POST # 272
Hey Simon, did you read the story that explains in great detail how much smarter dogs are compared to cats?
That's a good one, Paul. You crack me up. Dogs smarter than cats? What have you been smoking lately?
Thanks for the laugh, but I think I'll go back to sleep now.
Dogs smarter than cats. Just when I was beginning to think that humans are intelligent animals. Considering the amount of time that Paul has spent with cats, I would have thought, after reading the article he mentioned, he would have concluded that it must be fake news.
He's gone back to Port Townsend to play with his deer friends that hang out at the property where he is housesitting. Perhaps the deer can talk some sense into the lad, so that by the time he returns, he'll understand how superior we are compared to those dog critters, or boneheads as he likes to call them. Boneheads. Now that should be a clue right there.
But he sure did make me laugh.
living a life of simple acceptance,
Paul
The Thoughtful Wanderer
not all those who wander are lost
"NOT ALL THOSE WHO WANDER ARE LOST."
J.R.R. TOLKIEN
KAPAPAMAHCHAKWEW
Cree leader, Wandering Spirit
Friday, July 28, 2017
Friday, July 21, 2017
WEEDS AND WOOD
POST # 271
Time marches on, and in the battle between the weeds and the Canuck, at least for the moment the score is Canuck 1, weeds 0, as can be seen by the photos below. All I need to do now is to go on a daily weed patrol in order to keep the yard looking ship shape.
Since the weeds are now history, I have had time to chop some wood as well. It's an activity that I really enjoy. I spent plenty of hours bucking and then splitting wood when I lived at my little shack, SNUG, in the Yukon, and when I was splitting this pile, my mind would drift back to those wonderful days by the banks of the Klondike river. Mind you, when I was chopping wood in the Yukon, the temperature was probably hovering in the minus 30's or below, so as they say up North, the wood gets to warm you twice. Once when you chop it, and then again when you burn it in your wood stove.
Time marches on, and in the battle between the weeds and the Canuck, at least for the moment the score is Canuck 1, weeds 0, as can be seen by the photos below. All I need to do now is to go on a daily weed patrol in order to keep the yard looking ship shape.
Since the weeds are now history, I have had time to chop some wood as well. It's an activity that I really enjoy. I spent plenty of hours bucking and then splitting wood when I lived at my little shack, SNUG, in the Yukon, and when I was splitting this pile, my mind would drift back to those wonderful days by the banks of the Klondike river. Mind you, when I was chopping wood in the Yukon, the temperature was probably hovering in the minus 30's or below, so as they say up North, the wood gets to warm you twice. Once when you chop it, and then again when you burn it in your wood stove.
It only took me about thirty minutes to split this pile, and it is now safely stacked away in a dry spot ready to be used for when the weather turns cooler. But the way things are going, maybe that time will never come.
Today concludes round two of my summer sit here in Port Townsend, however I will be back again soon for round three.
Take it away Willie.
living a life of simple acceptance,
Paul
The Thoughtful Wanderer
Friday, July 14, 2017
WHOOPIN' IT UP IN WEIPPE
POST # 270
GUY ARRIVING IN WEIPPE
WHOOP (WOOP)- noun: a loud cry or shout, as of excitement or joy
-idiom: whoop it up: to raise a disturbance, as to celebrate noisily
In a recent conversation with my friend Guy, I asked him if he would mind sending me a photo upon his arrival in Weippe. True to his word, the above photo was in my email inbox a few hours later.
So what's so special about Weippe, Idaho? This was the town where Guy grew up. He is currently on another speaking tour of the USA, although Weippe wasn't one of the venues. Whether he let out a shout of excitement or joy, or raised a disturbance during his visit, I don't know. But I do imagine that being back there after so many years away, probably helped to bring up some long forgotten memories.
