It's Tabby Cat Appreciation Day!
And tabby cats don't get much more appreciated than this girl, whom we affectionately call "pretty hellcat", among many other names.
Happy Tab Cat Appreciation Day, to all who observe it.
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cherry valley forever

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Love Begins
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@comebackbrighter
It's Tabby Cat Appreciation Day!
And tabby cats don't get much more appreciated than this girl, whom we affectionately call "pretty hellcat", among many other names.
Happy Tab Cat Appreciation Day, to all who observe it.
I wrote a bunch of six-word stories last week. Once you start writing them, the temptation is to keep going and write as many as you can.
Among the stories I wrote was this one, for my dad:
3 years on: still miss you.
Cloudy with a chance of fireballs
The Lyrid meteor shower peaks around 3.30am AWST on 23rd April this year.
Although the shower itself stretches from April 14th to 30th, the Lyrids are notoriously slow to get started, and their hourly rates only sharply increase as you get closer to their peak. I feel like there's a joke in there somewhere...
But the Lyrid meteor shower is one of my favourites of the year. (Yes, I have favourite meteor showers, doesn't everyone?) It's not the most prolific; under ideal conditions of dark outback skies, you might potentially only see 18 shooting stars an hour, but it's because the Lyrids are bright meteors, and sometimes, very occasionally, if you're lucky, you see fireballs.
And then, only about once every 60 years, the Lyrid meteor shower turns into more of a storm, with hundreds of meteors. Even outside of those storm years, there is always a rare chance of 'outbursts', where you'll just have a year with a load more meteors, because of some complicated reason about debris fields.
I was going to include info on how/when to see the meteor shower, but since I can all but guarantee nobody who lives in Western Australia will see this, it would be largely pointless.
I don't even know if you can see this meteor shower at all in the Northern Hemisphere, so telling you what time to look above the north eastern and northern horizon isn't very helpful.
Something I think is very cool is that for the Boorong clan of north-western Victoria, the constellation of Lyra was the ancestral Malleefowl, Neilloan, who taught people when to look for Malleefowl eggs.
The Lyrid meteor shower coincides with the time the Malleefowl starts building their elaborate nests, and the streaks of the meteors burning up in our atmosphere look just like the bird kicking up sand as she builds her nest.
A helpful pie chart, because it's worth remembering all of the countries that have used nuclear weapons on unarmed civilians.
And also, the number of times it has happened: twice.
Happy 276th birthday, Caroline Herschel!
I briefly mentioned Herschel in the post Trailblazing Women of Astronomy, and today is a good day to expand on why Herschel is so great.
Herschel helped discover over 2,400 astronomical objects over the course of 20 years. She independently discovered the dwarf elliptical galaxy Messier 110 (NGC 205), a satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy, and independently discovered eight comets, including one with the naked eye.
Herschel was the first woman in England honoured with an official government position and England's first professional female astronomer.
In 1835, at the age of 85, Herschel became the joint-first honorary member of The Royal Astronomical Society.
The Royal Society's choice was a sensible one, considering Herschel had already become the first woman to publish her scientific findings (An Account of a New Comet) in the Royal Society's Philosophical Transactions 50 years earlier, and she was the first woman to be awarded the Royal Astronomical Society's Gold Medal a mere seven years earlier, in 1828.
1786 Caroline Herschel *becomes the first woman to publish her scientific findings in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Astronomical Society* Royal Astronomical Society: *crickets chirp* 1798: *gives Royal Society an index of every observation of every star in OG Royal Astronomer John Flamsted's catalogue, along with 560 missing stars, and a list of corrections* Royal Astronomical Society: *tumbleweed blows through* 1828 Caroline Herschel *becomes the first woman to be awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society* Royal Astronomical Society: *silence* Royal Astronomical Society: *nothing* Royal Astronomical Society: *mute* Royal Astronomical Society: *hush* Royal Astronomical Society: *stillness* Royal Astronomical Society: *total tranquillity* 1835 Royal Astronomical Society: By the way, Caroline, fancy becoming the joint-first honorary member of our society? You can't be a proper member, of course, haha, you're a woman!
