Daphne Eftychia Arthur, guitarist+. Read.
And today I close out Silver Bells pictures but I promise you there's narrative of recent events to come.
Good view here of the camera stand and professional photographers, and I guess one of the camera guys just had his iPhone with him too.
Oh, now, focusing on a dark tree, wonder what could be next ...
Yes, it's lit up! The tree was red that year to observe the ruby anniversary of Silver Bells. Took me a bit to realize that too.
The drone show helped underscore the 40 years-ness of this, though.
And another appearance by ruby slippers.
Santa appearing in the drones with his famous catchphrase, 'ho ho' (ding dongs were unavailable).
And now to the good part, the fireworks!
Just enough fireworks here to make it look like the capitol is sprinkling.
And here's a better white explosion behind the dome.
And a nice bursting of several fireworks. Also, can't help noticing the people on the third floor balcony of the capitol where they can't see a thing.
Close-up picture of the tree, seen from near the base.
The tree needed a less elaborate set of shims and supports to stay more or less upright this time!
Trivia: Bavaria and Austria switched to the Gregorian Calendar in October 1583, a year after the Pope had directed. Wurzburg, Münster, and Mainz all changed in November 1583, but picking different ten-day blocks to drop. Source: The Calendar: The 5000-Year Struggle to Align the Clock with the Heavens --- And What Happened to the Missing Ten Days, David Ewing Duncan.
Currently Reading: American Scientist, July - August 2025, Editor Fenella Saunders.
PS: What's Going On In Alley Oop? Why are they getting rid of the dinosaurs? July - October 2025 and it's a great question, why ever get rid of the dinosaur people?
The dye that we hoped might help us tell the brown mice apart has worn off, so we're back to thinking one of them kind of looks bigger than the other so that's going to tell us which is which? Maybe it'll be more obvious as we have more time with them.
Meanwhile Crystal, the elder mouse, I watched monkeying around climbing the wire mesh of their cage so she's at least feeling young yet.
That's not a lot to say about what's going on today so please take a double helping of pictures from the Silver Bells Electric Light Parade.
Hager Fox, which does heating and air conditioning, was one of multiple floats to have a Grinch.
And here's the big inflatable Hager Fox!
And here's a festival queen of something or other with plenty of lights around.
The giant rotating head of Ransom E Olds watches the crowd.
And then here's a Wizard of Oz float for whoever did that.
The slippers seem bigger than they appear on-screen.
And this robotty figure is somehow tied to ZapZone, which the pinball map tells me is the nearest place to play the Hot Wheels pinball machine.
Here's eternal favorites the Petoskey Steel Drum Band moving in! You can tell I took a video because the aspect ratio is changed here.
Now imagine this picture but the whole truck is bouncing up and down with the beat.
A small flurry blows through and does nothing to impair anything but maybe one picture of the night.
Sad to say Metro Lansing's only got the one roller derby team but at least it has a purple roller skate float.
And here's a glowing cow. I think this is the one for local convenience store chain Quality Dairy.
Trivia: Señor Wences performed as a juggler until the management of his theater (the Casino Theatre in Buenos Aires) decreed that only acts not requiring musical accompaniment could appear, so he adapted a ventriloquy routine he had last performed in school eighteen years before. Source: The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville, Anthony Slide. He'd picked up juggling as a way to rebuild his hand strength after a bullfighting accident.
Currently Reading: BBC History, July 2025. Editor Rob Attar.
Original art up for grabs here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/monica-jack-o-up-141163750
I have not accomplished much on my staycation, but I did spend Saturday at the Preservation Society's Festival of Historic House (this year's theme was modernism), and thoroughly enjoyed myself. I did not get to all of the houses on the tour, alas, but if this nor'easter ever clears up, I am going to spend an afternoon gawping at the houses which were marked as "outside viewing only" on the map, and which I ignored in favor of looking at interiors.
