Fossils
Mar. 21st, 2026 02:39 pmA newly discovered Triassic reptile from the UK looked more like a racing greyhound than a crocodile, built for speed on land. With long legs and a lightweight body, it hunted small animals in a dry, upland environment millions of years ago. Scientists identified it as a new species after spotting key differences in its fossils. It’s also a tribute to an inspiring teacher who helped spark a future scientist’s curiosity.
Peculiar Obligations has several such species called galloping crocodiles, hoofed crocodiles, or hoofers.
Monopoly 01.26 - Weekly Challenge Reminder 10
Mar. 21st, 2026 08:33 pmThere are still about one day left until the end of the week. Jump into the game and earn some points!
Remember your Joker Card if you don't like your prompts. For two tokens, you can roll the dice again!
If you have used your Joker Card to catch up with a previous week, you can still post up to two works for this week.
>Post all your finished works at
petty annoyances of the week
Mar. 21st, 2026 12:23 pm2. My car was in the shop for repairs after the stupid U Haul driver clipped me a couple weeks ago. They said it was a 4-day job, so I brought it in Monday morning, but I wasn't able to pick it up until literally ten minutes before they closed for the weekend on Friday. I'd been able to survive the week without a rental (which I'd have had to pay for myself), making necessary errands in B's car, but I'll need my own this weekend, so it's good that's over. The shop did do a very nice job, and cleaned up the interior too.
2a. In the shop's waiting area were magazines to browse, some of them issues of a body shop trade journal called Fender Bender. Most of its contents were about the economics of the trade, but each issue has a puff profile of a shop. One of these is in San Francisco, and the article said it had a branch in Moraine County. That's "moraine" as in what a glacier leaves behind. It's actually Marin.
3. I can't get into the Social Security website to download my 1099. They've changed their login to require a smartphone to jump through the hoops, and like a lot of older Social Security recipients, I have a dumb phone. They don't tell you that you need a smartphone, of course. First is the two-factor ID, so they text you a code. That a dumbphone can handle, but it's the last thing. Then they want you to snap a photo of your ID, but there's actually an option at the bottom, "I don't have a smartphone." That's the last time you'll see that. It offers an upload. So off to FedEx to make a PDF. Then when you try to upload it, they tell you it doesn't take PDFs, only JPGs. Find a site that converts them. Then they tell you your files are too small. Find a site that promises to increase the size of your files. Discover that it reduces them instead. Find another site that actually does as it promises. Upload the files. Then you have to click on a verification URL the site sends to your phone. I can't do that, I don't have a smartphone, remember? I already told you that. Painstakingly copy the long link text to my desktop browser. Get in and answer the questions, but then it says the link has expired because I took too long.
At this point I give up, having not even gotten to the promised final step, which is "a brief video call." I can do video calls, I do them all the time on Zoom, but by now I suspect it will only accept your cell phone number, and I can't do video calls on a dumb phone.
Go to the pre-login part of the SSA website. Tells me I can get the 1099 online. No I can't. Get address of local office. Will go in on Monday morning.
It's time to hem the pants
Mar. 21st, 2026 09:14 amOk Elbow Coffee is done. It was ok. Bonny really is a key ingredient and she won't be there for at least one more Saturday. Today Noelle said her computer did not come back after the electrical outage. So after coffee I went in to look. Her computer is 9 years old and took a good 20 minutes to go from off to fully on. She's a Gmail user so I took her my spare Chromebook and showed her how to use it and told her is was a way better bet for what her uses, but not to decide anything until she'd used it for a while. She has an appointment with IT on Tuesday so I didn't even bother hooking up her printer. Let them do it. She has both computers up and operational now.
My pants are too long. I wear the same pants every day. They are actually yoga pants. They are nice looking and plain with perfect pockets. They launder beautifully and stretch 4 ways but pop right back to the original size. They are comfortable and I have about a dozen pair. They have always been a smidge too long. Not long enough to require hemming but longer than I would like. Now they are unattractively (and probably dangerously) too long. I don't need a smaller size - and actually, the smaller sizes have the same inseam length. I just need to take up the hem in all the pants. All of them. That's the project today.
Also I am near the end of Death at the White Hart by Chris Chibnall. I can probably stretch it out two days but I probably won't. I've enjoyed the heck out of it. His only other book is Broadchurch. I did not like the TV series but maybe I'll like the book.
