oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-29 06:30 pm

Varied engagements with animals and the natural world

Some book reviews that have lately crossed my line of sight.

Andrea Ringer. Circus World: Roustabouts, Animals, and the Work of Putting on the Big Show:

Ringer is not interested in the perceived glitz and glamour of big top spectacles. Rather, she presents the golden age circus as a site of working-class labor, where both humans and beasts toiled from day till night under the near-constant gaze of thrill-seeking visitors.
....
_Circus World _is the sort of book that will captivate (and, in some cases, horrify) a great many readers. It's a
must-read for anyone interested in the history of the modern circus; the same is true for historians of animal entertainment and industry. Gender studies scholars will appreciate Ringer's fresh insights into the ways circuses amplified colonial and patriarchal notions of race, gender, and family. Plus, the book's short length and bite-sized
chapters make it ideal for classroom use. Above all, _Circus World _succeeds as a work of labor history, one that takes nontraditional work and nontraditional workers seriously.

***

Dominic Pettman. Telling The Bees: An interspecies Monologue. Possibly a bit twee/poncey?

Weary of the insistent demands and disappointments of online life in the early 2020s, Dominic Pettman turned to a very old practice: Rather than commenting on current events by posting for his followers on social media, he would tell the bees instead. The record of this experiment is _Telling the Bees: An Interspecies Monologue_ (2024). "Indeed, this time-honored activity--practiced in villages all over Europe, for centuries--seems much healthier to me than confessing things to the digital ether, the anonymous world via social media," he writes early in the journal (p. 2).
....
In Pettman's case, as a resident of New York City, he doesn't have much access to actual, in-the-flesh bees. The apartment co-op won't let him have a hive on the roof, for one thing. At the start he makes do by talking to "wild" bees he encounters on his walks in Central Park, but as the seasons change and the threats of COVID-19 force
ever smaller spaces of interaction, Pettman conjures and speaks to virtual bee--"the memory of bees," as he calls it, prompting a wry rejoinder from a waggish colleague: "These bees ... Are they in the room with us now?" (p. xi).
Readers seeking a journal of material human entanglement with physical bees will not find that here. Pettman's virtual bees are much more akin to the "virtual animal totem" [.]

***

This one does involve actual encounters with the beasts in question, it would appear: Leslie Patten. Ghostwalker: Tracking a Mountain Lion's Soul through Science and Story.

Patten then combats history and myth with a series of case and site studies in Montana, Wyoming, New Mexico, Colorado, and California, and interviews with mountain lion experts of every stripe--from trackers, hunters, and houndsmen (people who hunt with dogs) to wildlife biologists and conservation management specialists. Along
the way, Patten nimbly debunks so many myths about cougars--that they are isolate, cold-blooded killers who need to be managed to keep them from pets, livestock, and small children and that legal hunts are an effective way to manage and stabilize populations.

***

Hedgehogs in fact are ambiguously situated: Laura McLauchlan. Hedgehogs, Killing, and Kindness: The Contradictions of Care in Conservation Practice.

In the UK, hedgehog conservation is both necessary and supported by the public: Population numbers are in steady decline, while the animals themselves occupy a fond place in the British consciousness. The second section details her fieldwork in New Zealand at pest-control initiatives, including outreach events and community pest-control groups, conservation initiative Zealandia (a completely fenced ecosanctuary in Wellington dedicated to restoring
native flora and fauna), and her own "guerrilla" care for local hedgehogs. In New Zealand, hedgehogs are thriving despite their status as an invasive species, provoking widespread public animosity.

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puddleshark ([personal profile] puddleshark) wrote2025-07-29 05:20 pm
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-07-29 07:06 am

Dog days of summer

Air temperature 67 F, wind southwest about 8 mph, mostly cloudy. Air quality "moderate" with AQI 52. Supposed to reach 90 F this afternoon. Foraging, then cowering away in mechanical cooling?
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-29 09:40 am

(no subject)

Happy birthday, [personal profile] opusculasedfera!
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Laura ([personal profile] eve_prime) wrote2025-07-28 10:33 pm
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Book completed

The Case of the Reborn Bhagwan, by William L. Sullivan. I have now finally read the third (and final?) installment in the “Case of” series by local author Bill Sullivan; in each book the “case” is a literal object. This one brings together the Portland detective from the second book with his Eugene niece Harmony from the first book – she’s been tempted to join a revival of the Rajneesh cult that wreaked havoc in central Oregon during the 1980s. Apparently a Portland barista is actually the reborn spirit of Bhagwan Sri Rajneesh, and the whole cult business apparatus (which has been laying low in Costa Rica) springs forth to support him. He’s a very nice young man, but he and Harmony soon find that they’re both in over their heads, and her uncle Detective Ferguson has to try to help… but he has some serious issues. There are lots of great strong female characters, especially Ferguson’s girlfriend Connie Wu and his autistic daughter Susan. There are also some amazing scenes in the Crater Lake area, and we learn about the Modoc legends associated with the region. I definitely recommend it, and there’s no real need to read the other two books first. Fun!
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asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2025-07-28 07:56 pm

saving to the murmuration

"Holy shit. This guy saved a PNG to a bird," read the beginning of a Bluesky post that linked to a 30-minute Youtube video about birdsong and starlings' capacity for mimicry. A guy drew a picture of a bird in a spectral synthesizer, which then will produce the sounds that the lines indicate.** The guy played those sounds for a starling, and lo and behold, the bird copied it--such that when you look at the spectrogram, you see a picture of a bird that's very close to the picture the guy had drawn.