We can also thank Caroline Herschel for introducing her nephew, astronomer and polymath John Herschel, to the stars.
And if you've read this far, go check out Adrienne Rich's poem about Caroline Herschel Planetarium.
150 years ago today, Alexander Graham Bell conducted his first successful experiment with the telephone.Â
He reportedly shouted into the phone: 'Mr. Watson â come here â I want to see you."
People have been shouting into telephones ever since.
In today's edition of I'm totally convinced this isn't a scam, at all, apparently "Chairman Richard" wants to get in touch with me đ€š
Sounds like I'd better book myself a flight to Cali...
Trailblazing Women of Space and Astronomy
On International Day of Women and Girls in Science, I showed some love to the women who shaped astronomy.
Because today is International Women's Day, I'm following up with some of the trailblazing women of space and astronomy, including some women who maybe donât have telescopes or observatories named after them.
Elisabeth Hevelius: blazing a trail for women in astronomy
Many scientists consider Elisabeth Hevelius (1647 â 1693) one of the first female astronomers. Born in mid-17th century Poland, the stars fascinated Elisabeth from an early age.
Elisabethâs marriage to the noted astronomer Johannes Hevelius helped her pursue her astronomical passion while she helped Johannes manage the observatory.
Elisabeth Hevelius observing the sky with a brass octant.
After her husbandâs death, Elisabeth completed the celestial atlas and star catalogue theyâd worked on together. Prodromus astronomiae (âElements of Astronomyâ) documented the positions and relevant data for 1,564 stars, including more than 600 new stars and 12 new constellations found by Elisabeth that werenât in the original written draft.
Groundbreaking science communicator - Ămilie du ChĂątelet
Historians celebrate Ămilie du ChĂątelet (1706 â 1749) for her translation of Newtonâs Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica into French, but we do her a disservice by calling it a translation.
Du ChĂątelet made Newtonâs work accessible to the masses and also corrected and expanded on his ideas. Her contribution to astronomy is less frequently remembered than the work she did in maths and physics, but it also deserves celebration.
Ămilie du ChĂątelet advanced astronomy by bridging the ideas of Gottfried Leibniz and Newton, and contributed to a clearer understanding of the gravitational effects of distant planets on Earthâs motion.
You could call her one of the first science communicators.
Census taker of the sky - Annie Jump Cannon
Annie Jump Cannon (1863 - 1941) developed her enthusiasm for astronomy early, when she would stargaze together with her mum on the roof of the house, using an old astronomy textbook to identify the constellations.
Cannon studied physics and astronomy at college before getting a job at Harvard College Observatory as a âcomputerâ, classifying stars.
In 1901, several years before Cannon would even complete her Masterâs degree, sheâd already published her first catalogue of stars.
Cannon is now known as the âcensus taker of the skyâ, and her Harvard classification scheme, which categorises stars by temperature and spectral type, is still used today.
Opening space's frontiers - Katherine Johnson
Katherine Johnson (1918 - 2020) is our first 20th-century trailblazer, and she was crucial to the success of the USAâs early space program.
Johnson took every maths course offered at her college, so they added new ones just for her. Putting her exceptional maths skills and analytic geometry knowledge to work for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), Johnson calculated trajectories, launch windows, and emergency return paths for Project Mercury spaceflights.
Johnson worked for NASA until the mid-1980s, and her maths and electronic computer skills were critical to the success of the Apollo Moon landing program and the start of the Space Shuttle program.
Discovering impossible objects - Natasha Hurley-Walker
Natasha Hurley-Walker is a West Australian radio astronomy trailblazer who helped commission the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). Hurley-Walker also led the MWA team that produced the GLEAM (Galactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA) survey, creating striking maps of the southern sky, like the one pictured.
