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Jul. 24th, 2008

badger

this one is for [info]ymasen



cute!
badger

wannnnnt

clickieonpiccie

Problem with me doing dolly stuff. As I search (mostly because I don't want the ideas I have to have already been done [not copied]), I find stuffs I wants... So much.
*sigh*

Jul. 23rd, 2008

dax huh?

Ah... memories. And dollies

I'm glad I have lj for an auxillary brain. It helps. I'd forgotten what I named my 60cm doll (Visica). Checking Sept 07 entries brought back a lot of intetresting meanderings. Like the one where I was gaining weight and happy. What the hell was I thinking? That short span of weight gain ended with me 50# heavier and mostly naked. None of my clothes fit and I can't find anything worth replacing them at Goodwill.
And the optimistic post about meds and new baby critters. Ugh. Goes to show... Beware getting what you ask for.

Now,
I've been obsessing over wig-making the past few days. Gathered pics and ideas for wig caps, made a few in different materials; plundered the WorldWideWeb for inspiration for OOAK hair designs; found a few wefting tutorials that have helped some, mostly leading me to side-track a few hours to make/build/embellish wefting materials that really weren't necessary since most of the hair I currently have is already wefted.
One night was a total manic mess. I did force myself away from the sewing machine at 3:30am and spent the rest of the day feeling like I'd been hit by a truck. Hard thing is, my obssessive moments only seem to last about 30 minutes at a time. It kinda prevents me from actually finishing anything and at one point yesterday, I completely forgot what I was doing. Completely. I looked at my mess in the kitchen (where I'm now set up, because it has the best light and I can see the tv) and had no clue as to what I was doing. None at all. No concept of what any of it was for or what I had planned to do with it.
I got it back together today, anyway. I've come quite a ways on one wig, but now have to retool a part, which will require 24 hour drying time. I can work on one of the others in the meantime.

At some point, I'll have to pull out power tools and make a matching set of shelves to support my "worktable". Right now, It's too high and too wobbly

Jul. 20th, 2008

badger

Awestruck

The photos of this Flickr account are some of the most beautiful I have ever seen.
http://flickr.com/people/mboogiedown/
badger

yay! Kitties!

kitty wigs

Jul. 13th, 2008

badger

okc quizzes

Your result for The Which Holy Beast are You? Test...

Pangu

You scored 27 Blue Dragon, 27 Red Phoenix, 27 White Tiger, and 20 Black Tortoise!


You are the center, not only are you the center you created the world. You have perfect balance, you are Yin and Yang.

Take The Which Holy Beast are You? Test at HelloQuizzy



Your result for The Virtues of the Avatar Test...

Compassion

3 Truth, 7 Love, 4 Courage


Compassion is the Virtue of Love in its purest form. Compassion will be your guide along the path. Be open to where it leads you.


Like my tests? Try The Elemental Test

Take The Virtues of the Avatar Test at HelloQuizzy

badger

skink eggs

Yesterday I was moving concrete and uncovered a blue-tailed skink. Since I was planning on mowing the spot, I shoo-ed her away and found 5 tiny eggs! She stayed nearby as I took pics, picked an egg, and replaced the block carefully, so as not to hurt the eggs.
I took one egg, my curiousity of course getting the better of me. It's moist and leathery. It's in a makeshift incubater, with a heat pad for hermit crabs underneath, soil and paper towels to help keep it moist. I've been turning it and misting several times a day. I hope it works. I've never tried to hatch a reptile before. I'll get around to uploading the pics. The egg is smaller than my son's fingernail!
I "candled" it with the laser pointer on the mouse. There's a tiny shadow that looks like a very small tadpole. I doubt I could get a pic of that, but it is cool.

edit: I forgot to mention, the mother was on the driveway, waiting to see my intent. With the sun out, the driveway was really hot. As I watched her, she put her thin front legs up over her back to keep them from being damaged by the heat. I shifted so she was somewhat shaded as I waited for the kid to bring the camera. She ended up moving to a cooler spot. This all took less than a minute, btw.

