If $100 for a cup Civet Cat coffee is out of your price range, or you’re looking for a new coffee experience beyond beans extracted from weasel crap, try making Cucaracha Crunch Coffee. It’s easy and costs no more than what you pay for your daily dose of java. You can do the “found method” (pictured) where you leave out a coffee cup with a little sludge in the bottom, and if a cockroach happens to crawl in your cup to get a buzz (pictured), you pour fresh coffee on it, let it swim around in the coffee (pictured), then sip and savor the coffee (pictured). Eating the cucaracha is optional. The “Hunt and dip” method involves hunting down a cockroach, catching it, and dipping it in your coffee. Either way, you get a whole new coffee experience, and dispose of a few cucarachas without using poison.
Category: Uncategorized
Study Bug
Laurie had a bug studying with her this afternoon. Below is the first yellow spotted butterfly I’ve seen. It’s tiny and has interesting double wings. The fourth photo is of tiny flowers that we have planted with corkscrew grass. There happened to be a critter hanging out on the flowers when I took the photo. The painted lady was feeding on the same butterfly bush as “Spot”, the yellow spotted butterfly, and I did some photos of them together; however, when I got the painted lady in the frame so you could tell what she was, Spot was so small it got lost in the flowers. When I got Spot framed so you could tell that it’s a butterfly, only a leg or so of the painted lady was in the frame. There are so many things that our eyes adjust for so automatically that we are hardly conscious of it, that the compositions we put together in our field of view can be almost impossible to capture in a photo.
Pussy Riot
With six kitties in the house all wanting out first thing when I get up every morning, I usually end up with a daily “pussy riot” because I won’t let them out before sunrise. But far from our kitties rioting in Corrales, three members of the Russian punk rock group, “Pussy Riot” are on trial in Moscow on charges of “hooliganism”. In one of their protests in February against Putin running for President, they staged a “punk prayer protest” in the Moscow Cathedral asking the Mother Mary to deliver Russia from Putin. The three women are facing up to 7 years in prison for their dissent, and Putin wants to make an example of them. With all the serious crime and violent protests in Russia, it seems pretty pussy of Putin to pick on a group of girls whose public performance art is no more of a crime than driving a “Hello Kitty” car.
Now roll back the clock 163 years to 1849 in Tsarist Russia where Fyodor Dostoyevski found himself in front of a firing squad for his involvement with the progressive discussion group, the Petrashevsky Circle. At the last moment his death sentence was commuted to 4 years in prison in Syberia in what turned out to be a mock execution. It seems to me not much has changed from Tsarist Russia, then the Soviet Union, to modern Russia (with the exception that we would have never heard about “Pussy Riot” or their plight during the Soviet years), and there seems to be little difference in PR’s and Dostoyevsky’s cases. The girls haven’t faced a mock execution that we know of, and I doubt Dostoyevsky made a public scene praying for the Mother Mary to deliver Russia from the Tsar, but in both cases the penalties seem to be way out of proportion to the alleged crimes. Now I’m not going to argue that the US is any better as far as crime and punishment is concerned when possession of burglary equipment — a flashlight, for example — can get you charged with a felony and up to 5 years in prison. So I suppose a group staging a performance art protest against Obama in the Nation Cathedral might be brought up on similar charges, although I don’t think we could keep the group in jail for 6 months while awaiting trial for illegal performance art.
While Dostoyevsky went on to become one of the greatest writers of all time, publishing more than 30 novels, short stories and essays, which included his best known novels “Crime and Punishment”, “The Idiot” and “The Brothers Karamasov”, before his death in 1881. I doubt “Pussy Riot” will ever produce great music (at least from what I’ve heard), but maybe their case will inspire more people to oppose tyranny. Although, if the women are found guilty, and sentenced to 7 years in prison, which seems almost a given in Putin’s Russia, the message Putin is giving dissidents is that if they are planning creative and non-violent protests, forget it, they will be punished severely. Since most protestors seem to like violence, I believe the protests will escalate and become more violent if “Pussy Riot” is found guilty of “hooliganism”.
Classy Rose
Chevrolet 6100
Dahlia in Profile
Dreamy Rose
Ladybugs & Damselflies
Horseless Carriage
The NM license plate on the trunk of this 1953 Bentley A-Type reads “Horseless Carriage” under the number. It’s parked at the gas station in Corrales — I presume it’s waiting to have some work to be done in the garage. Laurie got a photo of our first white dahlia, and I drove home on Coors tonight avoiding the deluge, and resulting traffic problems on I-25.
Stormy Monday
The only thing good about my drive home tonight, besides finally making it home, was that I did get some photos. The first photo was taken while the downpour had the traffic stopped on northbound I-25. The soft focus effect is from the heavy rain. When I got off on Alameda, traffic was backed up to Jefferson, so I turned north on Jefferson and drove out to the Balloon Fiesta Park and photographed the storm over the Jemez. I noticed the layers were accentuated by the storm while I was northbound on I-25. When I got back to Alameda the traffic hadn’t moved and a police car was blocking access to Jefferson south of Alameda. I turned left on Alameda, got on southbound I-25, and made a circular route home via I-40 and Coors Road (the traffic was light, so the drive was fast, thank goodness). I ended up driving almost three times the normal distance to get home tonight, but I might still be on Alameda, otherwise.































