https://instagram.com/p/Bc2FdW4gWQG/
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2017/12/19/sound-sculpture/
July 12, 2017: Historic #NetNeutrality day of action swept the Internet broke records with millions of comments to FCC and emails to lawmakers https://imgur.com/a/vYVet
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2017/07/15/netneutrality-2017/
A couple weeks ago, on September 30, the NEH sponsored “Play/back,” a symposium on audiovisual preservation. As one of the planners of the event, I put together a panel of archivists and sch...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/10/14/playback-challenges-of-audio-preservation/
Over at Bibliolore, they featured Moondog this week: Louis T. Hardin, known to all as Moondog, was celebrated among New Yorkers for two decades as a mysterious and extravagantly clothed blind str...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/05/29/moondog-on-bibliolore/
Remember those cabbage sprouts? They were “Mei Ching Choi” variety of bok choi (brassica rapa var. chinensis). They did well… about 100 days from planting, they’ve produced beautiful litt...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/05/29/eat-your-cabbage/
Looking around this morning, a lot is happening in the garden today! Here’s a few: Above, the viburnum prunifolium (aka Black Haw) is in bloom, with parabolas of small white flowers. In the gar...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/04/22/earth-day-in-the-garden/
We had the chance to go out in the woods last weekend. It’s definitely spring in the MidAtlantic region, and it’s a great time to see the woods leafing out for summer! We saw spicebush (linde...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/03/31/forest-in-bloom/
I didn’t have a chance to post pictures of the onions earlier. We’re planning to plant today. So before I post on that, here’s the onion sprouts. These are about 5 weeks from seed sowing, a...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/03/20/onions-in/
When seeds sprouts, the sproutlings will have one (monocots) or two (dicots) leaves. Most of the herbaceous plants and vegetable types in our yards and gardens are dicots, including the cabbages....
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/02/23/true-leaves/
After the first week, the cabbage sprouts are one to two inches tall. This is the “Mei Ching Choi” variety of Brassica rapa. Some of them (two next to the label) still have the seed husks s...
https://culturalorganology.wordpress.com/2016/02/21/cabbage-sproutlings/