Model Building?

Not me—at least since high school. Never enough slack time, never enough patience.

But now, with my Santa workshopping completed and Sue still sewing, I brought out the old skipjack kit that has been lying in wait at least 20 years. (I think it might have been a present from brother John.) The glue was hard, but all the pieces seem to be present—so “heave ho, and up she rises.”

Actually, rather enjoying it. Model builders have a skillset I lack, such as pre-visualizing, applying the appropriate amount of glue, and clamping fragile little pieces—but I’m learning. Furthermore, the job requires micro-manipulation—holding and maneuvering itty bitty pieces in tight spaces, which has always given me the heebie jeebies.

But, so far, things seem to be working out, and there have been no deal breaking catastrophes; even when I glued the whole hull to the cardboard below it I was able to recover and reclaim.

Deep down I know I will hit a wall—some major component will break or be missing, or the whole thing will shatter into unrecoverable pieces, but nonetheless I will persevere, and I will exhibit the finished product—whatever it happens to be. The Chesapeake skipjack was a truly great boat, especially if you like oysters.

Sycamore…

…a native American tree, as opposed to its very similar cousin, the London Plane tree. (The University is doing lots of pruning right now.)

And below are the seed balls. Very strange fruit, something like inside out dandelions. The inner parts of the cluster are feathery, for wind dispersal, I believe.

The plan is to grow some this spring, along with the shagbark hickories.

Breakfast…

…with Tom and Mary—holiday get together and book marketing meeting. Also—yard pickup after the gale, which yielded two wheelbarrows-full of dropped branches and other detritus, most of which ended up feeding a fine fire in the (chiminea) fireplace. (Almost got in a good stretch of alliteration.)

And, below, the stack I brought home for the library yesterday. With the short days this time of year, and the limited opportunities outside, I’m ripping through reading matter at a frightful pace, and I can’t keep buying on Kindle. Thank goodness for libraries.

BTW, I wonder what it would be like to have a name like Merlin Sheldrake. My dad had a friend named Aethelston Spillhouse. How cool/awful would it be to have a handle like that?

Inherit The Wind…

…as well as the heat, the storms, the fires, the floods, and the drought. Sixty-six degrees Fahrenheit here in Wisconsin ten days before Christmas.

The Walworth chapter of The Citizen’s Climate Lobby is reading Kathrine Hayhoe’s book, Saving Us, the main point of which seems to be that if we talk nicely to climate change deniers we will be able to convince them that we really are facing a crisis.

Unfortunately, I don’t know any climate deniers, so I don’t have anyone to talk to. A vocal minority, financed by polluter money, are the ones pushing climate change denial, and these misguided or morally corrupt individuals are not going to be influenced by reasonable discussion.

A sizable majority of American citizens realize that we are in the midst of a climate catastrophe. They don’t need convincing, they just need encouragement.

My suggestions for things to do:

1. Vote climate.  All candidates for public office should be thoroughly questioned on their climate position, and that position widely publicized, along with their subsequent action. 
2. Spread the word on, and help neighbors get going on, the Homegrown National Park movement.
3. Encourage, spread the word on, and buy the products of regenerative agriculture. Join the “Kiss the Ground” movement. 
4. Initiate/participate in neighborhood/community action/projects such as community solar.
5. Support environmental organizations such as: FLOW, Midwest Environmental Advocates, and The Nature Conservancy.

All the while, of course, working to reduce personal/family ecological footprint.

Repairs Begun

Post flood basement has received new drywall, and everything else besides carpet is minor. Unfortunately, not everything will be finished by Christmas. Fortunately, that won’t interfere with ping pong.

Ancient cottonwood, now slowly returning its components to where they came from

Squash from neighbor, on tonight’s menu, with seeds saved for planting in our garden come spring.

Ted Lasso update. While season one was fun, season two was awful. The arc of a sports story can only last so long, and then the scripts disintegrate.

Crispy Chickpeas With Beef…

…as a risky dinner experiment.

Lots of garbanzos, an onion, a bit of garlic, and some ground beef, along with a few chiles chipotles, lemon, and spices. Worth the risk? Sure as shootin’, which I realize is not a good way to put it. Anyway, very tasty, and worth repeating.

With a south wind melting the remnants of our little snow—a bike ride and a walk to the library (to return a few items), and then cocktails in the breezeway while the garbanzos were crisping on the hob.

Right Across The Bike Path…

…but no one underneath at the time.

Meanwhile, another tree down, but in this case caused by a different agent.

That’s a lot of chewing

The e-bike, with its battery, now down the basement, and the old standard bike up in the garage. While I don’t go as fast and as far on the non-electric machine, I still go pretty fast and pretty far, and today’s ride in the wind and cold felt like the perfect way to spend some time outside.

Because we got 3 months of Apple TV free as a result of a phone upgrade, we are now watching Ted Lasso. While I swore I would never spend time watching something so corny, I have to say its a whole lot of fun.

Indoor Day…

…except for one walk.

Patchy drizzle and freezing drizzle will continue into this evening across southern Wisconsin along with areas of fog. With surface temperatures hovering near freezing, there remains a potential for slippery spots to develop on untreated roads and walkways. Elevated surfaces including bridges and overpasses will be most susceptible.