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Tinypliny's Journal

tinypliny
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10/21/2008 19:47 #46239

In love with salad...
Category: eating in
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So much so that I bought a HUGE 3 pound bag of spring greens this past weekend at Guercio's.

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For ~$10, these fresh salad greens were a steal. I intend to have a variation of bread/pita-hummus-greens for lunch this entire week. :)

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YUMMY! :)
hodown - 10/22/08 11:31
That looks so good and healthy!
imk2 - 10/22/08 09:09
yum, that does looks sooo good
gardenmama - 10/21/08 21:14
Yum! I love salad too - it's the best. I had a nice salad with lots of veggies and sunflower seeds and stuff in it at lunch today, but then, unfortunately, got an upset stomach this afternoon and haven't felt right since :-(
libertad - 10/21/08 20:05
That looks delicious. I am so hungry.

10/20/2008 21:25 #46218

Sunday at Forest Lawn
Category: tourism
I admit it. I am totally jealous of (e:pmt) weekend trips so I determinedly took one of my own this Sunday. I headed out to Forest Lawn Cemetery and decided to do this entirely by foot. Took me around 25 minutes to walk to the Cemetery from home. Not bad at all. I sorely missed Mt. Hope all these days and I think Forest Lawn is a worthy competitor. It was beautiful and I loved the fact that it was hilly and had somewhat steep-ish slopes just like Mt. Hope. Some photos from the hike...

I love that the entrance is so grand and has a small road fork of its own!
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The entrance gate is actually crowned! Nice touch. :)
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Is the green on this statue actually Copper patina or is it just green concrete/sculpting clay? I was in a hurry to rush all across the cemetery so didn't stop to read the inscriptions. Usually, I like to stop and read all of these random details and weave them into my own personal story versions. Hasty me. :/
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There is something so soothing about walking on a bed of crackling yet soft leaves layered on grass...
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Fall was out in all its glory at Forest Lawn!
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The water-bodies across the cemetery are spell-binding. I could have easily believed that throwing coins in them and wishing like crazy might have made all my dreams come true! They were just that perfect! This is Jubilee spring - the first of the three.
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Crystal Lake - as you can see it lives up to its name. Each leaf colour was reflected back in perfection!
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A couple more view of that magical lake.
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There were these morbid looking dark mushrooms all over the place.
(e:imk2), can Slawa tell whether these are edible?
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The Bridge to the mythical geese kingdom. :)
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The compass for lost souls.
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There were sections of the cemetery that looked like you were looking through some virtual convex glasses, when in fact you weren't. Such a cool effect!
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Creek Scajjy. ;-)
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The ferocious guardian of the mythical kingdom of geese (otherwise known as the mirror lake).
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The Geese Kingdom!
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These geese actually posed for me. :)
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From one of the mounds near Delaware avenue, you can see across the road on to distant plains and I think that is Delaware Park? (Not sure, though.) It was like one of the scenic moments described in a George Eliot novel.
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The colours on the leaves were gorgeous!
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There was this monument with angels and gargoyles that reminded me of churches in Prague.
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These crosses were set off by a riot of colours in the background.
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Not to be outdone by those below, some really delicate clouds were floating in the sky.
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This monument somehow reminded me of a water tank and nuclear cloud all at once!
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A flashback to Mt. Hope in Rochester that has Egyptian sphinxes as well!
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I thought this Roman influenced priest had such a dramatic background!
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I wasn't paying much attention to the inscriptions as I always do but these two picked me up ;-) The husband has measuring tools and a hammer on his side and the wife has humming birds (?) :)
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And, having that name must have been hard at school...
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It was a lovely afternoon! Forest Lawn is a real treasure. :)
heidi - 10/24/08 00:20
Thank you for the beautiful tour!
metalpeter - 10/21/08 17:40
Great looking pictures. Oh by the way I thought you could eat all mushrooms and the poisonous ones just got you super hight but not really sure about that.
dragonlady7 - 10/20/08 22:14
Oh I love Mt. Hope too!!


