to this perch. It's head height basically and right on the edge of the trail. I kept to about 15 feet from it and was SO GLAD my camera kit is light and portable and so I had my medium telephoto with me. No need to scare it more by getting closer. A parent was way up in a nearby tree keeping watch, and junior kept either looking at us or it all the time. After a bit it gave me this direct stare and it's the best of the shots I took. It's barely cropped at all and it was such a privilege to spend time with this big, fluffy baby. After a little bit, we all walked away slowly and left them in peace.
193Alexandra_book_life
>192 Bookmarque: Wow! What an amazing shot! I am glad you posted this.
194MrsLee
>192 Bookmarque: What a gift from nature for you! Special moment.
195Karlstar
>192 Bookmarque: Very nice!
196Narilka
>192 Bookmarque: Incredible!
197pgmcc
>192 Bookmarque: Lovely!
198Sakerfalcon
>192 Bookmarque: What an amazing experience! That you were able to get such a good photograph is the icing on the cake!
199ludmillalotaria
Love the bird photos, esp the owl.
It’s really hard to get close-ups of birds without spooking them. What kind of camera and lens do you use?
It’s really hard to get close-ups of birds without spooking them. What kind of camera and lens do you use?
200Bookmarque
Thanks everyone. It was a very special encounter with this little one. I hope we haven't given it a reason to need therapy. Lol.
Techniques for getting close to wildlife vary, but mostly it has to do with being still and not being seen. This one though, didn't need any stealth. I use a Lumix G9 M2 as my main camera with a G9 M1 as backup. The lens for this is the original Lumix 35-100mm f/2.8 at the 100mm end. F/4.5 I believe, 1/400th second and overexposed by about 1/3 of a stop, which should have been more, but I could pull detail from the shadows pretty well without blowing out the highlights too much.
Techniques for getting close to wildlife vary, but mostly it has to do with being still and not being seen. This one though, didn't need any stealth. I use a Lumix G9 M2 as my main camera with a G9 M1 as backup. The lens for this is the original Lumix 35-100mm f/2.8 at the 100mm end. F/4.5 I believe, 1/400th second and overexposed by about 1/3 of a stop, which should have been more, but I could pull detail from the shadows pretty well without blowing out the highlights too much.
201Bookmarque
It's been a while since a book has really sucked me in and makes me want to just sit and read it all day even though I have fun stuff planned. It isn't my first book by this author, but I don't recall the others being this good (at least so far) -

So that's good. I borrowed it from the library using Libby and thought I was getting an audio, but it's an ebook. It has some great hooks and interesting characters without getting all cartoony. The last few books I've read had idiots and whiners so it's nice to be reading about people who are functioning adults. Well kinda, they are somewhat damaged, but who isn't these days
Oh and I'm noticing a theme with flowers again with this one. If you click her author page you'll see Black-eyed Susans with this cover -

We are all the Same in the Dark features a bunch of dandelions on the cover and a girl was found in a circle of them at the very start of the book. Hm.

So that's good. I borrowed it from the library using Libby and thought I was getting an audio, but it's an ebook. It has some great hooks and interesting characters without getting all cartoony. The last few books I've read had idiots and whiners so it's nice to be reading about people who are functioning adults. Well kinda, they are somewhat damaged, but who isn't these days
Oh and I'm noticing a theme with flowers again with this one. If you click her author page you'll see Black-eyed Susans with this cover -

We are all the Same in the Dark features a bunch of dandelions on the cover and a girl was found in a circle of them at the very start of the book. Hm.
202MrsLee
>201 Bookmarque: Love those covers.
203Bookmarque
Yeah, they're quite pretty and striking. Just picked up her latest book in hardcover for less than $10. Should be here next week. Just in time for sitting on the deck time.
204catzteach
>192 Bookmarque: Love the owl! What a privilege to be able to sit with it for a bit.
205Bookmarque
A couple more Norway photos that I've recently edited -

That is an abandoned farm on a mountain near Skodje. I shot it clear across the fjord from another mountain and had to deal with some atmospheric haze, but I think it came out well.
And a stop for a view on another mountain near Skodje -

That is an abandoned farm on a mountain near Skodje. I shot it clear across the fjord from another mountain and had to deal with some atmospheric haze, but I think it came out well.
And a stop for a view on another mountain near Skodje -

