Unlike wintertime coyotes sporting their prime winter coats the summertime coyotes around here look a bit scrawnier; like their cartoon brother.
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
Two-Step
What next; the samba?
From one camera at the same location there are dancing fawns and a turkey doing the turkey-trot.
The Pantry Warrior Strikes Again!
Monday, September 15, 2025
Northern Lights
Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are large expulsions of plasma and magnetic field from the sun's corona.
As a consequence of a strong geomagnetic storm that occurred over the weekend last evening was a terrific opportunity to view the aurora borealis - the northern lights - in Canada and northern United States.
We might get some more tonight.
Meanwhile, I suggest you do two things. If you have a Facebook account or access to the interweb join some northern lights groups and sign-up for alerts for your geolocation. Secondly, use your device. While the northern lights may be visible to the naked eye your device will bring them to life. The extended exposure and built-in filters will bring to life wavelengths not visible to the naked eye. Same for the use of a photo-editing tool which will allow you to manipulate aperture, exposure and other elements after the fact.
Fingers-crossed for clear skies.
Does It Glow In The Dark?
In the nuclear-obsessed 1940s, when atomic energy symbolized progress and modernity, one cereal company decided to ride the wave—though not in the safest way. In 1947, Kix cereal launched a daring promotion: for just 15 cents and a cereal box top, children could receive the Lone Ranger Atomic Bomb Ring.
The ring wasn’t just a toy. It contained a tiny sample of polonium-210, a radioactive isotope (substance), within a spinthariscope, allowing users to observe flashes of light caused by alpha particles. The ring featured a “magic viewing chamber” with a zinc sulfide screen that glowed when struck by alpha particles emitted by the polonium. As long as it wasn’t inhaled or ingested, it was considered “safe” but polonium-210 is one of the most toxic substances known to science.
The ring's design also featured a red plastic tail fin that served as a secret message compartment. These rings are now considered collector's items and museum curiosities, representing a unique aspect of the post-WWII fascination with the atomic age.
While advertised as "perfectly safe" at the time, the inclusion of radioactive material in a children's toy would not be permitted under modern safety standards. Despite the risks, few raised concerns at the time. Atomic fascination had taken hold of the public imagination, often at the expense of safety. Today, the ring is a bizarre museum relic—an eerie reminder of an era when radiation was marketed as a wonder, and no one questioned giving it to kids.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Newtonian Physics
Newton's First Law of Motion - also known as the Law of Inertia - states that an object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same directions unless acted-upon by an unbalanced force.
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Late Summer Blooms
From our walk there is this.
Prairie Dock - Silphium terebinthinaceum. Also commonly called rosin weed. It is a sunflower-like plant it can grow to a height of 9 feet. With a 14 foot tap root it is exceedingly drought-resistant and can flourish for decades.
The plant gets the name rosin weed because it produces a sweet-smelling resin when injured. While Prairie Rosin weed is the correct name for this specific plant, there are other plants called rosin weed that are different species within the same genus, Silphium.
It is just now beginning to come on-line and pollinators are
attracted to it as it blooms for more than a month. Birds love the seeds.
When
we planted our prairie 20 years ago this species was not in the seed
mix. Like several other species it has found its way here and
established itself on its own.
Bonus!