tiggymalvern: (purrr)
Three or four years ago, we bought Kuro a microchip-activated feeder so that he could eat whenever he liked without the two young gannets stealing it.

Kuro was the smartest cat we've ever owned. He was also totally bombproof and insanely curious. To him, anything new was amazing - to be investigated instantly. Any new food he was offered, he would eat precisely because it was different and therefore great! Sometimes he would eat that new food for only a day or two, or maybe a week, and then go on strike and refuse to touch it again because it wasn't as good as his usual food once the novelty wore off.

We put the feeder down that first evening and pushed him into it to train it to his microchip. Then we pushed him towards it again. The door opened and there was food in it. Nom! He backed off and the door closed. We pushed him towards it again. Cool, more food! And then he ate enough and wandered off.

Half an hour later, we heard the whirr of the motor and crunching noises. He used it at his leisure forever after.


Now that Kuro's gone, his feeder was inherited by Yami. Her brother is an endless eater who would be obese if given half a chance. Yami self-regulates, just stops eating when she's not hungry any more, so having food available to her whenever she likes will be fine.

Yami isn't a dumb cat; she's perfectly smart, but she's incredibly apprehensive. Anything new is terrifying until proven otherwise. She disappears under the bed whenever the doorbell rings and won't come out when there's anyone else in the house. Offer her a new food and she refuses to eat it in case it's poison. She had to watch the other cats eat it for a couple of days before she'd agree to try it.

Fortunately, the noise of the feeder motor didn't bother her - she's been hearing it multiple times a day for years, after all. But the movement as the lid opened was a thing we knew we'd have to treat with caution.

We trained the feeder to her chip and set the feeder into stage one of its five training modes. In this mode, the lid is open and gives just the slightest twitch. That worked fine, so we put it to stage two - a little more lid movement. That was disturbing! But her food was right there and she was hungry and she was never murdered by it, so over four days or so, she stopped being weird about it and ate without hesitation. So on to stage three...

We are now into the final training stage where the lid is open just a fraction, so she can smell the food in there better, and she will use it with encouragement, but she's a bit humpy about it still. Once the lid's open, she's fine with it, but she disapproves of the opening movement right under her nose. And she hasn't learned yet that there's food in there all the time, so she could help herself at times other than when the humans yell at cat feeding times. But we're about 80% of the way there.

Kuro training time: 5 minutes
Yami training time: 3 weeks and counting
tiggymalvern: (Default)
Last weekend was the Washington Ornithological Society annual conference, based out of Yakima in south central Washington. So off I went for four days of sun, scenery and birds :-)

Pretty places and wildlife )
tiggymalvern: (Default)
I was away for five days, two of which were the weekend, but work continued for some of them. We now have all the beams in place and lumber between them - the shoring is basically complete! So now the massive drill and crane have been removed (improving access immensely) and the true process of excavation has begun...



There will be a post on my long weekend away when I have photos organised :-)
tiggymalvern: (owl stare)
He slept on my bed every night I was at home for 18 and half years. He was the smartest cat I've ever owned. He first tried to die when he was 6 years old, then again at 9, and 12 and 13, and still managed to outlive his brother by six years.

I've loved a lot of cats, but you were truly special.



tiggymalvern: (true blood green by i_rise_inside)
I went on a trip to Vendovi Island in the San Juans on Saturday. It was a private island for decades before it was purchased by the San Juan Preservation trust in 2010. Other than a house and boat dock at the north end, the owners left it completely undeveloped, meaning it still has a lot of native plants.

The island is open to the public five days a week in summer - if you can get there. Which means having your own boat or chartering one. My trip was organised by the local audubon society who chartered a boat, so I figured it would probably be my only chance to get to this island and I signed up the first day. Despite being arranged by the audubon society, it was scheduled with the flowering of native plants in mind more than birds (although there were birds).

Vendovi Island )
tiggymalvern: (Default)
Just a few photos from the day getting back home. Flying from Europe to west coast US always makes for a long day, but so often a very worthwhile day.

