Friday, May 8, 2026

The last Soup day of the Season


So last night was the last "soup day" of the season.  sop Season is of course my way of saying soup is for cold weather only. As a child we hardly ever had home made soup, at that time it was mostly Campbell's or the store brand with may-be some leftovers added in,  poor man's food.

UH, well that was then and this is now!!!  Years later soup is a work of culinary art, or at least as close to it as i can get. For soup is not to be rushed, either in the making or in the enjoying.  However it is still very closely related to clearing out the refrigerator.  

Being influenced by Beverly Nye i try to use leftovers when possible , i have some large peanut butter jars   in the freezer which contain leftovers that are usable in certain soups.  One contains left over bits of cooked meat, please separate the red meat from the chicken, turkey etc...why?, may-be it's just me but i don't like they way they taste when they get blended.  And one jar that contains homemade bread crumbs, no the bread was from the store, but i toasted it in the oven and ground it down with my mortar and pestle.  But i do digress, often. And  now  have lost my train of thought.  Oh yes, if you have leftover cookies at your house, they can be ground up to use in crusts, or in toppings.  But really does anyone ever have left over cookies???? And don't forget the de-greased drippings and broth, uh i don't mix these either, but remember that bouillon comes in many flavors when you don't have enough broth saved up.


This years choice for the last "soup day" of the season was last night.

 tortellini soup!


 Since i "wing it" with most recipes, here goes!!
-brown some finely chopped onion{1 medium} in some light olive oil and butter
-add some finely chopped celery and carrots if you like, about 1/2  to 3/4 cup, more or less as you like it,
also add a bout 1 1/4 pound of meat, we like beef cubes cut small, and dusted with Italian seasoning,pepper and garlic powder but you could use anything from burger to Canadian bacon after all it's your soup!!!! stirring until meat is nearly cooked,please don't precook the beef but stir until the meat is nicely browned

-add a couple o potatoes, trimmed and cut to bite sized cubes/pieces

-add any beef broth or sock you might have, or prepare some using your favorite bullion cubes or powders, you will need at least 1-2 quarts as it cooks down also add roughly half a cup or small can of tomato sauce, or diced tomatoes in tomato sauce.even a couple of chopped up tomatoes would work it you don't mind the seeds and skins

continue cooking until potatoes a nearly cooked

-turn down the heat add seasonings, Italian seasoning, more garlic if you want,  pepper, dehydrated sweet pepper flakes, some beef flavoring {the powdered kind with NO SALT}, 

- once it reaches a nice simmer and sir in fresh or packaged tortellini, and simmer until they are done 

 

Yup, i said "wing it" and but remember to watch for too much salt, don't add any, if it even needs any until shortly before serving. As the liquid cooks down it will strengthen/concentrate the flavoring of the seasoning.

Monday, May 4, 2026

walking with nature

 







\




 

 "In every walk with nature one receives far more than one seeks." ~ John Muir

 

 On the far side of those trees is a place called "the Grotto".  There is a stream and a pasture surrounded by some stately old overhanging pine trees.  A green and growing cathedral were some old kitchen chairs are secreted behind the low hanging limbs of those massive trees standing as gaudeians.  Thier overhanging limbs screen out the everyday world,and smell so good in the warm spring sun, even better than the fresh smell of earth.  There was an old kitchen chair  further out into the meadow, but weather and use have reduced it to  interesting looking bits of wood half buried in the ground.  There must have been a house here at one time, at least i think so, because there are a few old bottles inreek bank.  I have no interest in digging them out.  I don't think i should either.   If there are any other signs that there was once a house in this peaceful place  they are long gone.  Perhaps I am not the only person to have enjoyed this spot, stopped here on his way to and from work in the woods or the mines.  Some one who knew who also sought the solace and solitude of trees.

 

Cirrus clouds , and a blue sky, a  background to watch the birds of prey at work, as they soar gracefully and dive with a vengeance, then ascend back into the sky. The Masters of the sky are the scavengers of the of last years brutally cold and snowy winter.

