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In 1855, the Army Corps of Engineers determined that the Hillsboro Inlet—a connector between the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean—was a hazardous passage for ships. However, due to a lack of funds, Congress did not authorize construction of a lighthouse here until 1901. Five years later, the Hillsboro Inlet Lighthouse was built in Detroit and shipped 4,000 nautical miles to illuminate the inlet.

With a height of 147 feet, the lighthouse is one of the tallest on the East Coast, and stands apart from others with its distinctive iron skeleton framework and cast-iron roof with a finial. The lower third of the structure is painted white, while the upper two-thirds and the lantern are painted black. This scheme was chosen to aid sailors’ daytime visibility: The lower portion’s white stands out against trees, while the upper black section contrasts with the sky.

The Hillsboro Inlet Lighthouse’s second-order bivalve Fresnel lens was one of the most technologically advanced of its time when it was added to the lighthouse in 1907. It weighs a whopping 3,500 pounds and is made of 356 glass pieces that form a large diamond. In this way, the original vaporized kerosene lamp used for the lighthouse could refract and create a horizontal beam across the ocean. Today, Hillsboro Inlet’s lens is one of the few Fresnel lenses still actively rotating.

Also important to the lighthouse’s original construction was a mercury bath, which was used to float and rotate the massive lens. However, numerous dangerous spills during hurricanes eventually led lighthouse keepers to replace it with a ball-bearing rotation system. The keepers themselves certainly had ample reason to want a change, as tending to the bath over time gave many of them mercury poisoning.

Since 1997, the Hillsboro Lighthouse Preservation Society (HLPS) has been the steward of this beloved beacon, showcasing its history through educational events and public access tours. The society also succeeded in restoring and repairing the original Fresnel lens, now reactivated inside the lighthouse. Visitors to Hillsboro Inlet can stop by the HLPS Museum in Roy L. Rogers Family Park to learn even more about the lighthouse’s rich past.

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

Coconut Creek’s Butterfly World is the first butterfly house in the U.S., and the largest in the world. Founded in 1988 by local butterfly enthusiast Ronald Boender, the park contains butterfly aviaries, botanical gardens, and a working butterfly farm and research center that Boender spent years perfecting. In total, the park is home to over 20,000 butterflies, and over 150 different species can be spotted over the course of the year.

Visitors can also explore two aviaries for tropical birds or even participate in a lorikeet encounter with the park’s aviculture research staff. Originally from Australia, these friendly, rainbow-feathered birds are always happy to show off for guests (especially if you give them a cup of nectar). Near the birds, you’ll find the park’s “secret garden,” which contains one of the world’s most extensive passion flower collections.

Other highlights of Butterfly World include the Tinalandia Bridge—a swinging suspension bridge that is a replica of one in Western Ecuador, where Boender studied rainforest butterflies. Meanwhile, at the live Bug Zoo, you can find scorpions, Madagascar hissing cockroaches, tarantulas and many other fascinating creepy crawlers.

Butterfly World champions the North American “Bring Back the Butterflies” campaign: a program that supplies free butterfly gardening materials to anyone interested. Since its start in the ’80s, this campaign has resulted in thousands of new butterfly habitats and increased butterfly populations across the continent.

In the onsite Butterfly Garden Center, Butterfly World stocks all the hard-to-find plant species you’ll need to turn your own home into a butterfly sanctuary. The park also offers monthly butterfly gardening classes for especially ambitious butterfly hobbyists. The Center keeps gardening info sheets for every region of North America, so even if you live far from Florida, you’ll be primed for success in all your butterfly-raising adventures.

[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

The Bonnet House Museum and Gardens

Artist Frederic Clay Bartlett established Bonnet House in 1920 on a stretch of pristine oceanfront land that is one of the last remaining examples of a native barrier island habitat in South Florida. For decades, Bartlett and his wife, Evelyn Fortune Lilly, spent their winters here, embellishing the home with an eclectic array of paintings, sculptures, and antiques. Lilly herself took up painting in 1933, and today her works are displayed in the house’s Carl J. Weinhardt Gallery.

The Bonnet House property encompasses five distinct ecosystems: the Atlantic Ocean beach and primary dune, fresh water slough, secondary dune, mangrove wetlands, and maritime forest. In addition to this variety of wildlife, the site contains a Desert Garden, which presents an equally diverse array of greenery, from arid plantings to a hibiscus garden and a tropical courtyard.

