Last year I made a point of putting out two submissions per week, and not surprisingly, I sold a lot more. This year, I’m concentrating on finishing the non-fiction book about the observatory, and I’ve been doing very little submitting. Obviously that means that the steady drip-drip-drip of rejections has dried up So I was mildly surprised when a story came back yesterday after a very long wait, and pleasantly surprised…
Canary Day 2012
Wednesday is Canary Day. It’s a big thing here. On Tuesday, most schools will have a party for the second half of the morning. They’ll serve traditional food (probably lots of gofio) and play traditional folk music. Some will have Canarian sports, like the Shepherd’s Leap. Schools and most shops will be shut on Wednesday. There’s a good chance that you’ll be able to catch a folk group performing somewhere.
La Palma’s Violet
This is the lovely little Palmeran Violet, Viola palmensis. It only grows on La Palma, above 1,900 m. (There’s a similar violet on Tenerife, but it has smaller flowers). It used to be rare, but the island government has a program of replanting areas and it’s making a comeback. You can find them beside the road from Santa Cruz to the Roque de los Muchachos well above the tree line….
Morning Walk in El Hierro
I’m in the middle of one of my weekend escapes to El Hierro. I woke up early and went for a lovely walk before breakfast, from El Pinar towards Las Playas and the Parador. Not that I got all the way down to the Parador, because that would have meant hiking back up. Besides, the path was very steep and slightly slippery, and nobody knew where I was. Of course…
Dragging contests
A feature of many livestock fairs on La Palma is the dragging contest (Arrastre de ganado). Two cows or two bulls drag a weight around a course (usually 70 m), and the fastest team wins. The animals compete in various classes – heifers, bullocks, cows and bulls, dragging different weights. At San Isidro, the weights started at 400 kg, and went up to 800 kg, and the fastest team dashed…
Inside the HARPS-N spectrograph
Francesco Pepe invited me to see inside the HARPS spectrograph. I was very lucky, because the enclosure was closed for the inauguration, and closed again (probably for years) soon after I took these photos. Of course I had to wear special over-clothes to prevent dust getting into the instrument. The top photo shows the grating, which splits the starlight into a rainbow, and the bottom one shows the collimator,…