Zoo Pumpkin Contest!
Nov. 2nd, 2014 09:31 am
Friday we had our annual staff pumpkin contest. The hooves and horns department portrait of Hondo the Ostrich came together quickly.
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Pocket Mega Post
Oct. 26th, 2014 07:26 pm
Pocket's face! (My dad and Pocket).
What follows is lots of photos, mostly of Pocket. Mostly taken with my phone, in the dark, at a party. Not great quality. Imagine if you followed me on Instagram (@urbpan) you would have had these spammed to your phone in real time!
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3:00 snapshot #1440: Hallowe'en
Nov. 1st, 2013 09:31 pm
This year I missed the zoo pumpkin carving contest because I was on an errand with my boss. When I got back from the errand I went and carved my pumpkin anyway because--c'mon it's Hallowe'en, I can't do it tomorrow!
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All Hallow's
Oct. 27th, 2013 08:13 pm
I went to my friend Kiki's Hallowe'en party last night, and got some pretty decent costume pictures to share.
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The beautiful building in which I work, a product of municipal government.

I don't have pictures of all the pumpkins unfortunately--too busy carving mine to take the time to get good shots in the low light. I mainly wanted to get pictures of the people for facebook. This is the "Hooves and Horns" department.

Here's the "Bird's World" crew with their entry, which won the best in show despite not really being a pumpkin carving.

This is the Bird's World entry--the hummingbirds are made of okra with peacock feathers cut to be wings. The costa's hummingbird chick is a peeled grape in a carved onion nest. The ZOO 100 logo on the Andean condor feather commemorates the zoo's centennial.

And here's mine, a mandrill showing his teeth in an appeasement grin.

And this is how it looked on Halloween night, all lit up!
100 More Species #48: pumpkin
Aug. 18th, 2012 09:30 am
Pumpkin Cucurbita sp. Probably C. pepo but possibly C. pepo x maxima
Last fall, shortly after Halloween had passed, some farm donated a huge amount of pumpkins to the zoo. Pumpkins are fun novelty enrichment items for the zoo but they have to be judiciously used because they are relatively high in calories and sugar. There were so many donated that before they could be all used, they began to decompose and create a mess (to say nothing of the potential pest problem) in the area where they were stored. I took home a few, to use as fun novelty enrichment items for our home animal collection.
The dogs ripped them apart and carried them around and had a grand old time with them. Visiting wildlife foraged on the seeds, scattering them about. This sprout underneath our picnic table was a complete surprise. It's nice to see a native cultivated food plant volunteering in the yard.
The pumpkins we used were squat dense things that would require the skills of a stonemason to make into jack-o-lanterns. Smooth-skinned sugary pumpkins for carving and pie making are cultivated from a wild squash Cucurbita pepo. Massive, bumpy, state fair, Cinderella's carriage pumpkins are cultivated from a relative, Cucurbita maxima. Pumpkin cultivation, like all plant cultivation, involves selecting strains and hybrids with desired traits. The pumpkins growing in my yard were almost certainly chosen for decorative traits--unusual skin color and texture--but the flesh and seeds are still edible (we roasted up some of the seeds).
While researching this I discovered that there was a recent kerfuffle regarding warty pumpkins. One seed producer developed a strain of consistently and copiously warted pumpkins and applied to patent it. (This strain was named "Super Freak" by the seed company.) Rival seed producers came out of the woodwork with their catalogs and documentation to protect their own specialized lines of bumpy gourds. The trait of warts on a Cucurbit was thought to indicate a distinct strain dating back to the 18th century. The patent was rejected in 2009 so if our yard pumpkins turn out to be warty we won't be risking a lawsuit.
Brookline is the best
Oct. 31st, 2008 08:33 pmMy neighborhood was full of trick or treaters tonight. My street is quiet because we're sort of the far end of the town, but a couple streets in there were hundreds of kids. One block (Brooks street) was closed to auto traffic, and several of the houses were really done up with decorations. The highlight was the pirate ship with animatronic pirate skeleton. It's becoming a locally famous event, with people driving in from other neighborhoods and towns. I figured I could find some mention of it online, but I only found this weird youtube fragment:
I saw some great creative costumes too! Probably the best was the kid dressed as the Zakim Bridge, a complicated affair that he had to gingerly maneuver around the other kids. I bet he's a budding engineer or architect and built it himself. I also saw some awesome old school cardboard and tinfoil costumes, including a kid dressed as a giant iPod. Mad props to the kid dressed as a toilet--funniest costume for sure. The unexpectedly common costume was Superman, in fact, the only kid to come up to our house was a silent toddler dressed as the Man of Steel, with his very friendly parents as (I think) Lois and Jimmy.
Alexis captured the fun here. Seriously, go look at the pictures. Plus my jack-o-lantern is there.
Celebrating Hallowe'en!
Oct. 26th, 2008 07:47 pmI haven't done anything to celebrate Hallowe'en (other than bump up more zombie movies into my Netflix queue) in what seems like forever. This season it started out nicely with a gift from my buddy at work Courtney:

They're gummy candy!
( And then the costume party )

They're gummy candy!
( And then the costume party )
Public Service Announcement
Sep. 20th, 2008 12:16 pmCARAMEL FLAVORED CANDY CORN
This is the one great thing about the fact that the drug stores and supermarkets have their Hallowe'en products and displays up already. Now that it is officially fall, you can guiltlessly indulge in Candy Corn, and now it tastes 5 million times better since it's flavored like caramel. There is a caramel apple version, too which has that sour apple jolly rancher tang to it, if that's what you're into.
That is all.
This is the one great thing about the fact that the drug stores and supermarkets have their Hallowe'en products and displays up already. Now that it is officially fall, you can guiltlessly indulge in Candy Corn, and now it tastes 5 million times better since it's flavored like caramel. There is a caramel apple version, too which has that sour apple jolly rancher tang to it, if that's what you're into.
That is all.
Doorways and pumpkins of Brookline
Nov. 1st, 2007 09:31 pm
The night after Halloween the decorations are still up, but there aren't kids everywhere.
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On this day in 365 Urban Species: Pin oak