Birthday Dinner With Irene.
All kinds of good food, conversation, even a little music.
Bean soup, tomato soup, cucumber tomato salad, sautéed bok Choy, grilled salmon, along with new potatoes, etc.
All kinds of good food, conversation, even a little music.
Bean soup, tomato soup, cucumber tomato salad, sautéed bok Choy, grilled salmon, along with new potatoes, etc.
Shagbark hickory nuts, to be precise.
A pretty good haul. In hickory country a few weeks earlier than usual this year, which means I’m moderately competitive with the squirrels. A couple of windy days have also helped by shaking some nuts loose before the rodents got to them. It also seems to be a low year for the weevil population—only one of all I’ve collected so far has exhibited a drilled hole.
Plan is to let these seeds stratify in the garage over the winter, and then plant them (squirrel proof) come spring. With luck I’ll have seedlings available in a couple of years.
Out and about. Not much time to think bloggish thoughts.
Do you recognize this gnarly person.?
The Whitewater Urban Forest Committee seems to be moving forward with my push to have an arboretum in Starin Park. Here are my suggestions for a Mission Statement and a List of Benefits:
The Arboretum at Starin Park
Mission Statement
The Arboretum at Starin Park exists to provide a beautiful, welcoming sanctuary for humans, trees shrubs, and wildlife. It is a place where people of all ages can come to connect to nature, learn about the environment, and study and practice stewardship. The Arboretum at Starin Park is dedicated to helping create a greener, healthier, and more beautiful world.
Benefits
The Arboretum at Starin Park will:
1. Facilitate restoration of the beauty, health, and diversity of the woodland at Starin Park, enhancing its role as a vital natural sanctuary.
2. Provide Whitewater(and the larger surrounding community) with an outdoor classroom and a related curriculum that connects kids to nature and teaches the fundamentals of ecology and stewardship.
3. Provide Whitewater(and the larger surrounding community) with a haven for adult environmental connection, learning and stewardship.
4. Provide ecosystem services—oxygen, shade, pollution reduction, urban cooling, wildlife shelter, etc.
5. Provide nature-related outdoor social and volunteer opportunities for adults.
6. Help, in a small way, with climate mitigation.
7. Serve as a museum of native Wisconsin trees and shrubs.
8. Provide a laboratory for arboreal research (and a potential nursery).
9. Bring visitors to Whitewater to experience a special natural area and to participate in programs and learning opportunities.
10. Bring recognition to Whitewater as the site of an internationally certified Arboretum, thus enhancing the city’s profile as a good place to live.
…and a beautiful one it was, too. The days are definitely getting shorter. Happy Equinox.
The walnuts are ripe
And, from the Hmong farmers at this afternoon’s market, a winter melon, which I have never heard of previous, and which I believe is a squash.
Time to vote. Ballots are here. We are about to fill them out carefully, sign them carefully (although Wisconsin does not do signature matching), have them witnessed carefully (by each other, and signed by the witness), seal them up in the official envelope, and then place them, carefully, in the election drop box at city hall.
Next step— make sure everyone in the known universe (with at least half a brain) does the same. It’s a simple choice between representative democracy and totalitarian dictatorship.
Here’s my latest “You Make The Call:”
Electoral College
Pop Quiz
(Do your best, but don’t worry, your answers might not count anyway.)
1. The Electoral College was thought up at the Constitutional Convention to appease the big eastern states.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
2. How many Electoral College votes does it take to win the presidential election?
A. 250
B. 270
C. 295
D. 300
3. How many candidates have lost the majority of the popular vote but still ended up being president?
A. 3
B. 4
C. 5
D. 6
(Extra credit if you can name them. Send in your answer to get a chance at winning
a secret decoder ring—no boxtops necessary.)
4. The Electoral College favors voters in small and rural states.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
5. Wyoming gets one Electoral College vote for roughly every 160,000 residents. California gets one Electoral College vote for roughly every ______________ residents.
A. 560,000
B. 625,000
C. 715,000
6. Wisconsin gets ________ Electoral College votes.
A. 6
B. 8
C. 10
D. 12
7. The Electoral College is racist in that it dilutes the votes of African-Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans (who tend to live in cities and more populous states).
