Daphne Eftychia Arthur, guitarist+. Read.
When last I reported about my lost camera and Motor City Furry Con we'd had established two important things. First, they had my camera! Second, it was in storage so who knows when they'd find the chance to recover it?
Well. I could manage going to Pinball At The Zoo without a camera and even the handful of things we got to in May without. Mostly local pinball stuff, although this might be the first time I don't have a proper ``what we compete for'' picture of the plaques at pinball night. But we are coming up on things I must have a camera for, and while yes, my iPhone is probably adequate for most purposes I want a camera that's a proper camera.
So I went looking and found a used Panasonic Lumix camera, one very close to the camera I had before my misplaced camera. And I finally have all the pieces I need for it together --- camera, memory card, battery and spare battery, charger, and the data/power cable that connects it to a computer or USB power supply! I even found that my old camera bag, the one used for the previous camera, fits this new one just fine. It lacks a strap --- I'd transferred that to my Samsung camera so that's in the Motor City Furry Con Lost And Found Storage Locker right now --- but the important thing is I can take good pictures and plenty of them. And the zoom on this doesn't --- yet --- get jammed up partway through, putting it ahead of my Samsung.
Now, of course, I just have to explain what I need to take pictures of that made me spend money on this.
We close the month now with something I bet you'd never thought you would see: the end of Kennywood pictures from our trip last year! And what comes up to follow this? Hm. There's so many possibilities ...
Oh yeah, we rented a locker for the second time ever and had to get stuff out of it. Do you see our locker number? Well, it was easy to remember since it was 1054 and I need hardly remind you what an important year that was.
Super Kaleidoscope, the charming circular-shaped building up front with the candy shop inside. It just looks good. You can make out the Old Mill's frontage in the background.
The Goodnight heart, last thing you see before entering the tunnel to leave Kennywood.
They've painted the tunnel with all kinds of Kennywood memorabilia and items, including a replica ticket from nearly a century ago and the reminder to gentlemen after using the washroom.
Looking back at the park from the parking lot.
And here's a panoramic view at the end of the night, to match the one had at the start of the day.
Trivia: The pancreas's name reflects its label as ``pan'' (all) and ``kreas'' (flesh), an organ of all flesh. The name may reflect early lack of knowledge of what it did and was simply there. Source: The Song of the Cell: An Exploration of Medicine and the New Human, Siddhartha Mukherjee.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
This week my humor blog has seen a lot being made out of the fact Wikipedia has a list of notable soups. But there's also other stuff, no less weakly motivated. For example:
Now something that never needs motivation, the sharing of pictures of Kennywood. Enjoy!
Here's a picture of some of the horses from the inside of the carousel, showing off the less-elaborately-carved sides.
This is the band organ, a Wurlitzer something or other model.
Here's that carousel tiger scaring off some riders.
And someone so delighted she's clapping and leaning back. (Yes, I know, she's taking a picture and not stepping back a little.)
Is that the night already? Vending booths all closed up here.
The traditional picture from the bridge of the Racer and midway games and Jack Rabbit. That tree on the right's obscuring the logo almost completely now.
It is the end of the night! Grand Carousel with all the lights off, and people being quietly but insistently pushed toward the exit.
So here's another quick picture of the lake, looking over towards Steel Curtain so there's none of that pesky nature obscuring the buildings.
The waters were quite still and the reflection of Steel Curtain looked great.
And here's Jack Rabbit where you can see the neon logo and the parts of the legs that still aren't illuminated.
Refreshments continues to be one of bunnyhugger's favorite pieces of neon.
And here's the Kangaroo. The rainbow-lit roo is part of a lights animation, the extra brightness and colors jumping from right to left.
Trivia: During World War II, Japan had 99 motorized farm tractors. Source: The Taste of War: World War II and the Battle for Food, Lizzie Collingham. (Given the typical size and landscaping of rice paddies it's not obvious that more would have helped much, and in any case, fuel and oil were short.)
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
bunnyhugger, stirred up by my post last night about the tree and the risk it might present, spent too much time worrying about what to do and turned to doing something about it this afternoon. And by remarkable stroke, found something very effective: a couple guys who could come out to the house today to give an estimate, and who're scheduled to come out tomorrow afternoon to cut the fallen branch down and chop it up into useful wood. So now we're set to be even more well-stocked for when we get the fireplace converted into something not dangerously unsafe to operate.