Actually I had a great-grandmother with the name of Roach, but she spelled it Roche. She was Irish, and died in the fifties, so I've no idea if anyone ever made fun of her. (It's a French name, but I don't know if it means anything.)

10/18/2008 22:45 #46185

Congratulations, Baby Fing!!!
Category: e:strip
Baby Fing is here!!! He made it!!!

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CONGRATULATIONS (e:fing) & family!!


PS: Now get little baby Jack to blog here! ;-)


metalpeter - 10/19/08 11:00
Congrats

10/19/2008 20:12 #46197

Mayflower Terrace View of Buffalo
Category: tourism
Okay, I don't have (e:Matthew) magic dust, but hey, I try! :D Here is the view from the Mayflower terrace.

Looking north towards Delaware Avenue:
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You can see the Zion temple and the uber cool condos on Delaware.

Panning east, that's the pretty house at the north-east corner of Linwood and Summer in the foreground. I am amazed at how pretty and colourful it progressively becomes as the leaves climbing it slowly turn in the fall.
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Far in the background, I think that building is ECMC. You can also see the South Campus and the white clock tower in this view but my camera is on the lowest resolution to cram in the maximum number of pictures in 16 MB, so yes, this is all you get. Bleh.

Further east is the Summer-Best junction and the paint company further down the road. You can also see the copper-topped bell tower that produces the deafeningly loud chimes that resound around Linwood.
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When I first came here, I thought someone's wretched job was to sit in that tower all day, every day, in all weather and strike the chimes by the hour. It somehow consoled me in rough times in a crooked miserable way. However, (e:Paul) broke the romance and pettiness by telling me that the thing was pre-programmed. *Sigh*


Alrighty, this view here is the direction of my school and livelihood of many on this site. Though you can't see much of it behind the towering presence of Buffalo General, the tiny bit of red sticking out beyond the big building is Roswell Park Cancer Institute. :)
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To the right of the programmed chiming copper tower, the central terminal building is visible. I can actually see this from my window, but I didn't realize that it was the central terminal building till I actually saw it from terrace. Yeah, I am that visually and logically challenged.

Panning south now down Linwood...
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Off in the distance, you can see the hope of the future windmills! :)

Further south is Buffalo's famed downtown skyline.
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Hidden behind the tree in full fall colours is (e:pmt)'s abode!
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And of course, a close up of the famed Buffalo downtown skyline.

Hiding my clear view of the Buffalo Harbour are these 10 storey monstrosities on Delaware Avenue. I used to think they were the same height as the Mayflower, but no, they are a full 2 storeys higher. :/
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To the west is the beautiful church on Delaware Avenue between North and Summer. Off to the distance you can also see that Water Arbour structure right in the middle of the water. I am not sure what that is but I think it might be a good spot for a lavish water wedding that Buffalo might make money out of.
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People could say their vows in that structure between Canada and the US and the guests could witness the ceremony in yachts floating around that structure. I think I have been seeing far too many romantic comedy/wedding movies lately.

Further west is this grand view of Summer Street.
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And THAT off to the north-west is the city of Niagara Falls.
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When there are absolutely no clouds, zero haze and it is somewhat chilly, you can see the mist from the horse-shoe falls. Again, I need (e:Matthew) magic dust and a better camera to prove this but there you have it.

And no terrace shoot can be complete without sky-focus shots. These are the some of the same views in absolutely magical lighting.
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I go up there so often now, its hard to not take my camera and shoot when you see such awesomeness.
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I think the second best place to see the sunset (after the harbour) is the Mayflower terrace. :)
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Here's sunset over distant Niagara Falls!
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Sunset over the famed Buffalo downtown skyline.
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Nightfall over the famed Buffalo downtown skyline.
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PS: I have noticed that the more you keep describing something as "the famed blah blah", there is a big chance that it actually does become "the famed blah blah" at some point. Hey, I love Buffalo. If this is the least I can do to make it famed in current times, I will do it with diligence. :D

