Rusty Ring
@rustyring.universeodon.com.ap.brid.gy
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Zen hermit monk on the North Pacific Coast. Analysis reveals significant Pictish DNA in my genetic matrix. This probably offers important insight into my […] 🌉 bridged from https://universeodon.com/@RustyRing on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/
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rustyring.universeodon.com.ap.brid.gy
@pmonks @ai6yr

Wrote it up in my book, The Neighborhood Forager. Ate a lot of that when I lived in France, where it's called arbouze.
rustyring.universeodon.com.ap.brid.gy
@thekitmalone

I think those conservatives are worth their weight in gold. Aside from the good visual, their ability to pinpoint the exact nature of the malarkey and hypocrisy of specific issues at hand generally exceeds ours.
rustyring.universeodon.com.ap.brid.gy
@thekitmalone

That's the most succinct yet complete definition of social media I've ever seen,
rustyring.universeodon.com.ap.brid.gy
@davidaugust

A critical topic I never see discussed in the media: are soldiers even useful in law enforcement? Never mind whether there's any crime to suppress; are soldiers even capable of accomplishing law enforcement?

(Spoiler alert: no. Military forces are useless in catching criminals […]
Original post on universeodon.com
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Good Movie: Smoke Signals

"Any similarity to actual persons, living, dead, or indigenous, is purely coincidental."

http://rustyring.blogspot.com/2013/02/good-movie-smoke-signals.html

#alienation, #firstnations, #goldside, #movie, #review, #shermanalexie, #spokane, #cindysherman
Good Movie: Smoke Signals
"There are some children who aren't really children at all; they're just pillars of flame that burn everything they touch. And there are some children who are just pillars of ash, that fall apart when you touch them. Victor and me, we were children of flame and ash." With an opener like that, you'd be forgiven for assuming this all-Native production is a heavy social justice film. _Psych!_ Sherman Alexie's Smoke Signals is a modest miracle. Written by a Native, directed by a Native, starring Natives, it takes place in the present, a place where Natives are pointedly not welcome. (Take it from a Scot: The Man likes his tribals historical.) Yet for a' tha' it's a very sweet movie, wherein innocence is not so much lost, as worked into whatever comes next. Thomas Builds-the-Fire (allegory intended) and Victor are frenemies from Idaho's Cœur d'Alêne reserve. Their destinies, like their pasts, are intricately intertwined, though they appear diametric opposites. Thomas is perennial odd man out: a fumbling nerd who seems to live in a world that's not there. Maybe he's a shaman. Maybe he's autistic. Could be he's both; each one of director Chris Eyre's scenes encode about twelve concurrent realities, any one of which is liable to surface at any time. And Thomas is his translator. He's the seer in Coke bottle glasses; the good son without parents; the helpless hero. Meanwhile, Victor is _too_ anchored in the physical, too distracted by hard-cold to understand how weak that can make you. To borrow Thomas's image, Victor is a pillar of fire, permanently glowering over iniquities by no means trivial, though compared to those of his congenitally happy companion they can seem so. Shackled together -- to Victor's enduring annoyance -- they will make a long, winding journey, first through the lovingly-rendered homeland of their ancestors, and then the entire American West. (In a refreshing turnabout, the part of the Southwest is played by the Martian landscape of Washington's coulee country; just an hour and change west, it is in fact as different from the lush Palouse as Arizona.) Throughout, rezgeist eddies and froths like the Spokane River. In the very first scene, a doomed couple hurl their newborn from a burning house, into the steady arms of a feckless drunk with the heart of a warrior. The power of that metaphor, and its accuracy, are breath-taking. And the beat goes on: basketball; frybread; mothers; fathers; automobiles; water; hair. The entire film crackles with