Also we got back the clock. As promised they had it ready Wednesday; I ventured in after work, but before going to the card store to get my father a birthday card. (This spun out into also getting father's day cards, saving me a trip sometime in two weeks.) As bunnyhugger texted to ask if I was stopping for something after work I was on my way to the art glass shop. This was all but the work of a minute. I came in and both the woman and the guy who'd been in the car on Saturday telling me she'd gone back in were there. I started to explain what my deal was when the woman pointed to the counter. I was delighted, and said so, by how lovely the new glass looks.
bunnyhugger observed maybe the real difference was just that it was completely new and clean. But it does look great. And now it's on the wall and everything's in good shape in this part of this room of the house! We're making progress.
And now we return to Kennywood and to the flying saucer gift shop!
And here's the 90s t-shirt. Steel Phantom was rebuilt into Phantom's Revenge; Wipeout and Pitt Fall are gone (Wipeout to Lake Compounce). I can't find any information about Fort Kennywood and wonder if it might have been a show or event or something that wouldn't make lists of former attractions.
bunnyhugger admiring the Grand Carousel by night.
The carousel all white-lit and brilliant by night.
The inside has plenty of mirrors so you get to see the insides of the horses in this picture.
Looking out from atop a horse. bunnyhugger grabs a picture of me here.
bunnyhugger goes for a ride on the tiger this time.
Trivia: E-470, the beltway toll highway around Denver, is an incomplete loop, with the northwestern corner never built owing to plutonium-239 contamination of the soil of the former Rocky Flats Plant, which operated from 1952 to 1992. Source: Land: How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World, Simon Winchester. In 1989 the FBI raided the plant, owned by the federal Department of Energy, over Rockwell International's shoddy management.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
I have been staggering through the past few weeks, holding myself together with string and duct tape, and it is finally the Cottagecore Week.
I have finished a sashiko patch on a pair of jeans and I am very proud of myself, as well as the first of the embroidered numbers for my front & back doors, and I have solved the problem of how to print patterns onto stabilizer (use the library makerspace printer from a USB). The mending circle at the local "sustainable fashion collective" (it's a secondhand store with some mending/tailoring services) was fun and I'll go back when the bus schedule allows. Dropout.tv and the 1995 Pride & Prejudice miniseries have been my companions as I sew this week, and they are both great for that purpose. I think I will move on to North & South and perhaps Horrible Histories next. Is Shakespeare & Hathaway fun?
The knotweed in the garden has been beaten back from the path to the shed, and the asparagus is coming up spindly and feathery (I really hope that they will thicken over time, I will eat a thin asparagus spear without complaining but I love asparagus with some heft); no trace of the rhubarb, which I'm kind of upset about, but seeds are always chancy, and I'm waiting to see what happened with the watermelon and sunflowers, now that I've staked the peas. Surely something will come up? The gladiolus in the front garden are looking more promising, although I don't know what happened to everything else. I have proof that someone in the Parks Department exists, and has just been ignoring my emails (a coworker knows the parks director, and emailed her, and the person I have been trying to get in touch with answered when their boss was on the chain, but no luck since, so this is progress but not by much).
I have been wallowing in books, and can enthusiastically join the chorus of those of you who have been shrieking delightedly about Robert Jackson Bennett's latest, A Drop of Corruption, it's so good, please discuss in the comments; and I finally got my hands on Katherine Addison's The Tomb of Dragons, ditto.
This weekend we finally --- after like a week or so --- enjoyed some warm enough weather to clean out the goldfish pond, ahead of putting the fish back in for summer. That went about as usual, me mucking the pond out until I broke the pond vacuum. This time it's a simple fix, as the plastic bolt that holds the handle on the main unit of the vacuum snapped off, and that should be easy enough to replace with a metal bolt.