 

 Winter was long, bitter cold with days and days of snow accumulating. Walking in deep snow is much more like exercise than it is contemplative rambling.  This short walk from my home, it was not a trip i would make often.

 Today is different, a supernatural feeling that winter had dropped from my shoulders and spring is truly here wrapping itself around me.  The warmth of the sun is something i have missed.  Winter weary, i most certainly am!  The sun warming my soul, reassuring me, as it did the Ancients that it's warmth and light is returning. 

 

So i will sit here for awhile, thinking, day dreaming , in wonder of those who were here before me, of the  stores they told and the stories of everyday things they past down to me {we}.  

 

 



 

 

 

 

Friday, May 1, 2026

The full flower moon, haiku

 Friday, May 1 — 1:23 p.m. — Flower Moon 

 

I don' t know about where you live, but here in the piney wood it's cold, grey and rainy, for a few days anyway.  It really does snow !!!  as in several inches of it on the ground here in April, sometimes even in May, but it never lasts very long.  

OK, OK back to the whatever it was i going to say.  The cold and damp, sunless sky covers a countryside dotted with daffodil's, snowdrops, violets and  flowers i don't know the name of.   There are wild violets growing around the garden and yhe slightest hint of sun shows that the tree's in bud will have leaves any day; and then it will really feel like Spring.

"April showers bring May flowers"












 

 






flowering full moon 

earth and trees blooming with color

air fills with birdsong 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

haiku snowdrops in an old cup




  bulbs planted last spring

 return to the garden  now

others take their place 

 
 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

earth day, a Ute Prayer

 

 




Earth teach me stillness as the grasses are stilled with light

 

 

Monday, April 20, 2026

Tsunami , old school memories, science class and other randomness

 Mass extinctions are something i have wondered about since i was in the 7th grade, and had this science teacher, a good  teacher  he was  an encyclopedia of weird but cool science facts, he was most interested in tsunamis.   They were often the topic of the day no mater what the scheduled  topic was, it could be overridden by any new information about tsunamis.  One day he discussed the tsunami  that would be caused by Cumbre Vieja if it were to collapse into the Atlantic,  sweeping almost  1000 miles inland and reaching a height of about of 1500 feet.  More recent  estimates are no where near that.

Wave height would  be 1 to 3 meters, and travel far enough to cause significant damage to coastal cities and , was the latest estimate i could found.

 This unfinished in my drafts for a very,very long time, thought about deleting it completely a few days ago....the this morning.....tsunami warnings......At any rateTsunami warning were posted for the northeast coastal area after offshore earthquakes{s} were reported..... and si it goes

The study, scheduled for online publication Oct. 4 in the journal AGU Advances, presents the first global simulation of the Chicxulub impact tsunami to be published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. In addition, U-M researchers reviewed the geological record at more than 100 sites worldwide and found evidence that supports their models’ predictions about the tsunami’s path and power.

“This tsunami was strong enough to disturb and erode sediments in ocean basins halfway around the globe, leaving either a gap in the sedimentary records or a jumble of older sediments,” said lead author Molly Range, who conducted the modeling study for a master’s thesis under U-M physical oceanographer and study co-author Brian Arbic and U-M paleoceanographer and study co-author Ted Moore.

The review of the geological record focused on “boundary sections,” marine sediments deposited just before or just after the asteroid impact and the subsequent K-Pg mass extinction, which closed the Cretaceous Period.

“The distribution of the erosion and hiatuses that we observed in the uppermost Cretaceous marine sediments are consistent with our model results, which gives us more confidence in the model predictions,” said Range, who started the project as an undergraduate in Arbic’s lab in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences.

The study authors calculated that the initial energy in the impact tsunami was up to 30,000 times larger than the energy in the December 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake tsunami, which killed more than 230,000 people and is one of the largest tsunamis in the modern record.