Due to its unique ecological conditions, Bonnet House is home to several rare tree species, including Rangpur lime trees, which originated in India but were brought to Florida in the late 19th century. You can also find Sapodilla trees (native to southern Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean), mango trees, and Ear trees—flowering members of the pea family that are known for their ear-lobe shaped seed pods.

Though Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma significantly damaged Bonnet House’s grounds in 2005, a major replanting project in 2008 restored much of the tree canopy. To help preserve the estate’s aquatic ecosystem, community members have worked to remove invasive species and clean up detritus buildup in the waterways.

Today, visitors to Bonnet House Museum and Gardens can paddle board or kayak through the tranquil waters of its Coconut Cove. On this wetland voyage, you’ll find migratory birds, wetland waders, and even the occasional manatee swimming in the Boathouse Canal. It’s also not uncommon to see raccoons, iguanas, or even a monkey while strolling along the estate’s lush trails.

Ember & Ice

Jan. 12th, 2026 05:34 pm
profiterole_reads: (Kuroko no Basuke - Kagami and Kuroko)
[personal profile] profiterole_reads
The m/m podcast Ember & Ice was a lot of fun! Finn and Dane are fae princes from rival courts.

It's voiced by the lead actors of Heated Rivalry and it's basically a romantasy!AU of Heated Rivalry. With some plot and, of course, some erotica.

Hudson Williams's voice is so dreamy! *happy sigh*

Names from Freeman Wills Crofts

Jan. 12th, 2026 06:19 pm
cimorene: drawing of a flapper in a red cloche hat leaning over to lecture a penguin (listen up)
[personal profile] cimorene
Sgt. Sheepshanks
Superintendent Sheaf
John Weatherup
Alec Quilter
Ebenezer Peabody
Superintendent Goodwilly
Grosvenor Mairs

2026.02.12

Jan. 12th, 2026 10:10 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
“Minnesota Democratic Sen. Tina Smith said Sunday that the Trump administration was ‘attempting to cover up what happened‘ in the fatal shooting of Renee Good, a U.S. citizen and mother of three, by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in Minneapolis on Wednesday,” ABC News reports. “‘I think what we are seeing here is the federal government — [Department of Homeland Security Secretary] Kristi Noem, Vice President [JD] Vance, [President] Donald Trump — attempting to cover up what happened here in the Twin Cities, and I don’t think that people here and around the country are believing it,’ Smith told ABC News’ ‘This Week’ co-anchor Martha Raddatz.”
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/minnesota-senator-white-house-attempting-cover-good-shooting/story?id=129100690

Four members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe were detained by ICE agents in Minneapolis, according to WCCO. “President Frank Star Comes Out [said] in a Facebook post said the four men are homeless and were living under a bridge near the Little Earth housing complex in the East Phillips neighborhood. Attorneys who represent the tribe were “instructed” [to] reach out to Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan about where they are being detained and what their names are, he said.
https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/oglala-sioux-tribe-members-detained-ice-minneapolis/ Read more... )

multifandom icons.

Jan. 12th, 2026 06:09 pm
wickedgame: always & forever (Legend of the Seeker)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] iconic
Fandoms: 9-1-1, Cobra Kai, Crazy Handsome Rich, Dead Boy Detectives, Heated Rivalry, Legend of the Seeker, Maxton Hall, Ransom Canyon, Stay By My Side

heatedrivalry-1a.png maxtonhall-1x01b.png crazyhandsrich-1x06a.png
rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
oursin: image of hedgehogs having sex (bonking hedgehogs)
[personal profile] oursin

That piece about people having AI spouses is online: As synthetic personas become an increasingly normal part of life, meet the people falling for their chatbot lovers.

NB we note that 'Lamar' says that the breaking point with his actual, RL, girlfriend was when he found her doing the horizontal tango with his best friend, but it's clear that there were Problems already there, about having to relate to another human bean who was not always brightly sunshiny positively reinforcing him....

what would he tell his kids? “I’d tell them that humans aren’t really people who can be trusted …

I'm not entirely persuaded that individuals haven't made up imaginary companions (even way on into adulthood) before - I seem to remember some, was it in Fandomwank back in the day, accounts of people being married on the astral plane to fictional characters?

