Unexpected benefits

Since we moved to a more serious web hosting solution, I’ve had better access to statistics, including which search queries people are using (on the up side, I don’t have to scan through the URLs in the log; on the down side, the log parser my hosting company uses doesn’t recognize queries from very many engines—I think I’ll mention that to them). One of the benefits of such easy access is the ability to tell when someone has reached our pages due to a misspelled query. Today was at least the second time I’ve been able to go correct the spelling of a word in a blog post because somebody misspelled it in their query and ignored Google’s "Do you mean…?"

Art Taxidermy

It’s like seeing some alternate timeline version of me: an art taxidermist! There’s your standard jackalope, and your less-standard punk squirrel (mother’s day is coming up….). If I worked in an elementary school, I would have one of the creepier items in my office, so the kids would gape at it, eyes like saucers. Since I only visit schools from time to time, I could perhaps settle on one of the smaller items to carry on my person.

Note: due to this site’s posting on BoingBoing, it exceeded its monthly allowable traffic and is temporarily unavailable. Try again later, and buy some stuff to help her pay for her web bills!

Which is worse: mutant or crazy?

After reading the quite entertaining book Devil in the Details: Scenes from an Obsessive Girlhood, I have been looking up information on OCD (sometimes linked with anotherr FP interest, hoarding and garbage houses). I stumbled across a fascinating bit of research that suggests a genetic cause of OCD and related disorders! Yes, I sometimes miss the news for months on end, but you’d think I would have heard about this. More on OCD from Medline Plus.

Peach Leaves?

The Frugal Housewife mentions (in 1830) using peach leaves to flavor a pudding– this is certainly the first I have heard of this flavoring. Some half-hearted googling turns up some other mentions, most quite old, of flavoring with peach leaves. It sounds like they may taste of almonds.

A contemporary herbal mentions the leaves as having many positive effects, including “[i]n large quantities, they act mildly upon the bowels, securing mucous discharges without pain; and in this act many times leading to the expulsion of worms in their nests.” Eek!