Stayed up too late last night reading Dana Stabenow's A Cold Blooded Business (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 4). 📚

Kate went undercover at the oil drilling site on The Slope to learn who was bringing in drugs. She made herself a bit too comfortable. But that didn't last long …

Book cover: A Cold Blooded Business.

I know that Musk's and other multitudinous satellites are wrecking astronomy and are bad in all sorts of other ways too. This morning though, while looking at the stars before dawn I thought I saw a meteor streak.

Looked closer and it was maybe a 40 or 50 unit Starlink train. Quite a sight!

Blackbird. 🐦

Blackbird on the railing.

Number 169 asked for a photo. I obliged. 🐄

Black and white cow in the paddock next door, looking towards the camera.

I’m having a phase of unfollowing or blocking as relevant nincompoops and nitwits in my online life. Feels great! I wish there was some way to do the same in real life…

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds S02E05 continues the excellence. I'm loving this series so much. Lots of exploring the nature of who we are and how we interact with others. This episode: all the feels. 🖖🏼

Wow! Dead in the Water (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 3) by Dana Stabenow went by so fast as I had to keep reading. 📚

I wouldn't last 2 seconds on the crab boat Kate has to work on for weeks to solve this mystery. The smell! The heaving seas! The ice! The gruelling work hours! The killers!

Book cover: Dead in the Water.

Today we moved the (very heavy) sofa bed out of the way and I cleaned all the accumulated gunge off the floor — dust, dead flies, a couple of mouldy dog biscuits!

Window frames got washed, windows cleaned — I'll be able to see the birds so much better!

Finally, a floor wash.

Sparkling!

Dana Stabenow's consummate skill as a storyteller is evident in A Fatal Thaw (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 2). 📚

With lesser writers intensely descriptive passages make me (metaphorically — Kindles are expensive) throw the book across the room. Her descriptions draw me in, involve me…

Sample text: their cold glow over the broken arctic landscape, ephemeral ribbons of confectioner's sugar spun into pastel strands of pale green and red and blue and white.
Book cover: A Fatal Thaw.

We went down to the Ōtaki Pottery Society Star Glaze show at the racecourse and came home with a couple of items. I bought two bowls and a mug. The blue bowl and mug are by Harriet Bright (Facebook link).

A blue and white bowl, a white bowl with dark trim and a mug with a drawing of a cat.

I've started entering a few photos in competitions. This is a local Capture Your Horowhenua competition. Photos are put online and also displayed in the Library for folks to vote.

My two are the birds.

Capture Your Horowhenua info sheet.
One wall of 6 photos.
A wall of 8 photos, including two of mine.

It was … invigorating … at the beach on this winter morning. To my west the energetic waves and a definite breeze. To my east, my buddy Willow. 🐶

A Cold Day for Murder (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 1) by Dana Stabenow sets Kate on the trail of a missing Park Ranger, and the missing guy who went looking for him. 📚

I love the way Stabenow somehow makes the reader an inhabitant in the culture and landscape rather than just a tourist.

Book cover: A Cold Day for Murder.

I started my Dana Stabenow Kate Shugak reread with the short story called Nooses Give. It introduced Kate and the setting well. We learn Kate is dogged and determined, clever and sometimes ruthless.

Her constant companion Mutt, a part-Husky part-wolf, is loyally fierce. 📚

So cool; indigenous sports — How ripped ears are preserving a rare culture in Alaska:

Kakaruk says she imagines her ancestors playing the same games hundreds of years ago, watched by village elders assessing who to include in their next hunting party. Each event has its own story and background in that history.

"I have learned a lot more about my culture and the origins and background of the games. Each event has a specific meaning behind it. For example, the scissor broad jump was to tell if you could jump across the ice caps.

After finishing the latest Kate Shugak book I wasn't ready to leave the world so effectively created. I've downloaded all the books in the series to my Kindle to start again at the beginning. I began buying these books in May 2011. That should be long enough for me to have forgotten everything.

Folks who enjoy magnificent photos, astronomy, auroras, Aotearoa, I recommend you follow @iangriffin@mastodon.nz. Check out his latest amazing shot.

Flashback to #Matariki last year. Here's a panorama I shot showing the famous star cluster rising over Otago Harbour during a dawn impacted by aerosols from the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano in Tonga #astronomy #NewZealand

A crimson sky n the morning of Matariki

Heh heh. Star Trek: The Animated Series S02E04 (at 18 minutes):

McCoy: Anything Spock?

Spock: Negative. File … doesn't recognise these symptoms.

McCoy: Blast it Spock! Work harder! They're in the terminal stage.

Screenshot from the show with the captain lying on a sick bay bed looking ill and the dcotor standing by the Communicator.

Such a good book, as are all in this series! Not the Ones Dead (A Kate Shugak Investigation Book 23) by Dana Stabenow. 📚

The only thing wrong is I've finished reading and have to wait for the next in series.

White nationalists create trouble in The Park. Kate investigates. An excellent read.

Book cover: Not the Ones Dead.

Again, a fresh look reveals sexist assumptions:

A lavish burial site from the Copper Age… is not the final resting place of a young male leader, as scientists once assumed. … 'Ivory Man' is actually an 'Ivory Lady'.

Identity of a Copper Age Ruler in Ancient Spain Isn't at All Who We Expected