Image credit: ICRAR/Curtin
Currently, Hurley-Walker leads the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomyâs âExtragalactic Radio Scienceâ team, exploring supernova remnants, galaxy clusters, and radio galaxy life cycles.
With her researchers, Hurley-Walker discovered a new kind of repeating radio source in space: long-period radio transients. These mysterious repeating radio sources spin so slowly that they shouldnât be able to produce radio waves, but they do.
Me: OK, so. First, what I need you to do for me is close your eyes and picture the scene...
I was asked this question very recently, and I couldn't help but smile, thinking about Nivellen and Fenne.
Comic courtesy of Sundae Kids.
via ADHDinos
The women who shaped astronomy
It's International Day of Women and Girls in Science and I want to show some love to the women who shaped astronomy.
The early astronomy pioneers
Hypatia of Alexandria (c. 350 â 415 was a Neoplatonist philosopher, and is widely regarded as the first female mathematician and astronomer.
Hypatia was one of the late Roman Empire's most prominent mathematicians, philosophers, and astronomers, and her murder sent a message to scholars in Alexandria, chilling scientific study. Glad we can't imagine what that would be like.
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A Chinese astronomer living during the Qing Dynasty, Wang Zhenyi (1768 â 1797) defied society's expectations of women, learning astronomy at home.
Wang Zhenyi was an early science communicator, describing celestial phenomena, explaining and demonstrating equinoxes and writing articles on lunar and solar eclipses.
The telescope trailblazers
While working alone, Caroline Herschel (1750 â 1848) detected three nebulae in 1783. In 1786, she became the first woman to discover a comet. Over the next 11 years, Herschel spotted seven more comets, including the periodic comet 35P/HerschelâRigollet.
The self-taught Scottish astronomer Mary Somerville (1780 â 1872) played a vital role in the discovery of the planet Neptune. Along with Caroline Herschel, Somerville was elected as the first female Honorary Member of the Royal Astronomical Society. Note: they were the first female Honorary Members, the society wouldn't let women actually become members.
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Maria Mitchell (1818 â 1889)Â is best known as the first American professional female astronomer, and so probably needs no introduction. In 1847, Mitchell discovered comet C/1847 T1, earning her international recognition and a gold medal prize.
An advocate for education for girls and women, Mitchell travelled to Colorado with an all-female team of graduate researchers to observe 1878's solar eclipse.
The glimpses of history
Henrietta Swan Leavitt (1868 â 1921)Â pioneered stellar classification. Leavitt spent many years analysing photographic plates at Harvard College Observatory, discovering 2,400 new variable stars, including âCepheid variables', whose luminosity (brightness) fluctuates in regular patterns.
Leavitt discovered a relationship between the star's period of variation and luminosity. Measuring how fast the stars flickered told astronomers how bright they were, and this became known as Leavitt's Law.
This giant leap for astronomy helped give astronomers the tool to measure the distances to stars and galaxies that were previously impossible with old methods.
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Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin (1900 â 1979) discovered the stuff stars are made of, and revolutionised our understanding of the cosmos.
As a PhD candidate, Payne-Gaposchkin confirmed the theories of astrophysicist Meghnad Saha, and found that stars are mainly composed of hydrogen and helium.
A leading astronomer reviewing Payne-Gaposchkin's dissertation strongly discouraged her from publishing this outlandish idea, calling her work "spurious" in a published article. Payne-Gaposchkin downplayed it in her dissertation. That same astronomer later published research reaching the same conclusion and largely accepted credit for it. Arenât you happy that never happens anymore?
Finding the invisible
Vera Rubin (1928 â 2016) provided compelling evidence for the existence of dark matter, defying accepted ideas about the universe.
Rubin's passion for astronomy began as a child, and she built a cardboard telescope (with the help of her engineer dad) to observe and track meteors. Rubin's PhD thesis showed that galaxies weren't randomly distributed through space but instead formed clusters and clumped together.