But while doing this I noticed something funny about the fence, the older one that bunnyhugger and her starter husband put up when the house on that side was the bad neighbor. A piece of it was loose from the other and that seemed weird and new. And then I finally registered that one of the big branches from a huge tree had fallen over and knocked it out of place. Presumably it was knocked over in the big storm that blew through a week and a half ago, and we just failed to register that fact. It would be more ridiculous and embarrassing if it had fallen over back in the Motor City Furry Con storm of late March, so we'll go with the latter date.
So besides everything else going on --- and you'll learn what that is soon enough, don't worry --- we have to figure a way to get someone with a chainsaw and a ladder out here. Also to figure out whether the tree --- which is in the space behind our back fence, but also behind the back fence of the neighbor behind us --- is on our property or theirs and whether to get an insurance company involved. And the real crisis will be if another heavy storm blows through before we can get it dealt with because the branch is something like forty feet long and still partly attached to the tree trunk, so if it fell it could ... not hit any structures, but could destroy fences, our cherry tree, or do untold damage to our goldfish pond, if only by giving local raccoons a great place to sit while fishing. More on this as it comes to pass.
And now, pictures from the end of our day at Kennywood. We're not quite there yet, don't fear.
Tried taking a picture of the fountain by night, I think with the 'Waterfall' mode on my camera so I got this nice sheen in the middle water level there.
Tried the same thing with the water fountains of the main pool and I like how strange it makes the surface of the water look.
Swings ride and the giant rigid pendulum. I believe we've ridden both of these, although not this visit.
One of the gift shops, the flying saucer one in Area 412, had some fun decade T-shirts that ... we didn't want to get, but didn't want to forget either. Of the rides listed here only the Bumper Cars are still around. (Le Cachot was the 1972 Bill Tracy redesign of a Pretzel dark ride.)
Baseball caps showing off ... either rabbit-eared squirrels or squirrel-tailed rabbits.
The Kennywood 2000s shirt lists rides that are mostly still there and ... you know, thing with the Y2K fears is they were done once 2000 started so logically ...
Trivia: Between 1856 and 1864 Cyrus Field crossed the Atlantic at least 31 times working to build the Atlantic Telegraph Company's trans-oceanic telegraph line. Source: How The World Was One: Beyond the Global Village, Arthur C Clarke.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
When I got home yesterday from getting some stuff from the pet store and the hardware store I had news for bunny_hugger. She'd wondered when the Joann Fabrics in our local mall would close. The answer: 55 minutes. We dithered a small bit about whether to go; would it be just depressing, or might we get something useful like really cheap Easter egg dye kits or bolts of fleece or stuff?
We got there to learn that they didn't have any fleece left. Or Easter egg kits. Or almost anything, really; they did well at keeping the store open until they ran out of stuff. All the remaining merchandise was on two small shelving units up front, and most of that was decoration letters. If you need a box of Z's, we could set you up, except that Joann's is now closed for good and all. Someone working the tiny remaining stock was urging people to buy boxes of toothpicks with lobster or shrimp cutouts atop them. We're not sure why anyone would get these at all, even if, as she observed, they won't spoil. I had the feeling this had turned into some minor silly retail obsession, waiting to see if anyone would ever take any of this.
We also wandered around the shelving and fixtures, where another employee was doing her best to find some piece of hardware we would take home with us. Apparently some of the thread spools are also a good configuration for storing Hot Wheels cars, in case you have a hundred-plus Hot Wheel cars that need storing. But we don't, nor anything close to that. Some of the pegbord-with-bin shelving seemed like it might be useful in our basement, if it weren't too big to fit in our basement.
And yet as we were leaving I noticed they had boxes full of pegboard racks, like, the metal or plastic rods that stick out and you can hang stuff on. So we got a box of that, for five bucks, and have the promise of organizing more things in our basement and garage if we ever get to that. I also, maybe foolishly, bought a couple boxes of some silicone sheets that are meant to be pressed around mugs or other ceramic things. I don't know what to do with them but have the feeling there's probably something decorative we can do. bunny_hugger sees in them mostly a thing we'll have to get rid of at some point. I suppose either will do fine.
And that was our last Joann's visit.
Now to what I hope was merely the most recent Kennywood visit, drawing as you can see nearer its close.
Almost at The Phantom's Revenge's station and this gives a view of the exit queue. (Also the entrance for people with mobility needs, like the guy in a wheelchair coming up the other way.)
