Sunday, October 31, 2010
Bits and pieces from the internet, there is more...
An amazing train photo fit for Halloween night taken by a friend of ours, Eric Williams
Really nice wooden things from Sweden.
The New York Times writes about vintage tractors. And Pontiac (goodbye!).
The sorghum crops were taller in the old times.
Leaf blower users, move over: "In the meantime, blower foes can humiliate their enemies by citing a city of Los Angeles study that “showed a grandmother using a rake and broom took only 20 percent longer to clean a test plot than a gardener with a blower.”" Story here.
Posted by LS at 9:29 PM 1 comments
Labels: agriculture, Alt energy, cars, design, gardening, history, holidays, internet, train
Fall is flying by, also in New Jersey, USA
The fall colors of the forest are flying by very fast, and will soon be gone.
Our road, a few days ago.
The forest is painted.
I drive by this old, but still standing, barn everyday on my way to work, and some early mornings the sun falls just right to highlight the trees behind it.
Posted by LS at 9:14 PM 1 comments
Labels: autumn, color, forest, New Jersey, photo, plants, Sourlands, USA
Fading light in Scandinavia
We are losing daylight quickly now, and today is the first day with "wintertime". The sun is fading so the clock is turned back to it´s real position for half a year. Now the sun is passing south every noon, not one o´clock.
But light is fading, as you can see in this scheme over sunrise and sunset in Södertälje the coming week. Minus 30 min. But it´s only two months til it turns and daylight becomes longer again.
Posted by EH at 4:35 PM 1 comments
Labels: autumn, light, Södertälje, time
Saturday, October 30, 2010
The world is upside down
Posted by LS at 5:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: bad stuff, China, commercialism, design, handmade, jewelry
Milestone
My car passed an important milestone on its way to work the other day. 9 years, 130 000 miles, and who knows how many kilometers that is?
Posted by LS at 5:24 PM 2 comments
Labels: cars, mathematics
Things that are not needed in the world
At least I think so.
Posted by LS at 5:23 PM 0 comments
Labels: bad stuff, cats, commercialism, fish, health
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Autumn garden by DH
Gentiana sino-ornata
DH and I went on a garden visit today at Regebro´s in Trosa, Sweden.
While I walked and talked in the garden, DH, 5½ years old borrowed my camera. These pictures are his alone, composed all by himself. (All of the pictures are found here.) His interests, his views and his thoughts. Everybody has a sense of what is beautiful and kids have another perspective.
I love them, enjoy!
Autumn decay
Icy grass. We had frost again this night.
Posted by EH at 4:10 PM 1 comments
Labels: autumn, gardens, gentian, höst, photo, photography, plants, Sweden
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
No rock in the world...
Posted by LS at 12:06 AM 1 comments
Monday, October 25, 2010
Memories of summer food...
Fall is here in NJ, winter has come to Sweden, and while you are hanging out in the dark, remember that there will be fresh tomatoes with basil, black pepper and mozzarella next summer too. Photo by AREA of course, click on the photo to see more photos by her.
Posted by LS at 7:35 PM 2 comments
Labels: cooking, food, home cooking, local, New Jersey, photo, summer, USA
in disguise?
I got a very funny autoreply e-mail today:
Do you think Superman is out there fixing things?
Posted by LS at 10:52 AM 0 comments
Labels: communication, e-mail, funny
Friday, October 22, 2010
And in the night, a coyote walked past...
This photo is not from our house, but down in the Pine Barrens of NJ, USA. We have coyotes around here too, but you never see or hear them. You can tell coyote tracks from dog prints on how the paw pieces are arranged. The size of these tracks were about the same as a smallish labrador.
Posted by LS at 8:36 AM 0 comments
Labels: animals, nature, New Jersey, photo, USA
Friday surprise!
This morning the kids yelled happily, ! It´s snow! and parents with summer tires on cars, not so happy.... It was a great surprise!
This mornings view at the bus stop at 8.15. No bus came. I got a ride with a passing colleague.