206clamairy
>205 Bookmarque: Gorgeous! And I love the birdie photos. I think Robins might be somewhat overlooked because of their abundance. They have one of the most beautiful voices. And that baby owl! I miss having Barred owls singing outside my bedroom window. I don't believe we have many of them here.
207Bookmarque
Thanks clam. The owl was so amazing and a wonderful chance encounter. And yeah, robins are everywhere so easily ignored. Like these guys -

When you study them, subtle variations in color make them really beautiful. Plus their feathers are so smooth and perfect; that's what makes them amazing flyers, too.
So I finished the Heaberlin novel and my review is here if you want to read it https://www.librarything.com/work/24233913/reviews/264027688
One spoiler hidden. Quite a worthwhile book and when I get through a couple more that are on deck, I'll get to it.

When you study them, subtle variations in color make them really beautiful. Plus their feathers are so smooth and perfect; that's what makes them amazing flyers, too.
So I finished the Heaberlin novel and my review is here if you want to read it https://www.librarything.com/work/24233913/reviews/264027688
One spoiler hidden. Quite a worthwhile book and when I get through a couple more that are on deck, I'll get to it.
208jillmwo
>207 Bookmarque: That's a mourning dove in that picture, right? We have one or two who sit outside our windows in the early part of the day.
209Bookmarque
yes, it's a Mourning dove. Sorry for the lapse. There are many around the yard - in winter they congregate together and in spring break up into pairs. Still skitty though.
210Alexandra_book_life
>205 Bookmarque: Thank you for these wonderful views of Norway :)
211catzteach
Norway is just so gorgeous! Your pictures make me want to book a trip there.
We have mourning doves here. I like listening to them. They hang out on a wire behind our house and the kitties watch them.
We have mourning doves here. I like listening to them. They hang out on a wire behind our house and the kitties watch them.
212hfglen
What everybody else said about your gorgeous pictures of Norway!
Here we have Emerald-spotted Wood Doves. The local Tsonga, Swazi and Zulu people say the call of this one says "My mother is dead; my father is dead; all my family are dead, and my heart goes du-du-du-du-du". I've only ever seen one at a time, not crowds like rock pigeons.
Here we have Emerald-spotted Wood Doves. The local Tsonga, Swazi and Zulu people say the call of this one says "My mother is dead; my father is dead; all my family are dead, and my heart goes du-du-du-du-du". I've only ever seen one at a time, not crowds like rock pigeons.
213Bookmarque
Doves are so similar around the world, aren't they? Evolution is fascinating. Their songs are almost universally sad, too, I think. Interesting.
More Norway. Glad you guys are enjoying these. Getting through them slowly. Here's a glacial lake near Loen with a farmer's field and the mountains. Apparently there was a village here somewhere, but after the second avalanche that killed almost everyone, they gave up.

Here's the same lake from atop the Loen skylift. That road along the left is what we were on when I took the first photo.

More Norway. Glad you guys are enjoying these. Getting through them slowly. Here's a glacial lake near Loen with a farmer's field and the mountains. Apparently there was a village here somewhere, but after the second avalanche that killed almost everyone, they gave up.

Here's the same lake from atop the Loen skylift. That road along the left is what we were on when I took the first photo.

214Alexandra_book_life
>213 Bookmarque: Incredible and stunning!
215Karlstar
>213 Bookmarque: Really fantastic.
216Sakerfalcon
>213 Bookmarque: Wow, so beautiful!
217Narilka
>213 Bookmarque: Absolutely gorgeous. I need to visit Norway :)
218Bookmarque
Thanks everyone. Norway is drop-dead gorgeous. Definitely can recommend a visit.
There is something special and wonderful for me to start a new Stephen King book. I know he won't be writing forever, but I love the anticipation of it. What the hell will he make us watch now? And with short stories, he is in his element. I truly think the best of his work is contained within the shortest number of pages. Besides that, this new collection has the best cover I've seen on one of his books for a while, and that's after a slew of impressive covers. Behold You Like it Darker -

If you turn the flaps out, you get more in front of the gator's nose and the tail curling, but it's really wonderful just front and back. At first glance just looking at the cover, you don't even really see that it's an animal head; your brain fills in land because of the trees. Then you see the teeth. Very evocative and it mirrors a lot of his writing. What you think you're dealing with at first glance, turns out to be very different up close.
There is something special and wonderful for me to start a new Stephen King book. I know he won't be writing forever, but I love the anticipation of it. What the hell will he make us watch now? And with short stories, he is in his element. I truly think the best of his work is contained within the shortest number of pages. Besides that, this new collection has the best cover I've seen on one of his books for a while, and that's after a slew of impressive covers. Behold You Like it Darker -

If you turn the flaps out, you get more in front of the gator's nose and the tail curling, but it's really wonderful just front and back. At first glance just looking at the cover, you don't even really see that it's an animal head; your brain fills in land because of the trees. Then you see the teeth. Very evocative and it mirrors a lot of his writing. What you think you're dealing with at first glance, turns out to be very different up close.
219littlegeek
Thanks for the lovely Norway photos. It's stunningly beautiful, I second your rec.
220Bookmarque
Thanks lg, here are some more -


That is a burgeoning tourist attraction called Bakketunet on Hjørundfjorden. English translation would be hill yard or possibly hill farm. The woman who owns and runs it is the latest in many generations and the buildings you see date to 1549. The barn in the immediate foreground is the one with the milk thing on the steps. She's a painter and also exhibits other artists' work on this location. Originally the buildings, including the house on the left in the first shot, were right on the banks of the fjord, but that's several hundred feet down the mountain so they moved them up where the fields were because it was just to time-consuming and hard to keep walking up and down. They were built down on the water because the other major way to feed your family was by fishing which is still a going concern on the fjords.


That is a burgeoning tourist attraction called Bakketunet on Hjørundfjorden. English translation would be hill yard or possibly hill farm. The woman who owns and runs it is the latest in many generations and the buildings you see date to 1549. The barn in the immediate foreground is the one with the milk thing on the steps. She's a painter and also exhibits other artists' work on this location. Originally the buildings, including the house on the left in the first shot, were right on the banks of the fjord, but that's several hundred feet down the mountain so they moved them up where the fields were because it was just to time-consuming and hard to keep walking up and down. They were built down on the water because the other major way to feed your family was by fishing which is still a going concern on the fjords.
221Bookmarque
My ongoing Stephen King project has a little twist this time around. Seeing as I have a new book to read, I decided to go back to an old one (his 2nd) to do a little compare and contrast with regard to his style.

Salem's Lot is an old favorite for a lot of reasons, but mostly because Uncle Steve's romantic side comes through very strong. He did meet cute before it was a thing, so the way Ben and Susan get together is lovely and tender. Since this is only his second novel, folks don't automatically know he's going to destroy them and make you watch. He's oh so good at it and it becomes a recurring theme in his novels. Another is his love for small towns and the people in them. Of course though, he paints you a picture of the rosy surface of the apple and the worm at its heart with equal care and attention. I see that I can rent the 70s miniseries starring David Soul, Bonnie Bedelia & James Mason on Amazon, so I might do that since I've never seen it. Tobe Hooper directs so what's not to love? Oh that it was made for 1970s TV and is probably VERY watered down. Yeah, that. It's been adapted again more recently, but I don't know if I'll get to that one. We'll see.
I think I've decided to follow this up with Needful Things because there are so many parallels that The Lot is almost a rough draft. Should be fun.

