Psychedelia

I never understood psychedelia until I took a few good puffs of Tropical Skittlez, put on some really psychedelic music and found myself giggling my brains out noticing how beautiful the waterfalls were, strange shadows on the rocks, the way the leaves fliddered in the breeze and the clouds overhead.

People often think the psychedelic experience about elephants jumping out of windows and all kinds of strange colors. Maybe that’s the case with LSD but smoking a good sativa pot it’s more the colors and details are enhanced.

But probably seeing an elephant jumping out of the woods would be weird and hilarious at the same time, even though you know is unlikely unless it escaped from the zoo or somebody released it into the back country of the forest preserve. And, I wouldn’t mind looking a very colorful magazine with trippy colors and cartoons, just because that be a good giggle.

It’s good, legal fun. Not unlike having a beer minus the beer goggles and the often rowdy drunken behavior. Sativa strains aren’t nearly as tiring, indeed they can be quite engerzing, especially with energy shots. And quite hillarious!

West Virginia for Living?

West Virginia is one of many charming states with a lot of good rural land to explore. I’ve certainly enjoyed my road trips down there, and I will probably go back there this autumn. There is are two off-grid living channel I follow on the Youtube, and it’s wild and wonderful down there.

But I’m not sure I would choose the state to live in. For one, the summers are brutally hot even in the mountains and the winters are cold and icy. The roads are often steep, twisty and narrow which makes vacation fun, but probably not so fun when they are covered with ice and snow and you have to get other places.

The politics are strange in the state, while the people are friendly some of the laws are not. I am no fan of the idiotic boosterism for coal energy, that is literally tearing apart the land and leaving it with massive heaps of coal waste, ruining trout streams, and fouling with air with emissions — to say nothing of accelerating the harm of climate chgnage. Scrubbers help, but even the most basic of controls are often resisted at local levels, because coal is so uneconomic at this point compared to other generating plants and renewables.

West Virginia gun laws are good, but in many rural parts of state shopping opportunities are quite limited with even Walmart a distant trip away. Hunting and fishing opportunities are pretty good, especially in the mountain area around the National Forest are great. Restrictions on trash burning, and mandatory trash pick up go against my desire to live as close to zero-waste and zero-landfill as possible, reducing and managing the remaining waste by composting, reuse and burning on my own land.

Most people who live in West Virginia, especially rural West Virginia will tell you, they would never want to leave it — as it is truly is almost heaven. But the truth is, opportunities to make a decent living, outside of the dwindling jobs in the coal industry, is pretty darn hard.

 Corn In The Sweedlin Valley

Census-designated Urban Areas in New York State (2010)

Census-designated Urban Areas in New York State (2010)

  • 87.8 percent of New York's population lives in urban areas
  • 8.7 percent of New York's landmass is urban areas as of 2010

For the 2010 Census, an urban area will comprise a densely settled core of census tracts and/or census blocks that meet minimum population density requirements, along with adjacent territory containing non-residential urban land uses as well as territory with low population density included to link outlying densely settled territory with the densely settled core. To qualify as an urban area, the territory identified according to criteria must encompass at least 2,500 people, at least 1,500 of which reside outside institutional group quarters.

The Census Bureau identifies two types of urban areas:

Urbanized Areas (UAs) of 50,000 or more people;
Urban Clusters (UCs) of at least 2,500 and less than 50,000 people.

“Rural” encompasses all population, housing, and territory not included within an urban area.

2020 Urban - Rural areas will be released December 2022.