PPS: I am somewhat disappointed by the resolution of this entire shoot. I need (e:Matthew) to come up here and shoot it all to show the world exactly how awesome it really is. :)
metalpeter - 10/20/08 17:50
Nice Pictures. Some of how good a picture looks is the light and how the camera handles it and some of it is the person taking the picture, then there is this kinda morphing of the two together. It also helps if (I don't have this and I'm pretty sure Matt does) you have what I call a photographic eye. What I mean by this is that we don't see things in the same way as a camera does plus we have a brain to figure out what we see. I think though that there are people who know what the image will look like or how it will come out on the camera vs. how we see how it looks.
heidi - 10/19/08 22:59
Great pix, tiny! Thanks for sharing your view.

speaking windmills...
Did anyone else see about two weeks ago when there was a windmill blade stuck diagonally at the intersection of North & Delaware?

It was on a truck... a very long truck... it looked like it was supposed to be a very tall spire of a white marble church. It took me a few days to figure out what it might be, until I was driving home and saw two more of the beautifully sinuous sculptures along I-390. I spent a few minutes trying to find a photo that showed the elegance of the design but couldn't find any, so here's a bad picture: :::link:::
gardenmama - 10/19/08 22:55
Cool pix, Tiny. Amazing how good Buffalo looks when you're not right up close. From a distance, it's really very pretty and interesting. We do have a glut of beautiful architecture here that most of us long-timers take for granted. Nice view.
zobar - 10/19/08 20:36
Saweet!

One of the things I miss about NYC is roof access. But unless you were superrich you'd never get a 20-mile view like that- you'd have to settle for looking at other peoples' roofs.

- Z

10/18/2008 00:21 #46170

Top ten random things I want to do
Category: the odes
-- As of today and in no particular order --

1. Propose. Propose. Propose.
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2. Finish that grant paragraph/page.
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3. Learn how to bake bread.
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(I love the smell of bread, but I have never dealt with artificial yeast before. I am somewhat worried that whatever bread I do manage to make will come out smelling yeasty. This also seems like a ridiculous fear especially since I haven't even attempted to make any bread till now.)
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4. Learn how to low vault that wall on my way to Roswell. (I think I might need strong arms for this trick. Did I mention that my arms are out of proportion to the rest of my body? They look like sticks. If someone were to whack my forearms hard, I think there is a strong likelihood that they might break in two. Both ulna and radius in one go.)
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5. Get some wool yarn for my halloween costume.

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6. Actually sew my halloween costume
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7. Finish this literature search I am doing and write it up ASAP.
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8. Get a haircut (OMG, my hair is so long and untidy, its covering my ears now. UGH)
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9. Learn to make that perfect cup of coffee that I once had at this Italian restaurant called Pane Vino's in Rochester. Seriously, that coffee must have come from bean heaven because I was so enamoured that I had 7 cups of it. I skipped dinner altogether in favour of coffee. I know it must have made a weird impression on the faculty but hey, truly good coffee can only be appreciated via loon worship and erratic behaviour. I tried to explain later that it was done in the spirit of coffee but hardly anyone at the table agreed. Oh well. That coffee was awesome.

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10. Start on the practical part of my dissertation research. (And learn some cool laboratory basic sciency things on the way.)
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gardenmama - 10/18/08 12:48
Coffee is a glorious thing, isn't it?! The best cup of coffee I ever had was at Cafe' Du Monde in New Orleans. I could go back there just for the coffee (and the Beignets too, of course). I brought a couple of cans of their coffee home with me and it was delicious, but not exactly the same as in the cafe'. Maybe part of the fabulousness of it was being there.

I love the pix you put in this post - what a riot!
lauren - 10/18/08 09:46
you are absolutely hysterical! I loved this post and I need a good chuckle this early in the morning :)

And I wanted to thank you for your comments...I totally agree with a lot of what you said, especially about talk within/among like minded academics...and considering that I have ZERO knowledge of science, I was interested in your mention of genetics and diagnostics...although I will admit to being weary of science and classification in general because this was very much part of the project to reinscribe race "characteristics" as natural...like the whole going out and measuring facial features and whatnot. but at the same time i was once really interested in evolutionary theory, even though most feminists think it is terribly problematic.