Tuesday, September 30, 2008

The Garden of a Novice Gardener

In honor of the many excellent gardening blogs that I peruse, I thought I'd post a few pictures of my feeble attempts at a garden.

First, the summer squash. I am floored that I'm having such problems with these plants. Perhaps I was under the incorrect assumption that these things were like tomato plants in that they grow well with very little problems. I was very excited when I saw the first two squash the other day. I just checked on them...one is completely shrived with egg masses(?) nearby while the other is not quite shriveled yet, but obviously parasitized by the same thing as the previous one. If anyone has any guesses as to what's going on, please let me know!


The tomatoes are still going, but have slowed in their ripening. I think I'll pick some of the greener tomatoes off so the others can ripen.

The pepper plant is doing well. Here are two I picked today:


And finally, the bell pepper plant is thriving as evidenced by this baby:

R.I.P. Finny


My last surviving fish died yesterday. I've decided this owning fish thing is not for me. It's a good thing I didn't go get more fish on Saturday like I had originally planned. I think I'll put the tank in storage for now...at least until I can trust myself to be a responsible fish owner.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Fall cleaning?

When I bought my house, one of the selling points on the MLS listing was a "wintertime view of the river". Well, the guys from the power company went to work today clearing the vegetation from under the powerlines in front of my house and I now have...a year-round view of my neighbor's backyard. Think that will be a selling point when I go to resell??



Sunday, September 28, 2008

Grizzly Bears & Wolf

Check out this incredible video from the USGS.

Northern Divide Grizzly Bear Project

Here are the details of the project straight from the USGS. Complete results will be published January 2009.

McCain's Bear Reference

If you're anything like me, you became quite interested in McCain's "joke" about DNA testing of grizzly bears in Montana. Here's an article outlining the research:

McCain's Beef with Bears?—Pork
The presidential wannabe scoffs at pouring millions into studying grizzly bear DNA, but scientists say it's key to preserving the species


By Coco Ballantyne

Republican presidential hopeful John McCain is a well-known critic of frivolous government spending otherwise known as pork: those pricey projects that legislators routinely—and surreptitiously—slip into appropriations packages to benefit their own districts and bring them coveted votes. But scientists charge that an important study of grizzly bear DNA has gotten caught in the crosshairs as the veteran Arizona lawmaker attempts to showcase his creds as a crusader against wasteful government spending.

It is unclear why McCain, who has taken a firm stand on some other environmental issues—he believes more needs to be done to curtail global warming—considers the research to be a waste of time and money, and his press office did not respond to repeated e-mails and phone calls for comment. Yet, he is apparently so "outraged" that he takes a dig at it in a campaign TV spot in which an announcer declares:

"233 million for a bridge to nowhere. Outrageous… Three million to study the DNA of bears in Montana. Unbelievable… A million dollars for a Woodstock Museum—in a bill sponsored by Hillary Clinton. Predictable… Who has the guts to stand up to wasteful government spending? One man. John McCain."

Currently the front-runner for the GOP nod, McCain also hits the research in speeches on the stump, cracking jokes about bear paternity tests and criminal investigations. "I don't know if it was a paternity issue or criminal, but it was a waste of money," McCain railed last month during a campaign stop in Clawson, Mich. Scientists, however, are not amused: They insist that the study is not only worth every penny but that the $3-million price tag cited in the ad is, in a word, wrong.

In fact, Congress over the past five years has forked over a total of $4.8 million to study the genetic material of Montana's grizzly bears, according to Katherine Kendall, a research biologist at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). Kendall heads the Northern Divide Grizzly Bear Project, which is aimed at obtaining the first accurate population estimate of grizzlies living in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem—eight million acres of land in northwestern Montana that encompasses Glacier National Park and the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex.

"This is not pork barrel at all," says Richard Mace, a research biologist with Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (FWP). "We have a federal law called the Endangered Species Act and [under this law] the federal government is supposed to help identify and conserve threatened species."

The grizzly has been listed as a threatened species since 1975 and scientists say that it is essential to get a handle on the population to preserve it. But, according to Kendall, until the feds decided to invest in this grizzly bear DNA study, researchers lacked the funds to conduct research at the scale necessary to get a reliable measure.

