I have become a big listener to audio books from the library, both on Hoopla and Libby. Audio books have one big advantage over E-books and paper books – they don’t have to get your undivided attention. Some people disagree with this notion – but it’s still a way to learn and think critically about issues – when you have to keep your eyes on the road or whatever you are doing.
Riding my bike to work and driving places are the two places where I do the most listening to audio books. When your hands are on the steering wheel or bike handles, it is a chance to give the audio book your undivided attention – in the sense you can’t easily flip over to other social media or other distractions. You start the book, and you get through it cover to cover. I have done so much more getting through full books on the bike then during any other activity.
It’s often funny how much of our world is defined by socially learned context of smell. ππ½ A lot of babies eat poop, they aren’t all horrified by smell of their own poop — at least until they’re yelled out by the mom and told gross.
Smell is very much part of our lives, π½ and so much of it is based on what we think is good or bad. Silage smells wonderful to farmers, as they know it will make for healthy cows and livestock that produce a lot of milk and meat. As does fresh cut hay and other crops. Non-farm people might smell the same thing and either have a negative impression or a neutral impression.
Whether it’s sewage treatment plant, the landfill, the barnyard, π so much of it based on our context and our experience. When you learn that smell isn’t natural but based on the context you give to things, it will give you a totally different way of looking at things — not based on whether or not something is pungent but what the real impacts of human activity are.
The morning started out cold but colorful with fiery red skies before the clouds pushed in. That said, it was a pretty cold and gray November morning but many are like that this morning.
Pancakes π₯ with cranberries, shredded carrots and apples π and lots of coffee at 5 AM this morning. Finished off the last of the one container of Greek yogurt I got last week at Walmart, rinsed it out before putting it in the trash so it doesn’t stink π before I get up to woods and turn it into carbon dioxide. π₯ I could pretend recycle it but I know there is no real market for No 5 plastic, and truth is I make a lot less trash then most and I need stuff to get fires started. β»οΈ Maybe it’s all that reading I”ve been doing about the off-gridders this weekend that has my mind so focused on the wilderness and having fires. π²And thinking about those days riding through the wilderness on my bike after enjoying cannabis. I don’t do that shit at home nor do I ever touch beer at home. π»
Started out my day riding out to the Bender Mellon Farms Trails π² and taking my bike around some of those trails, riding easy, hoping not to break and spokes or get a flat tire. So far so good. π€True of the wheels are decent, maybe I’m getting used to it and don’t want to mess with the spoke key, but whatever. It was skipping into low last night when I down shifted but didn’t have that issue today. βοΈ Then I headed over to Five Rivers for a second time this weekend and walked around there before heading back home to make some cornmeal pancakes with onions and spinach for lunch. Also put carrots in them for extra softness and fiber. π₯ Any chance to replace calories with fiber, I figure is a good thing.
Been doing a lot of reading on this cold weekend. π I don’t normally bring my computer home, so I figure learning is a good thing by reading and it’s beats the endless ads and crap of social media. People say being well read is part of the healthy human life. Started out a book reading about the the History of the Rensselaer Train Station and railroads in the Albany area, Ernie Mann’s Railroads of Rensslear. Then I started reading Mark Sundeen’s The Unsettlers about modern day rural and urban homesteaders and off-gridders. For listening while riding, Cheap Land Colorado by Ted Conover. That book discusses the mostly rural poor, the outcasts, the crazies and others who have bought 5-acres of very cheap land on the Colorado plains.
I am endlessly fascinated by the rural poor, the homesteaders, the off-gridders. π Maybe I make too much of the nobel savage of the rural poor, and I confuse voluntary poverty with real poverty, but I deeply unsettled about the modern consumeristic suburbanite life. And it’s not just because I like all things dirty, the pungent smell of manure, wood smoke and silage. Some people make so much out of so little, while others drown themselves in big color televisions, plastics, and motoring everywhere as they eat organic twinkies and say their green because they recycle some of their plastic with their weekly 96-gallon garbage service, put solar panels on the grid-tied-house, and have their $100,000 Tesla parked out front. π Got to take advantage of Libby now, though come Thanksgiving I should plan out my 10-Hoopla Borrows and get them out before I head up to camp. Libby is not reliable in places without phone service, like out in the wilderness.
Mom is sick this weekend with a cold, π€ so no visiting this weekend, though it’s probably what has been going around the office so everyone is hopeful including my sister and neice and nephew that we can all get together for Thanksgiving. π¦ It’s all good, it’s expected to turn to a mixed-bag later on today, and while it might be too warm to stick, it’s going at least be pretty wet come the evening.π¦ I want to read more this evening, prepare beans and acorn squash along with knead bread dough and prepare that for cooking at 5 AM tomorrow morning. I think I have enough clothes to avoid going to laundromat this week, though my 5-gallon compost bucket is overflowing but I’ll stick that outside in the morning and it will be fine with cold. πͺ£ Going to rot at any rate either here or out in my parents pile. π
It looks like it will be a good weekend to get out of town next weekend, βοΈ though rain or maybe ice and snow up north come Monday. I’ll probably take that following Monday off so I can get three nights camping ποΈ starting Black Friday. I am leaning towards heading farther north for this trip, but no so remote that I’m far from plowed road should things turn to ice and snow by a week from Monday. Leaning towards camping along the Boreas River – Moose Club Way – NY 28N but I’ve also considered Old Lake Durant Road campsites or maybe just old East Branch Sacandaga. I’d just love a few days hanging out at camp, π₯ have some nice fires, cook some delicious meals, π smoke some weed and ride all day. π² Kind of like those memories of Horseshoe Lake, or even the Adirondack Rail Trail. I like the idea of riding Moose Club Way but also the Roosevelt Truck Trail ain’t far from thee, and while gated and rough in places, might be quite nice on the mountain bike.
My blog is making money thanks to advertising but at the same time, I’m increasingly bored with my blog. More than a quarter century into telling my story and sharing my experiences and interesting things I’ve found on the web and elsewhere I’m running out of things to talk about.
One of the things outside of work I’ve been spending much of my time doing is studying the C/C++ programming environment, especially more advanced topics like library and system development and ranges. Of course, I should really be writing more code if I want to get good at it, and one useful thing to would be to write code to develop content for the blog.
Work consumes more and more of my time, and riding my bike to work takes time that I could be writing. But also I need investigate other concepts to keep the blog going after all these years.