Rubin also found that some spiral galaxies should be flying apart from how quickly they rotated. This proved that a large amount of unseen mass was holding them together: dark matter.
Modern inspiration
Many scientists consider Ruby Payne-Scott (1912 â 1981) the first female radio astronomer.
Image credit: Peter Gavin Hall (Ruby Payne-Scott's son), CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia CommonsÂ
Payne-Scott's work has shaped our understanding of solar activity and its impact on Earth's atmosphere, and has helped lay the groundwork for understanding how these bursts affect communication systems, navigation, and even power grids on Earth.
During her career, Payne-Scott made significant contributions to solar astronomy, discovering three of the five categories of solar bursts.
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Nancy Grace Roman (1925 â 2018) was NASA's first Chief of Astronomy and is known to some as the "Mother of Hubble."
Roman proposed that a space â based telescope might detect planets orbiting other stars, and led NASA's orbiting astronomical observatories program. The program demonstrated the technologies necessary for the large space telescope.
Although known for her crucial role in planning the Hubble Space Telescope, Roman's contributions to astronomy include classifying stars by their chemical composition and motion through the galaxy.
Roman earned recognition from several women's organisations for her work advancing women in senior science management and was also one of four women featured in LEGO's 2017 Women of NASA set.
NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is scheduled for launch by May 2027.
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Jocelyn Bell Burnell (born 1943) discovered the first pulsar in 1967 while pursuing her PhD in astronomy at Cambridge uni.
Bell Burnell noticed a strange, rapidly pulsing signal in the radio telescope data she was studying. PSR B1919+21 is now known as a pulsar, a rapidly spinning neutron star that pulses a beam of radiowaves, like the regular beam of light from a lighthouse.
Image credit: Roger W Haworth , CC BY-SA 3.0, via Flickr
It was another 50 years before Bell Burnell won the Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics for her pulsar discovery, and her work remains pivotal.
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Beth Brown (1969 â 2008) was a pioneering astrophysicist at NASA whose research focused on elliptical galaxies and black holes.
Brown found that many elliptical galaxies are incredibly bright in the X-ray part of the electromagnetic spectrum, suggesting the presence of gas heated to millions of degrees. She theorised the cause could be supernova explosions or supermassive black holes.
Brown was the first African-American woman to earn a PhD in astronomy from the University of Michigan. She was also a passionate educator, developing a popular astronomy course for beginners and appearing on TV to share her love of space science.
Did you hear the scientists have found a way to grow colored cotton? Thoughts?
Itâs not a âscientists have foundâ and much more âpeople have been already doing that for thousands of years and itâs just gaining more attention recentlyâ
Scientists didnât know. It should be âScientists just found outâ
Thereâs actually been a load of vitriol leveled against folks who try to raise traditional colored cottons, because a lot of cotton growers donât want the colored cottons cross-pollinating with their standard white cotton.
But anyway cotton can be grown in lovely natural shades of greens, reddish-brown ochres, and browns, all of which deepen with a good boil in water with a bit of washing soda thrown in.
The color obviously doesnât fade or run, because itâs not dye. Itâs the intrinsic color of the fiber itself.
I....I want clothes made out of those colors. They don't hurt my brain!
Arenât they lovely?
Iâm biased because I love the natural earth tones of many fibers, of course...browns, blacks, creams, copper-reds, ect...but I think theyâre just gorgeous.
https://www.vreseis.com/shop
If anyone wants to know where you can get yarn or cotton like this!
Scientists did not "just find out", and this is more of the same anti intellectual bs as the post that goes around claiming archaeologists were too stupid to know that hair could be sewn for elaborate styles.