The team’s simulations show that the impact tsunami radiated mainly to the east and northeast into the North Atlantic Ocean, and to the southwest through the Central American Seaway (which used to separate North America and South America) into the South Pacific Ocean.

In those basins and in some adjacent areas, underwater current speeds likely exceeded 20 centimeters per second (0.4 mph), a velocity that is strong enough to erode fine-grained sediments on the seafloor.

In contrast, the South Atlantic, the North Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the region that is today the Mediterranean were largely shielded from the strongest effects of the tsunami, according to the team’s simulation. In those places, the modeled current speeds were likely less than the 20 cm/sec threshold.

For the review of the geological record, U-M’s Moore analyzed published records of 165 marine boundary sections and was able to obtain usable information from 120 of them. Most of the sediments came from cores collected during scientific ocean-drilling projects.

The North Atlantic and South Pacific had the fewest sites with complete, uninterrupted K-Pg boundary sediments. In contrast, the largest number of complete K-Pg boundary sections were found in the South Atlantic, the North Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean.

“We found corroboration in the geological record for the predicted areas of maximal impact in the open ocean,” said Arbic, professor of earth and environmental sciences who oversaw the project. “The geological evidence definitely strengthens the paper.”

Of special significance, according to the authors, are outcrops of the K-Pg boundary on the eastern shores of New Zealand’s north and south islands, which are more than 12,000 kilometers (7,500 miles) from the Yucatan impact site.

The heavily disturbed and incomplete New Zealand sediments, called olistostromal deposits, were originally thought to be the result of local tectonic activity. But given the age of the deposits and their location directly in the modeled pathway of the Chicxulub impact tsunami, the U-M-led research team suspects a different origin.

“We feel these deposits are recording the effects of the impact tsunami, and this is perhaps the most telling confirmation of the global significance of this event,” Range said.

The modeling portion of the study used a two-stage strategy. First, a large computer program called a hydrocode simulated the chaotic first 10 minutes of the event, which included the impact, crater formation and initiation of the tsunami. That work was conducted by co-author Brandon Johnson of Purdue University.

Based on the findings of previous studies, the researchers modeled an asteroid that was 14 kilometers (8.7 miles) in diameter, moving at 12 kilometers per second (27,000 mph). It struck granitic crust overlain by thick sediments and shallow ocean waters, blasting a roughly 100-kilometer-wide (62-mile-wide) crater and ejecting dense clouds of soot and dust into the atmosphere.

Two and a half minutes after the asteroid struck, a curtain of ejected material pushed a wall of water outward from the impact site, briefly forming a 4.5-kilometer-high (2.8-mile-high) wave that subsided as the ejecta fell back to Earth.

Ten minutes after the projectile hit the Yucatan, and 220 kilometers (137 miles) from the point of impact, a 1.5-kilometer-high (0.93-mile-high) tsunami wave — ring-shaped and outward-propagating — began sweeping across the ocean in all directions, according to the U-M simulation.

At the 10-minute mark, the results of Johnson’s iSALE hydrocode simulations were entered into two tsunami-propagation models, MOM6 and MOST, to track the giant waves across the ocean. MOM6 has been used to model tsunamis in the deep ocean, and NOAA uses the MOST model operationally for tsunami forecasts at its Tsunami Warning Centers.

“The big result here is that two global models with differing formulations gave almost identical results, and the geologic data on complete and incomplete sections are consistent with those results,” said Moore, professor emeritus of earth and environmental sciences. “The models and the verification data match nicely.”

According to the team’s simulation:

  • One hour after impact, the tsunami had spread outside the Gulf of Mexico and into the North Atlantic.
  • Four hours after impact, the waves had passed through the Central American Seaway and into the Pacific.
  • Twenty-four hours after impact, the waves had crossed most of the Pacific from the east and most of the Atlantic from the west and entered the Indian Ocean from both sides.
  • By 48 hours after impact, significant tsunami waves had reached most of the world’s coastlines.