In 2002 Kendall assembled a scientific panel with representatives from the USGS, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and FWP, along with other scientific and environmental organizations to determine the best way to measure the remaining grizzly population of the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem. It recommended setting up barbed wire hair-snagging stations to painlessly pluck fur from passing bears that would be used for DNA fingerprinting, a technique employed to distinguish individuals of the same species by the differences in their genetic material. This is the only way to accurately estimate population in such heavily forested terrain, where bears are difficult to spot, says Chris Servheen, a grizzly expert with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

In response, the USGS set aside $250,000 to launch the Northern Divide Grizzly Bear Project; the next year, Congress stepped in to provide additional funding, and from 2003 to 2007 appropriated $4.8 million to the effort, Kendall says.

She notes that her team of 250 scientists and researchers set up hair-snag stations at thousands of locations throughout the grizzly habitat, some as far as 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the nearest road. These wire setups do not harm the bears in any way, Servheen says: "It's no more than running a comb through your hair."

The team collected 34,000 samples of bear hair over a 14-week period in 2004, which it sent over the border to the Wildlife Genetics International laboratory in Nelson, British Columbia. By extracting and analyzing DNA in the strands, researchers were able to pinpoint the species (grizzly or black bear), gender, and individual identity of host bears. It took two years to analyze the large swath of samples and another to compile the data and conduct statistical analyses to estimate the size, distribution and genetic structure of the population as well as summarize the findings, which Kendall says she hopes to publish in a science journal by summer. (She refuses to reveal the results prior to publication.)

But numbers are only part of the story. Scientists say they also have to figure out how the population is changing to determine how to protect it. Toward that end, the Montana state government four years ago launched a $250,000 per annum effort to monitor grizzly population trends (separate from, but complementary to Kendall's study on population size), according to Mace, who is in charge of that project.

"There are no answers yet," he says, noting that it is too early to tell whether the population is increasing, decreasing or if it remains unchanged since 2004. But researchers are optimistic they will be able to fashion effective preservation measures once they have a better idea of [to vary] the population size—thanks to Kendall's study—and a solid understanding of trends.

Still, for many Americans who have never seen and probably never will see a grizzly bear, the question remains: Why should one bear population merit millions in taxpayer money?

The reason, grizzly expert Servheen says: the bears are a threatened species. He estimates that only about 1,500 still reside in the 48 contiguous states, compared with some 50,000 before the arrival of Europeans in the 15th century (a 97 percent population decline). The once far-reaching grizzly habitat, which stretched from the Mississippi River to California and ranged north to south from Alaska to Mexico, is today restricted to four western states: Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, and Washington. In these states, only two populations—those living in and around Yellowstone National Park and in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem—number more than 50 bears and offer hope for long-term viability, Servheen says.

So is forking over huge chunks of change to protect grizzly bears "unbelievable"—or a joke—as McCain charges?

No way, scientists and environmentalists say. Protecting wildlife is expensive, but grizzlies are priceless, says Louisa Willcox, director of the Wild Bears Project for the National Resources Defense Council. "Grizzly bears are a symbol of our frontier past—of untamed wilderness," she says. "Lewis and Clark saw them eating buffalo carcasses on the American plains."

Not only are grizzlies "treasures of United States history," Servheen says, but they help us understand how effective our conservation efforts are. Despite their ferocious reputation, he notes, grizzlies are exquisitely sensitive to human activity and can only live on the wildest tracts of land. "They are an indicator of the health of ecosystems," he says, and they emblematize "the preservation of wilderness, which is becoming rarer every day."

Click here for the original article.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Just some things

Another post on some things going on in my life:

--We're finally getting some cooler weather. Still no rain, but the cooler weather is nice. I can feel Fall approaching. About time too since we've passed the "start" of the season. I decorated for Fall/Halloween last Sunday, so that was fun. Not that I have many decorations, but it was fun nonetheless. I love this time of year!

--I read in a gardening book that vegetable gardens benefit from wood ashes, so I sprinkled the ashes left over from the fire pit (from the 30th bday party) around the plants today. I'm not expecting much (especially since we're getting cooler temperatures) but it was still neat to use something that otherwise would just sit there. At first I was thinking that the ashes help the fertility of the soil, but after I read more, I deduced that it helps keep pests away.

--My car is still in the shop. And not because it's not fixed, but because there's no gas. Anywhere! Apparently when I filled my car up with a mere 5 gallons of gas last Tuesday (because the pumps were so slow) I was putting contaminated gas into my car. The owner of the place has agreed to pay the bill ($340) thank goodness. And like I said, the car's fixed, but now I have the problem of finding gas to put back in it. I thought it was due to Hurricane Ike, but from what I heard on the news today, it has nothing to do with that. The way I understand it, the tankers in Spartanburg (where we get our gas) are only being filled half-way. The NC officials (not sure who that is) have called the gas companies (BP, Exxon, etc) to figure out why this is happening, but they either don't tell them or they don't answer their calls.

