Photo of Andy Arthur

Andy Arthur

Fifty years later I'm pondering the final words of the Zen of Motorcycle Maintenance. 🏍 In terms of this larger pattern the lines at the end of this book still stand. We have won it. Things are better now. You can sort of tell these things. πŸͺ· Maybe I'm just sunburnt and it was just a dream as I reached the end of the audiobook I was listening to watching the Red Winged Black birds teary eyed. 🐦 πŸ‘€

Sticking Your Head Into the Sand Over Oil

There is a popular Internet meme that goes along these lines:

“I am poor. So when I hear my car making a noise,
rather then taking it to the repair shop, I just turn up the radio.”

This kind of reminds me of the hype over fracking for oil and gas. It was a good distraction for a while — and indeed the United States got a big boost in it’s oil production for a while — it seems like as fast as the oil glut came it is now going away. A booming global economy has expanded the world’s thirst for this economy, and with Middle East production on a decline, it seems like it’s only a matter of time that we remember the serious energy crisis our world faces in the future. β›½

There are politicians all over that like to believe we live in a sea of oil, and that suburbia will last forever. Indeed, a good portion of the green minded people think that once we switch over to electric plug-in cars powered by distant solar cells, motoring can go on care free, with no concerns about the resources being consumed or emissions being produced away from the tailpipe. But at some point, no matter how long you stick year head into the ground, our long term habit of expanding the population and feeling richer by burning more oil each year, will come to bite us. 🐲

Nobody knows when the global oil crisis will truly bite us. High oil prices once again may spur conservation and innovation like new fracking techniques πŸ›’ but the truth is the oil fueled party can’t go on forever. I like my big jacked up truck, but I’m not stupid — I know the world of ever growing demand for oil is going to be confronted by reality at some point. And the next result isn’t going to be pretty. Climate change, expensive energy, massive reductions in consumption are going to be the future. While there may be some benefit to some, the next effect will be serious impacts to millions who are forced to make dramatic changes in how they live and go through life.

Another Great Blue Heron

One of the things you will see paddling along the Hudson River in a kayak is a lot of Great Blue Herons along the shoreline. They like fish, and outside of the cities, the river is often quite quiet and undeveloped.

Taken on Saturday May 19, 2012 at Kayak the Hudson.

I’ve been bad at updating my blog lately πŸ“

I think a lot of it has to do with the fact I’m doing data work all day long and the last thing I want to do is get home and write more code. Plus my creativity has been on a down swing lately, more and more of my time going to towards reading and learning now with e-books. I’m spending more and more time looking at property and studying cabins and building construction.

Then there is also just the awful truth that I’ve covered nearly everything that I want on the blog – it gets harder and harder to branch out into new ideas and unique content. I’ve made many of the maps that I can think of making, it seems silly to repeat what’s out there. Plus lately my phone is not working well with the touch screen failing and I rarely have my laptop home much less on and running. And I’m still working on restoring things are the full reset of my laptop after clean installing Fedora Linux. I really am trying not to install a lot of junk that I never use from back ups. Plus I have a lot of outdated code to update – the blog included.

Maybe the upcoming rainy weekend will be a chance to bring my laptop home and work on updating things. It’s a good way to keep busy when it’s dreary out and I can’t spend my weekend in the wilderness.

Corning Preserve 1952

Before Interstate 787 and the filling in of the Albany Yacht Club, much of Corning Preserve was the former railyards along the river.