Jul. 12th, 2008

badger

the one thing I'd like to do before I die

I think I've had an interesting life. Maybe my idea of adventure is different from others'. There are places in the world I would like to see, but as long as I can just know they're out there, I'm okay. No great desire to have to go elsewhere.
Except here. My love of mustelids encompasses from the least weasel to the great South American giant river otter. I'm not sure when I became aware of the giant otters, but I do remember following Diane's crusade sporadically over the years. To me, giant otters are the "Great Danes of the ferret world". To actually meet Diane is something I would dream of, but doubt I'd ever experience. So I'll continue worshipping her from afar.


http://travel.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/travel/holiday_type/green_travel/article2548332.ece

From The Sunday TimesSeptember 30, 2007

Guyana's otter woman
On the banks of Guyana's Rupununi River is a nature reserve with a
difference, says Lindsay Hawdon

Lindsay Hawdon
Ouch, you little bastard," Diane McTurk shouts, as Flood the otter
bolts out of the barn door and runs across the ranch yard, which basks
in dusky sunlight. "He bit my foot," she shrieks, sprinting after him,
agile despite her 75 years. She speaks the clipped colonial English of
another era. "Come, my heart, my love, my life," she coos, "you're not
supposed to chew me."

Flood is the 37th giant river otter that Diane has adopted here at her
ranch, Karanambu, on the edge of the Rupununi River. He was abandoned
by his mother at six weeks old; Diane found him growling beneath a
cupboard in a nearby Amerindian village and brought him home in a red
handbag. Eventually, he will be rehabilitated back into the wild.
Diane has no children. "These otters are my children," she had told me
earlier.

The McTurk family has long welcomed visiting naturalists to these 125
square miles of grassland, low forest, lagoons, creeks and rivers that
lie in the centre of Guyana. Gerald Durrell and David Attenborough
came in the 1950s, and Diane herself is now renowned for her success
in rehabilitating giant river otters into the wild.

I follow her out across the yard. I can hear Edward, Diane's nephew,
in the main barn, shouting into a radio that crackles over the
airways, trying to organise a plane drop-off of urgent supplies.

"There's a proper, excuse my language, balls-up going on," Diane yells
across the yard as she chases after Flood. Eventually, she manages to
corner him between the barn and a timber pile, engulfing him in a
dirty towel. "He's trying for a second swim, the naughty scamp. But
it's past his bedtime," she says, carrying him back across the yard.

"Tell them over and out, over and out," she shouts to Edward before
disappearing into the vast structure of the barn, which is roofed with
palm leaves, its walls open to the wind and rain. Built by Tiny,
Diane's father, it was meant to be inhabited only until a permanent
house replaced it.

That was never built, and now Diane sleeps in the centre of the old
barn, on a small bed beneath the roof that lets in monsoon showers.
Flood sleeps in Diane's bathroom, on a pile of wet towels placed
inside a cat basket. Visitors fare better, sleeping in one of five
comfortable cabana-style huts.

Despite her decrepit surroundings, Diane manages to look immaculate at
all times. She returns now without Flood, a silk scarf tied around her
head à la Grace Kelly, her beige slacks only slightly muddied with paw
prints.

"Do we have homemade fudge?" she shouts to Edward. "The boat's waiting
and we're late. I need to mollify them." Edward points and continues
his negotiations over the radio. Diane grabs the fudge and shouts
"Come on", running off, down to the river.

Dansford and Kenneth, Diane's tracker and guide, are waiting patiently
in a small motorboat, shaking their heads.

"I know, I know," says Diane, wading into the water and clambering
into the boat. "Sorry, I'm a disaster." They are both Guyanese,
Dansford slightly sullen with shyness, Kenneth all smiles. The latter
wears a knife in his belt.

"Did you bring the rum punch, man?" Diane is asking Kenneth. He nods
as Diane rustles in a cool box, then unsteadily pours us a drink.

The sun has almost set as we motor out into the wide expanse of the
clear Rupununi River. The light is sepia, the shadows are long. We
speed along the centre, the wind in our hair, the call of howler
monkeys in the trees along the banks. Diane's silk scarf ruffles
behind her. Somehow, she maintains her elegant composure,
straight-backed, swan-necked.

"My great-great-grandfather was the first to settle here," she says,
her attention shifting to me. "I think I take after him – hopeless in
all business matters." She laughs, and you can tell she was once a
great beauty. The boat slows and we turn off into a narrow creek where
the light is ghostly, all shadows and silhouettes.

Dansford shines a light onto a world of skeleton trees. Giant spiders'
webs light up in the glow. Bulldog bats skim across the water. A huge
orange caterpillar falls from a branch onto my shirt.

Diane flicks it off with one hand and sips her rum punch. "They burn,"
she says casually, then continues her story. "I took over the ranch
from my brother in 1977. I was hopeless, but hopeful. I tried planting
sugar, fruit trees. Both failed. I planted cashew nuts, but villagers
stole them and sold them back to me. Desperate for money, I asked
friends who visited to leave money instead of champagne. That's how we
got into hospitality. Now tourists dine with me like friends and I
show them the heart of the Rupununi."