The solution to my problem (kind of): the guys at the auto shop siphoned off the little gas that was left from my tank (I guess the water and junk settles out of the gas) and put it back in my tank. So I have enough gas to get home or straight to a station. I've decided to just drive it home & either put the gas I have for my mower in it or just wait until this whole gas shortage thing rolls over. I'm not real concerned about my car being out of commission because my boyfriend is gone this week so I can drive his car if necessary. Also, I got my bike fixed today (another story) so I can ride it to campus. Come to think of it, I kind of like this situation. Maybe folks will actually start to carpool, ride the bus, ride their bikes, or whatever else they can come up with.

--My bike. I'm a novice...and it shows. I broke the tire valve while trying to pump up the tire. :oP So not only was I out a car, but I was also out my alternate transportation. But let's look at the bright side: the guy at the bike shop taught me how to do it correctly, I met a guy at the store that's a member of the WCU bike club and he invited me to join them, and I perused a shop next door (they sell used library and donated books there) where I found a book in the series my boyfriend is reading. It looks like it hasn't even been read & I got it for $3.00.

--I'll leave on a funny note: 2 redneck (sorry) white boys just rang my doorbell selling steaks and seafood out of the freezer in the back of their pickup. Um, sorry guys, but I think I'll pass. :o)

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

It may be healthy, but it sure ain't satisfying!


I love love love Sour Patch Kids. If someone asked me what my favorite food is, that's what I'd say--even if it's not technically a "food".

My boyfriend and I have plans to go see a movie on campus Friday night. The theater there charges only $2 for students and the popcorn and cokes are free. This poses a huge threat to my diet because I've always taken anything free, even if I didn't need it.

I can get a diet coke, that's fine. But what will I substitute for the buttery, salty popcorn that my boyfriend will be eating next to me? I can picture the wonder aromas wafting up to my nostrils right now.

So this got me thinking, "What healthy and satisfying movie snacks are out there?" I wish I could tell you that I was amazed by the amount I found. Hardly. I saw: celery sticks, pretzels, nuts, fruit, cut up veggies, etc. BLECH! Honestly, I think those'll just make me want my sour patch kids or popcorn even more. I'm fine with incorporating those things into my daily diet, but there's a sort of feeling that seeing a movie invokes that draws me toward the unhealthy stuff. It's like going to a carnival and passing on the funnel cake for celery sticks. Uh, no thanks.
Some may say that one serving of sour patch kids can't be all that bad. And I agree. One serving of sour patch kids, for me however, can sabotage my entire diet. There's no braking system here.

I did amazingly well with the movie snacks this summer when we went to see Indian Jones. I had just bought a huge basket of local strawberries, so I cut some up and shared them with my boyfriend during the movie. They were so good! And satisfying! And no longer in season! :o(
I found this article on SparkPeople that had some better snack suggestions than others I found. Not sure whether sparkpeople will make you log in to read it or not. The only other thing I found that may hit the spot is Kernel Season's Popcorn Seasoning. I've tried several of these and really like them except that they have a hard time sticking to butterless popcorn. I saw somewhere that you can use that healthy "butter" spray to help it stick, but I haven't tried that yet. And I'm really not all that sure that these seasonings are a healthier option. There's 2-5 calories per 1/4 tsp (1 serving) so if you stick to the serving size, perhaps it is.

A major help would be to somehow change my way of thinking that going to the movies = yummy junk food.
A funny (& perhaps relatable) aside: my dad buys the popcorn size with the free refill and then will eat all (we sometimes help) of the popcorn during the previews and get a refill before the movie even starts. :o)

Anyone have any alternative movie snack tricks up their sleeves?

Friday, September 19, 2008

Ninja Cat

I saw this video on The Bonnie Hunt Show this morning and I had to share.

The big day

Today's the big 30th party! I'm stressed out, but anxious to get the ball rolling. I have tons of cleaning to do (should've done lots of it earlier, but other things kept taking precendence) and a fair amount of setting up/decorating. I guess it's a good thing my car is in the shop (because of some bad gas I got) so that I'm forced to stay home and do these things. Well enough talkin' about it...I'm off to start cleaning!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Amazing what a little rain can do

I have bell peppers! I have peppers! No squash yet, but the plants are doing so much better!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Jamaica anyone???

So...I'm going to Jamaica! YAY! I didn't want to post anything before it was confirmed, but I just booked the plane tickets, so it's official! It happened quite suddenly (wedding is Oct 26th--NOT MINE!) and was somewhat expensive, but you only live once, right?

