Thursday, May 21, 2020
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Nesting Roadrunner Style
Beep! Beep!
Here are a
couple of shots from out the front door. The last few days, as soon as the sun
comes up, our state birds are gathering sticks…and they make a return trip to
the supply depot about every 4 minutes.
Even the street sweeper didn’t deter them from their appointed
rounds. Time must be of the essence.
And we’ve found the nest high
in a pine tree at the corner of the house.
Question…how
do you spot a birds nest? Look for lots
of poop on the ground…
Mommy and Daddy stay together for life.
Have 2 or 3 nests a year. Lay 2 or
3 eggs. Mom & Dad take turns sitting.
Our guard
dog saw one thru the window the other day and just growled…didn’t bark!
I think
animals know when to just watch and let nature take its course.
Sunday, May 17, 2020
The
43rd President of the United States (George W. Bush) listened to Trump’s
inaugural and turned to the former Secretary of State (Gen. Colin Powell) and
said, “well, that was some weird shit.”
Indeed
it was.
Trump,
raged about “American carnage” and described a dystopic America that existed
only in the fever dreams of a noxious mix of conspiracy theorists, demagogic
commentators and dishonest propaganda platforms getting rich by spreading the
disinformation planted by foreign intelligence services.
Three
years on it turns out Trump’s speech was prophecy. He has brought devastation
to America. His legacy will be mass death and economic collapse caused by his
staggering incompetence and ineptitude.
The
United States is the epicenter of Covid-19 disease and death and the reason is
because of Trump. Trump has failed at an epic level. He has divided the county
and stoked a cold civil war. He has lied more than 17000 times and desecrated
the American Presidency. He has assaulted American patriots , our most
important institutions and attacked the rule of law. He is corrupt, indecent
and utterly lacking character. He processes none of the qualities of
greatness and goodness that have steered our country through its’ darkest
nights. He is a fool without compare. He is intellectually unfit and mentally
fragile. He is unworthy of his office and unfit for its duties.
We
are living in a moment of American weakness unlike any of us have ever seen.
Trump is the architect of that weakness. He is the instrument of our
precipitous national decline.
Recovery
from this disaster will take many years. Trump is not capable at any level of
leading it.
The
election ahead is the most important this country has faced since 1864. Let it
end this rancid era of the reality show Presidency. Let it send this tiresome
and ignorant bully back to Trump Tower and cleanse the stench of his
corruption, idiocy, racebaiting and failure from our national life. The name
Trump will long linger. It will stand for suffering and unnecessary death. It
will stand for economic collapse and financial ruin. It will stand for failure
and weakness. It will stand for decline and dishonesty. It will stand for
stupidity and indecency.
But,
mostly it will mark a tragic time in America where the worst leader in our long
history, a man so outmatched by history’s test was the President.
He
will be remembered rightfully as the worst one we have ever had.
Steve Schmitt - Republican Political Consultant
Sunday, May 3, 2020
On The Road to Villanueva
OK, we broke protocol.
Kind of.
After 4 weeks around the house, except for the not-frequent visits to a hardware store, and a supermarket, it was time to head out.
The 323 mile journey, during which our only contact with fellow New Mexicans was a friendly wave along the highway, and at the drive-thru window at Wendy's, away we went.
Here's what we saw.
State Road Three - between I-40 and Villanueva!
These 345,000 volt electric soldiers, I recall from my years in the electric utility business, carry power across the sagebrush plains between switching stations in Bernalillo and Blackwater (near Clovis). It's 216 miles long. I think, now, in additional to traditional power generation sources (coal fired power plants), the lines are used to transmit power from solar and wind generation used by PNM and other utilities across the west.
Villanueva State Park, on the banks of the Pecos River was tranquil. It had been opened up for day use, only. There were picnickers in one site - and nary another soul around - except for the state park employee who kindly told us that day-use at the park didn't require payment of a fee!
Along the way we visited another state park - Storrie Lake near Las Vegas. There, our trusty Teddy, looked longingly at the lapping blue waters, probably wondering how he could get to the ducks that were quacking in the distance. But, not wanting to get his little feet wet!
On thru Mora, Cleveland, Holman, Tres Ritos, SiPaPu, Vadito, Penasco, Las Trampas, Ojo Sarco, Truchas and skirting Picuris, Nambe, Pojoaque, Tesuque, Cochiti, San Felipe, Santa Ana and Sandia pueblos we went.
Arriving back in The Big Duke City 8 hours later.
It was worth it!
Kind of.
After 4 weeks around the house, except for the not-frequent visits to a hardware store, and a supermarket, it was time to head out.
The 323 mile journey, during which our only contact with fellow New Mexicans was a friendly wave along the highway, and at the drive-thru window at Wendy's, away we went.
Here's what we saw.
State Road Three - between I-40 and Villanueva!
These 345,000 volt electric soldiers, I recall from my years in the electric utility business, carry power across the sagebrush plains between switching stations in Bernalillo and Blackwater (near Clovis). It's 216 miles long. I think, now, in additional to traditional power generation sources (coal fired power plants), the lines are used to transmit power from solar and wind generation used by PNM and other utilities across the west.
Villanueva State Park, on the banks of the Pecos River was tranquil. It had been opened up for day use, only. There were picnickers in one site - and nary another soul around - except for the state park employee who kindly told us that day-use at the park didn't require payment of a fee!
Along the way we visited another state park - Storrie Lake near Las Vegas. There, our trusty Teddy, looked longingly at the lapping blue waters, probably wondering how he could get to the ducks that were quacking in the distance. But, not wanting to get his little feet wet!
On thru Mora, Cleveland, Holman, Tres Ritos, SiPaPu, Vadito, Penasco, Las Trampas, Ojo Sarco, Truchas and skirting Picuris, Nambe, Pojoaque, Tesuque, Cochiti, San Felipe, Santa Ana and Sandia pueblos we went.
Arriving back in The Big Duke City 8 hours later.
It was worth it!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)