The good part of travelling )
tiggymalvern: (charles-erik good isn't it?)
Reykjavik is by far the quietest capital city I've been in, which is no surprise since it's also the smallest. But it's weird to be in a capital that you can wander around on a Sunday morning and the streets are empty or have just one or two other people hanging out. It certainly makes it pleasant though!

This photo post is all out of order, because I spent several days in the capital with wildly varies weather. Some of the photos are in date order, some are of the same place in different conditions. The only logic to it is my logic! But there are a lot of photos...

Reykjavik )
tiggymalvern: (action!)
You thought I'd reached the end? Nope! I just had ten days or so when I spent a lot of time dealing with tax paperwork and planning permission and other things that you don't want to hear about, trust me on that (I will make a post summarising the planning permission head-desking at some point when it's all over, but that will be something else. In every sense of the phrase.)

But first - photos! )
tiggymalvern: (Default)
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law. This had been sitting on the watch list of a couple of years, but there was always something else we wanted to watch more. And honestly, we should have watched it sooner, because it was a LOT of fun. Tatiana Maslany was brilliant, obviously - she always is. Anyone who's seen Orphan Black knows that she can nail anything - drama, comedy, any kind of character, she's got it, and she proves it again here.

It was the rest of it that surprised and delighted us. The writing was genuinely good, on point with brilliant zingers and the serious undertones. I know some people didn't like the breaking of the fourth wall, but it worked so well (at least it did right up until the last ep, which I thought took it too far). The costume design was superb - everything too big on her as Jennifer, and short and tight as She-Hulk. It is possible to be a Hulk and not rip your clothes on a daily basis with a good tailor and a little thought given to fabrics đŸ¤ŖđŸ¤ŖđŸ¤Ŗ The end credits, done as courtroom sketches were hilarious. The little changes each ep made them mandatory watching even when there wasn't a little episode cap part way through.

So many people obviously put so much thought into all the little details of this series. It's a shame about the weak magic-wand-waving in the final ep, but the rest of it rocked.


Ripley (Netflix). This one was also hanging on the watch list for the better part of the year. I saw very little about it on my tumblr dash, which was surprising, and I took it to be a negative, and honestly? That was real.

Andrew Scott was fantastic, no surprise there. The writing was good, solid and well thought out - no plot holes, some interesting tweaks. The direction was nailed - truly classy, beautifully framed and set up, an Emmy fully deserved. Though having said that, while I understand the choice to shoot in black and white and go full on with the period noir style, it has to be something of a crime to film on the Amalfi coast and not show the colours. I couldn't help looking at it and wishing I could see the sea, the sky, the art and architecture in all their glory.

In the end, though, its biggest failure is that it didn't make me feel. At all. You would think that with eight episodes, they could truly involve me with the characters and their lives and... nope. The 1999 Anthony Minghella film with a third of the running time gave me ALL of the feels, and the Netflix series was all style with no heart â˜šī¸


Cobra Kai season six (Netflix). This had been a long wait! No way in hell was I going to watch five eps a year ago, then five eps five months later, then the final five of the season almost a year after it started. What drugs were Netflix on? In hindsight, having watched it, I can see why they thought it could work, because each batch of five eps covered a mini-arc, but still - an in-universe time jump of a month doesn't justify five months off air 😭

But watched all in one batch, I really loved this season. Cobra Kai has had its ups and downs over the years - as I've mentioned talking about earlier seasons, there was too much reliance on the old writing trope of 'inter-character drama that could have been solved with a five minute conversation if they weren't idiots'. But this season avoided that, and the characters all had reasons for what they did, or didn't, and everything made sense. I loved the ending too. From the start, Cobra Kai has been Johnny's redemption story, and in the end, it stayed true to that and let him take centre stage to complete his arc. It definitely gave me the feels â¤ī¸


