Yearly Archives: 2025
A Murder of Crows
A Gerard post, authored by ghostsniper: by Vanderleun on July 28, 2017
lifted from the comments: "Jeez, has it been 8 years already?"
This year the crows are back, after having been gone for the past 2 years. I’m talking about the BIG ones. Maybe 16-18″ tall, walk around with their arms behind their backs (not unlike Groucho Marx) like they are assessing everything. And talkin’ that shit. Loudly. VERY loudly. Easily the loudest birds in the forest, drowning out even the pileateds.
They are alert, watching each other’s backs, and they will see you before you see them. They keep their distance from you, at least 50 feet or more. Get closer than that and they take flight. Fraidy cats.
Crows is curious creatures, maybe an indication of higher intelligence. Oops. Did I just infer they could be human? OMG, you know what that means!
All black. Body. Beak. Legs. Eyes. Black to the core. And picky assed eaters. The other birds anxiously eat from the smorgasbord that is delivered daily but the crows are better’n that, so they think. I’ve seen a crow pick up a sunflower seed and throw it back down in disgust then run it’s yap for a bit then come back and pick it up again and head of to a high limb somewhere to enjoy that tasty snack.
6am to 8am is their staying connected time around here. Fortunately we are early risers so we are not unduly bothered by their group tirades. I find them humorous and enjoy watching them from afar. If I stay perfectly still on the porch they get closer for better viewing and they are magnificent creatures.
They have a purpose.
The crows do the jobs others don’t want to do. If a squirrel gets splattered on the road the crows are right there disposing of it. Nice. Then I don’t have to shovel scoop it up and dig a hole. They peck at it til it’s skin and bones, then the rest just magically disappears. Do they carry it into the woods? I’ve never seen a squirrel carcass in the woods. Do the crows eat the fur and bones? Don’t know.
As I said, the crows are the BIG variety. If they had a mind to, I imagine a group of 10 or more could most certainly take out a grown person. The beaks and claws look quite diabolical. At a full speed low angle dive I believe a 2″ black chisel beak would leave a deep permanent scar and maybe a trip to the ER. 10 of them punctures in rapid succession and you may succumb.
Then in a bit they will have picked you clean. And maybe we’ll find out what happens to the carcasses…..
Continue reading →Well, Well, Well …
Look what showed up in the garden today:

Now - even though it's still April - I'll go ahead and declare winter to be over.
Continue reading →Probably Out Of Gas
The Market’s Going To Go Up!
Your 401Ks will increase in ... numbers.
But the value will decrease. By maybe 40%.
"$10T Money Print! Fed’s New Plan Will Dwarf Bernanke Era"
If true, this is what also occurred in Oct 2023; the Fed dumped $10T into the market and stock prices went on a 14-month tear from then until mid-Feb of this year. Now they're talking of doing it again?
Do you feel richer from the Fed doing that the first time?

What this actually meant of course, is that the value of the dollar decreased so it took more dollars to purchase something of constant value.
Gold more or less holds its value - look at gold prices over the same period.

