Name That Penguin! round 2

I am pleased to announce the second round of the Name That Penguin competition is now open.

The short-listed names are:
Brix
Pablo
Aliette
Clio
Satanic Penguin of Doom (3)
Mr Flibble
Optimus Pengu
Remington

  • The shortlist comprises my personal favourite out of the names each person submitted.
  • To vote, go to the sidebar, and use the form you will find there. (It’s just under the Meta section and the pretty coloured buttons, above the Mini Meadow’s section)
  • Each person can only vote once, or so the plugin says. I haven’t used this plugin before, so if things start going a bit haywire, I may just shut down the poll and get y’all to give your vote in the comments field of this post. Try the form first though – we’ll see how things go.
  • You have a week to vote. The poll will be closed first thing on the 9th of February. I will then tally the results and announce the winner.
  • Comments on the first “Name That Penguin” post are now closed. If you have anything to say regarding this competition, say it on this post please 🙂
  • Even if you didn’t get around to submitting a name for the shortlist, please vote for your favourite name. I want this choice to be as democratic as possible. I write this blog for you all to read – even my lurkers who I know are out there somewhere – so it’s only fitting that you should have some say in what goes on around here 🙂
  • Don’t worry – I won’t be able to tell who voted for what, if that’s the only reason you won’t vote. Unless you tell us what you voted for, of course, but that’s up to you 🙂

That’s it. I look forward to finding out what name we all choose for the Bright Meadow penguin.

Apricot computers?

Ok, I saw this laptop and it reminded me of the first computer/laptops that the Crazy Canalman used to bring home from work. Now, bear in mind I was about four at the time, but I would swear he had an “Apricot” computer. Apricot being a brand? The manufacturer? I don’t know, but Apricot is what I remember. Can anyone help clear this up for me? Did there used to be Apricot computers way back in the mists of time (we’re talking around 1986 or 7 I’d guess), or am I going ever so slightly mad?

Cas’ perfect post-yoga breakfast smoothie

Back when I started this whole health kick, JB suggested in the comments that I should try smoothies for breakfast as a handy way of getting more fruit into my diet, and overcoming my inability to eat bananas, in one fell swoop.

Try it I did, and I’ve had smoothies for breakfast most days since! They’re great as you can drink them whilst sitting at the computer and not have to worry about getting crumbs in the keyboard. Even better, they are perfect for putting in a bottle and drinking on the train/bus on that long commute to work 🙂 I wouldn’t recommend making one the night before though – banana has a nasty habit of going all brown and icky, even in smoothie form, if left to its own devices for too long.

The following is my current favourite mix, great to have after your morning yoga session:

Cas’ Perfect Post-Yoga Breakfast Smoothie

You will need:

  • Two ripe bananas – in fact, over ripe or a bit bruised doesn’t matter here. It adds to the flavour.
  • A kiwi.
  • A good dollup of Greek yoghurt.

How to make it:

  • Chop up the fruit into small chunks (don’t forget to remove skins and labels) and place in a blender.
  • Add a good dollup of Greek yoghurt – how much depends on your taste and how runny/thick you want the smoothie to be. If you don’t use enough, you can always add more at the end.
  • Give it all a good whizz in the blender. If you don’t have a decent blender, I recommend that you get one – I got a hand blender like this one. It only cost £9.99 and does the job admirably, coping well with apples, which is something a lot of standard blenders find a bit hard.
  • Put it in a glass and drink it – that’s it.

You could also try:

  • Adding a clementine, or another kiwi, to the mix. You can put in any fruit that you have to hand, but I like the citrus mixes best. If you go for apples (and why not, they’re nice too), chop it up really small before you try to blend it. Whilst the firmer apples such as Pink Lady’s are great to munch on, on their own, I find they just don’t blend down enough to make a good smoothie – you end up having to half chew/half slurp the drink which isn’t great.
  • Plain yoghurt instead of Greek. I find the plain yoghurt lacks taste, but the grocery store doesn’t always have Greek yoghurt, so you make do with what you can get.
  • Oh, and when I said to make sure you removed the labels, I’m not joking. Especially with apples, where you blend the skin as well, it is VERY easy to forget there’s this little plastic label sticking to the side of your breakfast… No, don’t laugh, I’ve done this. Many times. Not tasty.