I'm beyond dismayed to hear from multiple people that Project Hair Mary - the movie - is great. I could not imagine how they could make it credible, much less great. I'm still not sure I want to see it. But now I probably will. I did love that story so very much.
My Amazon is out for delivery so should probably land pretty soon. I should get a snack for lunch before I head out.

Birdfeeding
Mar. 21st, 2026 02:10 pmI fed the birds. I've seen a small mixed flock of sparrows and house finches.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 3/21/26 -- I put topsoil in the four large pots that sit on the ground along the north side of the picnic table.
I also put the indoor flats of tree sprouts and squash sprouts outside to get some sun and air.
It is so hot outside as to limit my activity. In mid-March. This annoys me.
.
In which there is a belated happy Persian new year (according to the bus queue)
Mar. 21st, 2026 07:00 pmFilm: Nouvelle Vague, 2025, is US / French film about the making of A bout de souffle. So it's a Richard Linklater homage to Jean-Luc Godard - a movie god making a film about a god of cinema, or at least a godard of cinema. Exactly as you'd expect in every way. I felt it didn't quite deserve full marks due to minor blandness and predictability, but there are no actual faults with the film: the audience gets what it deserves. ;-) 4.5/5
P.S. That dance scene from Bande à part referenced again (but Le Week-End is still my fave recreation).
P.P.S. So, now I've mentioned the other film, Nouvelle Vague has a smart script with slick direction and cinematography and production... but it's also sorta shallow compared to Le Week-End, which gave audiences three truly great film actors* allowed space by the director to explore everyday human experience in depth. Both movies focus on trivia, one more intellectually and one more emotionally, but only one of them finds additional profundity. Quoting philosophical one-liners is not in itself a profound activity and any parrot can be trained to do it. Nouvelle Vague is a tribute, while Le Week-End is an original.
* Lindsay Duncan, Jim Broadbent, and Jeff Goldblum.
Film: Grass, a Nation's Battle for Life, 1925, US / Bakhtiari documentary film about the seasonal migration of 50,000 of the Bakhtiari (Lurs) and all their sheep, goats, cows, horses, donkeys, and dogs from exhausted pasture to fresh pasture, across several rivers including the Karun and over a snow covered mountain pass through the 4,221m Zard-Kuh subrange. Just crossing the river takes a week! (Spoiler for history: when the team considered remaking the film in 1947 they were told the migration was now done by mostly by cars and trucks.) It is, of course, a silent movie, although the music track for the screening I attended was painfully ear-splittingly loud for no apparent reason. There are explanatory intertitles throughout, beginning with typical USian self-congratulatory racism about "Aryans" supposedly originating in West Asia and progressing westwards as civilisation progressed... with the implication that Hollywood is the peak of human culture, lmao (USians: so modest!). If you're wondering why the intertitles keep shouting "Yo, Ali!" it's because the Bakhtiari are Shia Muslims.
Presenter: Marguerite Harrison.
Conclusion: worth seeing on a BIG screen for the spectacle, but the commentary is as racist as most "Aryan" ethnography of the time. No rating.
Film: Köln 75, 2025, is a German film about... well, that's a problem because it doesn't know what it's about. ( Cut for moaning. )
Conclusion: the filmmakers and their male gaze didn't find Vera Brandes that interesting as a central subject, they couldn't focus on their hero Keith Jarrett, so they produced a confused hash spiced up with teenage girl sex-appeal for their chosen audience. No rating because the film is too inconsistent.
P.S. There's a documentary, Lost in Köln, 2025, which I haven't seen but I'm guessing would be a more worthwhile investment of time than... whatever this was that I watched.
P.P.S. Only fun if you understand German but... Floh de Cologne - Sei Ruhig Fließbandbaby.
* Piano tuners being a hot theme for movies made in 2025 for some reason?
You are just the fingertips of something
Mar. 21st, 2026 02:58 pmmovies: The Revenant and Stalker
Mar. 21st, 2026 11:58 amAs suggested by that summary, this extremely whumpy, if you're into that, to a point well beyond realism. Somehow our guy Glass struggles through total wilderness for tens of miles with myriad open wounds and a broken leg, and rather than dying of deprivation, exposure, or infection, he actually gets better. By the end of the movie he's barely even hobbling anymore. Also, the people in this movie spend so much time tromping through and even immersed in barely-melted icewater that I expected them to either die of hypothermia or lose some toes to frostbite in the first twenty minutes.