With the market turn-down since mid-Feb, the money people begin to get worried - their worth is decreasing.
How to fix that? Dump more money into the market; get those prices back on an upswing. Everyone looks at the "value" of their savings accounts - mostly IRAs and similar - and think "I'm getting rich; isn't life grand?" when actually, the purchasing power of that $1million dollars in your savings is not what one thinks of when becoming a "millionaire" (IIRC, a millionaire is now defined as someone having an income of $1m/yr rather than a worth of $1m. Like a lot of things, the definition had to change to hide reality.)
Certain things will gain in worth; most will decrease. Just because the dollar amount on your savings goes up doesn't mean your purchasing ability has gone up as well; likely, it's going down. There's government inflation numbers ... and the prices you have to pay. Which do you believe?
(I personally have two Federal items in my life - income and outgo - both adjusted to cost-of-living.
Funny how the COL for money coming in is less than the COL for the money going out)
I don't have recommendations. As they say; "The best time to prepare was 10 years ago, the next best time is now". It may already be too late to gain a "bug-out" location; locals most anywhere one goes - especially rural areas - are getting resentful of newcomers. Mortgage rates are high, likely going higher. Doesn't matter though, mortgages will be harder to qualify for regardless of the interest. Guns and ammo are good; not as important as many think though. What else do you need for when you can't get it? Electricity? Water? Food? Waste disposal?
I suspect the market over all will continue down, perhaps another 20%. I suspect a flood of "funny-money" into the market in an attempt to keep prices up.
I suspect a major war ...
It wouldn't surprise me to see an adjustment in our currency - effectively turning the present $100 bill into the "new" 90¢ ... as soon as they can figure a way to do so without bringing out the tar, feathers, and pitchforks.
When? It could be the process has already started; it could be it takes a few months. I'm doubtful we have years.
Since they just print "money" as needed, one might wonder why we pay taxes. Or could an "elimination" of taxes be the way to introduce/force this new currency?
The Trump administration - while far superior to the alternative - is not going to be hoards of men on white horses come to save the day. More likely, just one gang coming in to take the place of the old gang. "Meet the new boss; same as the old boss".
Has this administration really done anything more than blow pretty smoke? A few hundred undesirables kicked out, a few million/billion dollars supposedly saved? Fluffy news stories. Did your taxes go down with all those savings? All the investigations and revelations of criminality and corruption? Anyone high up arrested and convicted yet? Anyone else suspect these district judges are simply a distraction or an excuse? They don't have the authority to tell the Executive branch what to do; they have no national authority in any case. Why aren't they simply being ignored?
Once the baby-boomers are gone, all memory of the way it once was will be gone with them. It was a privilege worthy of thanking God for having been a young adult during the time of the American empire's greatest days.
Shouldn't read the news just before I prepare a post ...
Of course, I could be fully full of it.
Continue reading →Legacy…
First published Sept 15, 2006
"We write, in part, the words we need to read."
.... Rebecca McClanahan, Write Your Heart Out
My words are my children,
nurtured from conception to maturity,
from thought to page.
They are what (all) I have to leave behind,
to let someone know I was here.
The mark I leave.
One proof of my life's worth.
They talk back to me, make me laugh.
They explain me, comfort me, as I grow old.
but I want to talk about spring time!
Submitted by SK as a comment
Spring has almost sprung in my corner of the Midwest. The dance is always two steps forward, one step back. Then spring actually does arrive, stays briefly and suddenly leaps forward into full summer.
With these longer days of spring and the sun warming the earth there comes the urge to clear and clean, dig and plant. My indomitable English mother was always bottom-up in flower beds and vegetable patches from the minute the clock jumped forward while we children were tasked with picking up sticks and collecting branches that litter the lawn after winter storms.
I never quite remember exactly how my garden was the year before. The first day out in the spring is therefore all about pottering around trying to remember what worked well and what was left undone, taking mental notes and preparing for more important decisions to come later on when frost is no longer a threat. Gardens teach us great patience. You can spend all winter making the best of plans only to have them thwarted because of weather or pests or blight or other unforseens.
The great thing about gardens is that you are never lonely. You are always in the company of bees, earth worms, beetles and birds, all of whom have something to tell you about the state of the things if you are quiet enough to listen.
The birds arriving from their winter places are always a joy. Skeins of geese honk overhead - it's a stirring, ancient sound that we on the ground have heard for eons. Usually the first song birds to arrive in my part of the world are the redwings. They stand on the tip of reeds at the edge of the marsh and sing their happy blackbird tunes.
One of the few Apps I have on my phone and use often is the Merlin Bird app. For those of you unfamiliar with it, the app permits you to record bird songs and then identifies for you, with names and photos, all the birds it hears. One late spring morning I set my phone on a table outside. The app identified 23 different birds in an 10 minute recording. I was astonished because I hadn't heard nearly that many. The result that morning on the app encouraged me to listen more carefully, beyond the songs of bluejays, cardinals, chickadees etc that one becomes accustomed to hearing as daily background noise in the garden.
The University of Texas, last May, published an interesting article on the subject of birdsong and the human voice. They conducted, as part of a study, high-resolution anatomical scans of syrinxes from hummingbirds and ostriches — the world’s smallest and largest bird species — and the discovered that the syrinx of birds and larynx, the vocal organ of reptiles and mammals, including humans, share the same developmental programming.
The genetic connection between the vocal organs, said one of the professors involved in the study, is a new example of “deep homology,” a term that describes how different tissues or organs can share a common genetic link. In short, birdsong and the human voice share the same genetic blueprint. Here is a link to the article:
www dot jsg dot utexas dot edu/news/2024/05/birdsong-and-human-voice-built-from-same-genetic-blueprint/
Looking for more information about this, I came upon a site about bird and animal music and the name of a Canadian composer and "zoomusicologist", Emily Doolittle (what a perfect surname), who creates music from bird song. She has a website (emilydoolittle dot com) where you can listen to examples of her music, some of which I have included below.
The music is unusual, evocative and quite beautiful. Seems at times similar to the dream like music of Claude Debussy. It struck me as something perhaps the music lovers on this site might enjoy and something Gérard might have considered for one of his "Something Wonderful" posts.
How dull would life be without birds!
youtube dot com/watch?v=-E1Kg4J41-c
youtube dot com/watch?v=KF7IlH03UwE
Continue reading →The Homestead
Beneficiary…
First posted: July 17, 2008
I think about you
almost never
these days.
much less than
once in a while.
funny that, don't
you think, all
those tears
washed my eyes
and let me see,
there is, after all,
life after left over.
Which?
Sometimes, this is how I feel when I have a post idea.

I actually just trashed one that on hindsight, felt it added nothing and subtracted much. I'll leave some of my developing ... hatred? ... of "things" to myself.
It's hard sometimes to keep from spewing out in public. Don't we all get enough of that most of our waking hours everywhere we look?
Not that I'm all in for rainbows and unicorns ...
This is much better:




