DISCOVER Magazine. Science, Technology and The Future
Current Issue
Subscribe Today »
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Archives
  • Customer Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • Health & Medicine
  • Mind & Brain
  • Technology
  • Space
  • Human Origins
  • Living World
  • Environment
  • Physics & Math
  • Video
  • Photos
  • Podcast
  • RSS
Cosmic Variance
« Nonsense and propaganda
The Walk Up Mount Wilson »

Harvesting The Other Landscape

by cjohnson

So I know that my last post promised a story, with some physics. It’s coming, but I must admit to having been distracted this morning by a bit of long-overdue tending of the garden. For those of you out there who might be wondering how the garden’s doing, especially after my description of my irrigation solutions in a previous post, here’s a look at today’s harvest:

harvest picture
Contents: tomatoes (3 varieties), cucumbers (2), courgettes (3), mint (2), basil (2), lemons, and limes.

I’m very excited, relieved, and pleased! So being on the road for so long was not too bad for the garden (although I lost several tomatoes and cucumbers due to over-ripening).

-cvj

Share

August 21st, 2005 2:00 PM
in Food and Drink, Gardening | 4 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

4 Responses to “Harvesting The Other Landscape”

  1. 1.   Ed Hessler Says:
    August 21st, 2005 at 7:29 pm

    Professor Johnson:

    Thanks for the photograph of this first (?) harvest. It makes me hungry and on this late Sunday afternoon, having not had supper yet, perhaps I should have hopscotched and waited until tomorrow to check CV. Here–Minnesota–at least in the gardens I frequent, we have a few (or) more days to go although I did see some great melons in development today. There is a community garden near where I live that I pass almost daily and the scent coming off the dewey, sunlit leaves each morning is that wonderful mix of decay and promise, of endings and beginnings.

    I’m not a physicist although I enjoy physics–right now I’m reading and teaching myself some ideas on error enalysis–pretty simple stuff to those of you who flip the mathematics as adeptly as a short-order cook in a busy restaurant or work in Quantum’s Garage. I’m a K-12 science educator. Still, I very much appreciated your skillfully managed series of entries on stringy things. It was fun to read and I learned some things, e.g., more insights into perturbation/nonperturbation.

    I’ve enlyed thinking about the greatest paper ever published in physics (I’d been following the polls and have smiled and yelled at some of the choices.). What makes this fun to think about is the development of physics. It strikes me as a badly knotted fishnet with nodes here and there, some more important than others and the strands inbetween as one thing leads to (many) other things. My choice if I were forced/dared to make one is probably (the equivocation is obvious even to me) is Newton’s “Principia,” meaningless though since I’ve never read it but merely about it, excerpts, etc. However, I did today glance through a translation at my local bookstore.

    I also think Galileo is mighty important for having published in the vernacular, making these ideas accessible to many others, a bold (I rhink) and ahead of his time, move. But then there is Maxwell and Boltzmann (whose work I’m only coming to appreciate as I read more about it), and the miraculous work of Einstein, and….

    However, I’m going to wait to view the poll until tomorrow to learn more about how others who are truly at home in the territory are thinking about this landscape. What a great idea–a prod to imagination and thinking.

    This blog and several others make me really appreciate the Internet and the WWW. Thanks again, to all of you, for letting non-specialists look over your shoulders and gain a few insights into this wonder-filled place as well as to how it is understood.

  2. 2.   Athena Says:
    August 21st, 2005 at 9:08 pm

    Clifford, your harvest looks scrumptious! Makes me pine for my former garden and orchard in Riverside, CA! I could just go out back and grab oranges, apricots, and lemons as I wished. Had a irrigation system similar to yours set up to water the courtyard plants – looks like you did a great job! I miss my old vegetable garden, but my container garden in the city works pretty well; just had some yummy tomatoes, basil, and peppers tonight with dinner. Bon appetit!

  3. 3.   Clifford Says:
    August 21st, 2005 at 10:44 pm

    Ed, Athena: Thanks so much. It means a lot to me that you appreciated it. It means very much to me indeed that both the harvest and the physics discussions can resonate.

    Best,

    -cvj

  4. 4.   robert Says:
    August 24th, 2005 at 8:23 am

    Hello Clifford

    So nice to see your produce. I am older, though not wiser, than you, and have only just embraced the land, having expended rather too much effort in the pursuit of a crust in the techno world. The good wife, recently retired from pharma mayhem, started to plough the fields, and scatter, a couple of years back: the corn, the beans and squashes, tomatoes, potatoes – not to mention the soft fruit – keep us in good shape. We even send a box down to the next generation in London town from time to time.

    One cannot help but point out (pace F. Uckoff) that Onsager liked to spend time in the garden as well





    • Cosmic Variance Cosmic Variance is a group blog by people who, coincidentally or not, all happen to be physicists and astrophysicists:
      • Daniel Holz
      • JoAnne Hewett
      • John Conway
      • Julianne Dalcanton
      • Mark Trodden
      • Risa Wechsler
      • Sean Carroll
      Our day (and night) jobs notwithstanding, the blog is about whatever we find interesting — science, to be sure, but also arts, politics, culture, technology, academia, and miscellaneous trivia. We have similar outlooks on many things, widely disparate opinions about others, and will do our best to keep the discourse reasonably elevated.
    • Recent Posts

      • Metaphysics Matters
      • How To Think About Quantum Field Theory
      • A 3.8-Sigma Anomaly
      • Boycott Elsevier
      • Mind = Blown
      • Unsolicited Advice XIII: How to Craft a Well-Argued Proposal
      • Your Favorite Deep, Elegant, or Beautiful Explanation
      • Good News/Bad News: Nobel Edition
      • Do I Not Live?
      • Noisy Systems and Wandering Canines
      • Happy Birthday, Stephen Hawking
      • Predictions for 2012
      • A Year Well Blogged
      • Happy Holidays!
      • Last-Minute Shopping List
    • Recent Comments

      • Charles Ames on Metaphysics Matters
      • GM on Metaphysics Matters
      • aew9 on Metaphysics Matters
      • GM on Metaphysics Matters
      • Avattoir on Metaphysics Matters
      • Brutus on Metaphysics Matters
      • Dronewatch on Metaphysics Matters
      • Jim Harrison on Metaphysics Matters
      • Physicalist on Metaphysics Matters
      • Josh on Metaphysics Matters
      • psmith on Metaphysics Matters
      • Physicalist on Metaphysics Matters
    • Facebook

    • Archives By Date

    • Archives By Category

    • Useful Pages

      • Home
      • RSS Feed
      • Comments Feed
      • About
      • Links (Blogroll)
      • Guest Bloggers
      • Equations Using LaTeX
      • Facebook page and group
      • Twitter
      • Goodies Store
      • Google Blog Search
      • Technorati Profile
      • Bloglines citations
    • Site Meter



  • Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Copyright © 2012, Kalmbach Publishing Co.

    Privacy - Terms - Reader Services - Subscribe Today - Advertise - About Us