The story: one of the Biology grad students (who came in with my group) just recently got engaged to his girlfriend of ~10 years. His now fiance was getting a little stressed about planning a wedding so soon, so they just decided to have it down in Jamaica. My friend and her fiance (engaged last week) somehow managed to get their family to give them an early engagement present of some money towards going to Jamaica and then I got it in my head that Chris and I should go too. We had to wait to make sure Chris could get the time off--it was driving me nuts, but we can go!

The bad thing: it's at a resort, so it's not roughing it like I'd like it to be.

The good thing: it's at a resort, so it's not roughing it like I thought I'd like it to be. :o) It's all inclusive, so food, alcohol, scuba...no charge. What more could I ask for? Also, I booked the same flight as our friends, so we can carpool and share the hotel room in Charlotte.

I'm stoked STOKED STOKED STOKED! :o)

Friday, September 12, 2008

What's for dinner?

From Lia Mack's Blog:

1. What's for dinner tonight? Fried okra, sloppy beef sandwiches, and pico w/ chips (sounds fattening (really it's not) and random (gotta use up the veggies!))

2. Do you do all or most of the cooking? Yes

3. What is your signature/favorite food to make? What are you known for? I'm not really "known" for anything but I can whip up spaghetti and garlic bread in 5 seconds (who can't) and my grandmother's coconut cake was a huge hit once.

4. Favorite food to chop? Cucumbers

5. Least favorite food to prepare that you have to cook? Onions, tomatoes

6. What was the last thing you made/cooked? Blueberry muffins last night

7. What was the last thing someone made for you? Hmmm...does McDonald's count?

8. How often do you burn your food? What are you known to burn? I can't even remember the last time I burned something. I'm a chemist in the kitchen.

9. What's your signature/favorite breakfast? Breakfast burritos

10. What's your signature/favorite lunch? Breakfast burritos

11. Dessert? What do you have to have that you make yourself? Cake!

12. Favorite veggie to prepare? How? Cucumbers--peeled and sliced

13. Most interesting item you've ever eaten and/or cooked? Probably dim sum mainly because I didn't know what I was eating.

14. Favorite kitchen gadget(s)? Louise's new wine bottle opener

15. Ever caught the kitchen on fire? Nope--done it with microwaves a couple of times though

16. Are you the grill master? What are you best at grilling? Hardly!

17. What would your dream kitchen include? A personal chef

18. If asked, what do you make/cook to bring to a party to share? Bean salad (yum!) or cake

19. What did you have for dinner last night? Cheese and broccoli Lean Pocket

20. And, most importantly...are you hungry now?! Absolutely! It's 12:25 and past my lunch time!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Kitchen before and after






Random things

1. It's the 7th anniversary of September 11th...it feels like it happened yesterday.
2. My seminar presentation has been moved from November 21st to early next semester! Yay!
3. I think I might switch from My Food Diary to Spark People. Spark People doesn't charge a monthly fee and does all that which My Food Diary does.
4. The power company started cutting down all of the brush and trees under the powerlines yesterday. One, a house above me that I didn't know was there suddenly appeared. Two, I feel like I'm going against my environmentalist side when I hope that they take down all of the brush in front of my house so that I can get a better view of the river. :oP
5. If all goes well (meaning my "boss" doesn't tell me I still need to do a certain plot) I'm all done with field work. Happy face!
6. My boyfriend bought an iPhone. Whatever.
7. Depending on whether or not my boyfriend can get the time off, we might be going to Jamaica in October for our friend's wedding. Another happy face!
8. Except for touch-up paint, my kitchen is done! Happy face number three!
9. I planted collard greens and cauliflower. Cross your fingers.
10. I needed to think of something else for number 10 (to make this list even) but couldn't.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Kiddie pool?

I have a digging problem. That's the first step, right? Admit you have a problem? Actually, my dogs have the digging, I have the problem. We've had this problem off and on for a while now with them digging up and killing ALL of the rhodos in the yard, but it hasn't gotten on my nerves until recently. Perhaps the problem has gotten bigger than what I'll allow.

I did some searching online to see if there's any kind of repellent for the areas they're (I say they but I'm not sure whether it's both of them or just one) digging up. No luck. The best I found were websites saying it's either their nature, boredom, or they're trying to find a cool spot in which to lay. Basically, it's the owner's fault.