The stained t-shirt needs to be mended before I can put it away for winter, so that's this week's project. First I gotta suffer through split stitch, then satin stitch, then French fucking knots, and then I get to have fun with fishbone stitch, which is one of my favorites if not my favorite.
I am making rice pudding with the rice I undercooked, with vanilla and dried sour cherries, and there are fresh cranberries at the grocery store, which means it is properly fall, and I am going to make a cranberry ricotta cake and feed it to everyone I know.
Got my panel submission in for Motor City Furry Con 2026, so, let's celebrate with a dozen pictures of the next event in my photo reel, which is, Silver Bells In The City. The nighttime parade and fireworks show and lighting of the State Tree, not the pinball tournament. That's Silver Balls in the City and you'll see that later.
Walking up to the parade spot. The tiger there is mascot for the Detroit Tigers, doing some crowd work before things started. (The tower on the right of the photo is about where the local ballpark is.)
Pedestrian bridge and lights over the Grand River. Note the building that looks like it should be in a Batman opening sequence behind it.
Local news guy teasing the parade for the 5 pm newscast. Behind him (from our point of view) is the plaque marking the 1937 Lansing 'Labor Holiday', that is, general strike.
Parade started! Here's the Grand Marshall, who I guess was in the Olympics.
And after that, the Detroit Tiger!
Marching band, here with the flag-twirlers in reindeer costumes. Can you spot the kid having a Furry Awakening just behind the yellow tape?
But what we really want in Silver Bells are the vehicles made up like bugs, so here's one of them.
And here's the new-model Cata-Pillar bus.
The Old Newsboys, who as ever do ... something or other ... raising enough money each year with their spoof newspaper to put out next year's spoof newspaper? I guess?
Some of the parade floats get nicely overbuilt like this.
Airport rescue vehicle surrounded in lights. As ever, I'm glad there wasn't a problem at the airport that needed them.
And here's a nice float with a reindeer depicted as the size of the house, like you hope to see.
Trivia: Michael Ventris's 1952 deciphering of Linear B is the first and only case of ``internal decipherment'' of a language's writing, based wholly on the statistical analysis of a script's signs, without reliance on bilingual or trilingual texts. Ventris was an architect. Source: The Greatest Invention: A History of the World in Nine Mysterious Scripts, Silvia Ferrara.
Currently Reading: BBC History, July 2025. Editor Rob Attar. It's a magazine I picked up for whenever we got to the beach, which we kept putting off, and then when we actually spent our day at the beach I didn't read anything.
Athena has a trait we haven't had to deal with in pet rabbits for a long while. She chews cords. Stephen outgrew this as his body declined. Columbo was indifferent to them. Penelope we never worked out her policy about cords and wires. Sunshine would move them out of her way. Roger ignored them unless they were in his way. But Athena, she chews them. This has damaged a lamp cord and an extension cord and we're not looking forward to how we'll have to protect the wire into our new fireplace's fan. But it's been mostly a minor hassle. And then last week she got hold of one of the wires leading to a TV speaker, a wire that ran behind her cage for the speaker on top of her hutch, and snipped it.
So first question, where to get more audio cable now that Radio Shack is a bunch of fading YouTube clips? Meijer's, turns out, so that's okay. There was the annoyance of moving the rabbit's pen, and the TV, and the stereo tower to get at where things connect. We set this up and bundled the wires in a way that doesn't really have enough slack for this sort of change-out. Also there was the annoyance of finding a wire stripper; I would give up on this and just use a straight razor. But with a little trying I got enough rubber off the wires and a solid enough connection between the wires that I could put everything back where it belonged. Apart from draping the wire away from bunny's cage.
With that done, the other speaker died.
So, first diagnostic. Taking the speaker over, the one on the bookshelf, and plugging it into the hutch's wires showed the speaker worked. The problem was, apparently, the wires leading to that and I had to work up the gumption to pull everything back out again where I could get at it. Swapping the wires for the two outputs swapped what speaker gave me sound, so it was the wire's fault. This particular wire goes through the floorboards, runs through the basement a bit, gets spliced into another wire, and that wire goes back up through the floorboard to the bookshelf speaker. Did I have enough cable to replace all that wire? Yes. Did I want to? Very much no.