Lanes to get your seat for the ride. Note there isn't that automatic gate that keeps you away until the operator decides you may approach.
That gift shop again, now seen by night. Also showing off the Small Fry's, that place where you can get the same fries as at The Potato Patch but with less of a wait. And yes, per Kennywood: Behind The Screams, it is based on the entrance to Wonderland at Revere Beach, Massachusetts. (Yes, if you looked at that link, you saw an 'Infant Incubators' building inside Wonderland. Early 20th century was weird.)
Sitting at the top of the reflecting pool in Lost Kennywood, looking out over a beautifully clear sky and the Black Widow swing ride.
Over that way's the swing ride. Oops, accidentally got a tiny bit of a view of bunny_hugger in there. Sorry, won't do that again.
And here's how the pool looks by early night.
Trivia: Charles Babbage invented a mechanical time clock in 1844. Source: Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time --- From Sundials to Atomic Clocks, Jo Ellen Barnett.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
And now I can reveal what my errand of yesterday was. Nothing big, I just didn't feel up to writing it up before deadline is all. It was my blood donation, rescheduled from Monday and from Tuesday.
Actually it was a platelet donation, my first time. I'd always donated whole blood before and for not a whole lot of particular reason tried the alternate approach this time. Platelets here are the parts of blood that allow for blood clotting, and they can't be stored more than a couple days, so there's always a steady need for them. They're collected by taking blood from your arm, filtering the platelets out of it, and putting everything else right back in. Your body, all going well, replaces the platelets in a couple days and the platelets themselves go off to cancer, transplant, and major-surgery patients.
The catch is all this takes much longer than a whole-blood donation where they just let you bleed on purpose for maybe fifteen minutes and then stop it. Long enough that they set you up in this reclined, sculpted seat, legs above your chest, with TV to watch and everything. The nurse offered me the chance to pick what I'd like to watch on Netflix, and I thought well surely she's using 'Netflix' as synecdoche for all the streaming services they have and so I could watch stuff on Disney+ or Hulu as on the other buttons on the remote that didn't work for me at first. But no, I've never had reason to think I wasn't basically neurotypical, why do you ask? Anyway she got the remote working and I got to thinking what do I even want to watch that's about 90-100 minutes? A movie? Okay, quick, think of a movie! Not so easy, is it?
Finally I realized I could just pull up a Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode, as I've finally started watching the Netflix seasons and I could get to the next one I hadn't seen (Starcrash). Getting on board several years after everyone stopped thinking about it I have to say: unless this season takes a major turn for the worse after this episode I don't see why anyone wasn't thrilled with it. There's stuff I'm not sure I like about it but the movie riffing is so wonderfully playful.
The nurse came back to check a couple times, the first none too soon because my headphones had fallen loose and with needles in both arms I couldn't re-adjust it myself. And near the end I started to feel a pringly, pins-and-needles feeling across my body, a known side effect that would pass once the process was all done. I also got to feeling cold and a little ... nauseous is too strong a term but very weird. A couple juice boxes when I was done healed most of that, and I of course followed direction and stayed in the waiting area having snacks and fluids for a good fifteen minutes before cautiously getting back up and heading out.
As reward for the donation I got a Red Cross Emergency Lantern, a solar-powered lantern that also provides USB charge. bunnyhugger wondered if this were an ironic statement on their own power outage; no, they'd been planning to give these away the back half of May anyway. We've slowly been getting more sources of emergency lighting in the house an the LED lantern should help. You know, in case something improbable like a massive, intense storm front with tornado-level winds rolls across the lower peninsula a third time in three months or something.
That's all fun, but you're wondering, what did it look like back last summer when we visited Kennywood? Please, enjoy what you see here:
The stairs leading up to the operator's booth on Racer, placed as nearly center as I could get my picture.
Everyone wants to get in on the Racer appreciating. I don't know when the landmark plaque dates to.
And here's the ACE Roller Coaster Landmark plaque, put at a time there were three wooden Möbius-strip racing coasters.
The park's Musik Express, included here because it's quite pleasantly colorful and also there's people who want to see pictures of these rides.
