Sep. 11th, 2011

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From last weekend (will I ever catch up?), brunch at IHOP. True story: I tweeted complaining about the cologne someone sitting near us was wearing and it was retweeted by someone with link to an IHOP promotion of some sort. Hopefully Alexis is having a full Scottish breakfast. I had to google it to make sure there was such a thing--I've had plenty of English and Irish breakfasts, but hadn't heard anyone talk about Scottish. Looks about the same. Tangentially, I tried playing the bagpipe the other night--you apparently need the combined lung capacity of 5 tuba players to pull it off.
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While doing the music meme, I ended up finding a bunch of other music I liked that I didn't use in the meme itself:


Listening to Sugar: "Beaster" as a result of trying to think of tomorrow's 30 Day Song Challenge post. GREAT RECORD.

ExpandPIL, the sHrugs, Spore, vintage Nirvana, 3rd Bass )

On duty

Sep. 11th, 2011 10:51 am
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The oyster mushrooms have rotten away, and a sentry has moved in below the birdbath. Probably he came to eat the bugs and slugs that ate the mushrooms.
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Some day I'll present the mushrooms that occur in urban (man-made or strongly human-influenced) environments. Winecaps, oysters, turkey tail, earthballs, mica caps, stuff like that. What format should I use? Should I have a website, a zine, something else? Why does my internal voice sound like Marc Maron? I think between his podcast and the new CD I've been overdoing it--maybe it's the coffee: POW!

Anyway, this is Mutinus caninus, the dog stinkhorn, famous for really really really looking like a dog's penis. We had fun with it when it was 365 urban species #175. Like other stinkhorns, it produces a bad-smelling mass of spores called a "gleba" which attracts coprophagic insects to spread its spores around. At a recent mushroom lecture I attended, the presenter verified my suspicion that stinkhorns are relatively recently evolved (making them "more highly evolved" fungi than others, if you look at it that way, which I guess you shouldn't) since they depend on animals to reproduce (as do flowering plants, another relatively recently evolved group, by way of comparison). I don't know if that's why the ants are busying themselves about this mushroom or not. The fungus is commonly found in the wood chips and mulch of urban landscaping, as it is here at Franklin Park Zoo.

I identified another stinkhorn for someone via twitter recently, thus: "Phallus stinkhorns, complete with santorum-mimicking spore mass (gleba)." Yes I'm so proud of that, that I had to share it again. (Whoops, wrong podcast.)

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