So it's in that sense that the guy saved an image to a starling.

I'm charmed that this involves translation from a visual medium to a sound medium. "We can save your picture, but only if you sing it." --This concept of translation is familiar to us, of course. Data that's stored digitally is translated into zeros and ones, then translated back into something we can understand--words, images, sounds, formulae.

... If we were going to use starlings to save our data, we'd have to beg not individual starlings but whole murmurations.

Imagine if you had to sing or say all your data to save it. Imagine going out and standing on a hill and taking a deep breath and just singing out, hoping that the murmuration would deign to listen and retain what you were singing. It would be like an incantation or an invocation or a prayer.



**A spectrograph of a bird's call looks like, for example, this:

(Song sparrow spectrograph from this web page)


So the guy drew the bird below and then played the sounds that this set of lines makes...

white line drawing of a bird on a blue background

And the starling sang back this:

pink-purple bird on an a black background

(Images are screenshots from the Youtube video.)
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jacey ([personal profile] jacey) wrote2025-07-28 11:29 pm

Booklog 46/2025: Emily Tesh: The Incandescent - Audiobook

Narrated by Zara Ramm
This is a school of magic story from the point of view of the teachers, in particular one teacher. Dr Saffy Walden (Sapphire, not Saffron) is the director of magic at Chetwood School. She's largely administrative, responsible for the magical safety of the ancient school and its 600 students, though she does teach A-Level invocation to four sixth formers, which includes protecting them from their own foolishness on occasions. Saffy is brilliant at her job and one of the most talented academic magicians, but demons are masters of manipulation and after an incident in which she calls on its power to save a couple of foolish students from a Higher Demon, Saffy's Phoenix demon might not be bound as tightly as it should be.

I listened to this largely because I really like Zara Ramm, the narrator (who usually reads all the St Mary's books) and I was right, the narration is excellent. The story starts off slow-burn but picks up dramatically. I thoroughly enjoyed the whole thing.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-07-28 03:31 pm

(no subject)

Double, double, toil and trouble
Fire burn and market bubble
Fillet of a fenny snake,
In the tariffs boil and bake
oursin: Hedgehog saying boggled hedgehog is boggled (Boggled hedgehog)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-28 07:11 pm

I am not sure I expected what followed

Recent spam email for a conference with initials which did not immediately decode for me:

ICGO is a boutique-style event that emphasizes depth and interaction. Modest in scale but rich in content, the conference’s intimate setting fosters close communication and meaningful dialogue. It encourages one-on-one and small-group discussions that often lead to lasting collaborations.

Takes me back to the dear old 1970s and the growth movement, what?

But then we discover

This esteemed gathering offers an exceptional opportunity for obstetricians, gynecologists, researchers, clinicians, and healthcare professionals to connect, share insights, and advance the field together.

One-on-one with gynaes is more reminding one of 70s soft pornos, hmmmm?

The conference is in

Athens, a city that blends ancient heritage with modern innovation, providing an inspiring backdrop for intellectual exchange. Its vibrant culture and Mediterranean charm will undoubtedly enrich your conference experience.

There is, apparently, a International Conference on Gynaecology and Obstetrics which holds ALOT of conferences in exotic places. I have managed to track down the details for a past occasion and discover - SURPRISE!!!! -

Travel
Due to limited budget resources, we regret to inform you that the conference is unable to sponsor or cover travel expenses for any participant, including speakers. We encourage speakers to make their own travel arrangements and plan accordingly.
Important Note
Please note that this conference is organized independently without sponsorship or support from any external organizations. The registration fees are primarily used to cover the cost of amenities and services provided to our registered members, including meals, snacks, sessions, networking opportunities, and other event-related activities.

The cherry on top of all this? -
We are pleased to offer honorariums to our esteemed keynote and invited speakers. To qualify for an honorarium, speakers must secure a minimum of 5 paid registrations or group paid registrations from their students, colleagues, or peers. The amount of the honorarium will be determined based on the number of registrations obtained. We encourage our speakers to actively promote the conference within their networks to ensure a rewarding experience for all.

Does this count as pyramid-selling?

Wotta racket, eh?

jhetley: (Default)
jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-07-28 01:24 pm

(no subject)

Epstein is a diversion.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-07-28 06:31 am

Godot still not here

Air temperature 63 F, wind south about 5 mph, fog at the airport with visibility under a mile. Air quality "moderate" with AQI 68. Errands this morning mean I may not get a walk before it turns nasty hot out there.
eve_prime: (poppy)
Laura ([personal profile] eve_prime) wrote2025-07-27 11:55 pm

Home stretch

Okay, I’m all settled in at J’s house, having made his guest bedroom dark enough for someone who sleeps until noonish. If this works well, I could get other things done in my house and yard too, like my plan to replace that horrible blackberry thicket alongside the south of my house with stamped concrete.