So I tried snipping a little off the wires and giving the hutch speaker a fresh connection into the stereo output. That didn't work, but snipping a bit more off did, which is very good because I was on the brink of trying to figure how to replace the cable going into the basement at least and that would not have been any fun at all. And, now, we've got working stereo speakers again, which is nice.
Also nice? Today I close out our Bronner's trip. Want to make guesses about what's to come next in my photo roll?
Also in the museum are a collection of Nativity figures from around the world.
There's only a selection of them on display --- the sign promises they have over five hundred from fifty nations --- but I can't help seeing that bottom left figure except as Woodstock.
Yes, we closed the place out, but we paused for photos near the exit with Santa and Illuminated Reindeer.
And then we went to the Cheese Haus, where this pun made bunnyhugger declare they were never friends.
Here's the big cheese figure outside Cheese Haus, though.
And finally, when we got home, bunnyhugger opened presents, the most delicate of them being this turkey sculpture to replace one my parents sent, hoping to replace terra-cotta turkey that broke in storage years ago.
Trivia: In the maps for his 1513 edition of Ptolemy's Geography, Martin Waldseemüller, who had given the name ``America'' to the two new continents in his 1507 world map, did not give the continents names (labelling them ``Terra Incognita'') or show them clearly separated from Asia (as he had in 1507). In his 1516 map he labelled North America ``The Land of Cuba --- Part of Asia'' and South America ``Brasilia, or the Land of the Parrots''. Source: The Fourth Part of the World: The Race to the Ends of the Earth, and the Epic Story of the Map That Gave America Its Name, Toby Lester.
Currently Reading: Lost Popeye Zine, Volume 74: The Slippisippi Riverboat Race, Ralph Stein, Bill Zaboly. Editor Stephanie Noelle. So for the big race Poopdeck Pappy sneaks a rocket engine on board an old-timey riverboat but it's okay because the people they're racing snuck jet engines on theirs. Just so you know the level the stories are at here.
It's been a couple weeks since we got the three mouse sisters so we finally had time to take them to the vet. By we I mean bunnyhugger, although I did help in catching the mice to put them in their travel carrier. Work, you know. Also in the failed attempt to mark one of two near-twins with a bit of food dye so we'd have a hope of telling them apart. We got our fingers food-dyed green.
We also caught and brought in Crystal, the oldest mouse whom we've had since February. If the pet store was right about her year-old age she's now nineteen months which is getting into old age and while she seemed overwhelmed by three barely-mature mice she doesn't seem quite doddering. But we were also worried she was scratching suspiciously much. And bunnyhugger briefly worried she might be pregnant because of how fat she looked one night. Nope; she's just a little fatter than when we got her in February and compared to the small young mice she just looked big. And we can be confident the young mice are female; we've seen their nipples (which male mice do not get).
So, the mice are all healthy, the oldest included. There's no specific reason to suspect mites or anything, but they're getting a dose of parasite-killer as best we can deliver. Which is not easy because it's about putting 0.1 ml on the skin of their shoulders and do you know how hard it is to get access to mouse shoulders? We did our best and hope it's okay enough.
Also, our older mouse is, despite her advanced age, showing no signs of cancer. That's a great stroke of luck; maybe we'll get to have her a full year yet.
You've heard about our pets, so now, you get a half-dozen pictures of Bronner's. You're welcome!
In case you're wondering if you have enough porcelain figures in your life, here's the Bronner's collection.
The collection only promises to be figures through 2003 which maybe reflects when the original collector died (or lost interest) but I choose to believe it reflects the original collector being so disgusted with what Precious Moments was doing they had to stop.
In the little museum they have this original, 1955, catalogue of Christmas stuff. No, your eyes don't deceive you: none of the brochure's photographs say 'Christmas' anywhere on them. (The snowmen are holding books that read 'Noël', though.)