Anyone got any other mixes they want to share?
And don’t forget – only one day left to Name That Penguin!

Gulp

Just had a very hairy thirty seconds – for a moment I thought that my ENTIRE mail database had upped and deleted itself for no reason. Luckily, it was just Mail having a hiccup – restarted the program and all is happy again. Don’t think that just because it is a Mac, you’re not going to have heart-in-mouth moments. You have them, just a lot less often than with a PC (consequently, they seem that much worse when they DO happen!)

If you’ll excuse me, I’m just going to go have a small gibber in the corner. I’ll be fine in a moment.

Just two days left to Name That Penguin!

I’d like to remind you all that there are just two days left to Name That Penguin!

I’d also like to urge any of you who haven’t already to contribute their three names, to do so!

I want the Bright Meadow penguin to have the best name possible, and that means having a top-notch selection for you all to choose the winner from.

Get thee to the appropriate post right now, and start naming! Don’t forget, win, and you are assured special Minion status, and my eternal love and devotion.

😉

Just in case you missed the copies of the link scattered through the post: Name That Penguin Competition

Asimet

I just installed Askimet – for some reason the past week has been spam-tastic, and I am fed up with nuking fake comments (most of them said really nice things as well!), but I don’t want to make it harder for legitimate people like yourselves to comment.

Anyway, I’m expecting there to be a bug or two (I’ve yet to have a totally bug-free WP plugin installation), so if you have a comment snarled up in the system, email me and I’ll sort things out.

(Please bear in mind though, I’m UK based, so I’m only going to answer emails that get to me between around 9am and 11pm MY TIME. If it’s before/after that, please just be patient. Much though I’d like to, I can’t be online 24/7 as I need my beauty sleep!)

Me and my high-heeled pink wolf-whistle shoes

Flickr: my pink wolf-whistle shoes There are a number of things I missed out on for one reason or another whilst I was growing up. Number one on the list used to be the correct application of makeup. Due to much practice and surreptitiously observing how it should be done, I’ve more or less cracked it (eye makeup that is. Foundation is for another lifetime). Number one is now definitely the wearing high-heeled shoes.

Now, you’d think as a short person, I would have come early to the joy of heels. You would be wrong. I was always a tom-boy growing up and showed very little interest in playing dress-up when heels were involved. Cowboy/Pirate costumes on the other hand… When I was in my early to mid teens, I was at a school with a very strict dress code. 1 inch was the maximum for heels. That isn’t to say people didn’t flout this rule, but both I (and more importantly) my mother who purchased my school clothes were always rule-abiding people. When I was at college, I had no real desire to wear heels. Jeans and trainers were my custom wardrobe. Comfort over style! Uni – more of the same. Oh, I had boots with chunky heels (ah, my beloved New Rocks…) but nothing really over 2 inches, and nothing that would give me practice walking in grown-up shoes. Also, my working life to date has been predominately retail – anyone who has been on their feet for an 8 hour shift will understand me when I say that flats really are the only way to go!

Now, however, I am regretting that I didn’t put in an hours practice every day walking round in some heels. I’m facing grown-up life working in an office. I like to think I have an innate sense of what will, and what won’t, work on me clothes wise. I went shopping the other weekend with Curly Durly, and even now she can’t resist the temptation to try and dress me. She keeps pulling things off the rack that would suit her (tiny, petite 5 ft nothing, uk size 8 ) and is surprised when they don’t look right on me (5 ft, curvy, uk size 14, stocky). I pull things off the rack that she sneers at, but then I try then on and she goes all quite and “oh, ok, yes…” in this way she has when she doesn’t want to admit she was wrong and I was right. I’ve found the style that suits me best. I know what length skirts to wear. It’s not to say I look “fashionable” – I don’t. Fashionable clothes just look silly on me – but I do (on the whole) look good. I’ve worked out my own style and I’m proud of that.

