Moquette

clatterbane:

Gosh. After seeing a t-shirt design someone is offering based off some old bus seat upholstery, I did a little searching to try and see how close that pattern is to some currently in use here. (It looks pretty similar from memory. But, bus seats.)

No luck with that so far, but I did find something else interesting. Evidently, London Transport Museum is offering a variety of furniture and home items in public transportation upholstery fabric! In case anyone desperately needs more of that in their life.

Just a few examples:

Quite a variety of patterns available, too.

Except on the hot water bottle cover, which only offers two pattern choices. It’s also the cheapest item, other than a Christmas ornament in a single pattern. (On sale now!)

Moquette

Moquette

Gosh. After seeing a t-shirt design someone is offering based off some old bus seat upholstery, I did a little searching to try and see how close that pattern is to some currently in use here. (It looks pretty similar from memory. But, bus seats.)

No luck with that so far, but I did find something else interesting. Evidently, London Transport Museum is offering a variety of furniture and home items in public transportation upholstery fabric! In case anyone desperately needs more of that in their life.

Moquette

dendroica:

“Shifting seasonality can also negatively affect the health of forests (Ch. 6: Forests, KM 1) and wildlife, thereby impacting the rural industries dependent upon them. Warmer winters will likely contribute to earlier insect emergence and expansion in the geographic range and population size of important tree pests such as the hemlock woolly adelgid, emerald ash borer, and southern pine beetle. Increases in less desired herbivore populations are also likely, with white-tailed deer and nutria (exotic South American rodents) already being a major concern in different parts of the region. According to State Farm Insurance, motorists in West Virginia and Pennsylvania are already the first and third group of claimants most likely to file an insurance claim that is deer-related. Erosion from nutria feeding in lower Eastern Shore watersheds of Maryland has resulted in widespread conversion of marsh to shallow open water, changing important ecosystems that can buffer against the adverse impacts from climate change. Species such as moose, which drive a multimillion-dollar tourism industry, are already experiencing increased parasite infections and deaths from ticks. Warmer spring temperatures are associated with earlier arrivals of migratory songbirds, while birds dependent upon spruce–fir forests in the northern and mountainous parts of the region are already declining and especially vulnerable to future change. Northern and high-elevation tree species such as spruce and fir are among the most vulnerable to climate change in the Northeast.”

Northeast – Fourth National Climate Assessment

heartachedreamboy:

punkrorschach:

heartachedreamboy:

heartachedreamboy:

thetaobella:

heartachedreamboy:

why do they always show cranberries in thos big pits n its implied its wet and possibly swimmable. do cranberries really grow like that. wh

You’ve never heard of The Bog?

th

the what

EACH ADDITION TO THIS POST MAKES MY BLOOD RUN COLD

This is a cranberry bog (unflooded) it’s how cranberries grow. Once they’re ripe, the blog is flooded and the cranberries harvested.

Basically by using big floaty things to round them all up and then scooping them out of the water.

thank u. i hate it a little less but the horrible little man in my head is still screaming “BOG BODY BOG BODY BOG BODY”, but i appreciate the education,

onlyniceandgaystuff:

naamahdarling:

This is actually A+ cat management.

“Mirroring” is a big thing with cats. It’s why they will lay in similar positions several feet apart, or will come and try to do things when you do them.
It’s a sign that they love you and want to show.

This cat wants to be close to its owner, and also wants to do what its owner is doing, to be involved in some way.

Giving them their own thing to use is a really great way to redirect them and allow them to mirror the behavior in a non-disruptive way that frustrates neither party.

This is a GOOD IDEA.

Just thinking, with the Fake Doctor Incident that came up in tags earlier. That was another thing which turned out more humiliating than it needed to, in a taking kids seriously kind of way. (As is unfortunately common.) Enough that I even remember it after all these years.

Based on my limited experience up to that point, I was very concerned that this random white guy in the ER was impersonating a doctor. And somehow my parents didn’t seem to notice or care, which was extra worrying.

(I don’t even recall why we were there that time, though I may well have knocked my head on something again. I ended up there a lot, because nervous mother. And I had seriously never seen a non-Asian doctor in that hospital before, in 3 or 4 years of my little accident-prone ass getting hauled in enough that the regular ER staff were probably sick of us.)

It seemed like a much better idea to pull one or both of them aside to raise these urgent concerns. Not only had I already learned that it might be very rude otherwise, I’d watched enough movies and TV to know that might not be safe. What is this person likely to do if he’s exposed as a fraud in front of a whole ER full of people? We just don’t know, but it’s unlikely to be good!

(The whole situation seemed creepy enough already, but this guy had also somehow managed to fool a whole ER full of professionals into thinking he was a doctor when he clearly was not. Someone to watch out for.)

Anyway, it was extremely worrying when nobody was willing to talk privately. Granted, my communicative speech was not up to much then, and I was very prone to having meltdowns and getting wrestled down in medical settings. (Which–surprise!–did not make me less terrified or prone to meltdowns in those settings. Kinda the opposite.)

