Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Maintenance Matters


I’m in maintenance mode.

▪️A lightning strike took out the transmitter for my Invisible Fence (Pet Safe) in-ground containment system. A new one was ordered today. 
▪️My old 18” Poulan chainsaw was always crap, has not run in years, and is not worth repairing. I plopped down cash for a new 18” Echo. Will try it out tomorrow. I also own a 16” electric chainsaw..
▪️Ordered sanding belts for my ancient (45-year old) belt sander, with an eye towards keeping a few digging tools sharp.
▪️Took the Toro lawn mower in for a tuneup and a reset on the idle. This expensive mower was bought from the previous home owner for $50.
▪️Took in the gas-powered Husqvarna weed whacker and brush trimmer to get the pull cord put back on, a job I would normally do but the folks at Husqvarna put two torx screws four inches deep in the plastic housing, requiring a very narrow tool that I could not find locally. I ordered the tool for future repair, but since the lawnmower was going in already, I sent in the weed whacker for fixing as well.
▪️Put a new spark plug in the backpack blower and it fires up fine.  Very powerful, and another good purchase from the previous homeowner.


Dickens’s Dream

“Dickens's Dream” was painted by Robert William Buss, 5 years after Charles Dickens’s death in 1870. The painting is a bit ghostly because Buss died before completing the painting and so most of Dickens’ characters were left as sketches.

Dickens is pictured, below, with his dog, Turk.



Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Frederick Is aTop 50?

This is the Monocacy Civil War battlefield, near Frederick Maryland, and just down the road from the house. Every inch of Virginia and Maryland was soaked in blood, and I hunt where the dead have fallen. I do not wonder why the soil is red.

Frederick is the intersection of quite a lot: two rivers, mountains and coastal plain, forest and farm, history and future, four states, the Appalachian Trail and a 340-mile bike path. We’re just 50 miles from both Washington, DC and Baltimore.

Frederick made Money’s 2024 list of the 50 best places to live in the U.S. and is included in their sub-list of "new boomtowns".  I’m a bit skeptical of such lists, but as long as others are not, that’s probably good for real estate values.  

Going for the Neck

Lucy Too goes for my neck. She’s a big galoot, and an easy keeper who likes to play with the Italian Greyhound. She’s my son’s dog, but she’s here at the house a lot.

Monday, May 27, 2024

Ring-necked Snake



Little Ring Neck snake moved from the dog’s area to a nice pachasandra-covered bed under the trees.

Real Good, For Free



This is Japheth Clark

But the one man band
By the quick lunch stand
He was playing real good, for free.
Nobody stopped to hear him
Though he played so sweet and high
They knew he had never
Been on their TV
So they passed his music by
I meant to go over and ask for a song
Maybe put on a harmony...
I heard his refrain
As the signal changed
He was playing real good, for free.
Joni Mitchell

In Memoriam


  
This Memorial Day I give thanks, as I always do, to the men and woman who chose service other than killing people they did not know in a country they had never even visited before. 

I thank the civil rights workers, the union organizers, the school teachers and, the hardware store clerks, the folks who repair our roads and plow our fields, who drive the trucks and mine the coal, who wash the dishes and fix the roofs. 

I thank those who pay taxes without hate for those who need a helping hand.

The job of the military is to kill people and break things. They will tell you that themselves. I understand that there is a place for that, but my honor is for those who raise things and make things. I offer no disrespect for the military dead, but surely there is a place to remember and celebrate those who fight to improve themselves and others? Surely there is a place to honor those who pay taxes rather than just those who killed and destroyed while on the government dole? Where is their flag and their monument? 

This Memorial Day let at least a few of us remember those who built this nation, and not just those who destroyed others.

Sunday, May 26, 2024

The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls

The tide rises, the tide falls, 
The twilight darkens, the curlew calls;
Along the sea-sands damp and brown 
The traveller hastens toward the town, 
     And the tide rises, the tide falls. 
Darkness settles on roofs and walls,      
But the sea, the sea in the darkness calls;
The little waves, with their soft, white hands, 
Efface the footprints in the sands, 
     And the tide rises, the tide falls. 
The morning breaks; the steeds in their stalls 
Stamp and neigh, as the hostler calls;
The day returns, but nevermore 
Returns the traveler to the shore, 
     And the tide rises, the tide falls.

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

What We Chase in the Hedge


Falconry and terrier work share a few threads. 

For one thing, the frame is the same; one species harnessed by another to hunt a third. 

For both, the danger of losing a much-loved animal is always there, as is the need to focus unblinking attention on the thing that is loved.

Fly a hawk, or run a working terrier in the field, and you will eventually have one disappear on you.

It happens to everyone. Most of the time things get sorted quickly enough.  But not always. 

When a hawk or a terrier slips away unseen, the hollow inside you starts as small as a peanut.  In 15 minutes it is as big as a ping pong ball. In half an hour it's as big as a melon. In an hour it is pressing hard against your lungs.

The brain tries to reign things in, but the hollow inside you has now grown, graduated, and is an independent thinker. 

You strain for a sound. Was that a goose? A murder of crows? Perhaps a barking dog?

You are hunting as if a life depends on it.  You move upwind and down, scanning for movement. You curse passing airplanes and the rumble of distant cars.  Then you hear a small muffled sound, or see a flash of fur or feather, and your world swings back, centered and in control.

There it is. All is not lost.

I can fix this.

The illusion of control is restored.

Why do we do this?  

Why do we hunt with hawk or terrier when the potential for devastating loss is always there?

I cannot speak for others. I can barely articulate an answer for myself. 

The way I hunt allows me to enter forest and field with a new set of glasses.  I see more and I begin to understand the world better because I am thinking with a primitive and feral brain that is not my own.

