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Things that frustrate us all

I love Seattle - it's one of my favorite cities - but I've seen how steep the hills are. Must be a kick in the teeth to try and navigate that during the winter...
This is from 2010 on Queen Anne Hill... I'm glad I live in the suburbs!
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Snow can be very picturesque to look at, not so much to drive in it.

winter-fantasy-vs-reality.jpg
 
argh! I hate determination keys that lead you in circles to the very point from where you started!
I had a caddis fly in one sample this morning and by its characteristic caddis I knew it to be the genus Hydroptila. But which of its 6 species that occur in my country? The key made me count setae (tiny hairs) on the larva's belly, look at indentations of the claws, measure the angle of the teeth, count and measure more hairs on its tiny legs (the whole insect is barely 3 mm long, that's less than 1/8 inch) only to - after 28 steps on 6 pages! - offer the conclusion: "the larva belongs to one of the 6 species in the genus Hydroptila native to Germany and Austria. These can currently not yet be distinguished."
triple argh with brass knobs on! :brickwall:

Dear writers of that key: one doesn't require 6 pages to point out the obvious! In the next issue please add
step 1: - flat caddis, shaped like a soft spectacle case, made from web and covered with fine grains of sand -> genus Hydroptila (species not distinguishable without DNA analysis)
- caddis different -> step 2

ETA: looks like you have them in America, too :) http://academics.smcvt.edu/Vermont_rivers/Bug_templates/Arthrop/Insecta/Trich/hydroptilidae.htm (click on pic to enlargen). So now you, too, know a shortcut through the Hydroptilidae key straight to the genus. Hydroptila's caddises really can't be confused with anything else :)
 
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argh! I hate determination keys that lead you in circles to the very point from where you started!
I had a caddis fly in one sample this morning and by its characteristic caddis I knew it to be the genus Hydroptila. But which of its 6 species that occur in my country? The key made me count setae (tiny hairs) on the larva's belly, look at indentations of the claws, measure the angle of the teeth, count and measure more hairs on its tiny legs (the whole insect is barely 3 mm long, that's less than 1/8 inch) only to - after 28 steps on 6 pages! - offer the conclusion: "the larva belongs to one of the 6 species in the genus Hydroptila native to Germany and Austria. These can currently not yet be distinguished."
triple argh with brass knobs on! :brickwall:

Dear writers of that key: one doesn't require 6 pages to point out the obvious! In the next issue please add
step 1: - flat caddis, shaped like a soft spectacle case, made from web and covered with fine grains of sand -> genus Hydroptila (species not distinguishable without DNA analysis)
- caddis different -> step 2

ETA: looks like you have them in America, too :) http://academics.smcvt.edu/Vermont_rivers/Bug_templates/Arthrop/Insecta/Trich/hydroptilidae.htm (click on pic to enlargen). So now you, too, know a shortcut through the Hydroptilidae key straight to the genus. Hydroptila's caddises really can't be confused with anything else :)
That sounds annoying but thanks for the tip.;)
 
Spammers who keep on posting spam like this --> Binance support phone number +1888-362-0111@ @Binance 2fa code error

Been flagging them left and right on a forum, let alone reporting their user name and they keep on flooding the boards where I'm a member on.
 
Sometimes on Facebook, since I'm in some video game groups, some LP streams come up.

Some can be fun to watch. So you're watching and enjoying it, and suddenly they start abusing save states and rewinds. Now it's unwatchable. Besides making it slow, why do people think I want to watch them play if they suck at the game? Git gud.
 
Wieners and Frankfurters are the very same sausages, only in Wien they are called Frankfurters and in Frankfurt they are named Wieners :D
Both can be used in hot dogs but the American hot dog sausages as well as the varieties in tins and glass jars have a much softer skin (if any at all). The filling, however, is pretty much the same.
 
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