Wednesday, 25 August 2010

favourite wiki of the week

My favourite wiki of the week, and favourite person of the week, or possibly the month, is Bessie Coleman.


Born in Texas in 1892, she was a very hard-working and successful student despite poverty and hard conditions. When she finished school she went to the Oklahoma Colored Agricultural and Normal University, but all her savings only paid for one term, and so she moved to Chicago to be with two of her twelve siblings. 


Hearing about First World War pilots inspired her to want to fly planes. Despite backing from influential men in the black community, as a black woman she could not get admitted to any US flight schools. However, she knew that in France, women were already being trained as pilots.


She learned French while  in Chicago, and got financial backing to travel to Europe from Robert Abbott, a wealthy black Chicago businessman. On June 15 1921, she was awarded an International Aviation Licence  from the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale.


This meant she was the first African American woman to hold any pilots licence, and the first African American to hold an international pilots licence. 


After a brief return to the USA, once again finding herself unable to get training there, she took further tuition in France, the Netherlands and Germany in advanced aviation. She continued learning with the aim of becoming a stunt pilot, the only real way to make a living as a civilian aviator before the age of commercial flights. 


She achieved great popularity and success as a stunt pilot when she went back to the USA, while never compromising on issues of race. She would not participate in flying displays in any venue that didn't admit people of colour, and she walked off the set of a film which would have starred her, when she discovered the script required her to appear in stereotypical tattered clothes. 


Her aim was to make enough money to set up a flying school for black aviators, of both sexes. Sadly, she died when the plane being flown by her mechanic went into a tailspin and she was thrown to the ground. The plane crashed, also killing the mechanic. Although this cut short her ambitions, and her life (she was only 34), she had already inspired a generation of African Americans, and opened the eyes of some white Americans.

Wednesday, 18 August 2010



I made this handy reference guide.

Captain Haddock (oil paint)

favourite wiki of the week


Fakelore: stories made up to seem like, and purporting to be, genuine folklore. For example, in the Soviet era there were attempts to replace genuine Russian folk tales- often morose, religious and fatalistic- with 'fakelore' government-approved up-beat 'progressive' stories.

Sort of like viral marketing eh.

Monday, 16 August 2010


I love this new deely on my phone: RetroCamera


I just made these rhubarb and lemon scones, and they are delicious.

Saturday, 14 August 2010



Having people over for dinner

Thursday, 12 August 2010

favourite wiki of the week


Bondegezou or Dingiso (Dendrolagus Mbaiso) - a whistling tree kangaroo. The reason I liked this guy so much is that the Moni people of Papua New Guinea revere the bondegezou as an ancestor. They say that when they come across one in the jungle, it will raise its arms and whistle at them, as a sign of their kinship.

The Moni protect them, so although they are sometimes hunted by other peoples, they remain relatively common in Moni areas. 'Mbaiso' in its Latin name is Moni language, meaning the 'forbidden animal'.

Although it's a tree kangarou, Bondegezou spends a lot of time on the ground, so it appears quite different to other tree kangaroos due to its longer, thinner bones. It also has a thicker coat as it lives in subalpine forest at elevations of up to 4200 meters.

Anyway they are cute little guys, who are quite tame (so unfortunately easy to hunt for the non-Moni), and they are the revered ancestors of the Moni tribe.

Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Friday, 6 August 2010

favourite wiki of the week



Alice Guy-Blaché was the first woman film director, and basically invented narrative film. Her film La Fée aux Choux was also the first film with a running time of at least one minute, probably first screened April 1896. 

Thursday, 5 August 2010


Going flat-out

Wednesday, 4 August 2010


Thinking about learning to drive