Dansford cuts the engine. Kenneth is hacking off hanging branches with
a large machete. The insects, attracted to the light, are flying into
my face. I spit them from my mouth as a sharp blade of razor grass
slashes my cheek.

Just when it seems we are going to be stuck there for the night, the
grasses part and we drift out onto tranquil waters that are covered in
giant lily pads. Silently, we float through them, the only light cast
by the torch and the new moon above.

"There," Diane whispers, pointing to a beautiful white flower, its
petals half open. "The Victoria amazonica lily," she says. "It only
opens at night, for three nights, closing before the sun comes up."

We watch in silence, sipping rum punch. It takes 45 minutes for the
lily to unfold its petals. "On the final night, it stays open," Diane
whispers when the fully-fledged flower lies before us, pink-centred
and Karanambu pineapple-scented. "And, as the bleeds into the white
petals andBRAZIL the flower dies. It's the most beautiful death. I
should like toRu u uniRiver die like that."

As we return to Karanambu, Diane is suggesting that, after dinner, we
go out to find black caymans. Her zest for life is insatiable.
Suddenly she is standing up in the boat.

"Flood," she shrieks. "I don't believe it. You've got out. Oh, you're
hopeless." From the water, two eyes glint in the torchlight – then,
quick as a flash, Flood dives beneath the surface.

"Oh, Flood," she laughs. "Come back, my heart, my love, my life. Come
back." With that, she clambers into the shallows and wades after him.

Travel details

Last Frontiers (01296 653000, www.lastfrontiers.com) can tailor-make
holidays throughout the region. An 11-day trip to Guyana, including a
stay at the Karanambu Ranch, and taking in Georgetown (the capital),
the 740ft-high Kaieteur Falls and the Makushi Amerindian tribe's
thatched village of Surama, starts at £2,990pp.

Accommodation at Karanambu is in cabana-style rooms, with erratic and
rudimentary plumbing and electricity, but the beds are comfortable and
well netted. Most of the rooms have an ensuite bathroom.

The price includes flights with Virgin Atlantic from Gatwick to
Barbados, and the onward connection with Liat to Georgetown,
transfers, tours and full-board accommodation (except in Georgetown).

Or try Exsus (020 7292 5060, www.exsus.com), or Trips Worldwide (0117
311 4403, www.tripsworldwide.co.uk).
badger

poly meme

Your result for The Polyamorous Test...

Heavenly Perfection

You're 89% Poly =) 95% tolerant of the poly lifestyle =) (But... you're 3% just in it for the sex =))


Ooooooohhhh Aaaaaaaaahhhhhh



You're poly.


You're tolerant of poly lifestyle. (Good for you you like yourself!)


You're not just here for the sex.


And you won't lie to your mate.



I *Like* YOU.



Congratualtions on being a pretty good person =)



Gabriel_Night



Oh - just so you don't go off wondering - the first question? the one about monogamous cultures? the answer is 16% of recorded cultures have been monogamous - 84% have been non monogamous! how about that? =)

Take The Polyamorous Test at HelloQuizzy

Jul. 6th, 2008

badger

meme/quizzes

</form>
Your Life as
a Celebrity by Karen_Walker
username
reason for
being famous
plastic surgery you've had done
your tabloid
scandal
arrested for
drugs
your stalkerurbpan
your best
friend
your nemesis
the tabloids think you're dating
you're really dating
your secret lover
your bitter ex
how long you stay in the spotlighta whole month




Your result for The Commonly Confused Words Test...

English Genius

You scored 100% Beginner, 93% Intermediate, 80% Advanced, and 87% Expert!


You did so extremely well, even I can't find a word to describe your excellence! You have the uncommon intelligence necessary to understand things that most people don't. You have an extensive vocabulary, and you're not afraid to use it properly! Way to go!


Thank you so much for taking my test. I hope you enjoyed it!



For the complete Answer Key, visit my blog: http://shortredhead78.blogspot.com/.

Take The Commonly Confused Words Test at HelloQuizzy




Your result for The Camelot Test...

Lancelot


Honourable and passionate. You never back down from a challenge. Your friends are very important to you. You believe in justice and duty far above your own personal security and comfort.


Congratulations! This was the most challenging result to get. You are one of a kind.