Cagney and Lacey. After I read Sharon Gless' autobiography, I got curious, because obviously she talked a lot about the show. I did see some of it when it aired, but I was a kid, and also I never saw it consistently. Gless had been reluctant to take the role when she was offered it, because she was the third actor to play Cagney. Loretta Swit played her in the initial film, but her commitment to M.A.S.H. excluded her from the follow up series. Meg Foster got the role for season one, but that season was canned after only six eps when the network decided it wasn't working. So it was offered to Gless, who initially turned it down. She was shooting a film with Michael Douglas, who was becoming quite the hot property, and she thought her film career was about to take off. It was actually Douglas who convinced her to take the role, pointing out that playing a cop on TV had been very good indeed for his career 😁 (That film Gless shot with Michael Douglas sank without a trace.)

I watched the abortive first season with Meg Foster, and you can see why it wasn't happening. Foster wasn't bad, but she wasn't great, and she didn't have the range. She couldn't play angry. You just never believed her when she yelled - her voice wasn't strong enough to carry that conviction. The difference when Gless took over for season two was immediate.

Season two was... fine. But it was very much episodic TV of its era. There was a bit of continuity, but not much, and when it was missing, you really noticed it. There was one ep, for instance, when information was leaking from the department, and Cagney and Lacey were bullied into spying on their fellow cops and reporting to IA. When the other detectives found out, they started getting the rats in their desk treatment. At the end of the ep, the leak is found, but the titular pair were still being ostracised, and the closing line was Cagney saying that things weren't going to be normal again for a long time. But of course, the very next ep, it was like it never happened.

After that I jumped ahead to season five, and now it was getting to be genuinely good. The continuity was there, actual arc plots and mini arcs running through the season. Things that happened in early eps were mentioned again half a season later. Events had consequences. Now it was the Cagney and Lacey that got all the acclaim, and you could see why it was really groundbreaking TV, and for more than being just the first series to have two female leads. You have to feel for poor Meg Foster, though - you film a show that gets canned for being crap, then it comes back to critical acclaim and gets Emmy nominations for both its leads every year it runs, when literally the only two things that changed were a different actor taking your part and a jazzy new theme tune. Ouch.

One of the saddest things about watching Cagney and Lacey was how little has changed in forty years. There are episodes about racism, about the awful way immigrants are treated and made scapegoats, about misogyny and sexual assault, about the fight for reproductive rights and the hideous people who attack women going into clinics, and damn. It's still the same old shit going on. People don't learn anything 😭

One of the crazy things about watching Cagney and Lacey at the same time as Cobra Kai was seeing Martin Kove in both, forty years apart. Holy hell, he is in amazing shape for a guy in his late 70s. I would have thought he was a decade younger...
tiggymalvern: (purrr)
This is Kuro, who was nineteen years old sometime this month. Who knows exactly when?

Curled up in his cat bed in a box this morning.


Stretched out in the sun this afternoon.


He has slept on my bed every night I've been home for eighteen and a half years.

The life of Kuro )
tiggymalvern: (Default)
The next day in Iceland started with a scheduled three hour glacier hike - with a forecast for rain throughout the day. Fun!

Another ice day )
tiggymalvern: (Default)
The weather did not improve on day five. There are a lot more photos taken on my phone, for the same reason of wind and rain rendering my real camera's lens a raindrop-sodden mess. Between black lava rock, grey mist and ice, there are also a lot of photographs that look like they were shot in black and white. They weren't, I swear! It's all in full colour. It's just bizarrely hard to believe...

First Day at the Glacier )
tiggymalvern: (charles-erik cab)
Day four in Iceland was the day with far to go - we went from Selfoss to the far side of Diamond Beach, a four hour ten minute drive. Except we took an hour long detour each way to Gulfoss, which made it over six hours of driving. Plus the time stopping at various waterfalls along the way...
The weather continued its pattern of getting worse by the day. But at least if there's going to be a day with lots of rain, it's not so bad if you're spending most of it in the car driving anyway. I'm not a fan of phone cameras generally, but I took a lot of phone photos that day. It's hard to take photos with a real camera when the wind keeps blowing rain and spray onto the lens. There's an advantage to that tiny crappy lens in the back of your phone sometimes 😭

Water, water everywhere )
tiggymalvern: (symmetry)
The SO and I had rings made for our 30th anniversary - which was last year, but we talked about it and then procrastinated badly. Anyway, we finally went and talked to the jeweller and they are done!