This is also an incredibly linear movie. There are no surprises here, no unexpected decisions or developments. No depths of character are revealed. It's also incredibly male-centric. The only female character with lines is Glass's wife, who's dead before the movie even starts, and the only other woman on screen is a Native woman-shaped Macguffin who gets raped on screen, then rescued, but never gets to speak. Even worse than that, to me, is that we get nothing of Glass's relationship with his half-Pawnee son at all. Other than simmering resentment over unjust treatment, we don't have any sense of the kid's personality or Glass's dynamic with him, which makes for a weaker movie and also makes it hard to believe in the movie's pretensions of giving a shit about the effect of European colonization on Native peoples.
I watched this for the scenery, and I will say it was great on that front. Lots of snowy crags, excellent! I also really enjoyed Will Poulter and Domhnall Gleeson, who round out the cast.
Cannot believe this beat Mad Max: Fury Road for best picture.
--
Stalker (1979). Wikipedia summary: a man called a stalker guides two clients through a hazardous wasteland to a mysterious restricted site known simply as the "Zone", where there supposedly exists a room which grants a person's innermost desires.
This is a Soviet movie by director Andrei Tarkovsky, who also did Solaris. If I'd realized that, I could have better set my expectations for this movie. I watched it because the premise gave me cosmic horror vibes and specifically because it felt like a precursor to a bunch of more recent cosmic horror that I've loved or at least loved concepts from, including Jeff Vandermeer's Southern Reach trilogy and movies like A Dark Song, Malefique, YellowBrickRoad, and Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made. (If you're not familiar, this a hilariously idiosyncratic list of widely varying quality, lol. There's a reason you probably haven't heard of most of those.) Maybe, I said, this is the original source of these other things I love!
Unfortunately, while this does promise many horrors, it delivers none of them. Very possibly it was an inspiration for those other things, but in the sense that other people watched this and were like, "okay but what if this were actually a horror movie."
The first hour or so is my favorite; I was genuinely shocked when the sepia filters of the real world give way to full color in the Zone, and there's some great tension as our stalker navigates the Zone using methods that hint at incomprehensible dangers. However, the longer we go without encountering any of those dangers, the harder it is to believe in them. By the time we finally arrive at the possibly magical room, I was more than half convinced that the dangers were all imagined, and the glimpse of two decaying skeletons came too late to change my mind. And then! We DON'T EVEN GO INTO THE ROOM. NO ONE GOES INTO THE ROOM. *flips over table*
Tarkovsky was not trying to make the movie I wanted to watch; he was much more interested in big philosophical questions and really long takes, and I gather this is considered an all-time classic for those reasons.
This was apparently an adaptation-in-name-only of the Strugatsky Brothers' novel Roadside Picnic, which I happen to have already have on hold at the library for unrelated reasons. I'm interested to see how it compares.
[ SECRET POST #7015 ]
Mar. 21st, 2026 02:43 pm⌈ Secret Post #7015 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
01.

( More! )
Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 37 secrets from Secret Submission Post #1002.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
The best thing about this video is this description of the game by a commenter:
"Oregon Trail: The game that unites students with the realization that they are NOT prepared to travel all the way to Oregon in a car, let alone a covered wagon in the 1850s."
The second best thing about this video is that there are eight more popular comments before someone says:
"'my Gen z high school students' says the Gen z teacher"
And the following classic exchange, which still made me laugh:
"The Oregon Trail isn't 40 years old I was born in 1985."
"As someone also born in 1985, have I got news for you..."
[ SECRET SUBMISSIONS POST #1003 ]
Mar. 21st, 2026 02:38 pmThe first secret from this batch will be posted on March 28th.
| RULES: 1. One secret link per comment. 2. 750x750 px or smaller. 3. Link directly to the image. More details on how to send a secret in! Optional: If you would like your secret's fandom to be noted in the main post along with the secret itself, please put it in the comment along with your secret. If your secret makes the fandom obvious, there's no need to do this. If your fandom is obscure, you should probably tell me what it is. Optional #2: If you would like WARNINGS (such as spoilers or common triggers -- list of some common ones here) to be noted in the main post before the secret itself, please put it in the comment along with your secret. Optional #3: If you would like a transcript to be posted along with your secret, put it along with the link in the comment! |
the barbarians in chief
Mar. 21st, 2026 11:16 amPete Hegseth either has no idea what a pocket square is and/or what it’s for, or he uses the American flag as facial tissue, for blowing his nose. You might point this out to any flag patriots who still worship the shitstain and his minions:

Normally, I probably wouldn’t bother with something this stupid and petty, but they’re trying so hard – so hard – to pretend to be old money and yet have no fucking idea what any of the symbolism means that this basically became a small but perfect snapshot of the sick delusional fraud encompassing literally every aspect of their worthless, filthy lives.