Salem's Lot is an old favorite for a lot of reasons, but mostly because Uncle Steve's romantic side comes through very strong. He did meet cute before it was a thing, so the way Ben and Susan get together is lovely and tender. Since this is only his second novel, folks don't automatically know he's going to destroy them and make you watch. He's oh so good at it and it becomes a recurring theme in his novels. Another is his love for small towns and the people in them. Of course though, he paints you a picture of the rosy surface of the apple and the worm at its heart with equal care and attention. I see that I can rent the 70s miniseries starring David Soul, Bonnie Bedelia & James Mason on Amazon, so I might do that since I've never seen it. Tobe Hooper directs so what's not to love? Oh that it was made for 1970s TV and is probably VERY watered down. Yeah, that. It's been adapted again more recently, but I don't know if I'll get to that one. We'll see.
I think I've decided to follow this up with Needful Things because there are so many parallels that The Lot is almost a rough draft. Should be fun.
222MrsLee
>220 Bookmarque: Love those photos. Especially the top one. I can almost hear the quiet. Now don't tell me it was noisy! :)
223Alexandra_book_life
>220 Bookmarque: So lovely and peaceful...
224jillmwo
>213 Bookmarque:. Distracted by other things, I am still catching up with various threads. The photos of Norway are indeed breathtaking. (I like the second one the best.) And yes, the cover shown in >218 Bookmarque: is amazingly well done. Definitely eye-catching on the shelf.
225Karlstar
>218 Bookmarque: Awesome cover. The Norway photos put it to shame though.
226Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Had a pretty sedate weekend mostly reading Salem's Lot and now I've gotten into Needful Things which will lead me to The Sundog and Cujo because they are basically precursors to Needful Things. While out on the deck reading, I always keep an eye and ear out for birds and other wildlife, so I was able to catch a photo of a little Least Flycatcher when it came down out of the upper canopy -

Such little cute birds. I love their constant activity, foraging in the trees and singing various calls throughout the day.

Such little cute birds. I love their constant activity, foraging in the trees and singing various calls throughout the day.
227catzteach
I haven’t read King in decades. I need to read his 11/22/63 as it’s on my bookclub’s list. I think for June.
I wish I had your photography skills. At school, we have a nest of little tweety birds (have no idea what they actually are) right next to where we teachers eat our lunch. We also have a mommy robin sitting on her nest right above the door to the cafeteria. It’s so cute, my kids get really quiet as they go for lunch because they don’t want to disturb her.
I wish I had your photography skills. At school, we have a nest of little tweety birds (have no idea what they actually are) right next to where we teachers eat our lunch. We also have a mommy robin sitting on her nest right above the door to the cafeteria. It’s so cute, my kids get really quiet as they go for lunch because they don’t want to disturb her.
228Bookmarque
11/23/63 is a terrific book. Exciting and romantic in the typical way King is about true love and friendship. I hope you all enjoy it. There is, of course, a big supernatural element with some ties to The Dark Tower, but you don't need to have read those (I haven't read past #4) to enjoy it or understand what's going on.
Photography is definitely something with a learning curve, but today's cameras & technology make it TONS easier than when I learned in the 1980s. Have a crack at it! Get any camera made in the last say, 5 years, with a reasonably long telephoto and you'll have the reach. So glad your kiddos are respectful of the nest and her mother instincts!
As a LONG TIME Judas Priest fan (their last album is amazing even after all these years), I was remiss in not knowing Rob published another book after his autobiography. This one is more about band life, a career on the stage, making albums and being famous, just what I want from The Metal God himself. Like Confess he narrates Biblical Rob Halford's Heavy Metal Scriptures, too, and I just love his passion, honesty and sincerity. So great.
Photography is definitely something with a learning curve, but today's cameras & technology make it TONS easier than when I learned in the 1980s. Have a crack at it! Get any camera made in the last say, 5 years, with a reasonably long telephoto and you'll have the reach. So glad your kiddos are respectful of the nest and her mother instincts!
As a LONG TIME Judas Priest fan (their last album is amazing even after all these years), I was remiss in not knowing Rob published another book after his autobiography. This one is more about band life, a career on the stage, making albums and being famous, just what I want from The Metal God himself. Like Confess he narrates Biblical Rob Halford's Heavy Metal Scriptures, too, and I just love his passion, honesty and sincerity. So great.

229Bookmarque
For years local snapping turtles haul themselves up from the river to lay eggs on the side of the road I live on. Alas none of the nests survive hungry raccoons, but this time I did see one of those big girls doing her thing -

It's quite a distance for them to come for this (a few hundred yards through the woods unless one takes a driveway instead) and I have no idea what the attraction is to be so close to pavement, but it's what they do.