Anyway, scientists DID figure out how to grow colored cotton. They genetically engineered it to be bright fuckin pink, and they didn't "just find out" about it, they already knew which is literally what inspired them to attempt the thing they just accomplished. Begging y'all to stop pretending that scientists don't know things, don't have interests, don't grow up in farming communities or have family who taught them this. Scientists are people. Do you seriously think people who use genetic engineering to make eco-friendly pink cotton don't know anything about textiles?
Anyway. Bright pink cotton without dyes, because science is awesome
Yes. CSIRO scientist Doctor Colleen MacMillan led the team that figured this out. They used tobacco plants for testing because of the genetic similarity. Basically if the tobacco leaves produced colors when injected with a bit of the experimental genetic material, the scientists on the team already understood that the color change would affect cotton bolls as well.
They grew bright red and bright yellow in a petri dish.
And yes, Doctor MacMillan knows lots of things. Here's a list of some of her publications.
@csirogram on Instagram
Additionally folks are researching how to create flame resistant cotton and black cotton. If a variety of black cotton becomes viable, it can stop a LOT of environmental damage caused by chemical manufacturing of black dye.
THIS. Every damn botanist I know, including myself, is at the least tangentially interested in fiber arts and indigenous methods behind things like that. Scientists have hobbies and we're all goddamn nerds so a lot of those hobbies are more niche. The anti-intellectualism is insane. I swear half of y'all think scientists are all evil cackling old men devoted to holding up colonial power systems. The work done by Dr. MacMillan is crazy cool and should be celebrated
âLove is in the air, and the Spud King is in your kitchen!â
I have a couple of thoughts about this.
First, why is âspud kingâ Tony Galati in my kitchen? Get out my kitchen, Tony! Go home, you weirdo. And take your spud minions with you.
Secondly, does the Spud King exist in a shared universe with the Goblin King and the Dream King? What are his powers? Does he lay potatoes? Spit chips? Summon a spud army?
How many of these kings are there?
"Death is always on the way, but the fact that you don't know when it will arrive seems to take away from the finiteness of life. It's that terrible precision that we hate so much. But because we don't know, we get to think of life as an inexhaustible well. Yet everything happens a certain number of times, and a very small number, really. How many more times will you remember a certain afternoon of your childhood, some afternoon that's so deeply a part of your being that you can't even conceive of your life without it? Perhaps four or five times more. Perhaps not even. How many more times will you watch the full moon rise? Perhaps twenty. And yet it all seems limitless." - Paul Bowles, The Sheltering Sky
Goodbye, Mr Cat.
We already miss you very fucking much. Every time I remember youâre not here, I feel like a skewer has been thrust into my chest.
Iâm sorry you had to leave so soon. 12 years, not even 12 years, felt more like 12 months with you. I thought youâd get a graceful retirement, an old cat, joints creaky and stiff, and more gum than teeth.
You were a bat-eared kitten not long ago, a cheeky monkey cat with the longest tail weâd ever seen, and I thought we still had many more years to enjoy together.
I feel like youâve been cheated.
We miss your shouty little self, especially whenever someone took a shower. Or went outside. Or shut doors. We miss your cuddles; you always enjoyed cuddles more than food, and I can still close my eyes and hear your purrs as loud as a tractorâs diesel engine.
We miss you sunning yourself in your cat run, hunting lizards that usually got away.
And Iâm sorry if there is something I did wrong, or something I didnât do that I should have.
You will always be my best friend-cat, and I will always love you. Nothing will ever be the same without you, and I hate that it wonât take very long for not having you around to start seeming normal.
You have lots of good stories to tell your new friends about all your adventures, and your uncles that came before you will all want to hear all about your life in Perth.
We hope there are lots of things to stalk and hunt and chase where you are, but most of all, we hope there are sunbeams to stretch out in, and lots of people to give you the love you deserve.
âAustralia Dayâ is almost over and I havenât even seen the photo of Burnum Burnum planting the Aboriginal flag on the cliffs of Dover and claiming Britain for the Indigenous people of Australia on my dash yet