All along this area are designated campsite "pull-off" areas with little more then a stone fire rings cobbled together by previous users. Still, simple but beautiful. It's very flat around here.
Good evening! Monday’s done, tomorrow is the last day of August. π
Partly clear and 70 degrees in Delmar, NY. There is a west breeze at 5 mph. π. The dew point is 66 degrees. The muggy weather ends tomorrow around 9 pm. π
Truck has been washed and I cleaned out the interior. π’ Oil change and tire rotation tomorrow. I felt guilty about not doing my own oil change so I washed the truck by hand and unbolted the hub caps. Got groceries π at Wally World. Did my evening walk. πΆSat out back for a while.
I would do my own oil change but I hate having to get the filter off and screwing it up somehow. Small engines are easier. Plus all that waste oil – have to take it back. I’ve burned it before but it’s kind of smelly to say the least. π₯ Small engines without all the road grime are easier π’ and much less waste oil to deal with.
I do want to get some paint on the truck π after a bit of sanding but I still need to get the primer. Probably Advanced Auto has that. I just got to find the time.
Thinking about going to Spectulator and camping and working up there for the holiday weekend. βΊ Friday is the last day of remote work and that seems pleasant by Lake Pleasant. Plus the weekend forecast right now looks cool but sunny π although I’m sure it will be pouring rain β by the weekend.
SMART PEOPLE… described by Kristen Kimball in the DIRTY LIFE. Good summer read, life goals, etc.
“We were the only people in town who did not keep our lawn neatly mowed. In Essex, even the scofflaws and the drunks, the wife beaters and the serial unemployed mow their lawns. On the outskirts, there might be cars up on blocks in the yard. permanent fixtures, but the grass around them was cut on a weekly basis. Our elderly neighbors, the Everharts, kept their lawn both neatly trimmed and thoroughly decorated, with figu rines, birdbaths encircled by pansies, and a kind of weather proof slide projector set up to make a picture against the house at night, a different image for every holiday, from a flag at the Fourth of July to a snowman at Christmas.
Meanwhile, our lawn grew shaggy. I looked at it as I ran by with my hands full of crates or tools or stakes, feeling a grow ing self-loathing, knowing that it was a black mark against us in the collective mind of our community, a civic failure. One evening at the beginning of summer I’d grabbed the little elec tric mower my parents had given us and made an attempt to cut it, but by then the grass had grown so rank it was like trying 10 shear a sheep with nose hair clippers. I made one crushed, chewed-up stripe of grass at the lawn’s periphery and was defeated. By August the lawn was so overgrown it could swal low dogs and small children. Our community has more than its fair share of eccentrics, and it is tolerant of them, but I could tell the lawn bothered our neighbors, because they didn’t tease us about it. Others of our quirks-such as the pair of Highland horns that Shane Sharpe helped Mark bolt onto the hood of our Honda, making the car look like it’s sporting a handlebar mustache-they would tease us about incessantly. About the lawn, they were ominously silent.
Mark is immune to this kind of social pressure, and gener ally contemptuous of lawns. In his mind, grass is for grazing. And therein lay the solution. We might never find time to mow the lawn, but if it looked fecund enough, and the cattle were hungry, we could find the time to put up a fence. A few weeks before our wedding, we ringed the lawn with electric fence and moved the beef herd onto it. The dairy herd was recruited for the smaller patch across the driveway.
For three days, the cattle mowed our lawn. We fell asleep to Rupert calling to the dairy cows: a series of mournful, falling bass notes, the sound of a monumental desire. Then a petu lant trumpeting, the pitch rising to what passes for tenor in a bull, the sound of desire thwarted by electric fence. We awoke to the rip-rip sound of cows grazing right outside our window. “