One of their old pianos along with their 1951 Peace On Earth - Good Will To Men shield, billed as their first outdoor decoration. The sign next to it reads 'Please! Do not ask for appointments by telephone', which is a strange thing to request of people.
And a Detroit-made organ plus some other outdoor signs celebrating the holiday.
A little nativity scene and the cash register that taught Wally Bronner how to cash. That sliding handle for the pennies is wild.
Trivia: After a cholera outbreak in 1849, blamed on filthy living conditions including feral animals, New York City (then just Manhattan) ordered free-roaming pigs off the city's streets. By 1860 the area below 86th Street had been cleared as a pig-free zone. Source: Down To Earth: Nature's Role in American History, Ted Steinberg. Upperclass New Yorkers had been trying for a half-century-plus to get pigs off the streets, although that the pigs cleaned up food waste and became food for their often-impoverished owners made it hard for prohibitions to stick.
Currently Reading: Lost Popeye Zine, Volume 74: The Slippisippi Riverboat Race, Ralph Stein, Bill Zaboly. Editor Stephanie Noelle.
PS: What's Going On In Thimble Theatre? Why did Sea Hag send Popeye to Mississippi? August - October 2025 for some even more Popeye writing-about.
“Dinosaur by the Highway” was a service delivered to The Unitarian Society in East Brunswick on January 26, 2025, by Rev. Lyn Cox.
The stories we develop and carry through our lives can affect how we interpret new experiences and how we respond to them. We can’t change the past, but we can reinterpret the meaning we gain from our experiences. This is true for our personal stories as individuals as well as for our collective stories as families and communities. The poignant, the joyful, and the bizarre events we encounter are threads in weaving together a new way forward.
Here is a recording of a story and song about John Murray (one of the first Universalist ministers in America), the winds of change, and the gospel of love. I offered this story and song back in January, but getting the editing done took awhile.
This story and song go with the sermon “Dinosaur by the Highway.”
You can learn more about John Murray and Thomas Potter from the Murray Grove Retreat Center.
The song, “To Preach the Gospel of Love,” was written by Lisa Romantum Schwartz and set to a folk tune, “The Fox Went Out on a Chilly Night.” The lyricist gave permission for the use of this song in UU congregations through the Unitarian Universalist Association’s Worship Web database.
My other daily writing project has long been a third-tier comics blog but this week I managed to be almost nothing but comics, plus two big doses of somebody else's writing. Here's what you missed if you weren't already reading it. Spoiler: lot of comic strips, so you might enjoy that.
Now that you've been briefly somewhat entertained by all that please enjoy a dozen pictures of Bronner's from bunnyhugger's birthday last year:
Prop from the Rankin/Bass special Rudolph and Medusa Christmas in November!
Bronner's sells prelit trees and there's no reason they have to be boring old green. Some of them go all-out Pride or at least Popsicle.
There are the occasional bright green trees hiding away back there, though. bunnyhugger kept having trouble with her camera's shutter speed being so fast half the LEDs were off in every picture.
Here's a prelit tree that's also pre-decorated in white frosting to look all fresh-snowed.
Did you know Bronner's has a small side museum dedicated to the place's history and, of course, their collection of Hummel figurines? Sorry to spring this on you by surprise!
More precious figurines, including something celebrating the year 2000 there.
And some unpainted Hummels, for everyone who figures someday they'll get around to painting their tabletop roleplaying game mini-figs.
There's also these cases showing the steps in making Goebel or Precious Moments figurines.
Ready for the tour of how the magic happens?
So, the figures start out, like you'd expect, as abrasives, flower, and a pestel.
These then combine to make brushes, spatulas, and (on the right) a kid who kind of looks like pantomime comic strip star Lio.
Finally, they get married. I hope this helps you make your own figurines!