This is not entirely 'wow, startling news' to Ye Hystorianne of Sexxe: The Phenomenon of ‘Bud Sex’ Between Straight Rural Men.

I am not going to see if I actually have a copy of the work on my shelves, or if I perused it in a library somewhere, but didn't that notorious work of 'participant observation' sociology, Tearoom Trade argue that many of his subjects were not defining themselves as 'homosexual'.

I also invoke, even further back, Helen Smith's Masculinity, Class and Same-Sex Desire in Industrial England, 1895-1957 about men 'messing about' with other men in Yorkshire industrial cities.

And there is a reason people working on the epidemiology and prevention of STIs use the acronym 'MSM' - men who have sex with men - for the significant population at risk who do not identify as gay.

I had, I must admit, a very plus ca change moment when I idly picked up Katharine Whitehorn's Roundabout (1962), and found the piece she wrote on marriage bureaux. In which she mentioned that the two bureaux she interviewed tried to get their subscribers not to be too ultra-specific in their demands - that if they met potential partners in real life they would be more flexible.

Was also amused by the statement that 'Men over thirty are always very anxious to persuade me that they could have all they women they liked, if they bothered'.

RIP, M. Christian 😢

Jan. 12th, 2026 09:29 am
catherineldf: (Default)
[personal profile] catherineldf
 RIP, M.Christian 

This is a heartbreaker of a post to write. I don’t remember when I first met Chris online, but we were all part of a fairly large community of erotica writers who also crossed over into other genres from the late 1980s to the early 2010s, by which  point the literary erotica markets largely disintegrated. Everyone knew everyone else to some extent or another. We all shared TOCs, appeared in each other’s publications and socialized in person, if we lived close enough. Since I am in the Midwest, I didn’t get to do much socializing in person, but I did meet Chris and a bunch of other folks at an erotica  writers conference in Vegas in the mid2000s.

 

In my experience, Chris was kind and genial, loved to write, wrote very well and enjoyed supporting other writers. Their body of work, between erotica, horror, science fiction and nonfiction, was enormous and well worth reading. I appeared in at least 3 of the anthologies that they edited and they sent me a great lesbian ghost for one of mine. I also had a short essay in Chris’s nonfiction book about writing and selling erotica.  I have no idea how many TOCs we shared, but it was a lot. I blurbed a couple of his/their books along the way, as well. Most recently, I released a new edition of Chris’s terrific gay vampire novel, Running Dry through Queen of Swords Press. 

 

Chris’s fiction ranged from the smoking hot to the atmospheric and suspenseful. While they finaled for multiple awards, they never really got the  wins and recognition outside the erotica writing community that they deserved, which is a damn shame. I was reaching out to Chris to tell them that I had just nominated Running Dry for the SSBA Awards in the Horror category when I got the bad news. 😢

 

As I’ve posted elsewhere, I’m trying to track down an estate contact. In the meantime, I plan to keep their book in print until I hear otherwise. Author royalties will be set aside until I have a designee or will be donated to some of the organizations they cared deeply about. In the meantime, remember them for their work. Read it, enjoy it and pass it along to your friends. Chris would like that.

https://books2read.com/runningdry

 

And their website: http://www.mchristian.com

UPDATE: I have spoken with Chris's brother and have gotten permission to keep Running Dry in print and to pay him the royalties. In the meantime, Samuel needs help getting to Eugene, covering associated expenses, etc. If you're in a position to help, his Venmo is @Samuel-AddisonMuncy

rebeccmeister: (Default)
[personal profile] rebeccmeister
I don't know that I have a coherent weekend report, but I did take some photos. so here we go... )

a pleasant Sunday

Jan. 12th, 2026 07:06 am
sistawendy: me in C18-inspired makeup looking amused (amused eighteenthcent)
[personal profile] sistawendy
Yesterday's outing was lunch in the International District with [personal profile] tylik. Much talk. Very noodle. Wow. Spotted an anti-ICE sign, partly in Chinese, in the window of a business. Nun-approved.