It's quite a distance for them to come for this (a few hundred yards through the woods unless one takes a driveway instead) and I have no idea what the attraction is to be so close to pavement, but it's what they do.
230MrsLee
>229 Bookmarque: I wonder if the dirt is warmer by the pavement/gravel? Very cool to see her in action.
231Sakerfalcon
>229 Bookmarque: Amazing!
232Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. She's pretty impressive, but not the largest Snapper I've seen. Was happy to have found her.
234Bookmarque
Well they might...I walked to the mailbox and didn't see the nest all dug up. Of course it's by a lot under development and so the nest site was driven over and that might finish it off, but who knows. They are still quite plentiful and not anything like a threatened species, so it isn't a total loss.
Look what I found the other day -

A tiny (2cm or less) new grasshopper. You can see through its exoskeleton at this point and look at the tiny wing nubs! They hide a lot at this time since they're so vulnerable and I didn't stay in its face long.
Look what I found the other day -

A tiny (2cm or less) new grasshopper. You can see through its exoskeleton at this point and look at the tiny wing nubs! They hide a lot at this time since they're so vulnerable and I didn't stay in its face long.
235Alexandra_book_life
>234 Bookmarque: Lovely! This is an amazing photo.
236jillmwo
>234 Bookmarque: and >235 Alexandra_book_life:. Amazing is indeed the right word! At some point, I hope you'll tell us what was involved in getting that shot. How long did you have to take the shot? (Did you move first or did he?) I'm sure you used a particular lens to get the close up but what else might have been involved? (Did you just happen to have the right lens immediately to hand? Or was it built in? I have no idea about how cameras currently operate.)
238Bookmarque
Thanks guys. As a photographer of very small things I have a feel for what I'm doing that's been over a decade in the making. I know my camera quite well and the lens I use. That is a Lumix G9 II (made by Panasonic) and a dedicated macro lens made by Leica and Panasonic together. That with an on-camera flash set just to fill in shadows with a nice soft diffuser on it. It's the flash that freezes action more than the shutter speed which I needed since this was handheld. I just saw the little guy, got the rig and lined up on him. It's second nature after so long, but I do blow it from time to time. Since it's only 1s and 0s, I can just delete the crappy ones! LOL.
Eventually, the little guy walked down inside a leaf to get away from the giant flashy thing. Poor guy. I try not to menace them too badly.
Eventually, the little guy walked down inside a leaf to get away from the giant flashy thing. Poor guy. I try not to menace them too badly.
239jillmwo
>238 Bookmarque: *thumbs up*
240Karlstar
>229 Bookmarque: >234 Bookmarque: Great pictures! Even with your explanation, that's all wizardry to me.
241Bookmarque
Thanks guys. It can be a little wizardry, but it's mostly just practice.
Getting to the end of editing Norway photos. This was our last day and we spent some time in the island town of Alnes. If you scroll all the way up to the little shack and the Oystercatchers, that was the same day and place.



You can barely see a surfer in the last one by the big rock heading out for more punishment.
Getting to the end of editing Norway photos. This was our last day and we spent some time in the island town of Alnes. If you scroll all the way up to the little shack and the Oystercatchers, that was the same day and place.



You can barely see a surfer in the last one by the big rock heading out for more punishment.
242pgmcc
>241 Bookmarque:
Lovely shots.
Lovely shots.
243Alexandra_book_life
>241 Bookmarque: Wow, these are beautiful!
244Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. It's a lovely part of Norway that I'm glad to have spent time in - could have used a few more days, but husband still works even if it is only part time. Gotta pay the bills!
So speaking of bills, I've spent a little on this comic book series that I'm really enjoying. I don't read them often, but sometimes I get the urge and this particular set caught my attention -

Yes, it's a horror/supernatural story, but it's told with such beautiful artwork that it's kind of seductive even if it is a bit bloody and strange. The heart of the story is a "witch" whose been reborn into a young girl named Emmy who doesn't know it at the beginning, but soon will. She comes to be Harrow County's protector and benefactor, but it has a price. Set in what I think is Appalachia during the 1930s the artwork is amazing - both detailed and rich in color, but mostly earth tones with a beautiful watercolor wash over almost every panel. I take a lot of time to linger over some of the scenes - basically on every page. It's a bit gruesome, but the drawing isn't lifelike so it's not terribly gory. The story is told with hope and a clear good against evil vibe. Emmy is definitely good and I'm already onto the second omnibus.
Harrow County Omnibus 1 - my review is the only one, but if you like graphic novels and horror comics that aren't sadistic or porn-y, this might work for you.
So speaking of bills, I've spent a little on this comic book series that I'm really enjoying. I don't read them often, but sometimes I get the urge and this particular set caught my attention -

