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Saturday, April 13, 2019

Make it stop!


It just won’t stop. “Maybe this is the last one” I heard them say. Will it be? Anything can happen at any time in this zone. 

Of the 35 or so years I have been living in this area I have seen snow in every month except July and the year before I moved up it snowed on July 4th, killing my neighbor’s tomato plants. That was in the early 80s, though, and while things can still get a little crazy we generally don’t see any snowfall in June, July, or August.

Our official total from this last storm was 10 inches or 25 cm. It was(is) heavy and wet, but at least it made mud season disappear for a couple of days. It is supposed to get above freezing every day for the coming week so it should go away in a few days. Here is a picture from this morning.


The winds got a little stiff, too. I don’t think anything much over 50 mph (80kph), but in Duluth they recorded some of 70mph (112kph). It made for some big waves on the lake and while I wasn’t adventurous enough to go out and do some crazy photography, other people were. These cliffs are about 40 feet (12 meters) high. 
(Angela Botner Photography )

I have lived by the ocean and there are seriously huge waves that can get going in some parts of the world, but we are on an inland lake. Granted, it is a very large lake, as lakes go, but there are things that happen in the ocean that are unbelievably amazing. 
There is a lighthouse on the Brittany Coast in France that is known for the waves.
 There have been movies made about rogue waves, but the first one I remember was in the "disaster" genre called the Poseidon Adventure. One of my favorite magazines when I was a teenager and early adulthood was the literary giant, Mad Magazine. They did a hilarious satire of the movie called the Poopsidedown Adventure. It was the biggest selling month in Mad's illustrious, yet dubious, history selling 2.8 million copies! That issue cost 40 cents. CHEAP! I laughed until it hurt!
 

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Seasonal Transitions


It is the time of year for seasonal changes. Some days are lovely and some days not so much. This week we have had sun, snow, and rain within the space of about three days, but eventually it will warm up so the snow part is gone for a while. Here is what we saw in the last few days.




Here is what the farm looks like from the air in summer. This is just so I don’t forget. 



Meanwhile we are getting into mud season as the rain and snow fall and the ground thaws out. Soon I will be able to put my flannel-lined pants away for a few months.

Here are some seasonal change memes offered up for your entertainment because misery loves company and I just can’t think of anything worthwhile to share. That will pass, too. 

























Sunday, March 31, 2019

Ships and stories



Shipping season is underway now. In the last few weeks the ice coverage on Lake Superior went from about 95% to less than 25%. The ice is up against the eastern shores and in the bays and the icebreakers are working to free all the harbors and keep the Soo Locks open. I have been seeing the lights out on the lake at night and the freighters, carrying mostly iron ore and grain, are lit up like floating casinos.  Yesterday was windy (about 30 knots on the water) and the ships were hugging the shore for protection.

I believe this is the Paul R. Tregurtha on its way to the Soo Locks yesterday morning.




I just finished reading an Icelandic mystery, The Darkness: A Thriller, by Ragnar Jonasson. It is the first in his Hulda series. I have previously read the first series of five books from this author a year or two ago and decided to try this new series. The main character, Hulda, is in her last days of work before retirement as an investigator. It took me two days to read this which is less time than it usually takes, but the stars were aligned and I didn’t have a lot of pressing chores, some of which I will do today. Procrastination for the sake of a good book is a pardonable sin in my world. The next book in the series is set 25 years previously, so I may have to read that soon to get a feel for Hulda from her younger days. There is very little actual murder in Iceland, maybe one every couple of years, and the killer was usually drunk and confesses immediately, so you can see that reality and fiction are well separated.   

Most of what I have read in the last ten years or so is of the genre, Nordic Noir, which for some reason appeals to me. I think the Scandinavian landscapes appeal to me, especially the bleakness of the Icelandic landscape in winter. It takes some imagination as I have only seen it in early summer which also has a stark beauty to it. Here are a few pictures of Iceland from a previous visit. As always, click to embiggen.

This is from a lava field where my brother and I were hiking and yes, that is geothermal steam rising  in the distance.
This is an abandoned farmhouse near the fjord. These abandoned homes often appear in the Icelandic mysteries.
A vessel returning from the sea.
A cabin where we stayed. Note the trees. The standard joke about the trees in Iceland is this. "What do you do if you get lost in an Icelandic Forest? Stand up!" 

 Living in a National Forest makes for quite a contrast, but one I find thoroughly enjoyable. 

Tomorrow is April Fool's Day so be careful out there!