Hair scrunchies tossed on top of a blue concrete-block building you pass on the way to Phantom's Revenge. According to a 2001 thread on CoasterBuzz it houses (housed?) an electrical distribution center for this area of the park. And it's where Lightning Loop, which we rode at La Feria Chapultepec and hope someday to ride at Indiana Beach, was located, with the ride on top of the building, which was also a second park entrance(!). The loop started about where the left end of the building, with the upwards hill to the left of this picture. Its service as a second entrance is why there's the huge Kennywood sign painted on something otherwise just tucked within the Lost Kennywood Municipal District.
Lift hill and one of the mid-ride hills of Phantom's Revenge, seen from the hilariously long queue approaching the station.
Trivia: The Ordnance Survey of Ireland begun in 1824 struggled against the heavy fogs that often would not burn off. Thomas Drummond developed several tools making the survey possible, including improvements to the barometer, photometer, aethroscope, and heliostat; but the big solution to the fogs was the ``pea-light'', a pellet of calcium oxide lime which, burned with an oxyhydrogen flame, produced a light so intense it could be seen as much as a hundred miles away. Source: On The Map: A Mind-Expanding Exploration of the Way the World Looks, Simon Garfield. And this is the ``limelight'' of fame.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
Long-memoried readers may recall a couple weeks ago I broke our atomic-clock-based wall clock, the one that uses time signals from WWV to adjust to the current time. The clock itself was and is fine, but the glass plate protecting the clock face from the elements was shattered into so many pieces. More than you're thinking of. More than that.
My father recommended that if there's a place in town that sells stained glass or art glass that they'd likely be able to cut a thin, eight-inch disc of glass. It happens there's a stained-glass/art-glass store so nearby it's even closer than the nearest convenience store. But I kept failing to actually check with them to see if they could do the work.
Today I finally got to doing something about it. But because of another errand, details of which I am not yet ready to make public, I got to the shop just before it closed. They were turning off the lights and everything, and I went back to the car but a guy waiting behind the shop said she'd gone back in, go talk to her.
So, wary that I had interrupted someone's departure-for-the-long-weekend, I entered and explained my need. Without saying a word she turned the clock upside-down, dropping yet another shard of glass out of it. Then took the clock over to a work table and did some measurements, and then back behind a counter. Finally she spoke: they can do that. She gave an estimate of about $20, extremely reasonable, and while it could have been done while I waited if I had gotten there earlier, now, I would have to wait. When could I come pick it up? Tuesday, unfortunately, I'm squeezed between office and pinball league, so we have to wait for Wednesday for the clock's return. (They're closed Monday for the holiday.) But they're going to cut a fresh piece of glass and install it and that seems to be everything we could hope for. Now I just have to stop instinctively looking for the time on the kitchen wall, the one surface in the house where it will definitely not be.
You know where we definitely were, back in July last year? Kennywood. Here's photographic proof.
Jack Rabbit dispatched and making its way to the first drop, which thanks to the terrain-hugging track, is well before the lift hill.
And there's the station. They've got LEDs providing the light of the stars now but at least preserved the shape and color of the neon.
Jack Rabbit's centennial logo, with the nice long ears for the K.
The new National Historic District sign doesn't have that post-facto correction about when the coaster opened on it. For what it's worth the Roller Coaster Database does think Jack Rabbit's double-dip ``camelback loop'' is a unique feature although ... boy, it sure seems like 'two hills in a row' would be an obvious feature for any terrain coaster.
View from just outside Jack Rabbit of the Racer and, above it, the Steel Curtain scenery.
Racer's new National Historic District sign has been modified to reflect the loss of Montaña Rusa at La Feria Chapultepec. And avoids any allusion to Blackwood's Grand National.
Trivia: In France in 1907 Wilbur Wright --- maybe souring from the bad progress of contract talks --- wrote his sister Katherine that the Notre Dame cathedral ``was rather disappointing as most sights are to me. The nave is seemingly not much wider than a store room and the windows of the clerestory are so awfully high up that the building is very dark'', and after visiting the Louvre, judged ``the Mona Lisa is no better than the prints in black and white''. Source: First Flight: The Wright Brothers and the Invention of the Airplane, T A Heppenheimer.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
So all's fine around here. Little chilly; this is looking to be the coldest Memorial Day weekend in a long while. But that does mean I don't have anything worthy of reporting today. Sorry, dear bunnyhugger. Please instead enjoy Kennywood photos.
