¿Tired of watching the paint dry?
¿Don't want to be accused of being a tree-hugger because your watching the grass grow?
To fulfill your observational cravings, ¿why not watch cheese age?
http://cheddarvision.tv/
thanks NPR.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
just found out
this morning we found out that we've got a little girl on the way. laura's just short of the halfway mark on her pregnancy and the baby will probably be born at the end of the first week of april or into the second week.
the baby looks healthy and laura and i are excited for all that is to come. having the ultrasound done makes this whole baby thing a little more tangible, even more so than hearing the heart beat for the first time.
i'm sure laura will inform me tonight of the name she has picked out. i may wait a bit before i pass on that news.
the baby looks healthy and laura and i are excited for all that is to come. having the ultrasound done makes this whole baby thing a little more tangible, even more so than hearing the heart beat for the first time.
i'm sure laura will inform me tonight of the name she has picked out. i may wait a bit before i pass on that news.
Friday, November 09, 2007
Little Things
on my way up to campus today, i stopped by the botany pond on the south end of campus. for my Wetland Ecology class we're supposed to be putting together a PowerPoint presentation on some of the terminology and concepts from the curriculum. i was looking for Daphnia (water fleas).
Daphnia are little planktonic crustaceans that feed on the bits of algae and other junk floating in the water column. these little critters aren't much longer than a milimeter (although some make it up to 2mm and others as small as 0.5mm) and they swim around in little jumps by swishing their antennae with rapid little twitches.
Daphnia are little planktonic crustaceans that feed on the bits of algae and other junk floating in the water column. these little critters aren't much longer than a milimeter (although some make it up to 2mm and others as small as 0.5mm) and they swim around in little jumps by swishing their antennae with rapid little twitches.
to catch them, i just went to the edge of the pond and dipped in a 25mL vial close to the edge where i could see these guys swimming. the vial filled up with water and only a couple of Daphnia, but the water surface tension had temporarily affixed dozens of these arthropods to my skin as my hand passed through the water. i scrapped the Daphnia into the vial to take them too their photo shoot; one more slide for my assignment.
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i also collected a leaf from a bunch of cattails in my neighborhood. who ever heard of someone growing cattails as an ornamental plant? this set of apartments thought it was a good idea, and i get to take a good picture of the lacunar spaces inside the leaf. the spaces help move oxygen down to the roots so the cattails can grow in wetland soils. Below are pictures of the torn edge of the leaf, and then i cleaned up a small section for a cross-section photo.
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