Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Rachel Laudan @rachellaudan.bsky.social

Thank you for picking up on this.

2 months ago 3 0 1 0
Front cover of the book Venerable Trees: History, Biology, and Conservation in the Bluegrass by Tom Kimmerer

Front cover of the book Venerable Trees: History, Biology, and Conservation in the Bluegrass by Tom Kimmerer

This ecosystem is described in my first book, Venerable Trees: History, Biology and Conservation in the Bluegrass. The hardcover is sold out but you can find good used copies. The digital version is available.

11 months ago 32 1 0 0

Thatʻs very generous. Thanks so much.

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

I really donʻt remember but I certainly knew of it in my undergrad UK geology major. I wrote a paper on it in 1980. bsky.app/profile/alis... And now I donʻt even have a copy of that paper! Hoping the library has one.

11 months ago 8 1 1 0

Oh thank you. Glad to know that it is being used.

1 year ago 3 0 0 0

Thanks Alissa. Just glad I got to meet the coming generation of philosophers of geology before this happened.

1 year ago 3 0 0 0

That needs to be updated again. Maybe I'll get round to it now I can't go gallivanting about.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Three Cheers for Rollators, Oxygen Concentrators, the Internet, and Friends - Rachel Laudan Twelve hours was all it took for my cat, Mittens, to discover how much she loved being rolled from room to room on my rollator, her new favorite perch. Apart…

Well, from very healthy to very unhealthy more or less overnight. What happened to me. Not important in the grand scheme of world events right now but a record I wanted to have.
www.rachellaudan.com/2025/01/thre...

1 year ago 30 3 5 0

Dialogue came naturally to Larry. It was the way he thought.

1 year ago 5 0 1 0

Interpretation sounds right.

1 year ago 5 0 1 0
Advertisement

That too.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

No to bigger sprouts.

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
I have talked to the pharmacy and your insurance again. Insurance is now saying they will not cover it until tomorrow as tomorrow will be the 24th day since your last refill. The fact that your dosage has increased did not matter, they would not budge.

I have talked to the pharmacy and your insurance again. Insurance is now saying they will not cover it until tomorrow as tomorrow will be the 24th day since your last refill. The fact that your dosage has increased did not matter, they would not budge.

Thanks United Healthcare for once again denying my pain meds. I'm a cancer patient w a bad prognosis and in constant unmanageable pain, but just keep counting beans.

1 year ago 4126 1179 160 74
Preview
Why has new additive Bovaer prompted people to throw Arla milk away? The new additive aims to cut down on methane emissions from cows, but some have raised safety concerns.

Unnatural stuff in food & livestock scares people way more than safety data reassures them.

Hence opposition to:

➡️ Irradiation
➡️ Genetic modification
➡️ Preservatives/additives
➡️ Artificial sweeteners

And now, Bovaer, a cattle feed additive that reduces methane.
www.bbc.com/news/article...

1 year ago 38 7 8 3

Oh no

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
American Thanksgiving as a republican meal, a repudiation of the high cuisine of monarchies - Rachel Laudan For a national meal, Thanksgiving is really rather extraordinary. It is not a public event, it is not showy, it is a home-cooked meal of ordinary ingredients shared by the…

What an unusual national meal is Thanksgiving (my annual reminder). Not showy, not reserved for politicians and diplomats, not an ox roast put on by civic fathers. Not an accident but by mid 19th century design. #foodhist www.rachellaudan.com/2023/11/amer...

1 year ago 12 4 0 3
1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Mil gracias @jferrerbeltran

1 year ago 5 0 0 0

Yes, I certainly would not want to drive and drive all day.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement

Thanks for posting. I'm still hoping that someone will do a study of the Poor Clares as highly effective agents in the transmission of cuisine.

1 year ago 5 0 0 0
How to Take a Solo Road Trip When You are 80 - Rachel Laudan This is not my usual kind of posting. Many friends , though, were surprised (horrified?) that at 80 years of age I drove nearly 2000 miles from Lexington, Kentucky to…

Many friends were surprised that at 80 years I went on a 2000-mile road trip. As I am pretty healthy, it seemed fine to me. You're the best judge of what you can do. But if you are tempted, here's what I did (and would have done years ago).
www.rachellaudan.com/2024/11/how-...

1 year ago 24 3 3 1

Thanks so much @dranniegray.bsky.social. glad you included your work in this list. www.ucpress.edu/books/cuisin...

1 year ago 9 2 0 0

That's what I thought. I found the swing worth it. Mounds all over the place. But good interpretation here and particularly important site.

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

Great summary of successive Mississippi cultures (and great pics too).

1 year ago 10 1 1 0

On a quick glance that looks like a great article Chris. On the road right now but will read carefully on return home. Not just a few 'mounds' but such an impressive culture. thanks for writing.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Yes, indeed. This is much older, still hunter gatherer, yet essentially a city with a huge trading network across the Mississippi Basin.

1 year ago 1 0 2 0

Not a competition. These are older, trading network for hunter gatherers, city built by hunter gatherers impressive.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

One of the most impressive archaeological sites I have ever encountered.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Post image Post image

A hunter-gatherer theater for living: mounds, the highest 70 ft, semicircular banks, wooden post circles. My obsession: grindstones for nuts, seeds, meat, and roots of aquatic plants, brought from across the Mississippi Basin to this stone-free site. Poverty Point in Louisiana. www.povertypoint.us

1 year ago 14 3 2 0

Such a fine book. #foodhistory

1 year ago 19 3 1 0