Take The Camelot Test at HelloQuizzy

Jul. 2nd, 2008

badger

Just watched Jumper....

... And all I got ta say is
"Ezekiel 25:17. The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness. For he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know I am the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon you."


So, who's the "bad guy"?
badger

hee hee, Val Kilmer!

badger

horoscope, this is actually pretty good

http://www.freewillastrology.com/horoscopes/sagittarius.html


Sagittarius Horoscope for week of July 3, 2008

Beginning in 1951, the U.S. government regularly set off nuclear bombs in the desert 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Most of the 1,021 explosions occurred underground, though for 11 years some were also done in the open air. Tourists used to flock to Las Vegas to watch the mushroom clouds, which were visible from that distance. As far as we know, the detonations ceased in 1992. Also as far as we know, the unusual lifestyles of Las Vegas's inhabitants are not the result of mutations in their DNA caused by radioactive contamination. Let's use this scenario as a departure point for your own personal inventory, Sagittarius. What dangerous or tempestuous events from your life are now safely confined to the past? Are there any lingering consequences from them? If so, what might you do to heal?

Considering how in flux my emotional state is lately (rapid cycling* and all), this really has me wondering. It's definitely spot-on. Demons from the past have been popping up to say "boo" quite a bit lately. There's a couple that even now, 20-some years later, have me going, "What? Did I really do that? What the hell was I thinking? Well, shit, of course, s/he/it was mad at me back then... I'm so pathetic!" One incident in particular causes this reaction every time it bursts onto my consciousness. I suppose it's partly because at the time, I was suprised my behaviour caused an issue to begin with. I think it was one of those "if a guy had done it" situations. And then, my mind wanders down the What-If trail. I always end up in It Was Probably For The Best land. Meaning, I would most likely be some physically abused, country breeder type if that event hadn't changed the then current course of action.
And so, I feel relief, just kinda sad that I did such an act that may have caused such pain to another. In my older, wiser state of aged-ness, I begin to see that perhaps that instance comes subconsciously into play more frequently than previously suspected. More in the most recent 10 years than the first 10 or so. So far, each reenactment has proved to be somewhat more positive in outcome, but maybe not all?
It's Groundhog Day all over again.

*with a phrase like that, I should be losing weight *sigh*

And Terry's
Aquarius Horoscope for week of July 3, 2008

"Dear Rob: After a long stretch of patiently putting up with God's mean-spirited tricks, I decided I'd had enough. So I fired Him. Now I'm going to create a brand new deity from scratch. Do you have any recommendations on what qualities a truly cool divine being might possess? - Awakening Aquarius." Dear Awakening: One quality your fresh god should have is an appreciation for your originality. You also deserve a deity who likes it when you take your fate into your own hands. That's all I'll say. It's a good time for you Aquarians to shun other people's ideas about the divine influences and brainstorm extravagantly about what's true for you.

hmmm, ok



http://www.freewillastrology.com/horoscopes/allsigns.html

Jun. 30th, 2008

badger

Mice

Finally, after 4 months, I've proof that the mice are a pair. They may have been breeding this entire time, and eating the babies. I heard squeaky noises and found two pups. Both were cold, but alive. When I pulled one for Charlette, it already had a nip in the back of the neck. I'm kinda watching them with the other one, but I'm sure it's going to be someone's lunch soon.
I'm wondering, would putting another female in help settle them down to parenthood? I've already moved them from the "public area".
Rats are so much easier...

Edit: Pup2 had its head eatten off. Kitara ate it anyway. Just a tiny snack for her. Kinda like eating a Lifesaver, I think.

Jun. 25th, 2008

badger

ON SALE!! older cats (for adoption) ATLANTA

For those in the Atlanta area who are considering adopting an older cat PAWS of Atlanta, previously the Dekalb Humane Society, will be holding discounted adoption days for those cats that have been in their program for more than 2 years.

From their newsletter
"KittyPalooza at PAWS Atlanta
From now until the end of the year, PAWS Atlanta is having special adoption prices-one weekend a month for select cats. All cats that have been waiting for their homes for more then two years at PAWS Atlanta will be half off their normal adoption fee during the weekends of : July 19-20, August 16-17, September 20-21, October 18-19, November 15-16 and December 6-7.

KittyPalooza is a fine way to get older, more relaxed cats into great homes. Come out to PAWS Atlanta and meet a couple of them!"

While some of these cats may be found on the
PAWS Petfinders page, I'd advise calling ahead or visiting to see if any of these cats would be the right companion for you.