From a distance, they just look like patterned rings, nothing weird or dramatic. But the repeating pattern all around them is <30 with the 3 made into the sideways heart emoji, because we are silly nerds đŸ¤Ē
tiggymalvern: (want to see - D)
The weather was deteriorating each day at this point in our trip, and so we arrived at Thingvellir National Park in rain that was predicted to last for several hours. But we'd planned to walk, and walk we did!

A drizzly day )
tiggymalvern: (action!)
Our second day in Iceland was a busy one, visiting a number of different spots. Yes, I've spent hours whittling down the photos from the insane number I took. Yes, I still have too many.

Waterfalls, caves and volcanoes, oh my! )
tiggymalvern: (charles-erik good isn't it?)
I went to two different hot spring/spa places on my Iceland trip - one on the first day and one on the last.
The Blue Lagoon is the original and the most famous. Conveniently, it's also just a twenty minute drive from Iceland's international airport, and in the right direction for everything, since the airport's out on a peninsula. When you've just got off a plane and your hotel check-in is hours away, a shower and a soak in a hot spring isn't a bad starter plan :-)

Warm and wet places )
tiggymalvern: (charles-erik good isn't it?)
The people I know who went to Iceland all said, 'It's amazing!' They are right, of course - it is amazing. There will be photos. Far too many photos. But first I'll need to go through them all and organise them and that will take... a while. So first, some general thoughts and observations.

The hotels:
Many of the hotels in Iceland use geothermal spring water for their hot water. They're very proud of how eco-friendly it is, and rightly so. But it does mean that your showers smell faintly of sulphur.
When you get a double bed in your room in Iceland, you don't get a double duvet, you get two single ones. They also come neatly folded lengthwise into strips, so you have to make up your bed before you get in it, and then try and overlap the duvets in a way that doesn't mean you wake up in the night with a cold gap between them where you've been wriggling. I thought it was really weird the first night in the first hotel, but then all the others were the same. Apparently that's just what they do in Iceland. (I'm curious if people do the same thing in their own houses. Does the concept of a double duvet just not exist there or is it a hotel special?)

Food and drink:
1. Brennivin - basically Icelandic moonshine. Iceland had a period of prohibition when they weren't allowed to import any alcohol, so they did what everyone does in those circumstances and figured out a way to make their own from whatever was at hand. As a shot, it's quite potent in your throat (this from someone very partial to a single malt Scotch). Mixed with ginger ale and lime, it was delicious :-) I bought a bottle at the duty free on the way home.

2. Pickled cabbage. It comes with pretty much everything. Order a burger at the fast food place, it has pickled cabbage on it. Order a slow-braised beef cheek (or fish, it doesn't matter) at a far more upmarket place, and it comes with pickled cabbage. Personally I prefer my red cabbage raw and crispy as a salad, but I appreciate that in Iceland that would limit its availability to a few months of the year. It's fine, and not overly vinegary.

3. Skyr. A sort of Icelandic equivalent of Greek yoghurt. Also comes with everything. It's there on your plate with your main course. It's part of many cakes and desserts instead of cream. I'm not overly fond of the sour taste of yoghurt myself, never have been, but mixed with other flavours, the skyr isn't actively offensive.


The scenery:
Iceland really like white buildings with a red roof. All over the southern part of Iceland, the scenery was scattered farms and villages on the flat parts at the foot of the hills/mountains, often with waterfalls pouring down the cliffs behind, and all of them looking very much like this:





Which is in no way a bad thing :-)
There were often also Iceland ponies roaming in the fields. Apparently there's a pony in Iceland for every four people.