So what do I do? I go and buy treats/toys to reward(?) their bad behavior. Against my better judgement (because my dogs don't play with dog toys--imagine that!) I bought a rope and a squeaky toy. I hate spending money on stupid things my dogs don't even touch. I also bought 5 big rawhide bones. I'm okay with spending money on these since I know Capone loves them. Athena loves them because Capone loves them. As I gave one to each of them I thought, "Wait. Since Athena's going to run and bury hers...this is just going to make it worse!" AAGH!

This situation has been on my mind all day. Believe it or not this is somewhat of a big deal because I live on a semi-steep hill. Since the dogs (or whichever one it is) are digging right where the hill meets the flat part, I'm afraid there's going to be a major landslide with the first major rain we get. Whether this concern is warranted or not, I don't know. At any rate, if this keeps up I feel like I might have to put in a retaining wall. :oP I would get a landscaper (not sure if this is the correct professional to hire) to come in a take a look at it, but after this kitchen renovation, I HAVE NO MONEY!

At any rate, here's my conclusion: judging from where they're digging (under an azalea, under a mimosa tree, and under the picnic table) I think they're looking for a cool spot to lay in. At the same time, one of them (or both?) are eating the roots of the mimosa. Same thing happened with the rhodos. So are they hungry? Am I not feeding them enough? They're eating grass as well. Or is it the water content in the roots? Does their water get too hot to drink? My boyfriend and I have discussed previously how strange it is that they won't drink the water I provide outside and then when I let them in for the night they'll drink and drink and drink the water that's inside. I even changed the bowl I have for them outside just in case it was the problem.

I considered buying a kiddie pool to put out back, but I did that in NM and they ignored it. Also, since it's hilly back there, the only level place I could put it is on the fire-pit patio and there's not much shade there.

Does anyone have any advice??

Thursday, September 4, 2008

When a spider isn't a spider


I recently posted a picture on Facebook of a daddy-longlegs and mistakenly called it a "spider". Boy was I wrong! (As my friends so quickly pointed out.) Apparently spiders usually have two body sections, eight eyes, and unsegmented abdomens while daddy-longlegs have one body section, two eyes, and segemented abdomens. The Spider Myths Site does a really good job explaining it when they say that daddy-longlegs are arachnids but not spiders in the same way that butterflies are insects but not beetles.


A little bit of trivia for you...now go impress all of your friends.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

...have the capacity to sting when they are rubbed against.


After sampling today I have decided that I'll take sampling in rhodo hell over sampling in wood nettle (Laportea canadensis) any day! If you scream in the woods and no one's around to hear it, do you make a sound?



Monday, September 1, 2008

The world would be a better place if every weekend was a 3-day weekend

SATURDAY

1. Played Mario & Sonic Olympics for Wii.

2. Picked up veggie tray and balloons from Food Lion for cousin's baby shower. Balloons were free since they forgot to blow them up before we got there. (yay)

3. Attended baby shower with lots of people I didn't know.

4. Ate microwave dinners (still don't have sink/countertops) on patio; drank a bottle of wine.

5. Went to friend's house to watch Clemson game.

6. Clemson lost.

7. Burst bloodvessels in my eye when I hit myself (on accident) with my friend's stick.

SUNDAY

8. Played M & S Olympics.

9. Boyfriend sanded address post at top of drive.

10. Picked up dog doo-doo.

11. Mowed

12. Got ice-cream at Dairy Queen.

13. Attended grandparent's 60th wedding anniversary party with (again) lots of people I didn't know.

14. Stopped by other grandparent's house for dinner and to pick up shrimp for boyfriend's bday party. Got hibiscus seeds.

15. Played M & S Olympics.

MONDAY

16. Rode bikes to eat breakfast at Huddle House.

17. Played M & S Olympics.

18. Painted post at top of drive.

19. Took two trips to the Jackson County Transfer Station to dispose of cabinets that have been sitting in my driveway for weeks.

20. Boyfriend switched out old porch light for new one.

21. Weeded, transferred bulbs, cut down overgrowth, planted some hibiscus seeds.

22. Ate at burger joint never been to before but heard great things about that didn't turn out to be true.

23. Watched Clear & Present Danger.

24. Transferred refrigerator from shed to carport closet.

25. Moved brush pile from driveway to rear of dog pen.

26. Hammock fell while sitting in it.

27. Had great idea to use posts we bought for the pergola we're no longer building to put hammock up in the backyard.

28. Levelled the dishwasher.

29. Played M & S Olympics.

30. Created "glass", "plastic", "cans", "trash", "paper" signs for recycle bins.

31. Ate microwave dinners on patio, relaxed, and enjoyed the last few moments of this wonderful three-day weekend.