Trivia: The trans-Uranian planets predicted in the calculations of John Couch Adams and Urbain Le Verrier were both a good bit farther out from the sun and more massive than the actual Neptune. (They also forecast much more elliptical orbits than the actual Neptune, which has one of the most nearly circular orbits of all the Solar System's major bodies.) Source: In Search Of Planet Vulcan: The Ghost in Newton's Clockwork Universe, Richard Baum, William Sheehan. Adams and Le Verrier had to make some guesses as there otherwise wasn't enough data just from Uranus's orbital perturbations to find a planet.
Currently Reading: Lost Popeye Zine, Volume 74: The Slippisippi Riverboat Race, Ralph Stein, Bill Zaboly. Editor Stephanie Noelle.
And now to Sunday, at last. We finally got everything together and made the drive to Silver Beach, in southwestern Michigan. It's daft to be going to the beach in early October, but it was also in the 80s and sunny and how long is it going to be before we can say that again? bunnyhugger got home late from a women's pinball tournament the night before and, after a couple hours watching the Flophouse podcast's live stream, and having dinner, stayed up late enough to make coronation chick'n sandwiches and get to sleep not early enough, really.
Silver Beach is just about two hours away. Why not go to a beach closer by? Other than that they don't get much closer a drive, what with Lansing being in the dead center of the lower peninsula? That's because, after failing to buy the carousel that used to be at Silver Beach Amusement Park, they commissioned a new one from Carousel Works. So the first thing we did was walk over to the carousel building and get two rides and also a discussion about whether I own a t-shirt from there. I don't remember it (I think), but bunnyhugger has pictures of me wearing the 'Ride The Raptor' T-shirt highlighting their velociraptor figure. I've got to find where that went. They don't still sell T-shirts, but
bunnyhugger did buy a little passport booklet with pictures of all the animals. On exiting the ride you can have the ride operator stamp what you rode and if you fill up the booklet you get, I think it was, seven ride tokens. There's no way she'll achieve this, not unless we go there a lot more and spend hours just re-riding, but it's a fun souvenir and nice to have a way of tracking what you've ridden.
After that we hauled all our stuff out of my car, to a decent-looking spot on the beach, and discovered we forgot our umbrellas. It's my fault; in moving them out of the way to look for something I managed to put them against a wall we completely ignored while loading the car and asking ``have we got everything''? So it would be a day of making sure we have plenty of sunscreen on, and for bunnyhugger facing away from the sun. And so I have to correct myself as we got only almost everything together.
After setting up, though, and having lunch at last, I did what I least expected to do at the beach and slept. Like, for hours, just laying on a towel on the sand, getting pleasantly near melting under the sunlight. I was asleep long enough that bunnyhugger took her daily half-hour walk and more, and did some exploring to see just how big the beach was. (She missed an historical marker that I found, though, noting the launch spot for the first powered flight across Lake Michigan, from St Joseph's to Chicago, July 1913. We both missed a marker somewhere nearby noting Augustus M Herring's powered flight experiments there in October 1898.) I finally woke up when
bunnyhugger got stung by what she first thought was a yellowjacket --- a problem of going to the beach this late in the season --- but turned out to be some other insect with less long-lasting bites.
Later on I actually got my bathing suit on and went into the water. The water was a little cool, but surprisingly good for October. It was choppier than I expected, though, waves sometimes hitting eighteen inches when when you consider you'll see tides as much as two inches. Also I swam much less than I expected to because apparently in the decades since I was half-fish I lost my endurance. How could that happen? But I also rediscovered how nice it is to float, just laying back, hearing nothing but your breath reflected in the water. Until a big wave comes and puts your head suddenly ten inches underwater. I again have no idea how long I was out there but it felt really good.
As mentioned, the waves were choppy. The wind was too. bunnyhugger brought a couple of her kites and used the time to get them in the air. I saw from far out of shore --- the seabed falls off very slowly and even rises repeatedly --- as her 40-foot-long long dragon kite twisted its way around and around. She couldn't get it as high, or for as long, as she wished, but it was going nicely for a good while. She flew the kites for a while after I got back in, too; she was flying until a bit after sunset, in the last bits of usable light.