Skipped nap in favor of doing laundry. Got eight hours of nearly uninterrupted sleep. Maybe there's a connection, but gift horses.
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

The Big Four Bridge spans the Ohio River, connecting Waterfront Park in Louisville, Kentucky with Jeffersonville, Indiana. Originally constructed in 1895 as a railroad bridge for freight and passenger traffic, it remained in service until 1969. Later, it was repurposed into a pedestrian and bicycle bridge as part of the park’s master plan. The length of the bridge itself is about 1/2 mile (2,562 feet), and each of its access ramps adds another quarter-mile, making a total journey of roughly two miles if one crosses and returns.

Subscription tidy up

Jan. 12th, 2026 09:45 pm
fred_mouse: line drawing of sheep coloured in queer flag colours with dream bubble reading 'dreamwidth' (Default)
[personal profile] fred_mouse

I've done my approximately-annual tidy up of dreamwidth subscriptions. I've stopped following a set of blogs that haven't updated in ~2 years, left roughly half the communities I was in, and changed a few other details. The main exceptions on keeping people who don't post are people who comment often enough that I remember; at least one of those I've left their access but unsubscribed. The other exception is people who I'm very much hoping will turn up again one day (and one who, sadly, will never be back, but whose name makes me smile to see it in the list).

If, as happens with this, I've managed to remove your access and you are someone who does actually want to see the occasional locked post, please comment on this post. I'll put a locked post up shortly; it will read 'test' or some equally inane thing.

The Day in Spikedluv (Sunday, Jan 11)

Jan. 12th, 2026 08:40 am
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I did two loads of laundry, hand-washed dishes, went for a couple walks with Pip and the dogs, hard-boiled more eggs, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, and changed kitty litter (my favorite Sunday chore!).

I went with the Cinnamon Orange tea again, and this time I didn’t let it steep too long. Much better! I watched the Bills game. It was another close one, but they pulled it out in the end, thankfully. That interception at the end was the icing on the cake.

I finished the Amelia Peabody book and wrote ~500 words on a new fic for Fandom Trees. *fingers crossed*

Temps started out at 32.4(F) and reached 39.9. We had sun in the morning and snow showers in the afternoon, followed by the snow squalls we were warned about. With the wind and the snow, I’m guessing I’ll be leaving late in the morning because the roads won’t be great.


Mom Update:

Mom sounded good when I talked to her. She’d had all the visits today! First my brother, then Niece L with Toddler A, followed by Sister A, followed by Sister S. The three (four) of them were there all at the same time. Mom agreed that having visitors makes the day go by faster.

Korean practice

Jan. 12th, 2026 01:38 pm
profiterole_reads: (Sakura)
[personal profile] profiterole_reads
Here's the new Korean practice post! As usual now, it's an open chat.

You can write about whatever you want. If you're uninspired, tell us the story of what you're currently watching/reading/playing...
You can talk to one another.
You can also correct one another. Or just indicate "No corrections, please" in your comment if you prefer.

화이팅! <3
snowynight: colourful musical note (Default)
[personal profile] snowynight
I fell into the Conclave (2024) movie rabbit hole in 2025. There are lots of talented artists in the fandom. Here are ten fanarts I love. Mostly SFW

Vincent Benítez/Goffredo Tedesco dancing by [twitter.com profile] nis_tema : I really like their smile!

Young!Thomas Lawrence & Raymond O'Malley with matching keychains
by [twitter.com profile] ralphater : Love the warm colour,

Conclavification of diptych by Albrecht Durer by [twitter.com profile] asai_ne : it really looks like a medieval church painting.

the bright Morning Star
by [twitter.com profile] asai_ne by : gorgeous Vincent Benítez in the desert

pumpkin head Vincent Benítez/Lawrence dancing by [twitter.com profile] ValeryMadHatter : so adorable!

Cornus Kousa by dambobodam7 : Vincent Benítez surrounded by lilies

I'm a heartless man at worst, babe / And a helpless one at best by [twitter.com profile] popekisser : Cardial Vincent Benítez/Pope Goffredo Tedesco kiss. It's very heartwarming!

Thomas Lawrence starring in a heartburn ad by [twitter.com profile] 9179797778_may : It's really funny!