For the current study, the researchers did not attempt to estimate the extent of coastal flooding caused by the tsunami.

However, their models indicate that open-ocean wave heights in the Gulf of Mexico would have exceeded 100 meters (328 feet), with wave heights of more than 10 meters (32.8 feet) as the tsunami approached North Atlantic coastal regions and parts of South America’s Pacific coast.

As the tsunami neared those shorelines and encountered shallow bottom waters, wave heights would have increased dramatically through a process called shoaling. Current speeds would have exceeded the 20 centimeters per second threshold for most coastal areas worldwide.

“Depending on the geometries of the coast and the advancing waves, most coastal regions would be inundated and eroded to some extent,” according to the study authors. “Any historically documented tsunamis pale in comparison with such global impact.”

Video: https://youtu.be/hy6wfjqFBE0

A follow-up study is planned to model the extent of coastal inundation worldwide, Arbic said. That study will be led by Vasily Titov of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Pacific Marine Environmental Lab, who is a co-author of the AGU Advances paper.

In addition to Range, Arbic, Moore, Johnson and Titov, the study authors are Alistair Adcroft of Princeton University, Joseph Ansong of the University of Ghana, Christopher Hollis of Victoria University of Wellington, Christopher Scotese of the PALEOMAP Project, and He Wang of NOAA’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory and the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.

Funding was provided by the National Science Foundation and the University of Michigan Associate Professor Support Fund, which is supported by the Margaret and Herman Sokol Faculty Awards. The MOM6 simulations were carried out on the Flux supercomputer provided by the University of Michigan Advanced Research Computing Technical Services.

Reference:
Molly M. Range, Brian K. Arbic, Brandon C. Johnson, Theodore C. Moore, Vasily Titov, Alistair J. Adcroft, Joseph K. Ansong, Christopher J. Hollis, Jeroen Ritsema, Christopher R. Scotese, He Wang. The Chicxulub Impact Produced a Powerful Global Tsunami. AGU Advances, 2022; 3 (5) DOI: 10.1029/2021AV000627

Note: The above post is reprinted from materials provided by University of Michigan.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

A Frog in the river,

Thinking about summer!  Really something i spend much tooooooo much time doing!   I keep watching the sky, looking for birds, checking to see if the buds on the maple tree are swelling {not yet}, however the grass is turning green and growing, surely Spring is here! 
 

Just as my parents took us for a long ride thru the woods each Spring, i would take my little one for long rides on backroads,  His favored  destination was the "Frog in the river"  a favorite destination for me and my siblings when we were very young also.     Became an almost seasonal trip to see the "frog in the river".   It began  as total surprise we had no idea  that it existed.   I have always claimed i saw it first, and may-be i did. Imagine being  in a car with three excited kids, who saw a giant green frog in the middle of a river. We were old enough to know it was manmade, but still gobsmacked to see it.  Dad calmly pulled the car over to the side of the road , everyone got out and gazed at the big stone frog painted "front porch green".   Curiously no one said much, not even my Mom, like we were in awe of what we were seeing.  Have often wondered if my parents knew it was there, because there it was a vivid green frog in the middle of Tionesta Creek!!!!  
  It looked a bit different in those days,  which should not surprise anyone.  
It is repainted every few years and details do  change a bit each time. Also no one seems to know who this devoted caretaker is. 
 
  Look at those huge slabs of ice on the riverbank!!  Also look how much the water has dropped since those blocks of ice where deposited there! 




 
 
   Indeed curious after all of the Springs that have passed since i last drove down that road.  Just wondering out loud,  i keep telling myself, i will drive down Tripple6s  again, may-be do a little fishing and scramble down the hill for a close up visit with the "Frog".  Then inch my way back up the hill. Perhaps by now there is a nice path.  I could do the smart thing and  admire it from the road. Nah,  i'm not that smart. 
 





The last Soup day of the Season

So last night was the last "soup day" of the season.  sop Season is of course my way of saying soup is for cold weather only. As a...