travelswithkathleen
I am a native in this world And think in it as a native thinks
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Saturday reflections
The US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis is supposed to suggest a Viking ship. (I have seen actual Viking ships and don't really see the resemblance.) But I do love the way it reflects the streets of downtown Minneapolis below.
Labels:
#travelswithkathleenblog,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
reflections
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Speaking of mills
The Gold Medal Flour sign sits atop the grain elevators of one of the defunct mills in Mill Ruins Park; that mill complex is a National Historic Landmark. The sign was unlit for more than thirty years after the mill closed in 1965, and was restored in 2000.
You can just see the Pillsbury's Best Flour sign in the other picture. That's also an old mill complex, across the river from Mill Ruins Park, but this one is being converted to artist's lofts.
You can just see the Pillsbury's Best Flour sign in the other picture. That's also an old mill complex, across the river from Mill Ruins Park, but this one is being converted to artist's lofts.
Labels:
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
National Historic Landmarks,
signs
Mill Ruins Park
This park along the Mississippi contains the ruins of several abandoned flour mills. I didn't really explore much because I was hot and sunburned after walking across the river.
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Astronomy Tuesday
I was a reasonably well-informed adult in the 1980's but I have absolutely no memory of this—the first untethered spacewalk in February 1984.
Bruce McCandless, an astronaut on the Space Shuttle Challenger, was using a Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU), which used spurts of cold nitrogen gas to push him through space. He was able to move approximately 100 yards away from the shuttle and fly back again.
Image credit: NASA
Monday, June 20, 2022
Farewell to Minnesota
This is the bridge over the Mississippi River a few blocks from my hotel. I walked over it on Friday afternoon, and it was hot, and there was no shelter from the sun. I quickly wished that I had a hat—or that I had remembered to put on sunscreen.
It's going to be over a hundred degrees here today, so I am getting out of town in the nick of time.
Labels:
bridges,
heat,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
Mississippi River
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Minnehaha Falls
The waterfall the park is named for.
Though Longfellow never visited this waterfall, he stole the name for the heroine of his poem The Song of Hiawatha. I still shudder remembering our awful sing-songy recitations of portions of that masterwork in grammar school:
Though Longfellow never visited this waterfall, he stole the name for the heroine of his poem The Song of Hiawatha. I still shudder remembering our awful sing-songy recitations of portions of that masterwork in grammar school:
By the shores of Gitche Gumee,But the waterfall, and the park, are lovely.
By the shining Big-Sea-Water,
Stood the wigwam of Nokomis,
Daughter of the Moon, Nokomis.
Labels:
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
parks,
poetry,
waterfalls
Sunday bird blogging
I did see a bald eagle today, but it was on the other side of the Mississippi River so I have no photographic evidence. All I can offer is this pair of grackles in the creek below the falls at Minnehaha Park.
Labels:
bird blogging,
birds,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota,
parks,
water
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Saturday reflections
And now, Greetings from Minneapolis!
This is the Two22 Tower, formerly known as the Campbell Mithun Tower, in downtown Minneapolis.
I took this picture from the observation deck of the Foshay Building, an interesting Art Deco spire built in 1929. That's the building you can see in this reflection.
Ithaca Falls
You don't have to go to one of the nearby parks in Ithaca to see a waterfall—there's actually one in the middle of town, just below the Cornell campus.
Final houses of Ithaca
I am actually in Minneapolis for the weekend, but have decided that I need to finish at least one location in the backlog before I post anything new. So here are a few more pictures from Ithaca, of various buildings that caught my eye.
Tuesday, June 14, 2022
Astronomy Tuesday
That's Saturn of course, in the foreground, in another wonderful image taken by the Cassini probe in 2014.
But if you look closely at the background, you'll see a tiny blue dot in the upper left corner. That's Uranus, which was approximately 28.6 astronomical units away from Cassini and Saturn when this picture was taken. One astronomical unit is the distance from the Earth to the Sun, or 93,000,000 miles, so if I'm doing the calculation correctly, Uranus was billions of miles away and it's miraculous that we can see it here at all.
The only thing that amazes me as much as this universe is the human ingenuity that allows us to see so much of it.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
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- Saturday reflections
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- Saturday reflections
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- Final houses of Ithaca
- Astronomy Tuesday
- Sunday bird blogging
- Saturday reflections
- Flagstones in the Katharine Hepburn Garden
- Urban poetry
- Taughannock Falls State Park
- Astronomy Tuesday
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