Friday, September 24. 2004Slip F-18 to be Rededicated
I'm a big fan of John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee series. There are 21 books in the series, the first of which was published nearly 40 years ago, and the last about 18 years ago. Despite their age, the books are very entertaining and contain tidbits of wisdom ahead of their time (A nice list of quotes from the books).
The fictitious McGee lived on a houseboat in the real Bahia Mar marina. The real Slip F-18 didn't exist, but a plaque was placed at the marina in 1987 to commemorate the famous character. Apparently the plaque was removed a couple years ago to make way for renovations, but it will be replaced and rededicated on October 2. I wish I could attend, but I'll have to settle for visiting the location on a future trip to South Florida. I like this quote from Cinnamon Skin, written in 1982, which nicely describes computers and the Internet today: Soon the bosses of the microcomputer revolution will sell us preprogrammed units for each household which will provide entertainment, print out news, purvey mail-order goods, pay bills, balance accounts, keep track of expenses, and compute taxes.There's so much good stuff in those books...go read 'em! Update 2005-10-26: The links I had died. Thank you very much big-name newspapers who hide their web archives behind logins and payments. Here's a link that works. Sunday, September 12. 2004Raising a Long-tailed Skipper Butterfly
Rolled Leaf
Caterpillar Inside
Early Stage Caterpillar
Late Stage Caterpillar
Pupa
Long-tailed Skipper One of the side effects from our small vegetable garden this year has been the insects that it attracted. This coincided nicely with my interest in bugs and how to photograph them. I've posted many of the images on BugGuide.net, a fantastic website. Our green bean plants attracted several bugs, the most interesting of which was a a small caterpillar that would roll up little curls of the bean leaf and hide while it nibbled on the leaves. After some research to figure out what it was, I discovered that it was common on bean plants. The caterpillar is known as a bean leafroller, and it becomes a butterfly called the long-tailed skipper. The Latin name is Urbanus proteus. An excellent writeup is found on this University of Florida page. I decided to capture a caterpillar and raise it. I placed it in a small screened-in container and kept it supplied with fresh green bean leaves from the garden. On occasion I would remove the dried-up leaves and the frass (caterpillar droppings). The caterpillar was probably nocturnal as I didn't see much activity in the day, but in the morning it was obvious that the caterpillar had been all over the container. It was neat to watch it develop from a 1/2-inch (1.27cm) caterpillar to nearly an inch (2.54cm). As the caterpillar grew, it developed red "eyes" on its black head. As the caterpillar got close to pupating, the whole head started to get reddish. After a couple weeks, I looked in to find that the caterpillar had pupated inside the leaves. I had put some sticks in expecting it to make its pupa by dangling from a stick, but I should have paid closer attention to the writeup, which states: "the larva pupates on the plant, within the shelter formed by the larva from leaf material." The pupa stage lasted about 10 days. During the steady downpour we got from Hurricane Frances here in upstate South Carolina, I went out to the garage and found that my container now held an adult long-tailed skipper. It was active and ready to fly when I saw it. My attempt to photograph it failed, and it fluttered away quickly into the rain. The adult image here was taken by Troy Bartlett and is used under the Creative Commons license. All of my images in this writeup are available under the same license. Click to see the larger versions on the BugGuide site. This was a fun and easy project, and a good way to understand the life stages of a butterfly. Friday, September 3. 2004International Comment Spam Conspiracy
Today I got my first comment spam! From my server logs:
221.224.33.227 - - [03/Sep/2004:06:29:44 -0400] "GET /mike/index.php?/archives/31_....
168.187.1.13 - - [03/Sep/2004:06:30:37 -0400] "POST /mike/index.php?url=http://boonedocks.net/mike/index.php&/archives/31_.... 200.45.71.40 - - [03/Sep/2004:06:30:40 -0400] "GET /mike/index.php?url=http://boonedocks.net/mike/index.php&/archives/31_.... 168.187.1.13 - - [03/Sep/2004:06:30:43 -0400] "GET /mike/serendipity.css.php.... According to some tracerouting, the 168.187.1.13 address is supposedly in/near Kuwait. The 221.224.33.227 address is in/near China, and the 200.45.71.40 address is supposedly in/near Argentina. And as I was writing this, they went and spammed 15 more entries, using 61.145.73.222 (China), 210.5.71.243 (Philippines), and 212.38.134.210 (unknown). Wonder if these are all compromised machines, or if they're complicit? Argh, I need to find a spam-bot blocker. Who'd have thought my blog was worthy of such attention? Update: Apparently I'm not the only Serendipity Blog user to get hit by this. Thursday, September 2. 2004Short Trip to Table Rock
We took a short camping trip to Table Rock State Park on Tueday and Wednesday. This was our first camping trip with our whole "family" including two dogs and our 17 month-old son. We crammed them and our camping gear into our overloaded Saturn VUE and hit the road. We got halfway there and realized that we didn't bring the camping stove. So it was to be peanut-butter and jelly for the duration!
The campground was nearly deserted on a weekday and we found a quiet spot to ourselves by a small creek. It had good shade and was fairly clean, but it still irked me to see all the cigarette butts...hey smoking campers...that is trash too! We took walks around the campground and maybe five sites were being used, but just about every site was reserved for Labor Day weekend. Yuck...camping in a full campground is like living in the city, I think. Tuesday night was nice and quiet, with a little rain and the creek babbling behind the tent. Wednesday we went hiking on the Carrick Creek trail, my favorite part of the trip. We had the trail to ourselves and enjoyed walking next to the streams and many small waterfalls. Afterwards we let our son run around the playground, slide down the slides, and try the swing, which he enjoyed. That afternoon we had a big rainstorm that confined us to the tent for a couple hours. With more rain in the forecast and being tired from walking the dogs and chasing our son, we decided to pack it up after one night and head home...definitely a benefit of living close to the mountains. A nice, but tiring trip. McAfee Annoyances
In the past week or so, there have been some annoying updates to the McAfee virus scanning software on my systems. The first update decided to leave a new icon on my desktop, "McAfee Security Center." The second update left yet another icon on the desktop, "McAfee Scan for Viruses." In addition, now when I send an email, a McAfee dialog box pops up for a split second. Hey McAfee, leave my desktop alone, and just run in the background! Otherwise I'll be investigating your competition.
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