Unfortunately, this style requires heels. Nothing drastic, but something to give me a bit of a lift, or else I look all dumpy. In the winter, this is fine. I have some lovely boots that look perfect. However, girl cannot live in boots alone, especially with spring (and then summer, surprisingly enough) on the way. I need some cute shoes to wear. Never underestimate the relationship between a girl and her shoes. Just because I can’t afford them and currently couldn’t wear them without falling flat on my face, doesn’t mean I don’t want them (If you’re detecting a slight fifties theme going on, then congratulations!)

And here comes my shameful admission. I can’t walk in heeled shoes. Not proper, elegantly heeled shoes anyway with a surface area of significantly less than the standard ‘heel’ area of a flat shoe. I don’t have the balance. It’s a whole different way of walking that is required and, frankly, I can’t do it. If you knew the number of times I’ve turned my ankle in flat shoes, you’d understand how bad my sense of balance is. In heeled shoes I have the potential to multiply my humiliation by a factor of 100. Not to mention potentially serious injuring myself and ending up in plaster with a broken ankle for six weeks (and there’s a look that is guaranteed to make your legs look fat 😉 ). I want to be able to walk in heeled shoes, I really do, but… I can’t.

I’m forcing myself to practice at the moment. I got wolf-whistled at by the road-repair men when I walked past whilst wearing a pair with three inch heels today, which was nice. Yes, yes, I know – all the feminists are currently arming themselves with sticks and preparing to come round and beat me up for that comment, but just hang on a minute – I am not the sort of person who normally (ever) gets wolf-whistled at. I’m just not. I’m sure if you did the stats, tall, leggy, busty blondes in short skirts would come up more often than short, curvy, brunettes, in knee length skirts. Actually, today, I was in a slightly ratty ankle length black skirt, so who knows what the hell the chap was on! I’d say he was whistling at someone else, except the high-street was more or less empty bar me and the little old bag lady. What I am saying is that being oggled is a new experience for me, and rather nice for someone who gets more compliments on her personality than her looks. Let me get used to that oggling before I have to start being demeaned by it, will you? Anyway, I’m forcing myself to practice walking in heels. Rather I make a fool of myself walking round the house and neighbourhood than when I walk into an interview.

I think part of the reason that I find it hard to walk in heels is my breasts. When you’re up on heels, your entire centre of balance shifts from low down around about your waist/pelvis to up around your rib-cage. You suddenly become acutely aware that you have a tendency to lean forward. At least that is how I feel. When I am in heels I am extremely conscious of the fact that I am in a posture with my shoulders back, and (consequently) my breasts out. For someone who spends her life hunched over a computer screen, who is acutely self-conscious, and who tries not to thrust the aforementioned features into the public gaze too much, this takes some getting used to. I need to be paying attention to where my feet are being placed (uneven ground = harder to negotiate in dainty shoes), but instead I am being distracted by my chest. *1*

Add to all this, when you walk in heels, your weight is distributed differently. For feet that are used to walking in flats and have the corresponding hardened bits, this opens up whole new unexplored regions to blisters and the like. Don’t believe me? Try walking round on tip-toes for a bit. Yeah, see?

I know the only solution to this problem is to stop being a baby and just get on with it. I am keeping myself going with thoughts of all the cute shoes I will be able to buy when I finally can walk in heels. Ahh, happy day…

Endnotes:
*1*Turns out workmen are also distracted by said chest, but that’s not really my problem 😉Back
*2*Oh, and I know that 3 inches isn’t, in the grand scheme of things, unusually high when it comes to shoe-heels, but it’s a lot for me when it’s nearly 5% of my total height.