Sun Swinging

Along with Go Fish, pancakes, and long bike rides. A springlike day.

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And, riding the warmth north, Robins, this year first sighted by Sue.

Photo by Sue

Photo by Sue

Lots of snow gone; lots of snow remaining. And where it’s gone, traces of life in the former subnivean zone.

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Overnighters

Will, Kate, and Abby here for dinner and fun.

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BLTs, cornmeal-cheddar waffles, mac&cheese for dinner. More good food and more good fun planed for tomorrow. And, katy brought her Polaroid camera, and used it to take a shot of the one eyed wonder. She then scanned it and gave it to me for posting.

Podcasts and Playlists…

…are appreciated.

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So, the police arrest two guys caught in a burglary. One has a car battery, the other a bunch of fireworks. There’s an arraignment, but then, as you might expect, one is charged and the other let off.

This is from one of my favorite podcasts, “The Infinite Monkey Cage,” a blend of science and humor—with most of the humor better than that above.

And, then, in the same vein, this from Gina Barker’s FB page:

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El Arco Iris

What color is a rainbow? Well, it depends on which eye you use (after a cataract procedure).

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Bright, with forgotten blues, in the remodeled eye, along with 20/20 vision. Not so much in the pending oculus. And that’s the hard part—having two eyes that are so very different. To deal with the problem I’ve ripped an old pair of spectacles in half, and am using the right side as a monocle. It almost works (no photo available).

Once eye number two gets its upgrade, I thinking of some Oakleys.

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Sunny Sunday

And warm enough to get out on two wheels, around town, including the footbridge over the rail road on the east side.

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Soft southerly, and no impossible ice patches or impassable melt puddles (If you were willing to detour a bit). Lots of walkers, bench sitters and other two-wheelers out pretending spring has arrived.

We did a little bench sitting, too, on the back patio, watching snow melt. Pax reluctant to come back in.

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Potted up 4 Kentucky coffee tree seeds and 8 shagbark hickory seeds (gathered last fall, and kept in the cold garage all winter). Expectations low, but nothing ventured, nothing gained.

You Make The Call

Which…

Pip? Is that you, Pip?

Pip? Is that you, Pip?

…of the following should be included in elementary school vocabulary lessons?
(Choose all that apply)

☐ Phish
☐ Click bait
☐ Acorn
☐ Whack-a-mole
☐ Tweet
☐ Kingfisher
☐ Virus
☐ Troll
☐ Newt

Note: three of the above are among a group of (no longer used) words that were dropped from the most recent edition of the Oxford Junior Dictionary. Which three are they?

Seed Starting…

…sweetgrass. After 35 days in the fridge, the sweetgrass seeds have come out to grow. At least theoretically.

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Sweetgrass (Hierochloe ororata) is notoriously reluctant to grow from seed. It needs to be stratified, which is what it was doing in the fridge, and even then its germination rate is very low. The starter tray in the photo is comprised of 72 cells, and at least 2 (and up to 4) seeds have been planted in each. I’m hoping that by the first of May at least a few of the many will have sprouted.

As a side note: I’ve also got 50 hazel seeds now taking their turn in the salad crisper.

Back Home

The Landmark Inn is a delightful place, with it’s penthouse North Star lounge overlooking Lake Superior, and it’s wood-paneled and cozy Northland Pub at street level (although the streets in Marquette are not level). But, since sleeping in hotel rooms is not something I tend to do, we decided to get back home before dark. Pax had a fine time at the Janowiec’s.

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Way Up North…

…again, and this time at an even higher latitude. Ultima Thule. Just about as far north in this country, at this longitude, on land, as possible. On the shore of Gitche Gumee.

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Out annual Valentine’s day getaway. Deep snow, but open water. Green Bay mostly frozen, all of Bay de Noc. Strange traveling without Pax, who is staying in Fox Point, but ever so convenient.

Marquette is an interesting town.

Straight South

Single digits In Flambeau, above freezing in Whitewater. One stop, enroute, at Qdoba in Stevens Point; Pax has an especially refined appreciation of Qdoba grilled chicken.

And tonight we hear that Will, Kate, Abby, and Tony have gone back to Winter Park for a candelight ski—and this after snowmobiling out to lunch. This family likes winter.

Minoqua Winter Park

Minoqua Winter Park

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Hemlock—Photo by Katy

Hemlock—Photo by Katy

Will—Photo by Katy

Will—Photo by Katy

Fill the Feeder…

…twice! Lower the earflaps, dig out the mittens. After more snow, plummeting temperatures, and tonight the meter dropping to the lowest point of the year.

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Summing up Wilding, by Isabella Tree…. An interesting story about how an affluent couple re-wilded a failing farm of 3,500 acres south of London. Their key discoveries are, perhaps, that wilding happens faster than one can imagine, and that grazing animals (cattle, deer, horses, and pigs) are essential to the process.

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Imagine putting a fence (some of it ha-ha, a design new to me) around 3,500 acres.

Here are some gleanings from the book:

The idea of natural capital…assigning a monetary value to thing like forests, clean air, and coral reefs is gaining currency.. There is a powerful, essential logic to this but…I rebel against the notion that everything has a dollar value. The wild must be commonplace again, not sequestered in parks
—paraphrase in introduction by Eric Schlosser

We need to be aware of the shifting baseline syndrome.
(Speaking personally here, the natural world I grew up in is vastly different from the natural world my grandparents grew up in, and vastly different from the natural world my grandkids are now growing up in; yet we all consider what we know as the way tings have always been.)

“The thorn bush is the mother of the oak.”

For Harvard  biologist  E. 0. Wilson  the human connection with nature—something he calls 'biophilia', the 'rich, natural pleasure that comes from being surrounded by living organisms'—is rooted in our evolution.  We have been hunter-gathers for 99 per cent of our genetic history, totally and intimately in­volved with the natural world. For a million years our survival depended on our ability to read the weather, the stars and the species around us, to navigate, empathize and cooperate with our environment. The need to relate to the landscape and to other forms of life—whether one considers this urge aesthetic, emotional, intellectual, cognitive or even spiritual is in our genes. Sever that connection and we are floating in a world where our deepest sense of ourselves is lost.

Crucial would be a shift in focus from specific targeted outcomes to broader ecological processes—looking at how well, or how badly, land is functioning. Instead of measuring a single service, which in the past has always been food, success could be measured through multiple services. So a system that is good at producing food but bad at water management would score poorly; and a system that scores optimally for water storage, flood mitigation, wildlife, carbon sequestration, nutrient cycling, pollination, and pollution amelioration would receive the most support.

The West Yet Glimmers...

…with some streaks of day.

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A day in February.

There’s a reason February was made the shortest month. But at least there’s more daylight.

Highlights: trip to dentist, bird feeder refill, garbage and recycle totoers taken to the curb, Instapot fired up (for the first time in a long time—pressure cooker spicy pork shoulder), dog walks (lots of shorter ones because walking is still a bit treacherous).

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“Nothing is more responsible for the good old days than a bad memory.” —?
”The trouble with learning from experience is that you never graduate.” —Doug Larson

InDesign Day

In the “Office,” on a cold winter’s day, working on the big screen, laying out the Tig book, discussing images—all the while working on a project of great unlikelihood. Tom is is an artist, who spent his career in the print industry, and he has opinions (mostly good ones). Contemporaneously, I am re-learning inDesign just as fast as I can. Altogether, pretty much fun.

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And here is another document—found in the “Office” as I was preparing for work:

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Those grandkids can be pretty tough on us old timers.

On to New Hampshire.