Let’s have a conclave by [tumblr.com profile] deathcomequickly : impressive animated pixel fanart

Vincent Benítez catching a plushie by [twitter.com profile] bontmercy : so cute!

beanside: Papa Perpetua V from Ghost (Default)
[personal profile] beanside
And, we're back to Monday! Whooo! IT's probably going to be a busy day with a lot of tea and warm drinks to get through without coughing. I think it is slowly improving, just a lot slower than I'd like. At the rate I'm going , it'll be another 3-5 days before I'm better, unless the steroids do a sudden kung fu maneuver on my lungs. Which is not seeming likely. It's helped some, but not like I was hoping. On the plus side, aside from some sleep issues, I haven't been overly angry, so the ADHD meds are holding strong.

It's weird that ADHD meds have done so much for my anxiety and mood swings. It's just like a warm blanket and cup of tea for my body and brain. When he gave the meds, the doctor mentioned that it might cause anxiety or hype me up. But in reality, I feel much more solid and relaxed when I have the medication. Apparently, it's not unusual for women to have that reaction, because for us sometimes, ADHD can be different, and of course no one studied it until recently, so it's tough to find the info. For women, it can involve being inattentive--having trouble concentrating on one thing, anxiety, mood swings, feeling the desperate need to be doing something, but not being able to chose or focus. And the meds just...turned that off. Now I only have anxiety in the evenings when the drug wears off. I really wish I could have a short acting that I could take at about 5 to ease me into the night time sleepy meds. But doctors are weird about controlled substances.

Yesterday was a nice day. It started with a game that [personal profile] coyotegestalt is running--a 9 session "one shot." To be fair, it probably would have been a shorter game if I was a bit less of a chaos demon from Hell. It was planned that the giant and his dragons would fly away, and we'd have to chase.

In practice, I blinded one of the dragons, and they crashed, and I started an absolutely bonkers fight with probably a hundred enemies. (Most low level and easily destroyed, with about 6 heavy hitters.

Most of my rounds have been given over to healing, but this last game, I got the chance to do something cool. One of my spells was "control water." We had a giant water elemental come in and flood an enormous swath of beach, catching several of my companions in it. Control water is ridiculously overpowered, so in one turn, I cleared half the beach of water, ala Moses. This allowed Jess' character Kragnik to run up the beach and punch a dragon to death. (The Monk class is wild.)

Then, before my next turn, Kragnik ran after the giant, and was about to try to take him on solo. My character, Casey has a bit of a crush on Kragnik, and was not having that, so they cast Harm on the giant, which killed it. Of course, immediately afterwards, Kragnik got smacked real hard by a the giant wave, so next turn will definitely be healing. It was super fun, and I felt good that I could get us out of the problem I had 100% caused. Fortunately [personal profile] coyotegestalt does not blame me for my Chaos Muppet tendencies, even if it changed the game they planned.

After that, we sat and watched two episodes of Bake Off, which was lovely. We finished Pastry and Meringue week. Then, I fucked around on the internet and looked at vacations for 2028. We're already set for this year and next, with Alaska this year, and Iceland to Rotterdam next year.

I'm thinking about a Mediterranean cruise in 2028. We'd board in Barcelona and go to Athens with stops in Cannes, France, Sicily, Rome, Crete and Mykonos. It sounds very tempting. The real expense is going to be the airfare. I joined Ratepunk, so I can keep an eye out for the cities to see what we can find.

I'll have to continue to hoard my PTO so that I'll be good for that in 2 years. It's a 10 day cruise, so I'll need at least 14 days of PTO out of the 17 I get. (18 if MLK continues as it's been.). It's a lot, but it's a 10 day cruise, and I'd like a day in Barcelona and a day in Athens to explore. It's Europe, so we're going to eat a 15-20hrs each way with travel. So that should do it.

After spending years not being able to really go anywhere, I'm definitely making the most of the ability to travel. There's places I want to see, dammit.

After I finished looking at the possibile ships available to cruise on, I made dinner, pork chops with Saltverk's Arctic Thyme salt and perogies with sour cream and sauerkraut. (Jess skipped the sauerkraut. Not a fan.)

Then we walked the dog and retired to our bedroom to wind down. It was a lovely day and I am glad I had it, since work today is sure to be busy.

And on that note, I shall hop off and get myself together. On the plus side, I got some hard boiled eggs, so I don't have to worry about doing that. It's lazy, but I'm still sick, so fuck it.

Everyone have an amazing Monday!

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Adventures in Mamboland

"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

Yeah. That sounds about right.

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