We're not sure that we closed out the beach. We were there after sunset, and late enough after sunset that we couldn't see anyone else on it. We did see some people farther back, on the grass, with a karaoke machine and having a party or something. But we did our usual business of taking in every last drop of the day. Very glad we got to do that.
Another thing it's fun doing? Spending the day at Bronner's. Here's another half-dozen photos from last year's visit.
And now some of the many raccoon ornaments. I only pick up one or two a year, don't worry.
And here's one for the Michigan Central Station, in Detroit, but made of blown glass.
If you need a plush tiger considerably larger than your child, Bronner's is ready for you.
Or if you just need aliens in very tiny flying saucers.
Over here, what if your fursona dressed as a bee? We have you covered if you're a mouse, rabbit, or ... uh ... donkey?
The caption explains, 'This is the chisel which Wally and Irene Bronner used to remove a portion of the Berlin Wall'. I assume it's also the chunk of wall they removed and also that they did this all after about November 1989. Less trouble that way.
Trivia: In 1896 Octave Chanute --- then 64 years old --- set up a camp for studying gliders at St Joseph, Michigan, and with Augustus Herring and two other American flight enthusiasts performed over a thousand glides by 1902. Source: Mastering the Sky: A History of Aviation from Ancient Times to the Present, James P Harrison.
Currently Reading: The Theoretical Minimum: What you need to know to start doing physics, Leonard Susskind, George Hrabovsky.
PS: What’s Going On In Eye Lie Popeye? Who is this ‘Susie’? July – August 2025 in a recap of only a couple weeks' worth of a very dense comic strip.
Since my report last month about how the new air conditioner was all but installed I'm sure you expect that it's been in the window for weeks now, keeping us comfortable in the nights of the last reliably warm days of late summer/early autumn. And so it has except instead of weeks it's been a couple days.
So here's my excuses. The first is that despite my general confidence in the Magic Mount system I was not perfectly sure that the brackets it mounted to, glued as they were to the window frame interior, were secure enough. So I found another screw-free mount, this one a footer to put underneath the air conditioner, and I liked it. It snaps into place inside the windowframe and leaning against the skirt of the roof between the first and second floors of our house. Between the two things feel very secure, which is good for my confidence in the whole thing.
The remaining catch is that the air conditioner came in two parts, a shell that you can use to make sure you have the thing installed correctly, and then the actual hundred-plus pounds of mechanism that slides into the frame. To keep from sliding loose, the mechanism screws in, in four spots, to the frame. Two of the spots are inside, but two of the spots are on the outside, accessible only by ladder. I needed to wait for bunnyhugger to be free to spot me. But then two days a week she's at work until close to or after dusk. One or sometimes two days a week, recently, we've had pinball events taking us away in the evenings. Or other appointments. Or, on the weekend, things like going to Michigan's Adventure or visiting her parents or so on.
So this Saturday, with bunnyhugger at a pinball tournament and not likely to get back before sunset, I noticed our neighbors on that side of the house having a cookout. After I found a tiny bit of garage work to do and got to small talking with them, I explained I had to do something on the ladder, and the guy visiting (a boyfriend(?)) was happy to spot me. Once I had the mechanism installed and screwed in upstairs, I got out the ladder and set it up to the air conditioner. There it was but the work of a moment to screw the last two screws in. Little work tip for this sort of thing: get a small bar magnet; it's a great way of making sure you can't drop the screws.
Anyway I thanked them greatly, and we talked about Cedar Point's Halloweekends a little (he'd never been, and I warned him not to go on a Saturday and not at all Columbo's Day Weekend). And then back upstairs to put the front cover on the machine, plug it in, turn it on and find ...
