Random link round-up

Now I’ve finally got the spiffy new WordPress walking to heel properly, here are some links I’ve come across recently that I liked that at least some of you might also like – sorry if they’re old news. In no particular order:

  • For those who take lots of digital photos, here’s a reason to take even more: Photosynth. It stitches together lots of photos taken of the same place / thing. I haven’t installed it yet, so I don’t know what it’s like, but there is a very groovy demo video on TED from one of its creators. When I see amazing technology like this, I sometimes wonder if there are people working on classified projects for governments who did this ages ago but can’t tell anyone.
  • Talking of TED, I have no idea how he does this – 30 minutes of genius.
  • If you start taking loads more photos, you’ll need somewhere to store them. A colleague is thinking of buying this neat gizmo, which seems to be hard disks That Just Work.
  • I often get fed up when people say how the Internet is going to change the world, how we’re going to order pet food online from specialist pet food web sites, how the world is going to be a better place etc. However, when Clay Shirky talks about the internet it’s usually thought-provoking and often seems perceptive and accurate. He’s written an another article on social participation and the internet with parallels to the past, which is much more interesting than it sounds, and there’s a good introduction by Tim O’Reilly.
  • The internet isn’t going to save the world, but people like Amy Smith and her International Development Design students might.
  • More stuff to make me ponder, but in a different way.

Vegan Popovers

(for Gina!)

from here

12 oz pack of firm, silken tofu (ambient tetrapak)
3 cups soy milk (and a dash of vanilla essence if you have any)
4 tabs olive oil
3 cups plain flour
2 tabs baking powder
dash of salt

Put the tofu, soy milk, and oil in a blender, and process until smooth. Combine the rest of the ingredients in a mixing bowl. Pour the soy milk blend into the flour mixture, and use a whisk to blend smoothly. It should be rather foamy.

Grease a muffin tin, or use a silicon one 😉 Fill muffin cups about 3/4 full of batter. Pop into the preheated oven for 15 minutes. DO NOT PEEK!
When done, let cool in pan for a few minutes – this is best done with the pan upside down so that they fall out when they cool!

swirly biscuits

Recipe for the biscuit dough we took to the Beans 🙂

75g/3oz icing sugar
150g/5oz softened butter or marg
1 lemon (we had to omit as we had no lemons)
200g/7oz plain flour
2 tabs milk (we used water and it was fine)
food colouring

Cream butter and sugar, then stir in grated lemon rind (if you have any). Divide mixture into two bowls and add half the flour to each bowl, along with 1 tab milk. Colour each bowl differently, or leave one plain, and squeeze it all together to make dough. Wrap the dough in cling film and refrigerate for half an hour. When firm, roll out one ball of dough to about 1/2cm thick. Roll the other out to about the same size and shape and brush with a little water. Lift the first and place it on top of the second, then carefully roll them up together to make a sausage shape. Wrap and chill again to make it easier to cut. Slice the sausage into discs, put on baking trays and bake at 180/350/GM4 for about 12-15 mins.
Or do as we did: make up the dough with no colour, give each child two balls of dough and a choice of food colour pastes and let them go wild with the colour combinations!

