
Raising The Kids Right



Must have been about this time of year perhaps 10 years ago. Along Colonial Parkway between Jamestown and Yorktown, Virginia.
Sometime along about 20 or so years ago … Nov 11, 2005 to be exact.

No one put outriggers out. Gravity still works and there’s a point where the machinery loses balance.
The bridge is about 850 ft long and stands about 95 ft above “normal” water level. That level is evident at the marks on the pier and shoreline. At this time, the reservoir had been drained for maintenance during a period of normal low water; the bridge was 160 ft above water level here.
The year before this picture, 90 elk and 25 mulies broke through thin ice while crossing just above this point and drowned. In efforts to prevent this, the local region was evaluated, including this bridge. The results of this evaluation led to upgrading the bridge (and more directly, the construction of a wildlife bridge attempting to redirect the elk migrations)
During repair operations, the crane over-balanced and fell off the bridge. The operator managed to jump off the machine but a nearby construction worker was pinned between the rig and guardrail as the crane went over.
San Diego mosque shooting
“My community is mourning,” said Taha Hassane, the director an imam of the Islamic center. “The religious intolerance and the hate that unfortunately exists in our nation is unprecedented.“
… except against “non-believers” in muslim countries.
A sample of some obscure – and maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.
Today’s selection: Marshall Tucker Band – “See You One More Time” 1980
Marshall Tucker Band was one of the highlight bands of the “Southern rock” genre of the mid/late 70s. They released their first album in 1973. The original band had dissipated by 1984. The co-founder and bassist had died in a car accident and the band never regained the success of the 70s. A band under the same name still exists with one remaining original member of the band.
This cut is taken from the last album released by the original line-up, recorded in 1980.
Recent personal events led me to put this cut up more or less as a prayer to a few that have passed on.
Guess I’m getting on to that stage of my life …
My favorite cut by the band is “Fire On The Mountain” which will probably show up on some Tunesday in the future.
Someplace out along US34 near Haigler, Nebraska – just east of Colorado; just north of Kansas – sits this … “billboard”.

Well now – what is the Windmill Angus Ranch?
A place to get your own bull … generate your own custom-made bull extract. It’s election year after all …
Our 52nd Anniversary Production Sale is coming up and you don’t want to miss it! Join us Saturday, April 18, 2026!
Sorry – this year’s sale was in mid-April … but wait!
The Windmill Angus Ranch sells semen from sire Mead Mercury:


You can grow your own bull from scratch. Just like IKEA, the ranch has all the parts for your project. Get your heifer here to match your semen. Get your GreatOPlus All Natural Cattle Feed (“Backed by Science”) here for nutrition.
Our Secret . . .
BUILD BETTER WITH OMEGA-3
We designed our feed on increasing your pork, poultry and beef production in almost any situation.
Having a flaxseed and our own nanno algae for base ingredients, we load and balance your livestock with Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids (Omega-3) so you can reap the benefits across any program.
Great O is a value added fat supplement that is low use that provides multiple benefits to your program.
All you need to provide is the land and water; 9 months later, you’ll be able to answer the age-old question: “What part of the cow does the Angus come from?“
The rear I suspect …
The hummingbirds showed up a week or so ago. We put out the feeders but generally only have one species show up, the “Black-chinned”, and a only a few of those. We don’t have the ruby-throated birds around here.

The first week or so back I suspect is one of exploration; a few visits to the feeder but not much action. After that first week or so, the territory battles begin and I sometimes suspect the males are more interested in fighting than eating.
The chin usually appears black but if the sun hits just right, an iridescent violet color appears. The bird is identified by a white chest, “metallic” green body, and a darker metallic green head … and the black chin.
While I’ve seen swarms of hummers at some feeders, I’ve never seen or than 3 or 4 at our feeders – I suspect our particular environment won’t support more.
The feeder is just off the back porch and only a couple of feet from the outer branches of a large honey locust tree where I suspect they nest. The birds ignore the cats; the cats have figured they can’t catch them so they ignore the birds (the cats concentrate on the doves and quail; the magpies mess with the cats’ heads). For the most part, the hummers ignore us as well; I can stand fairly close to the feeder and it doesn’t seem to hinder their feeding.
Just another pleasant valley Sunday …
Originally posted by Jean (on “Pondering”) May 1, 2026

it was fun when I did it.

Colonial Williamsburg stages little vignettes in the streets on occasion, sometimes with “famous” characters. I don’t recall if either of these actors were playing someone famous, but the student on the left had come up to the master on the right with a question of sword technique. The master walks the student through the move, then acts it out in real time.
Lesson learned, technique practiced, the participants bid each other good day and walked off the stage (or Duke of Gloucester St in this case).

Didn’t even move when I stopped to take his picture. Of course, safety was less than a hop, skip, and jump away …