senoritafish: (Default)
(posted from the bus; consolidated & photos added later)

Ok, freaky weather we're having, much? This morning when I was getting Angus ready for school, I looked out the kitchen window to the west and thought "Boy, that sure looks darker than our usual marine layer..." then put the boy on the bus and promptly forgot about it. By the time I caught my own bus, it was sunny, if pretty hazy, and remained so most of the day. VT remarked at lunchtime that her spouse had called after dropping their son off at daycare, and reported it was thundering and hailing in Irvine, but it was still sunny and hazy in Los Al.

Just before I shut down for the day, I noticed it agian looked awfully dark. I checked if the sidewalk was wet-it wasn't-and with a vague hope that I could get home before I got wet, headed for the exit downstairs. walked down the hall and got the door opened at the exact time the heavens decided to do the same thing. Soaked before I even got to the bus stop; one of the admin staff leaving at the same time stopped and handed me an umbrella out her car window.

storm3

Very tiny redwood forest at the corner of our building's property...

storm1

grr, guess there's a char. limit on email posts from the phone too...
Anyhoo, I usually hate brollies because it seems to me you need at least three arms to use them properly and I would rather just wear a hat. But grateful this time cuz I didn't have one-'tho there was thunder along with the downpour so I stuck close to the wall 'til the bus came. And yeah, Crocs are waterproof but they ain't WATERPROOF, so I have a wet shirt and wet feet. ACHOO! Frank, the driver, told me to have a glass of wine when I get home-sounds good to me! (Dammit, why don't the Enter key on this phone work?)
senoritafish: (Default)
(posted from the bus; consolidated & photos added later)

Ok, freaky weather we're having, much? This morning when I was getting Angus ready for school, I looked out the kitchen window to the west and thought "Boy, that sure looks darker than our usual marine layer..." then put the boy on the bus and promptly forgot about it. By the time I caught my own bus, it was sunny, if pretty hazy, and remained so most of the day. VT remarked at lunchtime that her spouse had called after dropping their son off at daycare, and reported it was thundering and hailing in Irvine, but it was still sunny and hazy in Los Al.

Just before I shut down for the day, I noticed it agian looked awfully dark. I checked if the sidewalk was wet-it wasn't-and with a vague hope that I could get home before I got wet, headed for the exit downstairs. walked down the hall and got the door opened at the exact time the heavens decided to do the same thing. Soaked before I even got to the bus stop; one of the admin staff leaving at the same time stopped and handed me an umbrella out her car window.

storm3

Very tiny redwood forest at the corner of our building's property...

storm1

grr, guess there's a char. limit on email posts from the phone too...
Anyhoo, I usually hate brollies because it seems to me you need at least three arms to use them properly and I would rather just wear a hat. But grateful this time cuz I didn't have one-'tho there was thunder along with the downpour so I stuck close to the wall 'til the bus came. And yeah, Crocs are waterproof but they ain't WATERPROOF, so I have a wet shirt and wet feet. ACHOO! Frank, the driver, told me to have a glass of wine when I get home-sounds good to me! (Dammit, why don't the Enter key on this phone work?)
senoritafish: (dreams on a 'chovie can)
PICT9585

This weekend was the Mary Lou Heard Memorial Garden Tour; a fundraiser in memory of a local gardener/nursery owner. She started the tour herself as a way to raise money for a local women's shelter - after she passed away, others continued putting it on. It's all free; each home has a donation jar that they ask you donate to. And some of the gardens are just breathtaking. A woman in my garden club particpated in it last year, and said she spent 9 hours a day for two months in her yard getting ready for it! There were 48 homes on the tour, but we only visited six, which was plenty.

Seal Beach CA
Sharp VE-CG30
04 May 2008

a few more... )
senoritafish: (dreams on a 'chovie can)
PICT9585

This weekend was the Mary Lou Heard Memorial Garden Tour; a fundraiser in memory of a local gardener/nursery owner. She started the tour herself as a way to raise money for a local women's shelter - after she passed away, others continued putting it on. It's all free; each home has a donation jar that they ask you donate to. And some of the gardens are just breathtaking. A woman in my garden club particpated in it last year, and said she spent 9 hours a day for two months in her yard getting ready for it! There were 48 homes on the tour, but we only visited six, which was plenty.

Seal Beach CA
Sharp VE-CG30
04 May 2008

a few more... )
senoritafish: (perfect TV mom)

My kids and I went outside just after sunset, because of a beautiful pink sky in the west, and hung out in the front yard for awhile, watching the stars slowly come out. Sometimes we'd notice a tiny glowing speck, but watch it for a few minutes before realizing it was a very high flying jet. The low flying ones, on their approach to Long Beach or John Wayne airport, made good subjects for Gareth to test out the binoculars he got for his birthday. When we noticed one appear we'd all try to point them out to each other; for me this required putting my head on their level and pointing so they could sight along my arm.

Sometimes, your eyes feel a little weird because you notice faint stars in the corner of your eye that disappear when you try to look directly at them. I've read this is because you have more light sensitive rod cells in the part of your retina covering peripheral vision than in the center, where there are more of the color sensitive cone cells that we use in the daytime. Or I'm just imagining them because I'm getting a crick in my neck from looking straight up, and my eyes are straining to see stars in a city sky full of light pollution from the street lights and the neighbor across the street's garish light display, and lots of wispy cirrus clouds besides.

At moonrise, we can see the disk is full tonight, and as she rises towards the power lines behind our house, I can see a bright speck to the lower right of it. As first I think I can see the space between the star and the planet growing, but as the pair rise farther, I see they are maintaining the same distance; the star is within the haze around the moon formed by the high clouds. Gareth check them out though the binoculars, and then we all take a look. I gaze straight up again and see a bright spot moving quickly; it doesn't look like a plane, but is moving steadily until it goes behind our tree and I lose sight of it. I surmise it must be a satellite; I haven't seen one in years.

Now I'm curious, and head indoors to look up (in a different sense) what we've been looking at. Earth & Sky tells us tonight the star near the moon is not a star but a planet; Mars, in fact, and The God of War will be accompnying the Moon all night long. Tomorrow, our planet and Mars will be in opposition- the Earth will be directly between the Sun and Mars, at its closest point for two years. If you have a good telescope/camera, it's supposed to be an excellent night for photographing the Red Planet - my camera isn't that great, so I guess I have to wait for the next close approach.

The Farmer's Almanac says that this full moon is the Full Cold Moon, or the Full Long Nights Moon, the full moon closest to the Winter Solstice, (or Yule).

Ah well, time to think of dinner and wrapping some presents; maybe we'll go out again later, to catch Saturn rising.

Amazing Space - nifty movie on sky events in December

senoritafish: (perfect TV mom)

My kids and I went outside just after sunset, because of a beautiful pink sky in the west, and hung out in the front yard for awhile, watching the stars slowly come out. Sometimes we'd notice a tiny glowing speck, but watch it for a few minutes before realizing it was a very high flying jet. The low flying ones, on their approach to Long Beach or John Wayne airport, made good subjects for Gareth to test out the binoculars he got for his birthday. When we noticed one appear we'd all try to point them out to each other; for me this required putting my head on their level and pointing so they could sight along my arm.

Sometimes, your eyes feel a little weird because you notice faint stars in the corner of your eye that disappear when you try to look directly at them. I've read this is because you have more light sensitive rod cells in the part of your retina covering peripheral vision than in the center, where there are more of the color sensitive cone cells that we use in the daytime. Or I'm just imagining them because I'm getting a crick in my neck from looking straight up, and my eyes are straining to see stars in a city sky full of light pollution from the street lights and the neighbor across the street's garish light display, and lots of wispy cirrus clouds besides.

At moonrise, we can see the disk is full tonight, and as she rises towards the power lines behind our house, I can see a bright speck to the lower right of it. As first I think I can see the space between the star and the planet growing, but as the pair rise farther, I see they are maintaining the same distance; the star is within the haze around the moon formed by the high clouds. Gareth check them out though the binoculars, and then we all take a look. I gaze straight up again and see a bright spot moving quickly; it doesn't look like a plane, but is moving steadily until it goes behind our tree and I lose sight of it. I surmise it must be a satellite; I haven't seen one in years.

Now I'm curious, and head indoors to look up (in a different sense) what we've been looking at. Earth & Sky tells us tonight the star near the moon is not a star but a planet; Mars, in fact, and The God of War will be accompnying the Moon all night long. Tomorrow, our planet and Mars will be in opposition- the Earth will be directly between the Sun and Mars, at its closest point for two years. If you have a good telescope/camera, it's supposed to be an excellent night for photographing the Red Planet - my camera isn't that great, so I guess I have to wait for the next close approach.

The Farmer's Almanac says that this full moon is the Full Cold Moon, or the Full Long Nights Moon, the full moon closest to the Winter Solstice, (or Yule).

Ah well, time to think of dinner and wrapping some presents; maybe we'll go out again later, to catch Saturn rising.

Amazing Space - nifty movie on sky events in December

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