Oh, it's quite nice. Not quite silent but barely any noise compared to the old one. And it even has a remote so we can turn it on or off or change the temperature barely even waking up. For as frustrating as this was to get put together it's felt magnificent in operation, and I'm sorry it's only a couple days before I, most likely, take it out and set it in the attic for the winter. But we can at last claim the new air conditioner as a success.
And now, here's osme more looking over more pictures of Bronner's from bunnyhugger's birthday trip last year:
They sell a lot of cute mouse figures and I suspect the masked mouse was left over from five years ago.
Despite being mainly a Christmas shop Bronner's sells for other holidays too, such as Raccoon Pumpkin Festival.
Or here, with an ornament for the Singing Ghost Festival.
Here's some ornaments for people who want their trees to be a thing they eat.
And here's one for people who want mice that are Tron-style lightcycles.
This, meanwhile, is for people building their own Tom Servo ornaments.
Trivia: The Florida pavilion at the 1939-40 World's Fair was one of only two state buildings equipped with an air conditioning system. Nevertheless a brochure for Sarasota suggested that air conditioning was less needed in Florida than in other states. The air conditioning was pitched as ``designed to duplicate the balmy atmosphere one actually encounters in Florida''. Source: Cool Comfort: America's Romance with Air-Conditioning, Marsha E Ackermann.
Currently Reading: The Theoretical Minimum: What you need to know to start doing physics, Leonard Susskind, George Hrabovsky.
I mentioned yesterday getting to the beach Sunday so let me tell you about last Friday instead. As it was a Friday I asked if bunnyhugger wanted to go to RLM's weekly Grand Rapids tournament and she was thinking of something the other side of the state. MWS often runs tournaments on a Friday night, this one at the relatively newly-opened Sparks Pinball Museum in the Oakwood Mall, in Troy, Michigan, part of the Detroit urban expanse. It's not quite twice as far away as Grand Rapids --- out past even where Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum once stood --- but it's a venue we've figured we would get to someday for, like, ever.
It did not disappoint! As with the Sparks mothership we haven't been to in years, MB oversees the pinball and arcade games and coin-ops and the collection is amazing. 75 machines, from 1960s tables through to modern games and over the course of a ten-round tournament I would play games from both 1964 and 2024. The place is also covered with stuff MB had collected from Chuck E Cheese's and Aladdin's Castle and Show Biz Pizza and other places that other people have strong nostalgic attractions to. I never built them up myself, sorry.
Also we ran into one of the furries we know mostly from Motor City Furry Con there. It wasn't purely accident; he works on some of the games there and was working on repairing an ``electronic handwriting analyzer'' --- a fortune-teller machine that uses your signature as the gimmick to give you a punched computer card --- that was apparently at the 1964-65 World's Fair. I mean, its supply of not-yet-exhausted personality report cards list the World's Fair, but it's in the machine-maker's interest to bally it up, right?
So, the tournament. After doing terribly last weekend we this week did ... eh. I squeezed out six wins in ten rounds; bunnyhugger, five. This would qualify me for a tiebreaker to get into the playoffs, but --- just as it would have at RLM's tournament, the other side of the state --- it was on Paragon. And just as with every Paragon I've ever played, the game was fast, hard, and prone to arbitrary drains. The game looks so good, why isn't it any fun? But I managed to get to a respectable second place, when only the first-place finisher moved on.
This did mean I had time to do some other stuff, like obsessively search the museum for the sixteen hidden Pee-Wee Herman string dolls. I can report having spotted fourteen of them; one, I found because I just knew there was no way this large an area of the place didn't have any hidden dolls. I wonder where the other two are.
We also made a little time, at Vix's insistence, to play the 'Cool Gunman' game. This is a light gun-based game, on a table about the size of a pool table, where you shoot at sensors in the floor which make an asterisk-shaped tower pop up. Ideally, this popping-up throws one of two empty pop cans into your opponent's goal, or at least gets it away from your own goal. This odd blending of ice hockey and shooter games is a good bit of fun; I'm glad we took time for it.
