Friday, November 14, 2003

Weather: Steel-gray fog ALL DAMN DAY! I did get a good shot of our library building for their Catalog page.
(I may "Photoshop" the sky to blue.)

Wildlife Report: A sad one today -- there was a dead doe right in the middle of the road in my neighborhood. Poor creature -- someone had a collision last night.

Thursday, November 13, 2003

Weather: Rare kind of day -- actual autumn conditions. Just a bite of cold in the air, warming midday -- a bit hazy from these stupid dorks burning their slash etc. I know it's legal and cutomary, but it's been shown to be destructive and unwise since the 1930's.

Something I've shoulda done earlier -- WILDLIFE REPORT!
Almost every day there's something worthy of mention.
Yesterday, I was crossing the street by the local NBC station. A cameraman was shooting some clown in a bear costume. What neither of them noticed was a bald eagle soaring about 50 feet above the street. I wouldn't have seen it in my car, but I was on foot, waiting for the "walk" sign, and had a moment to look up.
My house is next to Middle Foy's Lake and the ice is melted with the nice weather. The Canadian Geese are congregating in various flocks there as they migrate. They perch on the edges of the gathering ice, and swim where there's water.
Sometimes there are hundreds of them honking away and feeding. They'll fly off and then more hundreds will gather again.
Two days ago a bald eagle swept down and took a duck from Middle Foy's Lake. I'll tell you, the waterfowl sure fled the place while that was going on! The place was full by sunset, though.
We have a herd of deer in the neighborhood too. Since no one can fire a gun around the houses, they are safe from hunters. I usually see does and fawns every morning on my way to work in the gray morning light.
After dark, I've learned to watch for the critters, because they'll cross the road without a look.
More people are killed every year in deer/auto collisions then were killed in the last 50 years by sharks worldwide.

Wednesday, November 12, 2003

Weather: Not too bad, clear roads, occasional sun -- about 40 to 50 degrees (F) SNOW in all the mountains, and late fall colors. The larch trees turn golden-yellow and lose their needles at this time of year, so the slopes are BEAUTIFUL!

Following up on the bad news for our local National Guard on Veteran's Day, there may be a ray of hope (fragment from NY Times):
After two days of urgent talks in Washington with the Bush administration's foreign policy team, the top U.S. administrator in Iraq said today he plans to return to Baghdad to consult with the U.S.-appointed Governing Council there about how best to accelerate the hand-over of power to a new Iraqi government.
After discussing various proposals on ways to save Iraq's troubled political transition, Coalition Provisional Authority Administrator L. Paul Bremer said he would return to Iraq to continue "intense" discussions with the council's 24 members on President Bush's ideas for breaking a logjam on arrangements for selecting a panel to write a new Iraqi constitution before a U.N.-imposed Dec. 15 deadline. Bremer declined to give details on Bush's proposals, saying he had to brief the Governing Council first.

Tuesday, November 11, 2003

Weather: Slick icy roads on the way to work -- very dangerous. Melted off by 9 or 10.

Veteran's Day 11/11/03
There were some observances yesterday, the "official" holiday, but TODAY's the day that people talked about about the issues this day commemorates.
1st thing: Our local National Guard is being sent to Iraq. These men and women are in a transportation unit, and will do their duty with bulls-eyes on their backs -- for an undetermined time -- for an undetermined goal (a country is not free if it's occupied by foriegn troops, so it can't be truly "Operation Iraqi Freedom"). I'm praying for their safe return. The Daily Internet: The Daily Inter Lake Newspaper, Kalispell, Montana

Bush said something about "extremists" seeking to rule Iraq -- he's right for a change -- some of their names are Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Perle, and Bremer!

The local FM had a folk music show that featured songs about WWI -- mostly by and about British soldiers. "Over There" was NOT played -- if someone didn't like those grim stories -- well, they "can't handle the truth," can they?

I printed up a half-dozen images of Jasper Johns' "Orange Flag" from 1967 and posted them around my little campus. If you stare at the stars on the red, white, and blue flag, then look at the orange field below, you'll see a "ghost flag." What does it mean? I dunno -- maybe staring at the flag might resurrect thoughts about what it's supposed to represent.