The Forgotten Zeppelin Knot – MOTHER EARTH NEWS

Too cool. I’m terrible at all knots, even shoelaces. Mer is much more skilled. Maybe she’ll learn this one. There’s even jargon: bights and bitter ends. peace, mjh

The Forgotten Zeppelin Knot – Modern Homesteading – MOTHER EARTH NEWS

061 zeppelin knot

PHOTO 1 & 2:  Place bights of the two lines together, one on top of the other, so that the bitter ends lead away in opposite directions on outboard sides of the bights. PHOTO 3 & 4: Pass each bitter end around its own bight and the other bight, lead them out opposite sides of the knot, and tighten it up.

The Forgotten Zeppelin Knot – Modern Homesteading – MOTHER EARTH NEWS

Airships are coming back (really!).

Massive NASA-funded airship prototype takes off for the first time | The Verge

aeroscraft WORLDWIDE AEROS

Earlier this month, Aeroscraft — a 36,000-pound airship prototype — successfully lifted off for the first time at its California hangar. Funded by DARPA, NASA, and the US Department of Defense, the 230-foot long lighter-than-air vehicle’s frame is made of aluminum and carbon fiber, and is covered in a reflective Mylar skin. The Aeroscraft works by pressurizing helium — the blimp-like aircraft is less buoyant when the gas is condensed, but when the helium is released, it displaces the heavier air and lifts the Aeroscraft.

The Aeroscraft uses about one-third of the fuel of conventional aircraft, and because it can lift off and land vertically, it has no need for runways or ground personnel.

Massive NASA-funded airship prototype takes off for the first time | The Verge

You want to see hawks? Get thee to Estancia Basin pronto.

Merri notes, “After reading Judy Liddell’s bird report for the Estancia Basin, we headed to Clements Road just south of I-40 and just outside of Estancia. Wide-open ranches dominate the landscape out there. Driving and walking down dirt roads, we saw more than TWENTY ferruginous hawks, 4 rough-legged hawks, 2 red-tails, 2 golden eagles, some kestrels, a merlin, 2 shrikes, tons of horned lark, and 30+ antelope. We walked across ranch land and down a country road.”

I’ll add that we had never knowingly seen ferruginous nor rough-legged hawks, making these lifers for us both. In fact, we saw so many of each in so many poses that it was a field-lesson. It made for a beautiful day trip.

After seeing all those hawks on our main walks of the day, we looked for Cienega Draw on Willow Lake Rd, which seem to me imaginative, not descriptive, in this oh-so dry landscape. That detour did take us past the Thunder Chicken Ranch, a great name for an ostrich farm.

We drove farther south toward the two large-ish lakes that appear on the map south of the correctional facility. One lake was full of snow — surprising with the temp above 50 — but no liquid. Before we got to the second lake, a Cadillac Esplanade pulled up next to us. The woman driving asked if we were lost. No, I said, we’re bird-watching and thought the lakes might have something. She seemed surprised, then said sometimes they see cranes. I said I thought this was a public road and she said, yes, a little farther until the gate to the Wrye Ranch, which we saw the northern edge of at Clements Rd — quite a large spread. She drove on and immediately after her Mr Wrye stopped in his truck, "You need help?" he asked and I said, no, we’re just out for a drive. They were polite and offering help is neighborly but they were likely suspicious of strangers on "their" road. After they passed, we went on to the gate and turned around. If there is a second lake, it is behind a very high berm on the south side of the road.

Returning to pavement, we stopped where cottonwoods bordered what may have once been a house, now just some rubble. Mer saw a bird land. She got out and took photos of a merlin, yet another bird of prey to end our day. peace, mjh

PS- I recommend Judy Liddell’s blog, It’s a Bird Thing…, as well as her book, Birding Hot Spots of Central New Mexico. If you can’t join her on a weekly birding trip, you can walk in her footsteps, as we have several times.

PPS- Real birders or twitchers (in Great Britain) keep lots of lists, including at least one Life List. I’m a bird watcher, not a birder. My Life List only includes birds I’ve photographed.


You want to see hawks? Get thee to Estancia Basin pronto. is a post from Ah, Wilderness! . Let me know what you think. peace, mjh

Do you think a company that puts flame retardant in beverages cares about you? (Brominated Vegetable Oil)

Or that any corporation nourishes you instead of its stockholders? Want pink slime with that?

Food Politics » Brominated Vegetable Oil: R.I.P. (let’s hope)

PepsiCo announced that it would remove Brominated Vegetable Oil (BVO) from Gatorade and replace it with something less potentially harmful.

BVO, a flame retardant, keeps keep flavor oils in suspension and provides a cloudy appearance in soft drinks.

Food Politics » Brominated Vegetable Oil: R.I.P. (let’s hope)

Nearly a third of health coverage applications are denied in NM – Albuquerque Business First

In our household, the rate is 50%.

Nearly a third of health coverage applications are denied in NM – Albuquerque Business First by Dennis Domrzalski, Reporter- Albuquerque Business First

New Mexico has one of the highest rates at which health insurers reject applications for coverage, says a California-based public advocacy organization.

Insurers in New Mexico rejected applications for individual and family coverage at the rate of 30 percent, well above the national average of 22 percent, according to the study by HealthPocket, an online organization that ranks health plans across the nation. That rejection rate put New Mexico in 6th place among the states and the District of Columbia, the study said.

Montana had the highest rejection rate at 45 percent.

Nearly a third of health coverage applications are denied in NM – Albuquerque Business First

The NRA doesn’t serve its members, it uses them to serve the Gun Industry

The NRA is a corporate shill.

Senator Catches NRA Head In Epic Flip Flop | ThinkProgress

While NRA leadership opposes universal background checks, its members back the change. A national survey conducted by Johns Hopkins University found that “89 percent of all respondents, and 75 percent of those identified as NRA members, support universal background checks for gun sales. Similar surveys by Pew Research Center and Gallup have also found background checks to be by far the most popular gun control proposal in the aftermath the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.”

Update

Here is a copy of the ad the NRA took out in 1999 saying, “We think it’s reasonable to provide for instant checks at gun shows just like at gun stores and pawn shops.”

Update

The NRA broke its commitment to support background checks for “every sale” and lobbied for a watered down provision in 1999.

Senator Catches NRA Head In Epic Flip Flop | ThinkProgress

The evolution of ‘whelm’ leaves me gruntled

Merriam-Webster Online

Contemporary writers like Philips sometimes use "whelm" to denote a middle stage between "underwhelm" and "overwhelm." But that’s not how "whelm" has traditionally been used. "Whelm" and "overwhelm" have been with us since Middle English (when they were "whelmen" and "overwhelmen"), and throughout the years their meanings have largely overlapped. Both words early on meant "to overturn," for example, and both have also come to mean "to overpower in thought or feeling." Around 1950, however, folks started using a third word, "underwhelmed," for "unimpressed," and lately "whelmed" has been popping up with the meaning "moderately impressed."

Merriam-Webster Online

"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." — Sam Adams