The newest Louise Penny book, The Long Way Home, arrived at the Austin Public Library. I’ve put a hold on it. I’m number 95 in the queue. I’ll be waiting a long time for The Long Way Home.
Category Archives: Mystery
Eyed Click Beetle
Look what I found in our yard. I had never seen one before (a mystery!), so it took me a few minutes to find it on the Internet. I started out searching for “black and white caterpillars” but that wasn’t even close. Next I tried “black and white insects in central Texas.” Turns out there are a ton of those. The last one did the trick: “black and white insects with eyes on top.” And voilà! An Eyed Click Beetle. I’m glad it didn’t do its click and back flip while I was photographing it. And, of course, those aren’t eyes on top.
Valentine’s Gift
For Valentine’s Day, hubby and I gave each other half of a gift. Here it is, waiting to be installed.
Here’s where it’s going to go.
Here it is installed, our very own cattle guard. So romantic, don’t you think?
I must tell you, I was raised in the city, so I don’t know all there is about country living. One thing I don’t know is why there is a clipboard on the cattle guard fence. I had no idea cattle guards came with clipboards. And I still don’t know why. It’s a mystery.
East Meets West
East Meets West or In Search of an Orange Dot.
I found an orange dot on my computer screen. I couldn’t figure how it got there and I tried to clean it off. Next time I looked, it wasn’t there.
Then it was back, in the same spot. I tried to remove it again, this time paying attention to what I was doing. It stayed put. Hmmm. A mystery.
Do you know about some of the neat features that WordPress provides to its bloggers? They give us counts as to how many viewers visit our blogs, the count for our busiest day, and which search terms led someone to our blog. Pretty neat, I think. (Stay with me, here.)
A fairly new WordPress feature is a map of the world showing the countries where the viewers are from. When I first noticed this, my browser screen was not at its full size. Sometimes I could see that Alaska was colored in. Ooh, I thought, someone in Alaska read my blog? Cool!
Cool, maybe, but not necessarily true. Once I increased the size of my browser screen, I noticed that all of the United States was orange-colored, meaning that the viewer from the USA could have been from any state, including Alaska and Hawaii.
Which brings me back to the orange dot that I kept trying to clean off of my computer screen. It was Hawaii on the WordPress global map. Hawaii is, of course, way off in the middle of the Pacific and very small.
Mystery solved.
Sometime after that, I noticed another orange dot on the right side of my computer screen. I tried to clean it off. (A conditioned reflex; that’s my excuse.) On the map, it was north of Japan and just off the coast of Russia. But Russia and Japan were not highlighted as points of origin for a blog visitor. In fact, no country on the right (east) side of the map was highlighted. The only country highlighted was on the left (west): the United States.
That little orange dot is part of the United States? As it turns out, yes.
With a little Internet research I discovered that the orange dot is the easternmost part of the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Why then, was it on the right/east part of the map and not on the left/west part of the map with the rest of the United States? Because, geographically speaking, that orange dot, Semisopochoi Island (Russian for “having seven hills”), is in the eastern hemisphere, 14 minutes east of the 180th meridian. That makes Alaska the northernmost, westernmost and easternmost state. Hawaii is the southernmost state.
Learn something new every day. Well, some of us, some days.
Mystery 01
How is it that after staying behind someone on the Interstate who is driving 20 miles per hour under the speed limit (giving them plenty of time to adjust to the traffic flow, or so I thought), when I try to pass I can barely get even with them even though I’ve accelerated more than the 20 mph they weren’t going when I was behind them?
It’s a mystery.





