Never enough astronomy news

From SpaceWeather.com:

COMET TAIL: Exploding Comet 17P/Holmes continues to amaze onlookers. On Nov. 8th and 9th part of the comet’s blue tail broke away in view of many backyard telescopes. Visit http://spaceweather.com to see photos of the “disconnection event” and speculation about what might have caused it.

TAURID METEOR SHOWER: The annual Northern Taurid meteor shower caused by Comet Encke peaks on Nov. 12th. Although Taurid rates are normally low, only about five meteors per hour, those five can be doozies. The shower is a well-known producer of slow, bright fireballs visible at all hours of the night. If you’re outside after dark this weekend, be alert for Taurids.

Daydreaming

A close-up of Vazra lying on the floor staring out the patio doors

What far away land do you explore in such moments?

What hope for tomorrow do you think about when your eyes travel to those distant places?

What dreams carry you from this world?

Where do you go when you daydream?

How I wonder about the journeys your mind takes, the paths you walk that I can never know.

[Vazra]

I hope some of the photos are presentable

I stepped outside to give Larenti some attention and to enjoy the cool darkness of the as yet unfamiliar early dusk.  The patio felt stark, barren, a windless, lightless place, a landscape where even the stars forsake humans despite their valiant struggle to penetrate Dallas’ unforgiving light polution.  Were it not for Larenti’s presence, the night’s chill would have been my only companion.

But we were not alone.

As the sweet feline scampered about my feet stretching and purring, reaching for every bit of affection she could absorb, she suddenly leaped as her eyes rested on a large, dark moving mass crawling beneath her.  She nearly stepped on it before she saw it, and when she saw it. . .  Well, let’s just say it took her by surprise as much as it did me.

She took a few steps to avoid the monster, shook off the initial surprise, then leaned over to sniff it, investigate it, give it the once over it deserved for invading our time.

Then she turned her back on it.  Obviously nothing worthy of more than a first glance.

I felt otherwise.

I could see plainly that it was a caterpillar of some kind, a large one, a dark one moving with unalterable intent toward the living room doors.  I also knew better than to assume it benign.

Furry caterpillars can be dangerous.  It’s always safe to assume they are until/unless you know otherwise.

So I opened the bedroom door, turned on the patio light, and turned my attention back to the interloper.

Aha!  I immediately recognized the tiny giant as a leopard cub (or so I like to call them), the child of giant leopard moths (a.k.a. eyed tiger moths or great leopard moths; Hypercompe scribonia).  You might remember them from here and here.

Such creatures are harmless, their only defense to curl into a ball, show their red stripes, and hope for the best.

So I reached down, intercepted the miniature leviathan, picked it up, and carried it inside.  It remained motionless throughout the journey, a small, black and red-striped furry monster held with powerful care in the palm of my hand.

Then what?

If my last experience offered any insight, these are very patient creatures.  The last such caterpillar didn’t move for thirty minutes once wrapped in its bristly ball.  Yet I can be quite the patient ape when I want to be.

I therefore put the visitor down on a piece of paper on the desk, something white upon which its shadowy figure might be perceived, and I waited.

And waited.

And waited some more.

My amazement at the patience of these insects grew as I watched it.

Then finally, like a flower opening petal by petal in the day’s early light, it began to move.  Almost twenty minutes later.

I let the child walk about the desk a bit to gain some comfort in the alien surroundings, after which I placed my hands in its path hoping to intercept it.

After the briefest pause while it investigated my fingers, the little thing crawled right up on my hand and continued its search. . .for an exit, for a place to hibernate, for something.

I can’t tell you how many photos I snapped while it investigated me from stem to stern.  It crawled from hand to hand, arm to arm, and all the way across my chest from shoulder to shoulder.

My only concern is that many of the photos will be little more than garbage.  I have no idea what I was aiming at while snapping photograph after photograph.  All I know is that I did my best to grab an image or two of the stranger in our midst.

Not wanting to torture the little beast any more than necessary, I finally put the camera aside.  The time had come to set the cub free.

After pulling it from my sweatshirt like so much lint, I placed the ball of hair in my hand and carried it outside.  And just as I had done before, I took special care to lay it down well outside the patio fence, sheltered by darkness and flora and hope.

I can’t tell you where it is or where it went.  I do know I’m stepping carefully when I go outside, looking intently for any movement before placing my weight on the ground.

Meanwhile, I’m going through an unbelievable number of photos hoping to find one or two I can share here as I simultaneously hope the child finds a place to hibernate for the winter.  When spring arrives next year, should it survive, this large black caterpillar will feast again, even if for a short while, and then it will cocoon in time to metamorphose into an impressive leopard moth whose size and coloration will dazzle and intrigue all who see it.

Or at least those who aren’t calloused about such things.

A ripening

It seems a bit late, perhaps by a week or more, but I find this a welcome forecast:

A COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH NORTH TEXAS TONIGHT. THE COLDEST AIR ASSOCIATED WITH THE FRONT WILL FILTER INTO NORTH TEXAS TUESDAY… AND BY EARLY WEDNESDAY MORNING AIR TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER 30S WILL OCCUR. HOWEVER…GROUND TEMPERATURES ALONG AND NORTH OF THE INTERSTATE 20 CORRIDOR WILL DROP TO NEAR OR BELOW FREEZING. THIS WILL RESULT IN PATCHY FROST ON ROOFTOPS AND GRASSY SURFACES… ESPECIALLY IN LOW LYING AREAS AND LOCATIONS OUTSIDE OF THE URBAN CORE.

Yes, I live north of the I-20 corridor.  Because I live at the lake, I also tend to enjoy cooler temperatures than the city that crushes in from all sides.

I’m so ready for winter.  I desperately need cold air.  No other season brings me the kind of joy winter does, and no other type of weather thrills me so completely than cold temperatures and wintry precipitation.

I think Henry David Thoreau said it best when he penned this: “It is somewhat cooler and more autumnal. A great many leaves have fallen and the trees begin to look thin. You incline to sit in a sunny and sheltered place. This season, the fall, which we have now entered on, commenced, I may say, as long ago as when the first frost was seen and felt in low ground in August. From that time, even, the year has been gradually winding up its accounts. Cold, methinks, has been the great agent which has checked the growth of plants, condensed their energies, and caused their fruits to ripen, in September especially. Perchance man never ripens within the tropics.”

I feel—or maybe I know—the ripening of life, of my very soul, plays part in why autumn brings me great joy as the predecessor to winter, and why winter, in all its bleak starkness and barren landscapes, offers the rejuvenation I need to keep going, to keep smiling, to walk briskly with life.

No other season brings me such happiness.  Therefore, let winter come.

[Update] At 8:30 great swirls of magenta, hazel, and citrine take shape in fallen leaves dancing about the patio in tornadic fandangos performed to northerly winds and in the dark of early night.  Temperatures fall perceptibly, cool caresses against skin warmed too much by November days.  My step longs to join in Nature’s flamenco-like display.

Let cooler heads prevail, we declare, but what we really mean—what I really mean is let cooler days prevail.  Rid me of this endless, suffering heat, this Texas twaddling on the edge of seasonal change.  Bring me cool, then cold, and finally what winter this state provides.  Quickly, I beg, lest my heart languish in the fallow wastelands of empty promises.