



An funny happening. I saw a bathing canadiangoose lying on its back and try to be clean. I have never seen a bath like this before.
Welcome to this bilingual (Swedish-English) group blog by family members living on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, "the pond". Our interests range from the scientific to the eclectic, including gourmet food, horses, art and literature, computers, species in nature, history and iron, and photography. Three generations are posting here.

...is a place worth visiting. It is in northern New Jersey, and has a Swedish connection. It competes with the Swedish mine Långban in being the place with the most found minerals in the world. The Swedes and the Americans seem to still argue over who the winner is. I was there in June 2008, and enjoyed it a lot. See more photos here.
This was our view when we woke up on March 20. Depressing. But the snow melted and the sun came out this weekend.
Or just maybe, read more here. I think the bat got very surprised, and I hope it survived.
So, if don't have green fingers, a lot of money, and suffer from a lack of time, but still want a bonsai, here is the perfect book for you. The art of the bonsai potato. The kit contains everything you need except the potatoes, which I assume means just the pot. You can grow the potato even without water, at least for the first week, until it shrivels up and turn into a wrinkly ex-potato.
The Stamp of the Day series has woken up from the dead. Here you go! This is just how they showed it in Golden Door. Even the mustache is correct.
In June 2008 I visited the old, abandoned parts of Ellis Island's hospital. Ellis Island was the immigration center for New York and northeastern USA, and 12 million people came through here. With hardhats on we walked through old mental and infectious disease wards, corridors, the laundry rooms, the morgue, and the furnace rooms. So much is still the way it was when it was closed in mid 1900s, with doors, some furniture, and lamps, but a lot has been removed.
Many windows are broken or bordered up, but you still can get that feeling of history, how people were moved through this place to be treated for common ailments, give birth, or, if they weren't 'fit enough for the new world', then deported back to their old country. I don't know if any of my relatives came through Ellis Island, but it is possible. If we knew their names, we could look it up.
It was the best public hospital of its kind in America, and all free. Many doctors requested to do their training here because you got to see so many kinds of problems and learn cutting-edge treatments. We saw padded rooms for mental patients, an infectious disease ward with washable subway-tile walls, and the demonstration room in the morgue where they could to autopsies. Amazing enough, very few people died on Ellis Island, our guide told us, but in Wikipedia, the truth about everything, it says about 3000. More people died on the way over. Many children were born on Ellis Island , and most people that were sick were treated and then released to go on and live in America. If those walls could talk, imagine what stories they could tell!
PP and I finished watching the movie Golden Door tonight, about an Italian family leaving Sicily, traveling across the ocean and arriving at Ellis Island. It probably gives a rather realistic portrait of how life could have been. The movie is definitely worth watching, but it is slow. But the slowness creates a special feeling, and the filming and music is great.
I found this modern kick-spark on www.varmlandadventures.se/kickbikeshop.html. This looks a bit weird but they claim it´s fast. You can have it with wheels or skis on too. They also sell kickbikes.
We had a race on the road by Barking Dog Plaza yesterday, me and the kids. The 6-year old was the fastest, of course. I didn´t stand a chance. But it was just as fun as when we used to ride our "sparks" as kids.


