The dandelion wine is now bottled and “resting” for a few months prior to tasting.
Richard Dawkins and P.Z Myers In Conversation
Last night the BHA hosted and armchair conversation between Richard Dawkins and PZ Myers. After roughly half the audience had entered the room, a handful of protesters pushed their way in and onto the stage. Initially mistaken for religious loons, they eventually made it clear they were protesting Dawkins’ involvement in the New College of the Humanities and the existence of the college itself. While the death of free education in this country is a worthwhile thing to protest, the protestors definitely chose the wrong forum for the protest last night.
The audience were there for a free-thought debate / conversation, so were never going to take kindly to being shouted down at. They completely alienated themselves with their attitude – no matter what arguments they had, nobody was prepared to listen.
They were eventually turfed out by the police & campus security. The talk then began, but with police at all exits standing by to repel invaders.
As the talk moved from exobiology towards atheism, two other protestors got up from their seats, stood before the stage and tried to read out some questions or a speech. I may be wrong, but I gt the impression they were there to protest the anti-religion element of the talk (both RD and PZ being rabid atheists). The two protestors were quickly escorted outside after RD announced several times he would take their questions at the end.
When both speakers were asked what they would like the future to look like, there was a mutual agreement that they would like the word ‘Atheist’ to be meaningless. Both look forward for a time where you don’t have to state your disbelief in something, for the word to be as pointless as a ‘Leprechaunist’.
The night ended with the BHA Chair wrapping things up, suggesting we all join the BHA and thunderous applause from the audience for the speakers.
Dead.
Dead; not my corner of the internet – this is just pining for the fjords, but my poor walking boots.
A couple of thousand miles.
Five countries.
Three-and-a-bit years.
Three mountain ranges.
Two continents.
One dead pair of walking boots.
Spending the Royal Wedding bank holiday wandering around the Scottish Highlands including Ben Nevis finally finished them off. The laces snapped at airport security and a gash in the side opened up descending the Ben. The soles have leaked since January.
Dandelion wine – or – That was Easter Monday
Making dandelion wine is a messy business; First you have to collect ~400 grams of flowers, then you have to separate out the petals:
Then boil them all up with sugar, raisins and some orange peel:
And then hope it ferments into something nice.
Fingers crossed, that in six months to a year, we’ll have some nice wine.
Recipe:
400g of Dandelion flowers, 1kg of Sugar, 150g Raisins, Peel of 4 small oranges, 1 gallon of water. Simmer flowers in water for 30 min, strain off flowers and add sugar, raisins and peel to solution and simmer for a further hour. Allow to cool before removing peel and straining and squashing raisins for their juice. Add yeast and decant to demijohn. Wait.
A darker than usual morning at this time of year
Going back to work on the 4th of January might be enough to darken anyone’s spirits, the mornings are dark enough, but come the 4th dawn will be even darker for us here in London. A partial eclipse will have the moon covering up the rising limb of the sun, the uncovered portion will still be below the horizon at sun-up (08:06am).
Seeing as it will almost certainly be too overcast to take photographs and I’ll have no clear view to the low horizon anyway, I’ve prepared some simulations of what you would see (or I would photograph) were conditions perfect (with no atmosphere glare either).
The Sun will clear the horizon by 8:15, but a good portion of it will be eclipsed by the moon.
Just as you’re starting work, the sun will be high enough to clear low roofs and trees, you might get to see a chunk missing from it if you’re outside or near a window.
But it’ll probably be too overcast.
9:30, and the sun is definitely high enough to see now, but you’ve missed all the action.
It’s a shame hardly anyone in London will see this eclipse, because it’s one of the best London will see for a long time. The centre-line passes right though London, skirting the west-side of central park in East Ham, passing right over Ilford station and just clipping the eastern edge of Valentines Park.
A fun toy for working out where the eclipse is visible is this map from NASA. The next total solar eclipse visible from London isn’t until June 14, 2151, so armchair eclipse hunters have a bit of a wait.