• TWIL: Nautical vs statute miles

    I think I am not the only one this week to wonder about mileage. (Because of Artemis, of course, not gas prices.)

    Evidently measuring statute miles in feet and inches is deficient. I suppose that’s why we ended up with terms like “a country mile” and “as the crow flies.” If you’re navigating huge expanses, like an ocean, you need something more exact. Can’t put a tape measure on the ocean.

    At any rate, after rational people decided the earth was not flat, they covered the globe with grid lines of latitude and longitude. And I’m quoting here, because this is math: ”A Nautical Mile is the distance you cover when you travel along a longitude, within a slice of latitude that’s one-sixtieth of a degree (1/60).”

    It’s longer than a statute land mile, but close enough they can both still use the word “mile”.

    So the moon is about 200,000 nautical miles (nm) away. Mars is 30 million nm away. Pluto (I still count you Pluto) is 231 billion nm away.

    Or, in light terminology, Mars is 19 light-minutes away, Pluto is almost 5 light-hours away.

    Seems like we need a meansurement between nautical miles and light-years. And so there is, astronomical units, which I copied freely from NASA, because there are no NASA copyrights because U.S. taxes paid for it.


    Screenshot

    I give that to fellow members of the globe to make up for the way I have utterly disregarded kilometers in this post.

    So instead of having a fraction of latitude and longitude be the standard, the distance from the Earth to the Sun is the standard. That seems very earth-centric. We’ll probably meet people orbiting Alpha Centauri and find the use kilometers too.

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  • Garden mishap: Spring 2026

    When my neurologist asks me if I’ve fallen in the last six months, and I say yes, and he says, “What were you doing,”I say “Gardening,” because I often fall while I’m gardening. I’m tired, the ground is uneven, and I’m often too hot.

    Gary’s never around, so it isn’t a crisis, and frankly, I think the neighbors expect it.

    In the last three weeks I’ve fallen every time I’ve gardened. Today’s fall was particularly dramatic.

    I was tidying the peony bed. I had bought new cages: some plastic and substantial, some metal and graceful. I had just assembled the first plastic one with great difficulty, set it over some peonies in bud, stepped back, admired it, turned, tripped, and fell backward on top of the new peony cage.

    Sadly, Gary was in the garage and heard the impact and ensuing cursing. And moaning. Aside from my damage, I think one stem of the peonies broke, and of course the cage is in pieces again. I know one support leg is bent. I didn’t have the heart to inspect it, I just gathered the bits and piled them on the workbench.

    Tomorrow’s a new day. But tonight I am very discouraged.

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  • Splashdown

    Astronauts are back and safe. I can stand down. I can’t tell you how much I’ve been on edge these past ten days. Gary didn’t help this morning when he shared the heat shield worries.

    Anyway, good work NASA, you waited until April this time.

    Excellent work on the animated graphics in particular.

    Early on while the solar panels adjusted, the panels in the graphic sloooowly adjusted as well. Nice work.

    Evidently the toilet was never fixed, so points off for that. Then again, Buzz Aldrin famously never pooped during his week on Apollo 11.

    As for myself, I am as exhausted as if I had personally willed it to space and back.

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  • Weekly Paint Progress: 4/9/2026

    So this is the previous …

    This is the progress …

    And this is the goal.

    D45CE5FA-2C6B-42E6-8576-34A7FC25443B

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  • Green moon continued

    They have begun to release the images of the far side of the moon.

    No one at NASA is talking about the alleged green tint.

    Disappointed Photoshop users everywhere immediately took the ohotos and cranked up the color saturation. I won’t show you an doctored example.

    However, I did zoom in on the Earthrise photo …

    Screenshot

    … and I saw this one tiny crater that seems to have a slight green tinge in the bottom front.

    Screenshot

    If you zoom in on this even more let me know if you see it.

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  • Moon notes

    Okay, this is Sunday evening, and I have a comment for the astronaut giving notes on the far side of the moon.

    You mentioned two key things.

    1. The shadow where the moon split from sunlight to shadow, “the Terminator,” was extraordinary. You said It made obvious how craggy and dramatic the far side of the lunar surface was. Mountains and valleys and cliffs. Good to know.
    2. THERE ARE GREEN PATCHES ON THE MOON.

    Evidently some parts OF THE MOON are brown, and some are tinged green. So stop rhapsodizing about the Terminator. Tell me more about the green. Lime green or olive green? Green like baby poop? Green like a spring lawn? Green like the Martian flag?

    I do not think your priorities were aligned correctly. Hope you took a lot of photos.

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  • Moon day!

    It is a shame that the president has chosen the same day and time for his public speech on the current war in Iran. Is he competing with the moon for attention?

    I bet the astronauts are pretty excited. It really is a shame the toilet has been working only on and off. I would find that a huge inconvenience if I knew millions of people would have eyes on me.

    I find this quote odd: “They also may be the first humans to see some parts of the moon’s far side with the unaided eye.” May be? Really? That statement came from NASA. I mean, all the Apollo 13 astronauts and all the command module pilots all saw some parts of the far side surface with their eyes, right? I suppose they were too close to see the poles. This group will be further away. Or maybe there have been secret Soviet missions and there’s some skeletal cosmonaut corpse down there.

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  • TWIL: Something new about my favorite book

    [SPOILERS GALORE!] [NYT CROSSWORD SPOILERS! ENDING OF JANE EYRE SPOILERS!]

    The New York Times crossword had a clue sometime this past week, something like “Literary heroine’s name that describes her appearance and the end of the book.”

    Other letters left no choice other than Jane Eyre.

    “Huh. Okay, Jane, Plain Jane, kind of a stretch but … the end of the book? Eyre? Air? Because she hears his voice in the air?” And then, “Oooohhhh, ‘heir’. That’s amazing.”

    Was it deliberate? Opinions are mixed. But at least it must be a subliminal pun.

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  • Plants in pots

    I am tweaking the landscaping — and this year is the year of the pink, evidently. Phlox, which I’ve never tried, and dianthus, which is a soldier.

    You will note they are still in the pots. I worked for hours today, but it was all spent unearthing the river rocks I put out ten years ago. I count it a victory the flowers aren’t still in the back of the car, like the johnny-jump-ups twenty years ago. (I forgot them for days, but they rallied.)

    Ten years, twenty years … you know what didn’t happen as many years ago? No one asked if I needed help getting the dirt into my car.

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  • Mission Control CapCom

    When I think of Capcom (the Capsule Communicator, the guy who communicates with the space capsule), I think of this hard-smoking coffee-drinking guy, Gene Kranz.

    I can’t tell you how nice it was to watch the burn that pointed the Artemis astronauts to the moon, and to notice that the majority of the people on the screen were women.

    I loved watching the expressions on these ladies faces during the process.

    It’s nice to see an honest celebration instead of the mad flag-waving scene after Apollo 11 landed.

    And I know this is petty but it’s also nice that the man in the top right looks a little left out.

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