In retrospect, my parents probably assumed that I was “just” trying to leave because it was the ER and I really didn’t want to be there. No doubt also true, but not even the most pressing motivation in that case for getting well away from Dr. Fraud.

So, I ended up having to blurt it out in front of everybody, including him. It wasn’t only that I didn’t want to go back and get treated by Not A Doctor, I was also concerned about other patients and felt like I needed to speak up before something bad happened.

That went over about as well as you might expect. Complete with all the adults present going into laughing fits and talking like I wasn’t even in the room. While admitting that, based on the limited information at hand? That conclusion made a lot of sense. (Among themselves. Not to me.) Which made it funnier, in the laughing at and not with sort of way which is somehow acceptable dealing with kids.

The laughing at didn’t make me trust that doctor more, I tell you what. And nobody apparently considered that if a little kid did not trust a particular doctor for whatever reason, maybe they should find another one.

I can kind of understand the laughter reaction, because that situation is pretty funny if you’re not the frightened small child in question. But, there are ways of handling it, and then there are ways. The way that was handled would have made me hesitate to say anything in the future if I’d seen Jason Voorhees doing rounds with his machete.

And that does seem too common, dealing with kids. Who are, indeed, usually doing their best to make sense of the world around them, based on the sometimes very limited information available. Ridicule doesn’t exactly encourage that.

sensicalabsurdities:

vstheworld:

dinovia-countryman:

manic-kin:

aimmyarrowshigh:

loveyoutothem00n:

standard-fiend:

anxietee-n:

diamondelight92:

cractasticdispatches:

meelothemanly:

eyeslikeacat:

roonilwazlip:

letthemountainsmoveyou:

liamdunburs:

kids have no concept of anything. i walked into my kindergarten class and one kid asked me what my name was. when i said miss jones, he said “i like that name. did you know i’m in love with you”

i asked my four year old cousin how old he thought i was going to be at my next birthday and he said 8. im 23

once i told a 6 year old that i had finished school and was doing “more school” [university] and she asked “why haven’t you found anyone to marry then”

We were at a museum and I was asking for the student discount and my nine year old cousin looks up at me with his eyes wide and says “wait you’re a STUDENT??”

I used to babysit these three kids and the eldest who was around 11 at the time was talking about how adults are boring and when I told him I was an adult he said, “That’s not true, you’re my age”

our aunt teaches and she has this story about a little girl who really was always pretty quiet in class and then on the final day of kindergarten she just up and stated ‘i’m all teached now. i don’t need to be teached anymore. i’m done of being teached.’

once when i was 19, I told my little cousin that i was 19 and she looked up at me with huge eyes and went, “Does that mean you don’t have to bring an adult with you to the pool?”

My 6 year old cousin saw me driving for the first time, looked up at him mom and said “does that mean she is married now?”

I watched my dad and my niece (3 at the time) arguing over a pair of pants and whether or not they were also a dress. My neice’s argument was that they were, in fact, also a dress because they were blue.

I asked the kids in my daycare class what they thought I should be for Halloween and this little boy goes, “ooh I know! A pickle! You’d be such a good pickle”

On the first day of class with my favorite student of all time, I said, “Are you okay? You look like you have a question.” And she looked me right in the eyes and said, tremulously,

“Can a piranha eat a stapler?”

One time I was working with a kid and he looked up at me and asked “Do you have a boy?” I had no idea what he was talking about, but I told him that I did not have any boys. He looked shocked and then deeply concerned and said “Well, you better hurry up and shave your arms so you can get married; August is next month!”

I was sitting on the floor with my 3yo niece and we were playing with her younger brother’s alphabet blocks and the O had an octopus on it.  So I picked it up and asked her what it was.

“Octopus,” she said, all curls and smiles.

“And what kind of animal is an octopus?” I asked.  I was looking for “fish” or “sea creature” but I would have accepted almost anything–”weird,” “gross,” even “slimy.”  “Underwater” or “it lives in the ocean” would have also been acceptable. 

She looks me right in the eye and says, happy as a clam, “It’s a cephalopod.”

I haven’t been the same since.

last week a child of maybe four at the genius bar saw me running a product by, planted his hands on his hips and yelled at his mother, accusingly, “you never told me hair could be GREEN!”

the thing that’s so great about kids is that they’re very good at making connections and recognizing patterns, but they’re working off of extremely limited data sets.

For example, when I was a toddler, I assumed that every marriage had a) one mom and one dad, and b) at least one Jewish person in it. I also thought that every kid was either Jewish or Christian, and which one you were depended on whether the omnipresent Jewish parent was your mother or father (because Judaism is matrilineal).

I only knew Jewish or half-Jewish/half-Christian m/f couples. It sounds ridiculous now, but it was an entirely reasonable assumption at the time.