A. Agree
B. Disagree
C. Not sure
8. Trump could lose the popular vote by three to four percentage points and still have a chance of winning reelection.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
9. A presidential election decided by the popular vote might help to improve our rancid politics.
A. Agree
B. Disagree
C. Not sure
10. Theoretically, a Republican Party with the incentive to compete for votes in California and New York because of a national popular vote, might be less tempted by white nationalism.
A. Agree
B. Disagree
C. Not sure
11. A majority of Americans favor dumping the Electoral College.
A. Yes
B. No
C. Not sure
12. In 1969, the House of Representatives passed a constitutional amendment to establish a national popular vote for the White House. Nixon called it “a thoroughly acceptable reform,” but a filibuster backed by segregationist Southerners in the Senate killed it.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
13. A way to bypass the Electoral College and render it meaningless is something called the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
14. Fifteen states and the District of Columbia have passed bills pledging to support the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
15. On April 25, 2019, the National Popular Vote bill was introduced in Wisconsin but because of Republican opposition it has not passed.
A. True
B. False
C. Not sure
Small birthday party in Cedarburg.
My carefully nurtured, started-from-seed, sweetgrass was moved from the pot, where it could not survive the winter, to the earth, where it might. The pot was a tangled mass of roots, but, wielding Excalibur, I sliced segments out and interred them in the homeland. Here’s hoping the effort begun almost a year ago will carry over into the year to come, and that over time, sweetgrass will be readily available to anyone who might want some.
Yesterday, about this time, the wave of anguish rolling around the world washed over here. Not only was RBG a marvelous human, but her passing added to the long list calamities our star-crossed country is experiencing right now. If I were a religious person I’d pray that the USA can make it out of this nightmare alive.
Frost? No, not quite, but a low in the upper 30s.
Tom’s last painting for the Tig book
Too soon for Indian summer. Typical first frost in about 3 weeks. Still, the air is what might be called bracing, and is much appreciated. Over to Dem HQ to pick up a few signs this afternoon. The place was crowded, in spite of efforts to social distance. People are taking this election seriously; we are activated.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On the birthday of the world
I begin to contemplate
what I have done and left
undone, but this year
not so much rebuilding
of my perennially damaged
psyche, shoring up eroding
friendships, digging out
stumps of old resentments
that refuse to rot on their own.
No, this year I want to call
myself to task for what
I have done and not done
for peace. How much have
I dared in opposition?
How much have I put
on the line for freedom?
For mine and others?
As these freedoms are pared,
sliced and diced, where
have I spoken out? Who
have I tried to move? In
this holy season, I stand
self-convicted of sloth
in a time when lies choke
the mind and rhetoric
bends reason to slithering
choking pythons. Here
I stand before the gates
opening, the fire dazzling
my eyes, and as I approach
what judges me, I judge
myself. Give me weapons
of minute destruction. Let
my words turn into sparks.
Too busy to blog.
Doctor appointment, hardware shopping, research on various topics, GroGo virtual meeting. No time to think bloggish thoughts.
…a day?
Well, its’ difficult, especially when the routine has been uneventful.
In the weather department, a late afternoon dry cool front has passed through, and the temperature is dropping. Cold be a cool one tomorrow.
Cloudless, but pale sky, caused by high altitude smoke.
The old shag bark hickory
South wind, warm and strong, though the upper level winds are coming from the west.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here’s a clip from the NY Times:
HOW CLIMATE MIGRATION WILL RESHAPE AMERICA
Millions will be displaced. Where will they go?
By Abrahm Lustgarten
The millions of people moving north will mostly head to the cities of the Northeast and Northwest, which will see their populations grow by roughly 10 percent, according to one model. Once-chilly places like Minnesota and Michigan and Vermont will become more temperate, verdant and inviting. Vast regions will prosper; just as Hsiang’s research forecast that Southern counties could see a tenth of their economy dry up, he projects that others as far as North Dakota and Minnesota will enjoy a corresponding expansion. Cities like Detroit, Rochester, Buffalo and Milwaukee will see a renaissance, with their excess capacity in infrastructure, water supplies and highways once again put to good use. One day, it’s possible that a high-speed rail line could race across the Dakotas, through Idaho’s up-and-coming wine country and the country’s new breadbasket along the Canadian border, to the megalopolis of Seattle, which by then has nearly merged with Vancouver to its north.
And that’s the big event of this day.
At a landscape supply place south of town you can get a bucketful of good mulch dumped into the back of your truck for just over $20. Only thing wrong with that is that you have to wheelbarrow it once you get home.