There are nearly infinite reasons to want to punch this cretin directly in the face the moment you see him, this is merely one of many.
But it’s just so completely on the nose, isn’t it?
Just like someone’s fist should be.
Posted via Solarbird{y|z|yz}, Collected.
Fic - Resident Evil Requiem - Victor/Leon
Mar. 21st, 2026 10:53 amSomething in the Air
Victor Gideon/Leon Kennedy
Rated: M
Content Warning: The big three are non-con, sex pollen, power imbalance. See the tags for the full list of CW. <3
I'm SO HAPPY guys, I haven't written fic in so long and certainly not with this enthusiasm! I have two more fics about halfway finished, and a lil plot summary (there is no real plot) for a fourth one. It's been a VERY long time since I've been like this. It's SUCH a nice place to back in. Especially for written porn, gosh. Apparently all I needed with a horrible dead lizard man. <3 Although not everything I'm working on features Victor Gideon. Just...half of it. XD;
I also went through and locked all of my fic to AO3 logged in users only. I had it so only logged in users could comment but then decided, nah. If you can't comment, you don't get to read! Sorry, not sorry, normies who go to consume fic on A03, don't comment, but then talk about it on tiktok or whatever. :P
(fandom has become so big, so present, so known, and I hate it hate it hate it)
EDIT: And a fifth one! \o/!
Post of links and music
Mar. 21st, 2026 05:52 pmI'll add to all this with the news that you can now walk around the entire coastline of England. It's worth reading the article in full, because this undertaking is extremely impressive and future-focused.
Another good news story, via 2022 Ukrainian Nobel laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk: the tropical plants in the greenhouse of Kyiv's Hryshko Botanical Garden survived Russia's winter bombardment of energy facilities, thanks to the concerted efforts of staff and ordinary Kyivan citizens.
I've basically been immersively living in these two songs for the past week:
Moment of Silence: Nicholas Brendon
Mar. 21st, 2026 11:59 amCarry on the Work
5 Ways How To Steal The Show As The Comedic Relief In A Drama
Acting -- how to articles from wikiHow
Acting in Horror Films: Why You Need It And How to Pull It Off
Fingers say what?
Mar. 21st, 2026 11:10 amI talk with my hands. This amuses A. to no end: She's the one who's part-Italian and yet I'm the one who can't talk without gesticulating. Whether I'm talking about sending an email (fingers typing on a keyboard), sending a fax (hands palm-down, fingertips guiding the paper into the machine), or chopping vegetables (left hand moving the knife up and down, right hand advancing the the vegetable toward it), I don't even think about it, but my hands accompany my words.
Yesterday, we got some small cucumbers and I was talking about using some of them to make oi muchim (a Korean cucumber salad with thinly sliced cucumbers in a gochugaru-seasoned dressing). I was talking about slicing the cucumbers, and she looked at my hands and asked "What's that?" I looked at my hands and saw that my right hand was flat, palm-up, while my left hand was palm-down, in a claw grip, moving back and forth over my right hand. And then it hit me: When I make oi muchim, I don't slice the cucumbers with a knife. I slice them with a mandoline. And without even thinking about it, my hands were doing to the correct motion for the action I would be doing.
I don't even notice that I'm doing this until she points it out, so I don't know if I could stop it if I tried.
Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast - Episode 338 - Anne Bonny, Mary Read, and Other Pirates - transcript
(Originally aired 2026/03/21)
I don’t know if anyone else has noticed, but pirate novels have been getting rather popular in lesbian and sapphic fiction. Going by my spreadsheet (which isn’t necessarily complete), and searching on cover copy that includes the word “pirate” or “piracy,” after a long period with only 1 to 3 pirate books each year, the numbers started climbing in 2022 and hit 16 titles in 2025. While maybe half fall within the “golden age of piracy” stretching from the late 17th century to the mid 18th, and set primarily in and around the Caribbean, another solid chunk have stretched that era into the 19th century or exist in the nebulous, timeless “Pirate Era” of Hollywood movies.