Sunday, March 24, 2019

This was the morning commute through rush hour traffic the other day. Traffic will be this heavy for another month and a half, before the summer home people and tourists arrive. As you can see the snow is melting and the roads are bare pavement again making driving less of a challenge. The local deer (white tail) population is hanging around the roads and is being picked off by motorists along the North Shore on a daily basis. While they don't go to waste it is still sad to see their carcasses by the side of the road.

It has been above freezing nearly every day and below freezing at night which are the conditions favorable to tapping maple trees for sap. Syrup season is in full swing and I can't wait to taste the results! I dream of salmon on the grill after soaking in a marinade of maple syrup and lemon juice. Yummy!

Not much exciting to report, but it is interesting to watch as people slowly come out of their winter "hibernation" dressed in lighter clothing with their shoulders relaxed instead of hunched up around their necks.

Things are melting on the farm and the horses are shedding buckets of fur which is picked up by the birds to use for nesting material. It is organic and recyclable, so highly desirable building material.This is what it looks like this morning. Still a lot of snow in the woods and around the edges of everything.

Happy Spring!





Saturday, March 16, 2019

Musicalness


Last night we played for a dance. Since it is St. Patrick's Day weekend it was fitting for us to start the festivities for the next couple of days. Here is a photo from the dance floor.
That was taken by our cello player during a break. She left out herself and our bodhran (drum) player. I am the one with the genuine Irish tweed hat in the middle.

The dance floor was small as the Wunderbar left tables there to serve food and beverages. At least we were dinner music, too, and the place was pretty well packed to capacity. One of these days I will find a recording of decent quality, but this cell phone video will give you an idea of what we sometimes do for these dances. It is always fun no matter what. At least it has been for the last 25  years or so. I love the way cell phones only seem to pick up the trebly sounds and everything else is just muddled. No, I don't, but here it is anyway. I hope it works!
So while we are having fun the Big Lake is finally starting to lose its icy cover. The wind, rain, and above freezing weather has already put a dent in it.


The snow pack is melting, the flood warnings are around and the road bans are being put on this week. That means no trucks with axle weights of over 5 tons on my road starting Tuesday. So I got a load of hay yesterday and the weekend project is to put it in two places. Some in the barn and some in the hay shed. That is about 7 or 8 tons (230 bales) and I intend to start after I finish writing this. Most of it will wait until tomorrow, though, as I have a couple of young people coming to help. That is a very good thing, otherwise I will be tired for days and still won't be done. With help we usually get it done in less than two hours.+
Spring in the Northern Hemisphere will officially arrive with the equinox this week. It is a good thing to have gotten through one more winter. We'll be slowly warming up as opposed to you all on the other side of the equator who will finally be cooling down. That is the way it has been for billions of years and I hope it continues for a while.






Sunday, March 10, 2019

Ice and Icebreakers


The Big Lake is officially 90% frozen as of the 7th. I don’t think it will get much farther, though. The temperatures threaten to be around freezing or warmer this week and there is some wind. That will cause the demise of the ice sheets.  It also means that we can all dress in lighter clothing again! 
 (Detroit Free Press)

Shipping season will probably be delayed, too, as they usually like to get rolling around the 15th of this month, but I doubt the icebreaker’s ability to open and maintain shipping lanes in these conditions. I guess we’ll wait and see.

The USCGC Mackinaw is the icebreaker used to do this and I haven’t heard that it is out there working yet. I have seen it go by a few times in previous years. She has a distinctive shape and color and so is easy to identify. At 240 feet in length it is about one quarter of the size of some of the freighters it works for, but it does what it does to keep them all going. 

 (Photos courtesy of Wikipedia)

Note that I referred to the Mackinaw as a “she” in the tradition of sailors. That terminology has been losing favor since the 1700s and continues the downward spiral away from chauvinistic tradition. “Since 2002, Lloyd's List, which began reporting shipping news since 1734, has referred to all vessels as "it", and many news sources have adopted this new convention. Happily, most sailors have not.” (Traveler.com) There is a surprisingly large amount to read about this, should you be so inclined. Any internet search will take you there.

I wonder if the U.S. and Canada will continue with ocean going icebreakers to keep the Northwest passage open as the sea ice continues to dwindle? It opened in 2017 in August and was passable without the use of an icebreaker for the first time in many years. Of course, there is some controversy about who has the rights to use it. Does it belong to Canada or is it international waters? I am thinking it really belongs to Canada, but I am sure every country with an economic interest will disagree with that. It should be an interesting "discussion."

And for a little entertainment about the Northwest Passage I bring you one of, if not the greatest Canadian folksinger of the last century, Stan Rogers.