Yes, it's a horror/supernatural story, but it's told with such beautiful artwork that it's kind of seductive even if it is a bit bloody and strange. The heart of the story is a "witch" whose been reborn into a young girl named Emmy who doesn't know it at the beginning, but soon will. She comes to be Harrow County's protector and benefactor, but it has a price. Set in what I think is Appalachia during the 1930s the artwork is amazing - both detailed and rich in color, but mostly earth tones with a beautiful watercolor wash over almost every panel. I take a lot of time to linger over some of the scenes - basically on every page. It's a bit gruesome, but the drawing isn't lifelike so it's not terribly gory. The story is told with hope and a clear good against evil vibe. Emmy is definitely good and I'm already onto the second omnibus.
Harrow County Omnibus 1 - my review is the only one, but if you like graphic novels and horror comics that aren't sadistic or porn-y, this might work for you.
245Karlstar
>241 Bookmarque: Thanks for the pictures!
246Bookmarque
Found this boy the other day while paddling with a group. It was a Wisconsin Natural Resources Foundation field trip so one of the guides led us right to the edge of the water to explain the differences between two major bog species of shrub. Little did he know that there was a Red-winged black bird nest right in front of him. Dad stayed right there defending the nest and yelling at us to go away, not to mention giving us all the stink-eye. When we realized what was happening, we moved off. This is barely cropped - he was right above me -

248pgmcc
>246 Bookmarque: Beautiful.
249Bookmarque
Thanks peeps. Going out on the Somo River today and hopefully the light cooperates. Should do since it will be partly cloudy.

This was taken the same day as the bird shot and this is where he lives.

This was taken the same day as the bird shot and this is where he lives.
250Bookmarque
Had a good day in the backwater, just hanging with the locals -

251jillmwo
>250 Bookmarque: *thumbs up*
252pgmcc
>250 Bookmarque:
Love it. Basking by the lake…well, over the lake.
Love it. Basking by the lake…well, over the lake.
253MrsLee
>250 Bookmarque: lol, I was having a hard time figuring that out. At first I thought it was a turtle head with a funny hat. Finally realized the hat was the turtle! My eyes are giving me problems these days.
254Karlstar
>253 MrsLee: It looks like a turtle guarding a small, mysterious moss-shrouded door to some aquatic lair.
255MrsLee
>254 Karlstar: Yes!
256Bookmarque
Turtles just make me happy and it seems I'm not alone. Here are a couple more, even smaller, sharing a stump in the sun. I had to creep near to these two very slowly because I was afraid they'd plop down. Surprisingly they didn't. It's really hard to figure these guys. I'll drift by a few on a log and one or two will dive for cover and others will brazen it out. Funny.

257Karlstar
>256 Bookmarque: Very cool! Those are painted turtles?
258Bookmarque
That they are Karlstar. Eastern Painted turtles. I rarely get to photograph Snappers since they're big babies and I've only ever seen one Soft-shelled turtle as it swam under my kayak. There are Wood turtles on this river, but not this part of it and I've been quite privileged to have photographed one of those, too. Actually on two occasions, but on the exact same log in subsequent years which leads me to believe it was probably the same individual. A large male -
2021 -

and 2022 -

They are considered threatened due to the usual human activities as well as poaching for the pet trade. The log got shifted by the water and is no longer at this location, but submerged downstream somewhere.
2021 -

and 2022 -

They are considered threatened due to the usual human activities as well as poaching for the pet trade. The log got shifted by the water and is no longer at this location, but submerged downstream somewhere.
259jillmwo
>258 Bookmarque:. The 2022 photo on the bottom there is wonderful! Seriously, that's a great shot.
260Karlstar
>258 Bookmarque: Thank you!
261Alexandra_book_life
Oh, such beautiful turtles! It made me happy to see them.
262Bookmarque
Thanks peeps, they are really fun when they don't scramble for cover. Am going to continue this thread in a new one, it's getting a bit long.
This topic was continued by Bookmarque’s Padded Cell 2024 - Shock Therapy (2).