More info on donation fees and services can be found here


An excerpt from this site reads:
"All of our cats and dogs (and puppies and kittens!) have already been neutered or spayed -- this helps prevent more unwanted animals from being born and ending up homeless. Our cats and dogs are microchipped (a rice-size digital chip is placed between the shoulder blades so they can be reunited with their owner if they get lost), dewormed, up-to-date on shots appropriate for their age, and the dogs have been tested for heartworms and the cats for feline leukemia and FIV. Dogs receive heartworm preventive; all the animals are treated for fleas, ticks, and ear mites (if necessary). The minimum donation to adopt is $175 for dogs and $125 for cats."

So that's like... half of $125. You can't even walk into a vet's office without paying at least that! ($62.50)

My Public Service announcement for the day.

My personal pimpage:
If anyone is interested, or knows someone who might be interested, in a female B/W Papillon or two, my girls are up on the PCAR website, along with several other great dogs!

Adoptable dogs

Jun. 22nd, 2008

badger

our Rider's Edge teacher

http://www.ajc.com/hotjobs/content/hotjobs/careercenter/articles/2008/06/20/0622_wilmjharley.html




with one of the Buell Blasts, like my bike

Jun. 18th, 2008

badger

quiz thingies

I've spent about 3 hours playing around on okcupid "tests". Most are pretty lame.

But after one mentioned a "roof rat", I had to google. It appears "roof rat" is a more common name for rattus rattus than "black" or "ship" rat. cool. Lots more roof rat sites than the other, even googling rattus rattus. Found an electro-shock trap. Anyone have any experience with these? Bonus, if it works, would be ready-to-freeze raptor/reptile food.

Out of all the quizy things I've done today, this
http://www.ratbehavior.org/QuizNorwayRatRoofRat.htm

(with cute ratty pictures
)

was my fav. I did get two wrong, one on accident, but still, I think I'm pretty rat-savvy.
I like the comparison chart provided.

The rest of the site has some pretty humorous links. I liked the rat real estate one.
badger

hema page

Funny. Let the page load and watch for a few seconds.

http://producten.hema.nl/

Jun. 13th, 2008

dax huh?

Rats win...

Count ready for raptor food: 9
Count kept for personal enjoyment: 4
Count that outwitted me and are now at large in the house: I dunno. The four adults, three females and one huge-ass male, got out. I should've padlocked their cage. I lost a few outside, while trying to clean out their tank. Some were just too fast, too slick, too smart, I guess.
Total count? At one point, I had or saw a total of 21. I have 13. I think the big 4 are hiding out near the critter cages. I'm not seeing any droppings, but the ferret's food and water are gone by morning. She doesn't eat or drink that much.

Two years ago, GE messed up my gas stove, then chewed through the waterline to the fridge. We finally had her evicted.
Now, my Cabrio washer is leaking, no, pouring out, water. The service guy that came today said the diode/conductor/fuselage-thingie or something was chewed on. He disconnected it. It's a special order part, but with it disconnected, I should be able to use the washer, just not the bleach reservoir. Maybe he disconnected the wrong one? Anyway. It still leaks. When I pulled the washer and dryer out on Tuesday, I noticed the huge section of dryer duct that was chewed through. We've been pondering as to the why of the rats hanging out in the laundry room. It would appear to be that it's a water source.
I think it's revenge.

I'm plotting my next move. A bigger, tastier, more diabolical trashcan with food in the bottom of it.
badger

scootering stuff

This is our trikke. My step-mom was a sales rep, but got out of it after shattering her wrist. The wrist-shattering was a result of racing my young niece down a hill at a lake resort. My niece veered into her, and she steered away. One of the wheels hit a rock and my step-mom hit the ground. She now rides a "Harley wannabe" motorcycle. She really liked the trikkes, because it was the least impact exercise after her knee and back surgeries. But then, several surgeries on her wrist pretty much sucked (DO NOT go to the emergency room at the hospital in Villa Rica, GA. After x-rays, they told her it was sprained and wrapped it.)

I'm learning more about the design of the Urban Trail harness, also called the guard harness, distance harness, and a few other names. I don't think I got mine quite right.
Taking Hige out today, the topline, where the tugline attaches, pretty much disintegrated. I also had the breast section too low. Looking at some of the sites I've discovered, I think the breast piece wraps around to the girth. That was my original design, but then I opted for a seperate girth.
Okay, it's a $20-$30 harness. I need to order one... But where's the fun in that?

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