Posted by EH at 3:04 AM 2 comments
Thursday, October 21, 2010
better than Matisse?
Isn't this amazing? Photo from Flickr friend aroid, currently on a trip in China.
Posted by LS at 12:29 PM 1 comments
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Bits and pieces from the internet
The stone age people ate plants, not just meat! ("Of course", is my comment to this. What is easiest, hunt down a mammoth or dig up some cat tail roots? File this scientific paper among the ones classified as"obvious research results published in major journal due to the sexy topic". And the idea that cooking came before hunting has already been suggested by Wrangham.)
Inspiration for pumpkin carvings can be found here.
And you can check out the Fearless Dishwasher here.
Posted by LS at 12:02 AM 0 comments
Labels: archeology, cooking, food, history, holidays, kitchen
Monday, October 18, 2010
More clear messages
..we suddenly have an avid reader of Kurt Vonnegut in the house, after AREA got him as her school project author this year. She is mesmerized and reads, and reads...
For your thoughts and enjoyment, here are some of Kurt Vonnegut's most famous quotes:
"Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand."
"Another flaw in the human character is that everybody wants to build and nobody wants to do maintenance."
"Like so many Americans, she was trying to construct a life that made sense from things she found in gift shops."
Posted by LS at 10:32 PM 0 comments
Labels: books, landscapes, literature, politics, quotes, USA
Sorry sorry, can't help myself...
...just one more photo of the Pine Barren gentian... but then after all, I am the true gentian lady, right?
Wired plant
In these times of high-tech solutions, even the plants are sometimes wired. Isn't this a great photo by Erika Jo? Seen on Flickr (of course).
Posted by LS at 9:41 PM 0 comments
Labels: autumn, funny, photo, plants, technology
Saved (made..) in Sweden- needles and pins
In my sewing stool (above) I found these envelopes and sewing things. They are from our relatives.
Swedish paper clips, scientific needles in a War Pack, pins (knappnålar), needles
Inside this envelope are the tiniest needles I have ever seen. I doubt I could use them. I wonder if it is because metal was expensive by the time of WW II. I´m guessing they could well be from an earlier war as well.
Posted by EH at 4:20 PM 2 comments
Labels: global warming, handmade, sewing, Sweden
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Blue gorgeousness
Like this one, Pine Barren gentian (Gentiana autumnalis), seen today flowering in a meadow of already dead grass in the New Jersey Pine Barrens, oblivious to frost and drought and other things that kill off plants. There are many more photos of these incredible plants here.
Posted by LS at 9:22 PM 2 comments
In memoriam: Benoit Mandelbrot
From the New York Times article:
Posted by LS at 7:06 AM 0 comments
Labels: maps, mathematics, science
Like a snake nest...
... are these old rusty chains at the Argo Gold Mine in Idaho Springs, Colorado.
Posted by LS at 6:53 AM 0 comments
Ponderings on poles
How come American telephone and electric utility poles need to stand much closer to each other than Swedish ones? It isn't that the Swedish ones are bigger and thicker, not at all. In Sweden there is usually about 150 feet (50 m) between them, but around here in NJ, USA, it is much less. Just a question to ponder with your morning coffee.
Posted by LS at 6:26 AM 0 comments
Labels: ponderings, Sweden, technology, USA
Friday, October 15, 2010
Clear messages
Posted by LS at 9:02 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Lord Sandwich was hungry....
Quote from Words of Our Modern age:
The sandwich, which is most popular with world-wide eaters, functions as a noun or a verb and usually prefers to have its name pronounced as SAND wich. Besides the more obvious occupation of being something edible between two or more slices of bread, metaphorically speaking, it also likes to squeeze in between two other people, places, things, materials, etc.; as, he is willing to sandwich an appointment in between two other meetings or her car was sandwiched between two other cars in the parking lot.