Tomorrow morning, the heat pump replacement team will arrive and start work – they can get into the garage just fine, and if they think they need to get into the house itself before I arrive, they’ll come ask J. They’ve scheduled two days for the installation, although online I see that it typically takes 3-8 hours – maybe they’re allowing for complications, or maybe the new fancier thermostat takes a lot of work. Then on Wednesday will be the duct cleaning; I still have a few more things to get done for that step.

Today was quite tiring! All I did, really, was sweep and mop the floors in the kitchen and both bathrooms, but that sort of work is much harder on one’s body when it’s over 80 degrees inside. First world, 21st century problems right? Everyone else is used to summer heat. Then I moved both mattresses off my bed, which was surprisingly easy (they’re standing on their side now), and tomorrow I can vacuum beneath the bed. After that, I walked down to the beginning of the path through the park and met J returning from a bike ride to the river – the evening breeze was great!
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-28 09:49 am

(no subject)

Happy birthday, [personal profile] thedivinegoat!
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flemmings ([personal profile] flemmings) wrote2025-07-27 07:04 pm
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(no subject)

First wine after ten days abstinence is whee! 

After getting soaked in yesterday's 26C 31 humidex going to the library and back, I was not looking forward to going out today. But it was infinitely dryer and a wind was blowing so really quite bearable except in the sun.

Put my green bin, open, out on the front path to catch last night's rain. And it caught some but at some point my kind neighbours closed it and put it back under the porch overhang, so must still swish it out properly some time.

Maybe just yesterday's muggy grey wanhope, but my reading was fantodding me last night. My Victorian mystery went on and on, and Alison Bechdal's The Secret to Superhuman Strength depressed me in the odd way that Bechdal in bulk does. Fortunately Return to Dragon Mountain, Spence's book about Zhang Dai, is still delightful with his connoisseur's tea brewing and lantern collecting and music playing. Though I wish I'd kept The Way Spring Arrives longer, to reread the story that recollects his winter boat journey and the Moon Orchid tea he and his uncle contrived.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-07-27 05:47 pm
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jacey ([personal profile] jacey) wrote2025-07-27 10:21 pm

Booklog 45/2025: Paul Tassi: The Last Exodus – Earthborne #1 – Audiobook

Audiobook narrated by Victor Bevine.
After an alien invasion Earth is ruined. Even though the aliens have gone, the balance of the atmosphere has been destroyed and the seas are evaporating and the land is burning. Lucas is desperately trying to get back to his family in Portland, but when he arrives he finds nothing but a crater where the city used to be, a fellow refugee, Asha, and an alien ship which is not quite lifeless. Hardened by the last few years of suviving at all costs he doesn't trust easily, but it seems as though the only salvation lies in teaming up. This is a high body count book which combines post-apocalyptic survival with space opera. As the first book in a trilogy it doesn't quite have a cliffhanger ending, but it stops at a point which tempts you into the second book. The characters are interesting and Victor Bevine's narration is perfectly adequate.


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jacey ([personal profile] jacey) wrote2025-07-27 10:19 pm

Booklog 44/2025: 44. Adrian Tchaikovsky: Dogs of War – Dogs of War #1 - Audiobook

Audiobook narrated by Laurence Bouvard, Nathan Osgood & William Hope.

Rex is a Good Dog. He does what Master says and keep the pack in line. He's also a bioengineered killing machine. He knows he's not too bringht (not as bright as Honey, one of his pack and a bio-engineered bear - but he knows how to follow orders and thet makes him a Good Dog. When the pack is cut loose from Master, things begin to happen that Rex doesn't understand. Why do the villagers fear him and Bees and Dragon and Honey? They are not enemies, they have nothing to fear. And why are enemies attacking the defenceless village? And, oops, why is Master one of the people trying to wipe out the villagers? Though simple minded, Rex is caught up in a courtroom drama which will determine his right to live - his and all bioengineered beings. Good job his lawyer is smart, and Honey is smarter still. This is a fascinating look at the ethics of war and bioengineering, well narrated. Adrian Tchaikovsky's imagination is a wondrous thing.


oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-07-27 07:03 pm
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Culinary

Last week's bread held out pretty well, though unfortunately not quite long enough to extend to frittata for Friday night supper.

Instead I made the somewhat ersatz 'Thai fried rice' with saucisson sec.

Saturday breakfast rolls: Tassajarra method, 50:50% wholemeal/white spelt, Rayner organic barley malt extract, and dried blueberries ('apple juice infused' WTF): turned out quite nicely.

Today's lunch: stifado of diced lamb shoulder, served with Greek spinach rice and gingery healthy-grilled baby courgettes and red bell pepper (teriyaki sauce rather than tamari).