This particular speaking tour began a couple of days ago, and concludes in Chicago on July 25th. Some of the venues along the way will probably have a significant number of climate change deniers, but by now Guy is well acquainted with this type of individual. At this very late stage in the story of abrupt climate change, it's a curious thing to see how some people still believe that the topic is just a hoax or government conspiracy or whatever. Perhaps one explanation can be found when looking up the definition of cognitive dissonance.
Cognitive Dissonance: noun: anxiety that results from simultaneously holding contradictory or otherwise incompatible attitudes, beliefs or the like...
So for example, if you were to ask the average person why there are no longer any dinosaurs roaming the planet, the answer you would likely receive is that dinosaurs are extinct. People get that, and most of us learned that fact back in elementary school. The dinosaurs lost their habitat. No habitat, no more dinosaurs. Makes perfect sense when you think about it. But now we get to the tricky part when we discuss the human animal (and we are just another animal species). We are rapidly losing our habitat, and so it seems rather obvious to an ever growing number of us, that without habitat, we too will go the way of the dinosaurs. And that's where the cognitive dissonance comes in. Other creatures go extinct, but humans? We're too smart. We've got technology. Sorry folks, without habitat, we're done. It's just a question of when, not if. And the date for when seems to be rapidly approaching.
I stumbled across Guy's work way back in 2011, and by that time I already had five years under my belt studying this subject of climate change, so when I read what he had to say, it all made perfect sense to me.
Guy is a conservation biologist. He understands speciation, extinction and habitat, and once you understand the significance of habitat, it's very easy to see how species go extinct when their habitat goes away.
Now, I have had the pleasure of knowing Guy personally for the better part of five years, and I am very grateful to count him as a friend. And in spite of the news that humans are going to go extinct, I certainly don't go around with a big black cloud over my head. In fact (and I have to thank Guy for this), I now understand how slim the odds are of ever being born in the first place. Now just pause and really think about that for a moment. There was absolutely no guarantee that you or I might ever have been born. By keeping that in mind, I find it rather easy to enjoy each precious moment as it presents itself, and I now derive great joy in all the other life that surrounds me. Life is good, and I am happy.
OK, I'm rambling on a bit too long with this post, so I'll wind things up for this week. Guy will continue on his tour (and perhaps raise a few disturbances along the way), I'll keep weeding here in Port Townsend, and who knows, maybe they're still whoopin' it up in Weippe.
And for anyone else who wants the lowdown on abrupt climate change, you can always check out Guy's website. https://guymcpherson.com
living a life of simple acceptance,
Paul
The Thoughtful Wanderer
Friday, July 7, 2017
FRANKIE
POST # 269
Frankie, the bonehead has dreams of one day becoming chief pilot for Fireweed Helicopter Company in Dawson City. In the meantime she has a company hat to help her stay focused on her goal.
This past week Frankie was a guest at my friend Mary's place in Sudden Valley, while her owner was on vacation. It so happens that The Thoughtful Wanderer was there as well, so we all enjoyed our time together.
She's gone now (boo hoo), but we enjoyed her company for a few precious days at least. And today, I'll be heading out again, back to my housesit gig in Port Townsend for round two of the summer sit.
I imagine that there will be a few new weeds when I arrive.
Frankie, the bonehead has dreams of one day becoming chief pilot for Fireweed Helicopter Company in Dawson City. In the meantime she has a company hat to help her stay focused on her goal.
This past week Frankie was a guest at my friend Mary's place in Sudden Valley, while her owner was on vacation. It so happens that The Thoughtful Wanderer was there as well, so we all enjoyed our time together.
She's gone now (boo hoo), but we enjoyed her company for a few precious days at least. And today, I'll be heading out again, back to my housesit gig in Port Townsend for round two of the summer sit.
I imagine that there will be a few new weeds when I arrive.
HANGIN' OUT IN THE WOODS WITH MY BUDDY, PAUL
FRANKIE AND FRANÇOIS
living a life of simple acceptance,
Paul
The Thoughtful Wanderer
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