Drove into
Manhattan today to pick up my son--in the city, it's not too hard to imagine what wonderful critters we are. Pretty people wander about pretty buildings under a pretty
May sky.
Bricks and concrete. Pretty bricks and concrete.
pretty:
O.E. pręttig (W.Saxon), *prettig (Mercian) "cunning, skillful, artful," from prętt, *prett "a trick, wile, craft," from W.Gmc. *pratt- (cf. O.N. prettr "a trick," prettugr "tricky;"....Connection between O.E. and M.E. words is uncertain, but if they are the same, meaning had shifted by c.1400 to "manly, gallant," and later moved via "attractive, skillfully made," to "fine," to "beautiful in a slight way" (1440).
Etymology Dictionary Online
I spent part of the morning dodging a carpenter bee. Carpenter bees look like bumbles on steroids, and have an odd habit of bumping into folks who ramble into their territory. After getting bumped a few times, they usually leave me alone. I have yet to be stung by one, though I have been stung frequently by its cousins.
This particular bumble had claimed the same post I wanted to use to run a line for an errant hops vine. The post is made of treated lumber, and the bee kept trying different parts of the post, perhaps hoping to find a portion tasty enough to drill. It was cranky.
My daughter and I spent an hour or so sitting by our puddle, listening to
baseball, drinking
ale, and occasionally tossing in a pellet or two for the fish. I had cleaned the filter earlier, and I still had some muck in the bucket by the pond.
A fish kissed a bug off the pond's surface.
The game ended badly. I wandered inside to grab the microscope. It is a sturdy scope that I abuse, but it works better bounced around outside, dirtied by my muddy hands, than it does sitting pretty on a shelf indoors.
I do not know what I was looking for, but I am used to that. A copepod, apparently fine despite having spent part of its life sucked into the pond filter, squiggled by under the coverslip, munching away at critters to small to be seen at 40X.
My offline scritchpad died--I had a node called "
radiolarian ooze" almost ready to go. Radiolarians look like tiny glass
geodesic balls. Their exoskeletons are made of
opal--they live mostly inside their opal palaces, but when they get hungry, they extend a long sticky arm outside their crytal ball, and grab whatever it is that radiolarians eat.
When radiolarians die, they sink. There are portions of the Pacific sea floor thick with radiolarian ooze--miles thick. The lower levels eventually get compressed into rock called chert.
I wanted to buy some radiolarian ooze. I found a science store that would sell me a prepared slide, but I wanted the ooze. I never liked prepared slides--don't trust them. Too pretty.
I am still looking for radiolarian ooze.
I got all excited last year after discovering
ostracods, but I still got pretty darn excited by my copepod.
Another bug got itself stuck on the pond's surface. My daughter and I watched for a minute, waiting for a fish to grab it. The fish were full.
I retrieved the bug.
I went back to my microscope. The copepod still squiggled about.
So I dumped the rest of the filter ooze back into the pond. My pond isn't pretty, but that's OK.
We all need more ooze in our lives.