Sunday, January 17, 2021

Even less bathroom plastic

Left - original blades in plastic holder
Centre - box of 200 new blades
Right top - New blades in cardboard box

As I neared the end of my first packets of double edge razor blades I ordered some more. 

I purchased a box of 200 as the price was low. To my delight they contain no plastic at all. Serendipity. 

Saturday, January 16, 2021

47 Years of Growth

Forty seven years ago the tree at the centre of the photo was as tall as me.
Also the park - Harrup Park - had no fence and no lights, it was an undeveloped cricket ground. 
Now there are turf pitches and boundary fences and grand stands. In the empty dark the bush stone-curlews would make their hauting calls. 
Tonight, behind the glare, cricket is being played. The stone-curlews are hiding in the adjacent streets.

Foxtail


In the 1980s a new species of palm was discovered in far North Queensland. In order tp protect the wild trees from poachers, many trees were grown and passed to local governments to plant in parks and to nurseries for sale to the public. 
In thr 1980s the bright red seeds were worth $50 each. Now they are ignored as they rot on the ground in the car park.
It is still a beautiful palm with lovelly seeds.

Friday, January 15, 2021

Treasure Island 2


 

Jim Hawkins and the Curse of Treasure Island by Francis Bryan (Frank Delaney, Irish novelist) [2001, ISBN 1- 84255-213-9]

The great joy in this book is the use of language in the spirit of the original Treasure Island. It has a pursuit, capture and escape; violent action and parley; disguise and mystery.

A  modern criticism of this book is that there is no gender/cultural diversity, all characters are english or scottish men apart from Hawkin's mother and the mysterious woman. 

At the conclusion attentive readers will realise that not every mystery has been resolved. Maybe the author left open the option for a sequel. 

I urge the reader first re-read the original tale by Robert Louis Stevenson.


Thursday, January 14, 2021

Tak...tak...tak

 


The playing pieces I made myself by slicing up a stick and a piece of rail. The board is a piece of cloth cut with pinking shears to stop it fraying. It is a homemade game of Tak.

The rules to Tak are simple as they are in all the best games. But the play is complex.

Tak was once an imaginary game in the fantasy book A Wise Man's Fear by Patrick Rothfuss [2011, ISBN 987-0-7564-0407-9]. I have read the book many times, it is a great adventure - but I cannot recommend it. It is volume two of a trilogy and the third volume is yet to be published. 

The story is told in flashback, each volume is covers the tale as told over one day in a remote inn. It is a the tale of a talented child who witnesses his parents murder and then overcomes extraordinary hardship to become a talented musician and adventurer. So far a common but well told fantasy story. The twist seems to be that he is a broken man - he has failed to avenge his parents' death, he has lost his love, and he has unleashed horrors upon the world. Volume Three is expected to be one more day so how can anything be resolved in the protagonist's favour.

But Tak is fun.

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Lilies of Brisbane Valley


 

A friend gave me a couple of plants - Brisbane lilies - Proiphys cumminghamii. He said his mother used to grow them and they were easy to care for. They have flowered after a year and now there are plenty of seeds to spread around.



Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Infinity and beyond

 A simple book that explains some important concepts about infinity. It makes it all easy to understand.



How to count to Infinity by Marcus Du Sautoy [ ISBN 976-1-78648-497-0 ].

I have added it to my prepper library to help re-build civilisation after the fall.

Gas Lighting

Gas lighting was nominated as word of the year yesterday by Mirrium-Webster. When I look it up, the source of the term is nomin...