There were, of course, female pirates in history, many of whom would make excellent subjects for historical fiction. From the bloodthirsty Jeanne de Clisson in 14th century Brittany, to Gráinne ní Mháille in 16th century Ireland, to the powerful commander of the Red Flag Fleet in 19th century China, Zheng Yi Sao, there are plenty of colorful figures to provide inspiration. The Wikipedia article on Women in Piracy [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_piracy] has extensive listings with reliable assessments of historicity. Rather less reliable is a popular book titled Women Pirates and the Politics of the Jolly Roger by Ulrike Klausmann, Marion Meinzerin, and Gabriel Kuhn which aims more at entertainment and speculation.
Now, it isn’t quite fair to blame Hollywood for the familiar version of the Golden Age of Piracy. Indeed, there is a long tradition of pirate stories being based primarily on a fantasy version of history, invented by someone who was most likely already a prolific novelist, who gave the public what they wanted in the form of elaborate, bloody, and largely fictionalized stories of real-life pirates…and some pirates who never existed in the first place. And at the center of that fiction are two real-life women pirates: Anne Bonny and Mary Read. Bonny and Read are the darlings of the lesbian pirate set, but almost everything that makes them of interest—everything except that they were women and were pirates—is fictitious.
The fantasy version of the Golden Age of Piracy was the creation of a man writing under the pen name “Captain Charles Johnson,” but who many scholars believe to have been Daniel Defoe, author of Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders, A Journal of the Plague Year, and Memoirs of a Cavalier. The full title of the work—following the expansive fashion of the times—is A General History of the Pyrates: from their first rise and settlement in the Island of Providence, to the present time. With the remarkable actions and adventures of the two female pyrates Mary Read and Anne Bonny ... To which is added. A short abstract of the statute and civil law, in relation to pyracy. Whew. The first edition—published early in 1724—covered 16 pirate captains (with Bonny and Read’s stories included under Captain Rackham) and was so popular that a second edition was published a few months later, which included a second volume with an additional 15 biographies and further details about the people covered in the first volume. Supposedly this second volume was aided by contributions of material from correspondents who had access to first-hand knowledge, but it includes several figures who are entirely invented. And like the material in the first volume, it includes detailed personal histories with content that could not plausibly have been obtained under the conditions in which it was written.
The vast majority of the material about Bonny and Read falls in this category, included detailed histories of their childhood and early careers that could not have been available to the supposed author, whoever he was. If you want to read the complete original material and an analysis of its possible veracity, there’s a multi-part series of posts on the Lesbian Historic Motif Project blog that will be linked in the show notes.
But let’s step back for a moment. Anne Bonny and Mary Read were genuine historical figures. Their presence and activities among the crew of Jack Rackham during acts of piracy in the later part of 1720 are documented in contemporary legal records and newspapers, as is their trial for piracy—complete with detailed eyewitness accounts—from an official record published by the government of Jamaica, covering a whole series of piracy trials in the later part of 1720 and early 1721 and published sometime around May 1721.
The trial records and eyewitness statements document that Bonny and Read participated enthusiastically and violently in acts of piracy, that they did so while wearing masculine clothing, that they were found guilty and sentenced to hang, and that they successfully delayed execution by claiming pregnancy. (This was a common tactic for female defendants, as execution would be put off until either the child was born or it was demonstrated the claim was not true, and the delay could allow time for appeals or clemency.) In contrast to the General History’s claim that Bonny and Read were successfully disguised as men during their time on ship—their true sex unknown to anyone except each other and Captain Rackham—the eyewitnesses indicated it was perfectly obvious they were women, and furthermore that they only dressed in masculine clothing during combat, while wearing skirts at other times. But I get a little ahead of myself.
The myth of “lesbian pirates” derives from one episode in the General History that depends entirely on the motif of a completely successful gender disguise. I’ll quote the passage in full. It comes during the biography of Mary Read.
Her Sex was not so much as suspected by any Person on Board, till Anne Bonny, who was not altogether so reserved in point of Chastity, took a particular liking to her; in short, Anne Bonny took her for a handsome young Fellow, and for some Reasons best known to herself, first discovered her Sex to Mary Read; Mary Read knowing what she would be at, and being very sensible of her own Incapacity that Way, was forced to come to a right Understanding with her, and so to the great Disappointment of Anne Bonny, she let her know she was a Woman also; but this Intimacy so disturb’d Captain Rackam, who was the Lover and Gallant of Anne Bonny, that he grew furiously jealous, so that he told Anne Bonny, he would cut her new Lover’s Throat, therefore, to quiet him, she let him into the Secret also.