Boat going up the Pittsburg Plunge to produce a whole lot of water splashing around!
A gift shop and couple of food places in the Lost Kennywood area. We knew the area generally was themed to the old Luna Park, Pittsburgh, this particular set of buildings was themed to ... some Massachusetts park, I believe it was.
The fountain at the head of the Lost Kennywood reflecting pool. Also people eating from the Potato Patch's auxiliary outlet.
There was a booth selling miscellaneous weird old stuff that looked like someone was cleaning out a surplus room. We didn't get anything but there were things we had to photograph, like this Kennywood picture from the 70s(?) listing a Smithsonian list of top coasters. Note that the Great American Scream Machine there is the one in Atlanta, not the Great Adventure one. The Coaster at Dorney Park is now known as Thunderhawk and we've been on that. I think #5 was what we knew as Montana Rusa at La Feria Chapultepec but can't swear to it.
A leftover or maybe never-used T-shirt design with lots of Kenny Kangaroo.
And here's a leftover or maybe never-used T-shirt with a more beak-snouted Kenny Kangaroo than usual, and a lot of plush.
This must be an un-used t-shirt design for Exterminator, from before they decided to use a crazed rat theme. Or when they thought maybe they could make a licensing deal that didn't pan out.
Steel Phantom was the original incarnation of Phantom's Revenge. I'm not sure this was the Steel PHantom's original design. Looks a little Doctor Doom-y to me.
At some point during the day I broke away from bunnyhugger to ride Aero 360, the elongated rigid-arm swing ride. Wasn't much of a wait!
Here's Steel Curtain, which didn't run that year. It hasn't run since a week or two after our KennyCon 2023 visit.
In the evening light this color and shade really caught my eye.
The queue for JackRabbit, which has been spruced up with some nice paint and some very pixellated renditions of old park photos. Note the old Jack-Rabbit station overhang on the right there.
Trivia: Though he conquered Venice, without the city putting up any defense, Napoleon never set foot in it. Source: The Riddle of the Compass: The Invention that Changed the World, Amir D Aczel.
Currently Reading: The Harvey Comics Companion, Mark Arnold.
My humor blog this week started with the silly, turned incomprehensible to people who don't know that I read something about Heroic Comics for a trivia item last week, went back to being So Random, and then took a turn into Peanuts news. So here's what you've been missing:
And now for more Kennywood, as of last July:
For this year they rethemed the Grand Prix bumper-car ride to ... the Potato Patch. I don't know why the cars are now fry baskets but there we go.
The far side of the wall is full of Kennywood materials, including a Lincoln Highway sign (the Lincoln Highway goes along a part of a British military trail used in the French and Indian War) and a jackrabbit crossing sign.
Kennywood and sister park arrows. The weight limit refers to the date of Kennywood's opening.
The Turtle gets a shout-out here, as does Potato Patch mascot Potato Man. I'm not sure the significance of the blobby traffic signal. Probably references some Kennywood thing I'm not hep to, like the Thomas the Tank Engine section (since rethemed).
Slightly better view of the fry-basket cars and somehow a more in-focus picture of the back wall.
And now the Kangaroo, last of the flying-coaster flat rides, with the car behind number five there showing why it's a flying-coaster.
It's not a big hop but it is a heck of one and you don't have other rides like it.
Picture of the car after landing back on the track.
Here's the new Kangaroo facade seen from behind.
Now over to The Whip, a ride nearly(?) a century old now, although not in this location.
The Whip is on the left, and that's the Pittsburg [sic] Plunge shoot-the-chutes to the right and above. And hey, what's the line for Exterminator like? If it's a reasonable wait we might just go in and enjoy ---
Oh, it's a 76-minute wait for the spinning wild mouse coaster. Never mind.
Trivia: 86 percent of French people [ as of about 2005 ] have never flown in an airplane. Source: The Discovery of France: A Historical Geography, Graham Robb. The book was published in 2007 so the data is likely accurate to two-to-four years before that.
Currently Reading: The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore, Evan Friss.