Tacos for dinner, followed by an episode, and then reading. That’s pretty much the routine. I’m reading Thoreau’s Chesuncook, but not for much longer, interesting as it is.
To Hell and back? No. From Helenville to Dousman (less than 15 miles) on the Glacial Drumlin.
Late bloomer
Perfect weather for a ride—partly to mostly sunny, high of about 70, and lower humidity. Who could ask for anything more.
Look at the size of these oak leaves. Must have been growing very low down before they were snapped off by something. Lower leaves grow big in order to capture sun in shady places.
Because we have not been as absolutely careful as we have been in the past and should be always, we decided to go for a covid test this morning—at the county fairgrounds in Jefferson. As we drove through the sheep pens and amongst the sheep dogs getting ready for trials, I was afraid we might have to spend an hour or two in the queue. But no, we drove right in to the exhibition barn, and within five minutes were identified, swabbed and dismissed. Drive-in testing like this was held here yesterday, so maybe that’s why the crowd was so light. Or, maybe there’s some other reason?
Later, I rotated two of the three compost bins. Quite a bad idea on a warm day with the air so thick I could shovel it too.
No results from the tests yet, but we are feeling positively negative.
After a few hours without precip, it’s back. Go west, rain clouds, go west!
Photo from yesterday’s walk in the prairie
Continuous drip for the longest time. Couldn’t some of this head west?
But, thanks to the weather, Sue, Pax, and I had the prairie all to ourselves as we walked there this morning. Asters and goldenrod, abundant.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“People flock to our hills for the fiery suite of October but they often miss the sublime prelude of September fields. As if harvest time were not enough—peaches, grapes, sweet corn, squash—the fields are also embroidered with drifts of golden yellow and pools of deepest purple, a masterpiece.”
—Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass
…all day
To Cedarburg again to help out on a day complicated by school, jobs, and moving vans. Most of the drive there in the dark and drizzle.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Another You Make The Call
What should Democrats be wary of between now and the November election?
Choose all that apply.
☐ Russia’s ongoing efforts to use Facebook, and other means, to tilt the election towards Trump
☐ No more verbal intel briefings to Congress
☐ Attorney General investigating and targeting leaders of BLM
☐ Creation of doubt and confusion about absentee voting, disabling the post office
☐ Defense and encouragement of right-wing protesters/militia
☐ Shadow people getting control of Joe Biden
☐ Creation and dissemination of deep-fake altered videos by Trump team/supporters
☐ Right-wing and paramilitary groups patrolling polling places
☐ Planes full of thugs in black uniforms
☐ Trump sending in the National Guard
Rain from midnight into morning, and all through the day. Accompanied by a very chilly wind.
This could be what Mr. Thoreau calls “the first unquestionable and conspicuous autumnal day.” It certainly seems so.
Sitting on the back patio, wearing a jacket, I watched our resident chipmunk run by, west to east, along the top of the concrete wall between us and Vi, as I do most evenings. I think he might be heading for the compost bin, for dinner, which seems sensible. Later I watched him run by east to west, which confused me. I thought he lived in the patio garden under the redbud (where there be tunnels), but perhaps he lives in the big hollow in the black maple in the side yard. In any case, I think he has found the perfect spot.
…to Cedarburg. Wonderful house in a fine neighborhood, 4 minutes by bike to school (on trail and sidewalk) and 10 minutes to the famous downtown (entirely on trail). Move just in time—school starts (for Will, Katy, and Abby) tomorrow.
Thirteen mile ride, the last half of which directly into a blistering gale. Wouldn’t have made it without a little supplemental amperage.
Rain last night, and then off and on mini storms this morning. Southerly gale this afternoon.
Wisconsin residents who have not already requested an absentee ballot received their request forms this week from the Wisconsin Election Commission. If you are planning to vote absentee, right now (or earlier) is the time to send in the request form. Better yet, go to myvote.wi.gov and request one online.
Voting absentee by mail is actually only one option, however. The other two are: voting in person on November 3, and voting in person by absentee ballot. This is what I am going to do. As soon as early voting is open at my municipal clerk’s office I’m going to be there, either using the ballot I got in response to my request, or the one provided by the clerk. Either way, I’m only gong to cast my ballot once, unfortunately.
So, here’s the question, do you and everyone you know, have your voting plan in place?