The word sandwich that we use today was born in London during the very late hours one night in 1762 when an English nobleman, John Montagu, the Fourth Earl of Sandwich (1718-1792), was too busy gambling to stop for a meal even though he was hungry for some food. The legend goes that he ordered a waiter to bring him roast-beef between two slices of bread. The Earl was able to continue his gambling while eating his snack; and from that incident, we have inherited that quick-food product that we now know as the sandwich. He apparently had the meat put on slices of bread so he wouldn’t get his fingers greasy while he was playing cards. It’s strange that the name of this sex fiend should have gone down in history connected to such an innocent article of diet.
This is published here.
Stamps of the Day: The Sandwich Islands
Welcome to the Sandwich Islands (named after Lord Sandwich, who also gave name to the food item), a previous name for the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific. This stamp sheet has 10 stamps hidden in the tropical rainforest of Hawaii.
Posted by LS at 7:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: birds, Hawaii, place names, plants, stamps
Alternative uses...
We have a saying in our family in Swedish that is something like: "All ways are good except the bad ones", implying that there are many ways of doing things, and some things just don't work out the way you thought. Here is an innovative new way of using broken skis as a fence in Colorado. The photo is from Idaho Springs in the Rockies, a place that is also home to the Argo Gold Mine and the Argo Tunnel. We stopped by the mine and admired the old rusty machines and restored mining building through the locked fence. More photos of Argo here. It is amazing how much old history is visible in the Rockies. Here there are no vines (grapes, rosebushes, briars, etc.) that are covering up the old buildings, and the dry air preserves both wood and metal much longer than the eastern and southern humid summers. There are also a lot less people, more space, so a metal nail that was dropped 80 years ago, might still be laying on the side of the road.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
They have knitting guerillas in England too!
Posted by LS at 11:47 PM 0 comments
Labels: communication, crafts, knitting, street art, United Kingdom
Monday, October 11, 2010
Maybe the best sandwiches in the world?
Sometimes I get really homesick for Swedish food. I was just downstairs in the kitchen and opened the fridge and thought about the Swedish things that are great but hard to get here in the US. So here you go, my list of the best traditional Swedish sandwich toppings (smörgåspålägg [ha, there is a Swedish word for you Americans to master!]), in no particular order (they are all amazing). I know, some of you will not agree, feel free to comment. :)
- Skivat hårdkokt ägg med Kalles kaviar (Sliced hardboiled egg with smoked creamed fish roe) (photo)
- Skivat hårdkokt ägg med ansjovis (Sliced hardboiled egg with anchovy-pickled herring sprats [these are not real anchovies]) (photo)
- Skivad kall kokt potatis med kaviar (Sliced boiled cold potatoes with smoked creamed fish roe) (photo)
- Smörstekta kantareller (Wild-collected yellow chanterelles fried in butter) (photo)
- Räksmörgås (Shrimp sandwich, with little tiny pink shrimp, mayo, sliced boiled egg, lettuce, thinsliced lemon) (photo)
- Rökt renkött med pepparrotsvisp i tunnbröd, renklämma (Smoked reindeer meat with creamed horseradish in thin bread) (photo)
- Greveost och rökt skinka med färsk röd paprika (Greve cheese and smoked ham with fresh sliced red pepper)
- Gravad lax med senapssås och dill (Gravlax/Brined salmon with mustard sauce and dill) (photo)
- Köttbullar (kalla) med rödbetssallad och sallad (Cold meatballs with beet salad (with youghurt or sour creme) and lettuce) (photo)
- Gratinerad varm smörgås med allt möjligt, kantareller, ost, tomater, osv. (Oven-broiled sandwiches with different toppings, such as chanterelles, cheese, tomatoes...) (photo)
We Swedes have much less toppings on a sandwich than Americans (well, we used to, I think Swedes are becoming richer and add more nowadays). I only think Dutch people have less. And they put butter, chocolate sauce and chocolate sprinkles on their breakfast sandwiches.
We don't cut off the crust and make little triangular double sandwiches with white mush in them like the Brits (I do like these too, but they are for people that are afraid of getting messy).
We don't overload giant subs and heros with salamis and other meats like American-Italians (which can be great to eat, but isn't Swedish). Ever heard of a muffaletta? They are giant. Giantly tasty too.
