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Welcome to this week's salon post!
Useful notes
Consider tracking this post to get notifications of new comments. Select the bell icon (or the words 'track this'). More help over here, and more about notifications in general here.
Comments are welcome whenever you get a chance - even if that's hours or days later. Feel free to jump into whatever sub-threads intrigue you. More discussion is the point of the salon posts!
Got a question you're trying to sort out, or a thing you'd like to discuss? Lots of thoughtful interesting people with a wide range of interests show up here! Feel free to ask about things you're thinking about or trying to solve, as well as other kinds of chat.
Topic of the week
Logistics note: I didn't realise until last Saturday that I'd forgotten to unlock last week's Salon post. If you notice I haven't unlocked it, feel free to let me know. (Most content in my journal is locked: I am very amiable about adding most people, but it means I have to remember to unlock the Salon posts in particular.)
Question for the week: What interesting things have you done recently? (Whether that's something new to you, something other people might find interesting to hear about you do all the time, or the current thing you're geeking out over.)
I went to a presentation a week ago for the Cambridge (this is the Massachusetts Cambridge) Open Archives, two weeks when a lot of the museums and archive collections do special sessions. The one I was at was at Mount Auburn Cemetery, which was the first 'rural' cemetery in the United States.
It's a really beautiful place (it was jointly designed with horticulture in mind) and the way they've preserved information is also fascinating. Families who owned plots could design the landscaping in that plot (within guidelines), and they kept all those records. I was reminded I really ought to go walk there more often.
What I've been up to:
See above! Otherwise, a fair bit of playing catchup with life.
House rules:
This is a public post, feel free to encourage other people to drop by, just note the 'if posting anonymously, include a name people can call you in responses' rule.
* Consider this a conversation in my living room, only with a lot more seating. I reserve the right to redirect, screen, and otherwise moderate stuff, but would vastly prefer not to have to.
* If you don't have a DW account or want to post anonymously, please include a name we can call you in this particular post. (You can say AnonymousOne or your favourite colour or whatever. Just something to help keep conversations clear.)
* If you've got a question or concern, feel free to PM me.
Useful notes
Consider tracking this post to get notifications of new comments. Select the bell icon (or the words 'track this'). More help over here, and more about notifications in general here.
Comments are welcome whenever you get a chance - even if that's hours or days later. Feel free to jump into whatever sub-threads intrigue you. More discussion is the point of the salon posts!
Got a question you're trying to sort out, or a thing you'd like to discuss? Lots of thoughtful interesting people with a wide range of interests show up here! Feel free to ask about things you're thinking about or trying to solve, as well as other kinds of chat.
Topic of the week
Logistics note: I didn't realise until last Saturday that I'd forgotten to unlock last week's Salon post. If you notice I haven't unlocked it, feel free to let me know. (Most content in my journal is locked: I am very amiable about adding most people, but it means I have to remember to unlock the Salon posts in particular.)
Question for the week: What interesting things have you done recently? (Whether that's something new to you, something other people might find interesting to hear about you do all the time, or the current thing you're geeking out over.)
I went to a presentation a week ago for the Cambridge (this is the Massachusetts Cambridge) Open Archives, two weeks when a lot of the museums and archive collections do special sessions. The one I was at was at Mount Auburn Cemetery, which was the first 'rural' cemetery in the United States.
It's a really beautiful place (it was jointly designed with horticulture in mind) and the way they've preserved information is also fascinating. Families who owned plots could design the landscaping in that plot (within guidelines), and they kept all those records. I was reminded I really ought to go walk there more often.
What I've been up to:
See above! Otherwise, a fair bit of playing catchup with life.
House rules:
This is a public post, feel free to encourage other people to drop by, just note the 'if posting anonymously, include a name people can call you in responses' rule.
* Consider this a conversation in my living room, only with a lot more seating. I reserve the right to redirect, screen, and otherwise moderate stuff, but would vastly prefer not to have to.
* If you don't have a DW account or want to post anonymously, please include a name we can call you in this particular post. (You can say AnonymousOne or your favourite colour or whatever. Just something to help keep conversations clear.)
* If you've got a question or concern, feel free to PM me.
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