Presenting a collection of St. Louis bricks, sidewalk markers, and the Fleur-de-lis as architectural detail on and in city buildings, brick collecting, urban exploration, and my life by Christian Herman. Reporting from Tower Grove South in St. Louis, MO
11/11/21
11/10/21
11/8/21
Barred Owl
Along our walk yesterday I saw a baby barred owl near our house. It was 8 feet above us.
I stared back and it flew off. It was huge and clumsy. I love hearing their calls at night.
I stared back and it flew off. It was huge and clumsy. I love hearing their calls at night.
11/7/21
The Stories, the Stars
Of course I'm sworn to privacy and can't blab about my Hollywood clients. I can tell you this Art Nouveau hair comb was purchased by a costume department.
When I asked about its fate I was told, 'Its actually for an HBO series, called "Lovecraft Country" we are mid-production of the first season in Atlanta'.
When I asked about its fate I was told, 'Its actually for an HBO series, called "Lovecraft Country" we are mid-production of the first season in Atlanta'.
11/6/21
Bye!
An Apple Juice Bakelite magnifying glass that I literally found & just sold for $100. It's moving to Canada.
I wish I were going with it.
Wave goodbye!
I wish I were going with it.
Wave goodbye!
A Brain can't explain itself
Before I left for The Wild yesterday I was admiring a piece of brain coral in my collection. I wished I had another.
Boom: two hours later I found this:
.
11/5/21
11/3/21
Day Trip through Rural MO 2019
A day trip into rural MO.
We drove through Hermann, New Haven, Bonnets Mill, Chamois, Frankenstien, and Washington, MO.
We were almost to Jeff city.
We crossed and visited the Missouri, Osage, and Gasconade rivers and they were still very high.
We saw Rump 2020 campaign signs.
We saw endless American flags, billboards and signs promoting their white Jesus.
This is the Gasconade river still above flood stage.
We talked to a 77 year old man who just pulled this boat in from the water. He said the river had only recently dropped to this level.
It's still quite high.
He'd been out fishing but didn't catch anything and complained about Asian Carp.
I'd read about Asian Carp in the Missouri Conservation magazine and was actually able to hold a conversation about this highly invasive species with him. I was surprised to recall the details.
They cause serious damage to the native fish populations in the lakes and rivers that they infest because they out-compete other fish for food and space. They eat the alga which newly hatched fish need for food to grow into minnows. They are also thought to lower water quality, which can kill off sensitive organisms like native freshwater mussels.
They were imported by the US from Asia to help aquaculture and wastewater treatment facilities keep retention ponds clean but chronic flooding caused accidental releases that allowed these fish to escape into the Mississippi River system and migrate into the Missouri and Illinois rivers.
And now they are in the Gasconade river.
He told me they jump into his boat.
That's Cor-ten steel on the bridge.
The white gravel had recently been dumped there by the county to provide traction over the mud.
We drove through Hermann, New Haven, Bonnets Mill, Chamois, Frankenstien, and Washington, MO.
We were almost to Jeff city.
We crossed and visited the Missouri, Osage, and Gasconade rivers and they were still very high.
We saw Rump 2020 campaign signs.
We saw endless American flags, billboards and signs promoting their white Jesus.
This is the Gasconade river still above flood stage.
We talked to a 77 year old man who just pulled this boat in from the water. He said the river had only recently dropped to this level.
It's still quite high.
He'd been out fishing but didn't catch anything and complained about Asian Carp.
I'd read about Asian Carp in the Missouri Conservation magazine and was actually able to hold a conversation about this highly invasive species with him. I was surprised to recall the details.
They cause serious damage to the native fish populations in the lakes and rivers that they infest because they out-compete other fish for food and space. They eat the alga which newly hatched fish need for food to grow into minnows. They are also thought to lower water quality, which can kill off sensitive organisms like native freshwater mussels.
They were imported by the US from Asia to help aquaculture and wastewater treatment facilities keep retention ponds clean but chronic flooding caused accidental releases that allowed these fish to escape into the Mississippi River system and migrate into the Missouri and Illinois rivers.
And now they are in the Gasconade river.
He told me they jump into his boat.
That's Cor-ten steel on the bridge.
The white gravel had recently been dumped there by the county to provide traction over the mud.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)