aboriginal touchstones. You could write an MFA thesis on _The Symbology of Sherman Alexie's "Smoke Signals"_. (Send me a link if you do.) There's also a lot of (coincidental?) Zen in Eyres' world, where nothing is what it appears, yet everything is patently obvious if you can decide to see it. My favourite teaching: the boys voyage to the end of the earth with a jar of gold; come back with a jar of ashes. As Thomas points out, we all travel heavy with illusions. But the greatest fun comes from the palpable glee with which director and writer lay waste to Hollywood "Indian" conventions. "Hey Victor!" says Thomas, "I'm sorry 'bout your dad." "How'd you hear about it?" Victor asks. "I heard it on the wind," says the spooky medicine-kid. "I heard it from the birds. I felt it in the sunlight. And your mom was just in here cryin'." Later, having hitched a ride off-rez with two backward-driving contraries (another overlapping wink at First Nations tradition and politics), they're asked if they've got their passports. "But it's the United States," Thomas protests. "Damn right it is," says the driver. "That's as foreign as it gets." Anyone who has lived in a bush community will appreciate the sentiment. In fact, my own village once had a bootstrap radio station that broadcast traffic reports identical to those on KREZ: "Big truck just went by. Now it's gone." The boys fall further down the highway, Thomas's old-school braids and pronounced aboriginal accent underscoring the sense of spacewalking, until they arrive at last… on another reserve. One that is simultaneously completely different from and exactly the same as the one they just left. (Cough*_zen_ *cough.) Canadian viewers will be forgiven for assuming _Smoke Signals_ is one of ours; it's about aboriginals, and the cast is almost entirely Canadian. I guess that's both the good and the bad news. Good, because Evan Adams (a straight-up doctor in real life), and the more familiar Adam Beach, Gary Farmer, and Tantoo Cardinal, all act like they're not acting. And bad, because apparently there aren't enough experienced Native actors in the States to pull off such a film by themselves. Here's hoping that changes. Also terrific is Tom Skerritt, whose sixty-odd screen seconds, as a weary, competent Arizona sheriff, would qualify him for token white guy, if the moment weren't one of the movie's most memorable. And then there's Irene Bédard. Sigh. What can be said about this grossly under-signed actress that won't jeopardise one's monastic street cred? How about this: I esteem Ms. Bédard for her effortless performance, her deft, sensitive handling of a pivotal role, and her ability to imbue any scene with grace and immediacy. Contrary to rumour, my admiration of this accomplished thespian has nothing to do with the fact that she's, like, _virulently_ beautiful, pulling down six to eight thousand millihelens on a grey Tuesday. I would further like to deny categorically that I originally watched this film, or any other of the every single ones she's ever made, just because she was in it. The soundtrack here jacks up the property values as well. Most of it is the raw, powerful Colville musician Jim Boyd, singing lyrics by Alexie. A few others are chucked in for symmetry, notably the multi-layered Ulali masterpiece, All My Relations. It may be true, as Thomas says, that "the only thing more pathetic than Indians on TV is Indians watching Indians on TV", but this production goes a long way toward making the world a better place in the best possible way: by simply giving genius and insight a platform. I don't know if Alexie and Eyre knew this, but their movie isn't really about aboriginals at all. It's about humanity, all of us, as manifested in one of our ten thousand hoops. (And I was chaffin' you before; no way they didn't know.) So in the end, the most moving thing about _Smoke Signals_ is how aboriginal it's _not_. Alexie nails the thing in a final disclaimer at credits' end: "Any similarity to actual persons, living, dead, or indigenous, is purely coincidental."
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Reposted by Rusty Ring
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❌ "Don't call us Nazis."