Now, it’s an important bit of context that gender-disguise adventures were a popular staple of 17th and 18th century popular culture, and there’s a common motif of a women in male disguise on shipboard falling into sexual adventures because a woman (usually the captain’s wife) is attracted to someone she thinks is a handsome young man. While this motif flirts with the idea of same-sex relations, it’s done with plausible deniability as the desiring person believes they are pursuing an opposite-sex encounter, and the revelation of the underlying sex immediately puts an end to the desire.
That said, the historic record does include a good number of successful gender disguise biographies (and that’s only the ones we know about because they failed at some later point), including ones where a disguised woman either initiates or goes along with a romantic or sexual relationship with a woman, either to support the disguise or from desire—we can’t always tell.
So the fictional version of Bonny and Read’s encounter—that they were both successfully passing as men, and engaged in a same-sex flirtation within that context—is quite plausible. But the totality of the evidence for the real Bonny and Read’s lives makes it clear that no such encounter happened between them. They were not successfully passing as men—they weren’t even trying to. Even within the narratives offered by the General History—the only source for the slightest hint of sapphic attraction—they are both depicted as exclusively heterosexual, both pursuing sexual relationships with fellow male pirates.
So how did Bonny and Read end up becoming the darlings of the lesbian pirate movement? For that, we need to trace the history of the genre. Historian Helen Rodriguez is joining the podcast to talk about the pop culture afterlife of Bonny and Read, and especially how they became lesbian icons.
[A transcript of the interview will be included when available.]
Show Notes
In this episode we talk about:
- Female pirates
- Anne Bonny and Mary Read in the General History of the Pyrates
- The motif of “lesbian Bonny & Read”
- Bonny and Read in lesbian historical fiction
- Sources mentioned
- This topic is discussed in one or more entries of the Lesbian Historic Motif Project here:
- Works mentioned by Helen Rodriguez:
- The History and Lives of Notorious Pirates (1735)
- The Extraordinary Adventures and Daring Exploits of Captain Henry Morgan (1813)
- The Naval History of the United States by Willis J. Abbott (1896)
- The Buccaneers and their Reign of Terror by C.M. Stevens (1899)
- The Homosexuality of Men and Women by Magnus Hirschfield (1920)
- ”Anne Bonny & Mary Read: They Killed Pricks” by Susan Baker in The Furies: Lesbian/Feminist Monthly Vol. 1, issue 6 (August 1972)
- Mistress of the Seas (novel) by John Carlova (1964)
- Forgotten Women ed. By Nancy M[???] (couldn’t identify this book)
- The Women Pirates (play) by Steve Gooch (
- Mary Read, Buccaneer (novel) by Philip Rush (1945)
- Beneath the Black Flag by David Cordingly
- Kingston by Starlight (novel) by Christopher John Farley
- Black Sails (tv series)
- Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flag (video game)
- The Pirates of Neverland (video game)
- Our Flag Means Death (tv series)
- Hellcats (podcast fiction)
Links to the Lesbian Historic Motif Project Online
- Website: http://alpennia.com/lhmp
- Blog: http://alpennia.com/blog
- RSS: http://alpennia.com/blog/feed/
- Twitter: @LesbianMotif
- Discord: Contact Heather for an invitation to the Alpennia/LHMP Discord server
- The Lesbian Historic Motif Project Patreon
Links to Heather Online
- Website: http://alpennia.com
- Email: Heather Rose Jones
- Mastodon: @heatherrosejones@Wandering.Shop
- Bluesky: @heatherrosejones
- Facebook: Heather Rose Jones (author page)
Links to Helen Rodriguez Online
- Email: Helenrodriguez1720@gmail.com
- Bluesky: @ladytyler.bsky.social
2026.03.21
Mar. 21st, 2026 10:31 amThe winter’s scars remain, but during Eid al-Fitr, the community’s conversation turned to celebration and family time.
by Shadi Bushra
https://www.minnpost.com/metro/2026/03/in-marking-the-end-of-ramadan-twin-cities-muslims-find-relief-from-talk-of-ice-enforcement-eid-al-fitr/
Minnesota stands out as an exceptionally generous and prosperous state, thanks to the contributions of immigrants
Under constant siege even before the federal ICE invasion, immigrants have been providing almost all our population increase and much of our economic growth.
by Dane Smith
https://www.minnpost.com/community-voices/2026/03/minnesota-stands-out-as-an-exceptionally-generous-and-prosperous-state-thanks-to-the-contributions-of-immigrants/ ( Read more... )
Just Create - Straw Edition
Mar. 21st, 2026 08:31 am[The Conservatory] Cattleya #3
Mar. 21st, 2026 04:17 pmStory: The Conservatory
Colors: Cattleya #3: Luftmensch
Word Count: 1334
Rating: G
Warnings: NA
( Read more... )
(no subject)
Mar. 21st, 2026 10:13 amWell, that happened pretty damn quick. Then again, so did everything with her moving. She signs for a house at the end of the month.