The weather we had on our trip was a typical mix, although the first week was unseasonably warm, being above freezing all day. We had some days or hours of glorious-if-chilly sunshine, some periods of rain and pretty strong wind (though fortunately only one afternoon when the two combined, and we decided it was too miserable to be out and went back to our hotel early), and then the last three days were colder with some snow, although only enough to really settle in the last 24 hours. With the landscape of black rock/sand and white ice/snow, I have many photos from overcast days that look like I shot them in black and white. But those will have to wait for later!
tiggymalvern: (Default)
Doctor Who We finally caught up with the Ncuti Gatwa stories from 2024, the ones that came after the Tennant/Gatwa mini-season. It was definitely a mixed bag (normal for Doctor Who) but there were a couple of stories in this season that reached heights not seen for several years. Capaldi and Whittaker were great Doctors as performers, but the writing for them was godawful. Gatwa and Millie Gibson actually get their teeth into some good stuff here and nail it. There was also some utter tripe - Space Babies OMG. And why would you make what was easily the worst story of the season the season opener?? But at least it was all uphill from there!

The Christmas special was enjoyable stuff too. Seeing the Doctor get to live a normal life, have to stay in one place and earn money and live like a human? Gold. But Anita deserves to be a companion, dammit, why doesn't she get to go and see the universe? She's been the most amazing friend to the Doctor. She deserves it!


Secret Level Made by the same people who did Love, Death and Robots, it's another animated anthology series, this time all based on video games. The usual anthology mash up of a few actually good, a bunch of just fine and one or two that seem to be pointless? Miss whatever they were aiming for? They're all short, so worth a look, especially if you're into video games and curious to see where people took the concepts. (Netflix)

Arcane season two Good. Really good. Not as good as the first season which was amazing, but still really good. The animation continued to be mind-blowingly good, especially the contrast in the different styles that were chosen as we moved between worlds/planes of existence.
I think the main problem was that this being the last season, there was a lot more time dedicated to the Plot and tying all the lore together, which came at the expense of time for delving into the characters. The character development did feel rushed for some of them - not wrong, but it all seemed to happen in a hurry. I think a longer season, or three seasons in total, to wrap up where we left off at the season one would have made this show dam near perfect. (Netflix)

Star Wars: Skeleton Crew Meh. So very meh. Star Wars does The Goonies, and not well. Some eps were better than others - it started out not too badly, but the one in the spa resort was dire. Plot holes you could fly an Imperial Star Destroyer through. Do Not Recommend.

Black Doves Fun! Not critically good, but fun! The cast are all amazing - Ben Whishaw as a gay assassin, Keira Knightley as a spy/politician's wife, Sarah Lancashire as the head of a secret non-governmental spy ring. Lancashire didn't really get to show off - anyone who's seen Happy Valley knows exactly how good she is - because her role didn't give her that scope, but she worked with what she had. Whishaw was fantastic. The plot was... far-fetched. Had some holes in it. But screw that, just go along for the ride.
It has been renewed for another season and I'll be there 😁 (Netflix)

Snow Day

Feb. 6th, 2025 10:04 pm
tiggymalvern: (pretty as a picture)
This was my driveway this morning. Pretty!



Unfortunately, the weight of the snow on the trees had brought one down on the power lines, so the power was out. Also, I went to leave for work and someone in a rear wheel drive pickup had decided to back into our (downward sloping) driveway to turn around and then discovered that surprise! They couldn't move. So me, my spouse and a passing neighbour had to push a pickup out of the way before I could leave my house. We shoved and shoved while the wheels span, and managed to get him out onto the street where the truck promptly slid sideways down the camber and into the kerb. But at that point, he became Not My Problem. (My car with all wheel drive and winter tires drove past him effortlessly.)

I really love driving to work in the snow. The schools are closed and there's hardly any traffic, so I actually get there faster, and it's all so pretty and peaceful.

Fortunately the power came back on an hour before I got back from work. Spouse spent the day texting me photos of the cats on the cat beds which he lined up in front of the fireplace, that being the only source of heat.







He works from home remotely, so when the power's out, he gets a free day to tend the fire.

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