Volunteer xenias

Given how precarious the tank seemed after the storm, leaving it for a week to visit my parents in Florida made me very nervous. It must, however, have been in better shape than it seemed, because we came back to find the fish happy and hungry, the corals growing, and several new surprises in the sand.

Kevin took this picture of the Pom Pom Xenia a few days before its demise.

It was about four inches wide, pulsing constantly, and had recently started climbing. We were both so sad when it didn’t make it through the storm, and tried to save it by removing the parts of it that were clearly dead. After two days, it became clear that none of it was going to make it, so we pulled it out.

Apparently though, the xenia had been dropping its hands — xenias will do this when they’re stressed, and the hands will blow away until they find a better place to settle and grow. We’ve never seen this — ours have always propagated by growing and dividing. Nonetheless, when we came back we were delighted to find little hands in the sand, pulsing away. They’re teeny (a quarter of an inch or less), so we may have missed some, but we counted at least seven. Some of them are in great shape, like this one:

(You can see two of his “fingers” touching together — he alternates full hand pulses with pulses that only use one or two of the fronds.)
Others are regrowing fingers that were damaged. This guys is pulsing and has a nice strong stem, but only has one full length finger.

(Note the gorgeous orange zoos with their blue and brown centers! Plus you can see one open green mushroom under the rock to the left, and one mostly-closed green mushroom on top. The shiny green globes are bubble algae — a mild nuisance, but pretty in small amounts.) For a similar shot partially blocked by a curious clownfish, click

I’m cheering all of them on.

PS. An aside, when I told my mom about these, she wrote, “It makes me think of all of Charlotte’s babies hatching to keep Wilbur company at the end of Charlotte’s Web.” What a great analogy. 🙂

Happy Old Year

As much as I keep considering all of the things that look to make 2007 great (we’re getting married, love our families, great friends, great job, nice place to live, so many things on the list to knit…), I keep coming back to how much I liked 2006.

I finally made decisions about a career path, applied to grad school, got a wonderful job instead, competed in the Olympics, bought kayaks, learned to plumb things, went to Brown dinners, got engaged, was sucked into fantasy football, knit a lot, read a lot, learned a lot, tracked real estate obsessively, and generally had a happy year. Given all of that, my cup is rather full.

So, this year, these are my hopes:

  • See the world, especially the world nearby. More weekend trips to interesting places!
  • Become a habitual gym-goer.
  • Subject of course to the winds of fate: buy a house that we can paint, tile, and plant things around.
  • And, since the shoe thing worked out so nicely, learn to buy stylish pants, to match my shoes.

🙂 Happy new year!

Home Again

The major downfall of living on the West Coast is that we end up flying back to the East Coast about four times a year for assorted vacations and holidays. Neither of us is exactly an enthusiastic traveler, especially given the exertions of the TSA. It’s such a pity that the red eye flight is the short one (when you actually wouldn’t mind having longer to sleep), and that the way back home is the long one. So, here’s a “we love planes” smile, as we boarded flight #2, and clocked hour 8 of ultimately 16.

The only consolation in spending a full day traveling is that it was completely devoted knitting time. Taking off, I only had about an inch and a half of progress on the sock, despite having put in a good seven days of what felt like consistent work. (I had a much better picture than this, but you could read the chart perfectly. It seemed like sort of a copyright violation, so I nixed it in favour of the overexposed version.) As an aside, look how much leg room there was! A new, four-seats-per-row plane, and we were in the exit row. Thanks, Jet Blue!! Excellent for early-trip morale.

Six hours later, we boarded flight #2, and I had this much to show:

And by the time we landed, I had made it 8 rows past four inches, and now the pattern is only on the front half of the sock, and the back is all stockinette — so speedy and nice!

At this rate, I may actually finish this pair in January — a stunning accomplishment.