Anyway, today is capybara day! :D We're going this afternoon and I'm so excited!
I might have pictures, but I'm not entirely sure on that. However, because I was thinking about images, I did get fresh tattoo pictures!
( Tattoo pictures! )
Books Received, March 14 — March 20
Mar. 21st, 2026 08:56 am
13 books new to me, and save for one mystery, all fantasy. Man, fantasy is just eating SF's lunch. Not that that will be reflected in what I actually review.
Books Received, March 14 — March 20
Which of these look interesting?
The Siren by Tomi Adeyemi (October 2026)
3 (21.4%)
Twined Fates: Tangled Hearts, Book Three by K. Bromberg (October 2026)
0 (0.0%)
Light of the Song by Joyce Ch’Ng (September 2025)
6 (42.9%)
The First Flame by Lily Berlin Dodd (November 2026)
1 (7.1%)
A Destiny So Cruel by Amanda Foody & C. L. Herman (November 2026)
1 (7.1%)
Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw (October 2026)
6 (42.9%)
Bad Company by Sara Paretsky (November 2026)
4 (28.6%)
The Kings’ List by Jade Presley (May 2026)
1 (7.1%)
My Unfamiliar by Mara Rutherford (December 2026)
2 (14.3%)
Ghosted by Talia Tucker (November 2026)
1 (7.1%)
The Mystic and the Missing Girl by Vikki Vansickle (September 2026)
2 (14.3%)
The Scarlet Ball by Nghi Vo (October 2026)
4 (28.6%)
Chosen Son by Adrienne Young (November 2026)
0 (0.0%)
Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)
Cats!
13 (92.9%)
Weekly Chat
Mar. 21st, 2026 01:57 pmWhatever it is, talk to us about it here. Tell us what you liked or didn't like, and if you want to talk about spoilery things, please hide them under either of these codes:
or
SGA: Just So Long and Long Enough by busaikko
Mar. 21st, 2026 10:32 pmCharacters/Pairings: Dave Sheppard, John Sheppard/Rodney McKay, Ronon Dex, Teyla Emmagan, Sam Carter, Radek Zelenka
Rating: Teen
Length: 7998
Content Notes: no AO3 warnings apply
Creator Links: busaikko on AO3
Themes: Siblings, Family, Post-canon, Outsider POV
Summary: Dave Sheppard learns more about his brother and gets drawn into a tangle of secrets and truths.
Reccer's Notes: This is from Dave's POV, as he and John cautiously reconnect via emails, then more, after their father's funeral. I really like Dave here, separated from his wife and still in love with her, baffled by John and wanting to understand him better. They do gradually reconnect, and eventually some Trust shenanigans lead to Dave meeting all John's team and being read in about the Stargate program. The characterisations of Dave and John are excellent, with Rodney's relationship with Jennifer Keller, then with John, happening in the background. One of my favourite Dave Sheppard fics.
Fanwork Links: Just So Long and Long Enough on AO3
And there are two podfic versions: by juniperphoenix and by cookiemom6067
The Friday On The Saturday But With Other Stuff
Mar. 21st, 2026 07:10 pmIn that vein, would anyone have any recommendations for communities/websites etc where I could find some lovely sapphic imagery? I've the urge to explore some more Thasmin art... possibly due to the spoilers coming from Big Finish... I am not fussed on rating, I'll make it work.
onto the meme!
1. What was the reason you began a Dreamwidth or LiveJournal account (or both)?
I had friends on the SG1archive that were on Livejournal, and found it had a better community for the creative side of fandom than the forums. Joined LJ in 2007, mirrored DW as soon as I could get an invite, and finished up with my personal LJ when the Russians banned LGBTQI+2 content in 2017. I ran the
2. How many DW or LJ communities do you subscribe to?
49, though if anyone has any recommendations, I'd love to build on that. Drag me out of my shell!