Celtic Harmony Camp

Slightly worrying name, but a great place 😀
Bob worked from home and we went out; I think he probably had the less tiring day 😆
It was a wizarding event, so lots of Celtic-inspired, wizarding themed activities, starting with making a “wand pouch” from hessian and string, then collecting a “magical flint” to put in a wand. In theory the children should have been able to knap the flint themselves, but in practice it was too busy (Sun was quieter, apparently) so they just watched the flint knapping expert make a stone hand axe using hammer stones, antler hammers and the power of angles, then collected from him a carefully pre-blunted flint. He showed us how sharp a flint blade can be by scoring the edge of his thick leather apron with it, then broke the sharp edge away with a finger nail, showing how brittle it was, hence the invention of much thicker blades with serrated edges (L worked out what he was doing immediately but couldn’t think of the word; fortunately he was completely happy with her description of it being “like mountains”) to rip rather than cut. He said he has seen hand axes and flint blades used to cut up animals and it is scary; the thin straight blades can cut a finger to the bone before you realise you’ve been cut, while the thicker serrated ones can rip through hide and meat so you can cut up a carcass in just a few minutes – essential for cavemen who were competing with larger and fiercer animals.
Next to the flint knappers roundhouse was a circus skills workshop, where J and L learned to spin plates, K had a go with diablo and devilsticks (is there a more PC name for those?), L and K had their faces painted and A flirted with instructors who tried to get her juggling 😆
There was a story trail about to begin so we joined that and followed the storyteller through the woods (I may try to get the stories down before we forget them, as the children are all keen to keep telling and retelling them 🙂 ) on a circular trail past trees, huts and carved animals. I think we may go back for one of their full-on storytelling sessions, because we were all ready to go on for several more when she finished after just five (reminder to self: nut, great creator, man and tree, tree and heart, hedgehog who went pop).
Time for lunch, so K and L played in the sandpit and playground while J and I consulted menus. J went for a cheese roll, while K and L and A and I shared jacket potatoes – and then J decided he liked the look of potatoes more so A and I ended up sharing three ways *sigh*
After lunch we continued our quest, finding gnomes with directions and clues. We collected feathers from one, made wands at the weaving sheds with the next (willow stick, with flint inserted into a slit in the end, wrapped around with wool, decorated with feathers, dipped in glitter), collected smooth pebbles to give to the gnome guarding the bridge so we could cross, found the way to the druid’s hut where we were able to decipher some runes and choose which ones to write on the wands (L went for Joy and Mother, K for strength and defensive action (?!) and J for strength and wealth), made broomsticks from birch twigs and string, wove some wishes and dreams into the weaving web, made friends with the goats, wandered through the willow tunnel and then sat down in relief to watch a (rather small, but they’re working on it!) display of Celtic warriors (well, warrior, plus volunteers) and a circus skills display. There should have been fire juggling, but it was too windy with so many trees nearby so it was crystal ball work instead – still rather impressive and J was very cross that we had run out of memory on the camera so I couldn’t video it. Must get another memory card!
It was almost time to go now, but we managed to squeeze in a few minutes in the arena doing some Celtic games and activities, which proved to be L and K’s favourite bit, so I’m glad we did it. Next time I think we might start there, though, as we only got to do half of them before chucking out time 🙁 We didn’t even make it over to the archery section, partly by design as J desperately wanted to have a go and I was worried about his arm, while K was under the age limit (7) but hoping to have a go anyway. Next time…

Do I cut the red wire or the blue wire, Lassie?

Phew! I’ve now migrated 2 blogs (this one and a pretty dead one) to WordPress 2.6.1. Hooray! It was a much bigger job than usual because my run-by-friends-of-a-friend-in-their-spare-time ISP hadn’t upgraded the MySQL database software beyond version 3.23! I had done all the steps in the WordPress upgrade instructions and clicked on the upgrade database link, and then got the error: WordPress 2.6.1 needs MySQL 4.0.0. :wall: To give them their due, they set up a MySQL 5.0 database for me very quickly. But that was an empty database, so I had to schlep all the data from the old database to the new one, without any nice tools like phpMyAdmin 🙄 Oh, and I couldn’t do it all in one go because I got weird out-of-space messages.

Because I exhibit the weird obsessive laziness of the geek, I had to write some scripts to save time (I will only actually save time if I remember to run them each time I upgrade), and because I’m rusty I had to look up shell scripting and some MySQL. (Yeah, really quick. The documentation was good, but I was v. rusty.)

Anyway, enough rambling. Katy took the children off to this Celtic place today, and they all came back tired but happy. (K and L came back with painted faces too – K’s was excellent.) I haven’t bothered to upload photos yet, but will in the next day or so.

A Grand Tour

We’ve just finished a Grand Tour of the North (which included London). First was the SOTP summer party, which was very nice. We met the welly boots tribe, one of whom is also the mystery commenter on the SOTP’s blog, which is good and reduces the number of things I have to hold in my brain (like learning that Bruce Wayne and Batman are the same person).

