snowdeal.org

Search
Skip to content
  • About
  • Site Archives

Tag Archives: corn

Uncategorized

things you think while running along cornfields in the upper midwest.

July 26, 2014 snowdeal Leave a comment

things you think while running along cornfields in the upper midwest.

every day i run by the growing corn and today it occurs to me. why is the left side of the road tassled and the other not?

perhaps you recognize the leaning electrical pole from a more wintry view of this scene.

cornfieldfitnessrunningviroquawisconsin
parallax

KAP Maze by Pierre Lesage

April 23, 2013 snowdeal Leave a comment

KAP Maze

cornhastingsmazenew zealand
conflux

the dramatic drought disaster and complicated corn sex

July 18, 2012 snowdeal 1 Comment

it’s record breaking hot all over and meteorologists predict the drought is only going to get worse on the same week usda declared the largest natural disaster area ever due to drought ( more than 1,000 counties covering 26 states ) because, well, “corn sex is complicated…the whole affair is so freakishly difficult it’s hard to imagine how it ever evolved in the first place…” and the drought isn’t making it any easier.

agriculturecorndroughtweather
Uncategorized

a cloud. burst.

August 13, 2011 snowdeal Leave a comment

a cloud. burst.

certainly a candidate for HDR imaging, but i totally flaked out and didn’t shoot any brackets.

cloudcorndriftless regionfieldrainstormusawisconsin

Posts navigation

← Previous 1 2

Conflux :: A Confluence of Curiousness

  • wongblog: why smart people are better off with fewer friends

    i’m not sure how to square these findings with the fact that i’ve long said that in a parallel universe very close to our own i live alone in cabin in the middle of nowhere writing manifestos: “The effect of population density on life satisfaction was therefore more than twice as large for low-IQ individuals than for high-IQ individuals,” they found. And “more intelligent individuals were actually less satisfied with life if they socialized with their friends more frequently.”

  • everything you think you know about thanksgiving is wrong.

    the heart warming fable of thanksgiving, unsurprisingly, ends up being a whole lot more complicated than some of us were taught and answers the nagging question of how squanto spoke perfect english when the pilgrims arrived and what was happening during the 100 year interim between columbus and the pilgrims ( spoiler: it involves human trafficking, enslavement and villages being wiped out ). and if you’re a stickler for tradition, you should put ditch the turkey and cranberry sauce for salted pork and olives since the spanyiards were the first to celebrate thanksgiving 50 years before the pilgrims.

  • i, for one, welcome our herbicide-free giant weed punching robot overlords.

    “…researchers from a Bosch startup called Deepfield Robotics presented a paper on “Vision-Based High-Speed Manipulation for Robotic Ultra-Precise Weed Control,” which has like four distinct exciting-sounding phrases in it.” IEEE Spectrum

  • cracked: We Built Their Death Squads: ISIS’s Bizarre Origin Story

    “We learned that, if we’re not the father of ISIS, the United States is at least some sort of uncle.” cracked

  • i’m suuuuuuure it’s an honest mistake on apple’s part.

    after updating to iOS 9 and el capitan i’ve been having troubles synching photos from my iphone to my macbook air. the mac would recognize the iphone but no photos would show up in the photos application or image capture. it was driving me nuts. turns out, if you have non-apple services like dropbox running that sync your photos to non-icloud services you have to turn them off.

  • Penn Live: Leroy Stolzfus clocks a 3:05 at Harrisburg Marathon in full Amish garb.

    having run a half a dozen marathons, i can’t imagine finishing in 3:05. even more unimaginable in full amish garb so kudos to leroy stolzfus. the whole article is great read but now i want to know more of the backstory on why he started to run: “A few years ago, Stolzfus got “involved with some stuff” he said he shouldn’t have. His brother-in-law suggested he start running instead when he was tempted. He took the suggestion to heart, and went out for a run.”

  • some of you will be deciphering cuneiform tweets this christmas

    i think i know what some of you will be getting for christmas! dumb cuneiform creates clay tablets of tweets. you’ll have big fun guessing if you got a trump tweet or a neal degrease tyson tweet. [ via Waxy links ]

  • nyt: Viewfinder: Hogpen Hill Farm

    huh, who knew edward tufte has a farm with 234-acres of landscape sculpture fields that he opens to the public once a year. i’d love to make a trip. and i also love the article’s description of tufte, “[he] is also known as a genius of data visualization, professor emeritus of political science, statistics, and computer science at Yale, an author of books on information design, and a hater of PowerPoint.

  • the new yorker: what we think about when we run.

    so very, very true. “To run five or ten or twenty-six miles is, as much as anything else, to engage in a sustained way with the deep strangeness that is the human mind.”

  • The story of .io | Citizen Ex

    “The Chagossian people have a word, in their Creole language, for heartbreak: sagren. It is a profound sorrow which refers to the loss of a home, and the impossibility of returning to it. As we build new worlds with our technologies, knitted from fiber-optic light and lines of code, it is incumbent on us to ensure it does not reproduce the erasures and abuses of the old, but properly accounts for the rights and liberties of every one of us.” citizen-ex

{ intertwingled since 2000 }

Archives

Proudly powered by WordPress