We don't make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, a combination I personally think is kind of... disgusting. Each one by itself is quite fine.
We don't make smörrebröd, that is the Danes specialty (overloaded warm or cold sandwiches you have to eat with a knife and fork - also delicious).
Sometimes Swedes invent crazy sandwich topping combinations. I have a vivid memory of a cousin, who will rename unnamed, who ate a sandwich with cheese, kaviar, and orange marmalade. And here is a crazy one too!
So, what is my favorite breakfast sandwiches here in the US? Well, since there aren't some of the Swedish things... smoked ham, cheese and Frank's Hot Sauce... cottage cheese and fox point seasoning... hummus.... goat cheese... sliced cold potatoes and kaviar (everybody else in the house thinks I am crazy to eat that)... sliced egg and real anchovy... marmalade.... blueberry jam (homemade, more about that later)... cheese and pickles, or cheese and sundried tomato tapenade...
Posted by LS at 11:12 PM 11 comments
Labels: bread, Cultural History, Denmark, Europe, food, mushrooms, photo, recipe, seafood, Sweden, Swedish, the netherlands, United Kingdom, USA
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Alternative fuels...
In Scotland, the energy production might soon have a new scent:
Those Scots, they are really ingenious! And if they base it on Laphroaig, then they even have some smoke! Meanwhile, poorer people are burning cow dung and in America bad things are going on:
Posted by LS at 10:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: Alt energy, drink, environment, food, Scotland, USA
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Book Review: A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains by Isabella Bird
" I had gone to sleep with six blankets on, and a heavy sheet over my face. Between two and three I was awoke by the cabin being shifted from underneath by the wind, and the sheet was frozen to my lips. I put out my hands, and the bed was thickly covered with fine snow. Getting up to investigate matters, I found the floor some inches deep in parts in fine snow, and a gust of fine, needle-like snow stung my face. The bucket of water was solid ice. I lay in bed freezing till sunrise, when some of the men came to see if I 'was alive', and to dig me out. They brought a can of hot water, which turned to ice before I could use it."
Isabella Bird is not a modern-day author, she lived in the 1800s, and traveled the world as a single, fearless woman and wrote about her adventures in letters back to her sister in England. Her travel letters in the Rocky Mountains are collected in this little volume called "A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains", now a real classic, that I happened to find right before we decided to spend some time in Colorado this summer. I started reading it on the plane to Denver, and I was hooked.
Isabella describes her travels from San Francisco via trains over the Sierra Nevada, then to Cheyenne, Wyoming, and on to Fort Collins, Colorado. From there she is adamant about getting up into the Rocky Mountains, where no railroads yet have come (this is before the big railroad era in the Colorado Rockies, and the mining had just started). She buys a horse, travels alone, and takes in as a boarder at the local houses and farms along the way. She stays a long time at Estes Park, part of it involuntarily in the winter (see above), and she also visits Denver, Colorado Springs, and passes over many mountain passes. In time she becomes famous for her ability to negotiate bad trails and bad weather.
Her book is full of detailed and funny descriptions of people she meet, and the everyday life they live. I would guess this is probably one of the few books that describes the often poor and miserably life many pioneer women (and men) lived out West, living in squalor, without enough food and in very harsh weather. But she also describes nature in exquisite detail, from sunsets to conifer forests, geologic features, rushing rapids of waters in canyons, and snow and stormy winds during dark nights far from her cabin. Her feelings of isolation and appreciation of company is true.
But what gets me most is that this is a real person writing, someone that experienced it all and wrote down her thoughts in her diary-like letters to her sister, never to think they ever would get published. The letters are raw and honest, but beautiful and so well-written it is unbelievable she wrote them with ink pen at candlelight under sometimes very harsh circumstances. But Isabella is perpetually encouraging, even in dark or dangerous moments.
This is a Highly Recommended book, I loved it!
Posted by LS at 10:02 PM 2 comments
Labels: book review, Colorado, travel, women