There were two walks – one in the wet and one in the dry – to take in the glorious countryside and water engineering. J occasionally left DS corner, for instance to play Ticket to Ride, which K and I enjoyed too. Lots of lovely food and nice company, and of course books.

We were out-tented by everyone, as we took two small, cheap, basic tents (including a cheapy Tesco children’s one). The interesting weather on the second night – to recreate the effect, sit inside a small tent while someone hits it repeatedly with a cricket bat and then sprays a garden hose on it – couldn’t defeat them, so they were The Little Tents That Could. I hope that those whose tents suffered have all now got things sorted out.

Thanks very much to J, J, J, M, C, R and M (I didn’t see S) for being such excellent hosts.

Then over the Penines to my parents. In all my time living there, I hadn’t gone to the viewing bit of Manchester airport, so when we took the children there it was new to me too. A real Concorde – from the outside as beautiful as it is I wasn’t going to pay that much to go on – a 3rd size willow Concorde (see Flickr) and Dad’s binoculars meant that this was a nice hour or so. We also went to a garden centre that had a miniature railway and loads of railway signs and other bits and pieces (more photos), which was also good fun.

Katy had to disappear home to run the toddler group, and took J and A with her in the car. Mum and Dad and I took K and L into Salford on the tram, and for once got to sit just behind the driver. The first stop was lunch down by the quays, where a cormorant was fishing. At the time K and I tried to remember the nonsense verse about cormorants but couldn’t. I’ve looked it up, and here it is (it’s by Christopher Isherwood):

The common cormorant (or shag)
Lays eggs inside a paper bag,
You follow the idea, no doubt?
It’s to keep the lightning out.

But what these unobservant birds
Have never thought of, is that herds
Of wandering bears might come with buns
And steal the bags to hold the crumbs.

The architecture of the new buildings is interesting and varied, and a lot better than it could have been. We went into The Lowry, saw some amazing huge inflatable alien plants hanging from the ceiling and then I took the children into the galleries while Mum and Dad had a cup of tea.

It was meant to be a quick look but it turned into a proper visit, because they were enjoying themselves so much. Most art galleries I’ve been into have Art pinned to the walls, made by famous worthy people, many of whom are dead and/or lived somewhere else. The Lowry has a thing set up permanently to get visitors to draw, and another room (complete with member of staff, aprons, drying clips and racks and a huge mirror with Are You Clean? on it) for painting. Drawing and painting aren’t particularly amazing, but having them as part of an art gallery I think is great. It gives the children a much better connection to the exhibits, and it’s fun.

The other reason for going to Salford was to visit Old Trafford i.e. Man. U’s ground. Mum and Dad had taken my nephews to Anfield, and suggested to K that we could see Old Trafford. To see the pitch you had to go on a tour which was £15 a head :eek:, so we made do with the shop – at least that was free. The size of a small supermarket, and the thing that put the lid on it for me was a baby’s dummy with the Man. U. logo on it: you can’t even turn over, but we can make money out of you. Mum bought them some Top Trumps, so I’m learning about the current and past squad.

On the way back to the tram we passed the other Old Trafford i.e. the cricket ground, which had a War of the Roses poster up showing all the Lancashire vs. Yorkshire matches.

A much cheaper trip out was going up Tegg’s Nose. Fortunately the sun was out, so we could see hills in Wales, Jodrell Bank, as well as all the lovely layers in the sedimentary rock in the quarry at the top.

As well as that, there was helping with planting and picking vegetables, playing Mousetrap, watching TV, playing Braintastic and lie-ins for me (yippee!) and a bit of computer technical support.

We caught a Megabus from Manchester to London, which was cheap and great apart from the light in the loo switching off randomly. While we travelled down, Katy took J and A to the British Library where they saw the Ramayana and some old printing presses. The rendezvous was for about fourteen hundred hours at Coram’s Fields, which was fab as ever, particularly as one of A’s sets of godparents was there with 8/10 of their children. Tired but happy children were then packed onto the train and off to bed.