3. Do you have a favourite community or one you check out often to see what's new?
Probably the icon communities, I love seeing everyone's amazing work. Back in the day I loved running the challenges on
4. How did you pick your user name?
An old tv and a teenage obsession with Latin?
5. If you could change your user name, would you?
Nah, it's been too long now. I'm just Mags...
6. If you have a LiveJournal, are you currently able to access it?
Surprisingly, I am. I have periodically popped in just to keep it active so folks there can still access my older works, etc.
7. Do you have any information about why one would be unable to access LiveJournal?
I remember Denise posted something a while back about them trying to restrict use to Russian users only and implementing a pay to play system so they could track citizen's online activity hence an influx of new DW users. How many of our governments are trying much the same, dressed up as 'think of the children' whilst supporting the orange pedo starting another war...
:\
in bed with Anya by moreloveforjm_ (SFW)
Mar. 21st, 2026 05:43 pmCharacters/Pairing/Other Subject: Shane Hollander/Ilya Rozanov & Anya
Content Notes/Warnings: none
Medium: digital art
Artist on DW/LJ: n/a
Artist Website/Gallery: moreloveforjm_ on instagram
Why this piece is awesome: Extremely cute - the boys cuddling in bed, with Anya the dog!
Link: on instagram, and on tumblr
another solstice, another story
Mar. 21st, 2026 07:15 amContact email: doctorLHSF@gmail.com
AO3 username: Rudbeckia
Treat preference: Sure!
I will create:
A fanwork of the following type(s): fic
In one or more of the following parts of fandom: Books: Doyle - Canon. Warlock Holmes - G. S. Denning. TV/Film:Granada TV Show; Rathbone Films; The Private life of Sherlock Holmes; 1954 TV show Howard Holmes. Comics/radio/other: Bert Coules radio dramatizations.
For one or more of the following characters or relationships: Holmes/Watson; Holmes & Watson; Holmes/Watson/Mary; Holmes/Watson & Mary; Holmes & Watson/Mary.
I like working with one or more of the following categories: Fluff; Angst; Post-Reichenbach; Alternate Universe; Romance; Hurt/Comfort; Established Relationship; Crossover; Friendship; Humor; Case Fic; First Time; Friendship; Drug Addiction; Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence; Bondage
With any of the following ratings: 1) suitable for general audiences; 2) non-explicit sexual content; 3) explicit sexual content; 4) mild to moderate violence or depictions of non-sexual mature themes; 5) moderate to explicit graphic violence or depictions of non-sexual mature themes
I am willing to create for the following squicks and/or kinks: bdsm; alcohol/drug abuse.
I want to receive:
A fanwork of the following type(s): art, fic
In one or more of the following parts of fandom:Books: Canon; Warlock Holmes - G. S. Denning. TV/Film: Granada TV Show; 1954 Holmes (Ron Howard); Rathbone Films, TPLoSH. Comics/radio/other: Bert Coules radio dramatizations; Sherlock & Co.
For one or more of the following characters or relationships: Mrs Hudson & Holmes/Watson; Holmes/Watson; Holmes & Watson; Lestrade & Holmes & Watson; Lestrade & Holmes/Watson; Holmes/Watson & Mary; Holmes & Watson & Mariana
I like stuff in the following categories: Fluff; Angst; Post-Reichenbach; Alternate Universe; Romance; Hurt/Comfort; Established Relationship; Crossover; Friendship; Humor; Case Fic; First Time; Friendship; Drug Addiction; Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence; Bondage
With any of the following ratings: 1) suitable for general audiences; 2) non-explicit sexual content; 3) explicit sexual content; 4) mild to moderate violence or depictions of non-sexual mature themes; 5) moderate to explicit graphic violence or depictions of non-sexual mature themes
I wouldn’t mind any of the following squicks and/or kinks: bdsm; alcohol/drug abuse
Please include further details about what you’d like to receive: I like my fluff cut with something sharper. Hurt/comfort is lovely. I adore angst and mutual pining as long as there is a happy ending. MCD is fine (either to write or to receive) as long as it is at the end of a long and happy life together. I have a particular soft spot for old, married, retired Holmes/Watson, and a deep love of Warlock Holmes.
Special requests: None
The Friday Five for 20 March 2026
Mar. 20th, 2026 11:59 pmI don't think so.
Just another bad poem
Mar. 21st, 2026 03:55 am.
.
.
Sehnsucht nach Heidelberg