✅ "Don't talk like Nazis. Don't ape the style of Nazis. Don't govern like Nazis."
Elon Musk gives a Nazi salute while speaking to a crowd from a podium with the presidential seal affixed.
Reposted by Rusty Ring
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“ "In the first century in Israel, Christianity was a community of believers. Then Christianity moved to Greece and became a philosophy. Then it moved to Rome and became an institution. Then it moved to Europe and became a culture. And then it moved to America and became a business." --Richard […]
Original post on masto.ai
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Hermitcraft: Sourdough Starter

Get started.

http://rustyring.blogspot.com/2013/01/hermitcraft-sourdough-starter.html

#bread, #food, #henrydavidthoreau, #hermitpractice, #hermitcraft, #recipe, #sourdough
Hermitcraft: Sourdough Starter
_(I just uploaded a hermitcraft article last week, but a reader recently asked about sourdough starter, so I'll go ahead and answer this week.)_ "Sourdough starter" was synonymous with yeast here in western North America before the concentrated item appeared in stores. Elsewhere it was called leavings, scrapings, or spook yeast, or just "yeast", for it was all we had for that in those days. Witness Henry David Thoreau, hermit and _Walden_ author, who had to hike to the village bakery to procure "yeast". There he was sold a living batter, susceptible to being scalded to death in overhot water, that raised bread primarily by chemical reaction with sal (baking) soda. You tell me what that was. The paste those Concord bakers doled out is properly called sourdough starter, as "sourdough" by itself usually describes the kneeded dough and its products. But in practice, the starter is also often called "sourdough", and this can confuse beginners. For that reason, I will henceforward identify the yeast culture by the word "starter". SOURDOUGH STARTER You will need: Potatoes Water White flour (_not_ whole wheat; see below) A serviceable pot Such a pot must be nonreactive (that is, not metal) and watertight. Beyond that, anything will do. The best ones are lidded, wide-mouthed for easy scooping in and out, and clear, so you can monitor the health of the occupants. Mine is a one-quart plastic jar that once held mixed nuts. Pot secured, proceed as follows: 1. Peel, quarter, and boil the potatoes. 2. Strain, reserving the water. 3. Eat the potatoes. 4. Stir up a batter with the flour and potato water. It should resemble slightly-too-thick pancake batter. 5. Dump this medium into your pot. Leave the lid off to welcome passing yeast. Within 24 to 48 hours the starter will begin, slowly at first and then with gusto, to bubble and work. At full élan it will have a healthy, yeasty, fermented smell. Sourdough starter is a living thing, with wants and needs and specific rights under federal and provincial law. To be precise, it's a community of microbes – hence the term "culture" – that eat various sugars and fart out carbonic gas. (Sorry; you asked.) The sugars come from the ground grains you put back in the pot each time you use some. Keep this up indefinitely and your little sea monkey civilisation will thrive indefinitely, humming happily along on the kitchen counter, where you will bond with it as with houseplants, pets, and children. The longer it survives, the better it will get; new yeasts will happen by and set up shop, resulting in more active, versatile starter. In any case, the starter must be fed at least once a week, even if that means throwing some starter out to make room. (This fact helps get me up and baking when I otherwise might slough off, because I hate wasting food.) The more you use it, the more you feed it, and the healthier it becomes. If however your starter goes too long without recycling, the yeast will suffer moral decay and the pot will be invaded by either a red bacterium or a grey mildew. They're both harmless, but they taste bad. To get rid of them, collect a teaspoon of the cleanest starter you can rescue, use it to start a small temporary pot on the side, and throw the rest out. Then sterilise the pot (a thorough washing, followed by an overnight soak in a bleach solution), mix up a fresh batter, and inoculate it with the reserved starter. The yeast will then handily out-compete any intruders that come back aboard with it. It's also good to feed other grains from time to time, to encourage a diversity of yeasts. You can stir in whole wheat flour now and then, but not too often, because it's full of oils that go rancid over time. Other effective treatments include corn flour (fine-ground cornmeal), masa or powdered oatmeal (not too much of either), and mashed rice or rice flour. So this oughta get you started. (Get it?) If you're looking for a good first project, you might try hermit bread. It's an easy enough recipe to build confidence, and a hard enough one to teach you a few things. And it's where I started, too.
rustyring.blogspot.com
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Glamorous Mystery

Sometimes you don't know what you don't know.

https://rustyring.blogspot.com/2025/09/glamorous-mystery.html

#flower, #wildedibles, #firstnations,
Glamorous Mystery
When I encountered this florist-worthy flower on a bike ride through local prairie country, I was certain it must be a garden escapee, persisting on ground that was once a yard, or arriving more recently in a load of soil. A dozen-odd volunteers formed a loose colony, with random pioneers scattered along the trail beyond for perhaps a hundred yards. I was so taken with the glamour – and mystified that I couldn't identify this, given moderately wide experience of garden blooms – that I emailed a few shots to a friend who's a recognised expert on the topic. The mystery only deepened when she couldn't identify it, either. At last, my friend worked her resources and reached a verdict: Clarkia amoena. Thus was I thoroughly humbled, because not only does this eye-catching bloom turn out to be native – while in theory I'm Mr. Wild Plants Guy – it's a fêted member of the freakin' Lewis and Clark herbarium. Named after William Clark, for God's sake! (Way to rub it in, karma.) _Clarkia amoena_ , also called farewell-to-spring, is an evening primrose relative, which accounts for another common name: satin flower. It prefers well-drained and –sunned soil, and as that first common name suggests, tends to burst into glorious blossom just as things start to hot up. Which is exactly the moment in which I passed that day. Indigenous peoples made a staple of this plant's tiny, grain-like seeds, eating them toasted as-is, steamed into porridge, or brewed into a thick, nutritious drink. In addition, _Clarkia_ was one of several field-forming flowers on the pre-settlement prairie that sustained multiple species of butterflies and other insects that have since become endangered. Finally, it counts among the relatively few North American flowers to pivot to cultivation, thanks to a ready willingness to thrive anywhere that supplies its minimum requirements. And also, of course, its magnificence. So, why has this once-classic local suddenly (re)appeared? Well, the land on which grows is actually a reserve, donated to prairie preservation by former owners who'd run a horse-training facility on it. As such it's undergone incremental restoration, some of which might recently have included inoculation with _Clarkia_ seed. The reserve trust has also taken to conducting controlled burns on their land, as fire is important to prairie health – among other things, nudging _Clarkia_ seeds to germinate. Whatever the reason, I'm glad it's back.
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