Waiting For The Wrecker

I notice the engine is missing
A not-quite-so-old mine site. 1940s-1960s; maybe into the 1970s. A fair number of abandoned vehicles laying around. Off to the right is a shaft that's been fenced off.
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I notice the engine is missing
A not-quite-so-old mine site. 1940s-1960s; maybe into the 1970s. A fair number of abandoned vehicles laying around. Off to the right is a shaft that's been fenced off.
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Terry Noland - "Fungus Among Us" - 1958
I am not old enough to remember the song being released but was reminded of the fungus among us line as I took an afternoon walk through some autumn woods on Sunday and found a proliferation of fungi.
They were everywhere on the ground, popping up from under fallen leaves, bending their heads over the river’s edge, spreading across the river bank and into the fields, gathering in groups at the base of trees like little hooded monks at a meeting.
There were tiny dainty butterfly-like fungi fluttering up old tree trunks in the thousands and topping it all off, the grand sounding, wonderfully named and enormous Fomes Fomentarius dangling further up the trunks of the hardwoods. I guess a perfect combination of heat, moisture and light created this abundance of fungus.
The Fomes Fomentarius is also called a hoof fungus because it looks like a hoof. It is also called tinder fungus, and sometimes called Iceman fungus because Otzi, the 5000 year old Iceman was found to be carrying four pieces, presumably as fuel. Hoof fungus can be almost two feet in height and width. The ones I saw were about 12 inches and looked more like baby elephant feet than hooves. They were tall and round with smooth flat pads on the bottom. The latin name has a great ring to it…Fomes Fomentarius. It has historical significance as a fire starter because its insides spark. It is inedible, but has been used to make amadou, a material for tinder and clothing. Some of them high up looked like giant paper wasp nests they were so big.
Photo below.

Nature put on quite the show of mushrooms for me and my dog although all I saw seemed of the poisonous or at least inedible variety so I let them all be.
I crossed paths with only one other person in my two hour walk through the woods… a sturdy lady with a heavy slavic accent who appeared out of nowhere with a giant red, white and blue supermarket bag filed to the brim with small golden mushrooms. I asked her how she intended to use them. She told me they were for her mother in law. Hmm.
A sample of some obscure – and some maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.
Today’s selection: T Bone Burnett "Shut It Tight" 1983
T Bone (Joseph Henry) Burnett was a guitar player for Dylan in the '70s, worked on several movie soundtracks, and produced the Alison Krauss/Robert Plant collaboration on "Raising Sand".
Along with all the other work he has done: more producer than performer.
Shut It Tight is off the album "Proof Through The Night"
I don't like to win but then again I hate to lose
And in between is something I can't stand
I don't care what you think and I hope that you approve
I am just an ordinary man
Sometimes I want to stop and crawl back into the womb
And sometimes I cannot tell wrong from right
But I ain't gonna quit until I'm laid in my tomb
And even then they better shut it tight
Headline: "'No Kings' Color-Revolution Turns Into White Liberal Boomer Parade"
Now I'm a member of that most dreaded group, white boomer conservatives - yet the news is making it seem that all us boomer types are ex-hippies. (Actually, "ex"-hippies are OK but too many of them never left that playground)
I don't know that I've encountered such a group of people - liberal ex-hippies and wanna-bes - so willing to be so ignorant, so unwilling to look at details, so unwilling to think maybe they should change at least some of their beliefs - yet know so much better than anyone else about just about any topic that comes to their minds.
Way back when in the 80s, I lived in Santa Cruz where I first seriously ran into what I call "hippies with money".
They struck me as mean-tempered, holier-than-thou hypocrites even then.
All those glorious ideas when they were poor about the "proper" society went out the window when they got money and it became "their" money, not "the man's" money - or even "our" money.
Now they've organized.
I liked living in Santa Cruz - I like the regions within the Santa Cruz mountains - but SC was more quirky than insane then, before the earthquake. No way would I live there now.
Continue reading →A little bit of some foot-stompin' music.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1980076437697646868
I dislike live links on the main page but the video could not be embedded.
This stuff's as good as bagpipes :)
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I had something else lined up for today but it'll keep.
I just received this photo of some finish work my brother did recently. I don't know the proper name for his specialty but "finish carpenter" is what I use.
His work in this photo is the entry way and ceiling trim. Probably other detail trim work as well.
Other than his mother's house, I don't think he's worked on any home under $10M for a long time; some in the $100+M range.
I can't afford him.
so I have to use family "secrets" to blackmail him :)
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Along what was once US30 just west of Green River, Wyoming sits ... sat ... this forlorn remnant of Highway America of the 40s and 50s ... perhaps into the 70s? See the USA in your Chevrolet ...
The construction of I-80 - that stretch of road behind the structure - doomed this business ... and likely many others along this stretch of road.
My first thought was "Texaco" but I now lean towards "Sinclair". There was nothing on site to aid identification.
I don't know what drew me to stop by the place more than once but stop often I did. One time, there was a professional photography crew there. I didn't interfere with them; they returned the compliment.
A weird arrangement of gas pumps ...
The ghosts out here aren't necessarily of the 1860s; the ghosts of the 1960s are fading away even faster.
As are those of us who remember the 1960s.
And even now, I realize I didn't gather all of whatever it was - it was not physical things - that drew me there..
The structure is gone now ...
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And there I lay, early O-dark-thirty, instantly teleported from some unknown world to this one.
My brain turned on ... or at least changed channels ... and I start thinking about the day ahead.
I have things to do, places to go, I got a good night's sleep, I feel good.
It's time to get up.
So I swing my legs around to get out of bed and sit up contemplating my next move.
Coming to the conclusion my mind was fooling me about the day ahead.
I'm ready for a nap.
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Properly agave americana, it is also known as American aloe although it is not a true aloe
Said to bloom "once a century", the plant only lives about 25 years and blooms only as it dies.
Native to Mexico and the SW US, its ornamental value has allowed it to spread world-wide.
The stalk can reach 30 feet in height; this one not that tall.
This is one of the plants from which mezcal is made (tequila is a mezcal made from a specific plant, agave tequilana.
Not only is the plant a source of sugar, the fibres are suitable for making rope, paper, and rough cloth. Ingested, it is a laxative and diuretic although it can also lead to allergic skin reactions.
This particular specimen was located in the Tucson vicinity

Along about a long time ago, I was in a position to obtain a 1 ft square section of shuttle tile - the original recipe, not the later version. This ⅜" thick section looked like a section of acoustic ceiling tile - weighed a bit less though.
You could hold a ⅜" thick section in your hand and put an acetylene torch to the other side ... and not feel the heat through the tile.
Once upon a time, this impressed people and over time, I gave pieces away. What I have now is a few larger sections of what once was a single section of tile.
My house is being repaired from a flood last summer. One of the workers - an apprentice - discovered some of my old CDs when they were moving stuff. This kid - he might be 18 - was very interested in my old Fleetwood Mac and Pink Floyd music. That period of time is old history to him.
Thinking of it, the 70s to him is what the (19)20s were to me. Time of legend and mystery yet some living remnants still exist.
So he was admiring some of my "my shit is stuff" stuff so I showed him the pieces of tile (looking like busted styrofoam).
"Here's a piece of space shuttle tile."
"Shuttle? What's that?"
Automobiles were still a novelty in the 1920s but not the 1970s. Space was still a novelty in the 1970s but not the 2020s.
Time flew by - so make me feel obsolete ...
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