The way I hunt allows me to understand the natural world in a more intimate way -- and with it my own place in a complicated matrix.

In this world there is no past or future, there is only NOW. What is flying NOW? What can be scented NOW? What is the weather NOW?

I may be hunting a small farm on the edge of the suburbs, but I can see the wild, feel the wilder, and almost taste the wilderness.

And what I am doing is not without risk. 

I am running along the edge of the abyss and I am aware of it. Yes, the dog or the hawk is wearing an electronic locator, but it is far from magic. Very bad things can happen out here. There is no question about that.

What is going on here is irrational, but it is also basic and elemental.

When the dogs and I go hunting, the code explodes from where it has been coiled up like a watch spring inside our respective bits of DNA. 

It is an ancient code written in blood and sweat, and urine and dirt. 

This code connects all things, including the dogs and I and the natural world around us.

And it is a timeless code. There is no past or future in the hedge; there is only NOW, now, now.

Perhaps this is part of the attraction. 

do not know.  

I do not claim to understand it. 

All I know is that a kind of enlightenment occurs for dog, hawk, and human alike. When things go well, we become one together, and with the land, and with the seconds and minutes that we spend together.

It is a perfect thing.  

It is what we chase in the hedge.

Canada Geese on the Creek






The Non-workers Going Up and Down the Driveway

Saturday, May 25, 2024

There’s Always a Bigger Bird

They’ve put several pairs of plastic Swan decoys in the creek and a lake downtown in an attempt to discourage a huge build up of Canada Geese and ducks. Scare-geese. Not perfect, but is seems to be working. Canada Geese can be bastards, but paired Swans are the frigging Marine Corps; even the Canada’s don’t want to mess with them, plastic or not.

Yellow-crowned Night Heron

Snapping Turtle Buffet


While out biking, I passed these Snapping Turtles, as big as manhole covers and covered in green duck weed. Snapping Turtles eat fish, anything dead in the water, and this time of year they will predate on baby ducks.  

This female Wood Duck has just one chick left out of what might have been a dozen at hatching. Fox, raccoon, possums, turtles, coyotes, and even large catfish, will dine on duck chicks of every type.

Friday, May 24, 2024

Wee Wolves Behind the Bee Hives



 

Bees Returning Home for the Night



Morgan Spurlock Dies at 53

Morgan Spurlock, the director and star of the putative  documentary ‘Super Size Me,' is dead at age 53, from cancer

Spurlock was a scum bag alcoholic liar whose principle work was a fraud.  

That should be the first line in his obituary.


When Soso Whaley ate exclusively at McDonald’s for a month and ate 2,000 calories a day, she lost 10 pounds (going from 175 to 165) and lowered her cholesterol from 237 to 197, a drop of 40 points." 

John Cisna, a high school science teacher, lost 60 pounds while eating exclusively at McDonald's for 180 days.  He said, "I'm not pushing McDonald's. I'm not pushing fast food. I'm pushing taking accountability and making the right choice for you individually... As a science teacher, I would never show Super Size Me because when I watched that, I never saw the educational value in that... I mean, a guy eats uncontrollable amounts of food, stops exercising, and the whole world is surprised he puts on weight? What I'm not proud about is probably 70 to 80 percent of my colleagues across the United States still show Super Size Me in their health class or their biology class. I don't get it."

Bingo.  How much you eat is more important than what you eat.  

And for God’s sake stop drinking and smoking, and start getting a little exercise.  

Also stop molesting women.  

Yeah, that too.  Spurlock was the whole package of noxious bullshit.

I’m Broad-minded Like That

Thursday, May 23, 2024

This Land Is Your Land


The C&O Canal flows seamlessly into the Greater Allegheny Passage trail, creating a perfect, nearly flat, 335 mile bicycle and walking path from Washington, DC to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

This is land I own, and you do too. 

Protect public lands and never give them away.

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Tree Swallows Bent on Murder


I got dive-bombed by Tree Swallows today.  Boxes were up, but they did not appear to be nesting.  Not sure if I’m early or late, but gorgeous birds hell-bent on putting my eye out.


Wee Wolves on the Driveway



Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Watersnakes Mating


Two smaller males
attempt to mate with a larger female. The 16-60 young will be born alive in August or September.

Jewels Are All Around Us

I am always amazed so many folks never notice.

Monday, May 20, 2024

A Very Large Northern Watersnake

Thankfully, it was an overcast day, and this snake and its buddy were a bit torpid, allowing me to get quite close with my cell phone camera.

How close did I get? The picture, below, is not cropped or enlarged.

Northern Watersnakes are quite deadly to frogs and small fish, but otherwise fairly harmless.



Installed a Shade Awning Over the Back Deck

The big deck has seen some improvements since we moved in last year: a hot tub, a full set of deck furniture, and now a shade awning. It’s not a bad place to read a book, listen to music, and contemplate the birds and the bees.  Several bird houses and feeders are in eyesight, and the bee hives are just behind the tool shed in the background of the last picture.

A Very Young Fawn

I spotted this doe with a very small fawn right next to her in the verge next to the canal. The doe was licking the fawn religiously, and for quite a while.

The near-cliff behind them, and the water in front, suggest this fawn might have been born here; I do not think the fawn could have walked in or out. The fawn was not yet completely competent at finding a nursing location on the doe, making me think the fawn might have been born within the last few hours.

Put Up Four Hollow Limb Birdhouses

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Wee Wolves In the Forest



Herman Melville on Rich and Poor

"Of all the preposterous assumptions of humanity over humanity, nothing exceeds most of the criticisms made on the habits of the poor by the well-housed, well-warmed, and well-fed.”-- Herman Melville, from “Poor Man's Pudding and Rich Man's Crumbs" (1854)