So, quite nice venue, somewhere we'd like to be again. It's just annoying it takes nearly two hours to get to. But a pay-one-price arcade that's even in a mall, like a particular streak of arcade longs to be, with Comet, Cyclone, Dr Dude, and Bugs Bunny's Birthday Ball? That is nice.
Next up in the photo roll ... our trip to Bronner's on bunnyhugger's birthday, the 5th of November last year, which was supposed to be a happy day. Gads but it should have ended the way we spent it, just full of good cheer and good feelings.
The Bronner's experience: so very many ornaments, almost shooting at you in limitless abundance. It's wonderful in its way and I promise I didn't photograph every aisle because my camera doesn't have the battery life for that.
Some of their I-love-my-pet line. Rabbits have an easier silhouette to put in than guinea pigs do.
Among the model buildings they had this year was an Old Timey Dairy Queene, for all those folks buying ice cream in a white Christmas.
Some toys combining the Rankin/Bass Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer with ... uh ... kids doing sheep cosplay? I don't know.
New for last year: frog witch transformation! Get it while it lasts!
Also turns out Bronner's is selling fursuits these days, who knew?
Trivia: Joe Quinn (1864 - 1940) was the only baseball player to appear in the American League, the National League, the Union Association, and the Players League, four of the major leagues to have ever existed. He was also on the two teams with the best and the worst win-loss records in major league history, the 1884 St Louis Maroons (94-19) and the 1899 Cleveland Spiders (20-134). Source: The Beer and Whiskey League: The Illustrated History of the American Association --- Baseball's Renegade Major League, David Nemec. Although Nemec notes, Quinn never played for the American Association.
Currently Reading: The Theoretical Minimum: What you need to know to start doing physics, Leonard Susskind, George Hrabovsky.
You are summoned to Kitsune Alley at the request of Mitsuki. This animated short takes place in the Wapsi Square universe. https://wapsisquare.com/ Big thanks to talented voice actor Saori Nishihara for helping out with my nerdy little project. Please check out her other work through her website: https://saoli.net/
We finally got to the beach today! And spent a lovely day there, with me not on my computer and not writing things. So please enjoy instead the close-out of our Cedar Point trip from November last year, eleven-plus months ago!
Ride operator at the front of the Mine Ride, shortly after a train's dispatch. You can see it about to get into the shed.
And a walk-on ride for us! We wouldn't get the train to ourselves, I believe, but it was close.
We did go back around for a ride that, while not the last one of the night, did get us back into the station after midnight, the close of the season. So we were on a roller coaster on November 3rd, the latest in a year we've been able to yet.
I photographed this sign showing the way to Snake River Falls because I expected it to be removed or rewritten for this year. I forgot to check if it was.
The Town Hall Museum I photographed out of fear they'd tear it down over the winter season. They didn't, but they have turned it into a Halloweekends walk-through attraction.
And here's Snake River falls, the last time we'd see it.
Skeleton head just taking up space on the Frontier Trail.
And a view of the Power Tower and the reverse spike for Top Thrill 2.
Got a picture of bunnyhugger in front of the Iron Dragon entrance. They changed the queue over the off-season and I don't remember if I knew that and was taking a last picture of the way it was, or just, we were nearby and it's Iron Dragon.
This is an ordinary picture of the end of the entrance midway but it came across nicer than I expected. Something about the depth of action worked out well here.
Picture of Cedar Downs, put to bed for the season, that came out better than I expected.
And the decorations in front of the Midway Carousel, facing the park's exit.
Trivia: On the 6th of October, 1961, NASA head of Space Flight Programs Abe Silverstein requested and received Associate Administrator Robert Seamans's formal approval for ``preparation of a preliminary development plan for the proposed orbital flight development program'', that is, what would become Project Gemini. Source: On The Shoulders of Titans: A History of Project Gemini, Barton C Hacker, James M Grimwood.
Currently Reading: The Theoretical Minimum: What you need to know to start doing physics, Leonard Susskind, George Hrabovsky.