Life On and Off an Acreage

In-sights into moving from an Acreage back to Town, plus a few things I find of interest.

Two things that horses are scared about:


1. Things that move
2. Things that don't move




Old enough to be eccentric, but not rich enough
Showing posts with label Musings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musings. Show all posts

October 20, 2013

Quite a Time to Live in

I found this while cleaning out some old stuff getting ready for a move to where? I don't know.

Things are rough now as they were in 1944, but look at the price on things! Gas at $0.15 /gallon? Makes you think how far we've progressed, doesn't it?




August 19, 2013

Summer Progresses

Five loads of hay have been hauled. Seven more to go in September when a couple of brothers do their second cut and bale some squares. They also deliver!
 The hay storage now has 115 bales in it. I should be able to pack 120 in the other side. The balance will go on skids in front and under tarp. For the life of me, I can't figure out why hay producers just lay the bottom course of a pile on the ground! It causes the bales to wick moisture up, and in short time the bottom course is good only for cows, maybe. Companies here can't get rid of their skids and they make an ideal platform to get the hay off the ground. The skids are also free!
 The horses have now been moved back to the upper pasture. Hopefully, I will get 3 to 4 weeks out of the field, and several back in the lower before the snow comes.
 This sweet little 102 pound darling looks pretty good before brushing.
 She looks much the same after brushing, except for the pile of hair in front of her. I get this much off every second day, and haven't got down to dog yet.
In this part of the country we get to miss quite a few summers, but never get the chance to miss a winter. Perhaps Brooklyn knows that this will likely be a cold winter. She is sure hanging onto the insulation. The general opinion around the coffee shop, you know, the Good Old Boys club, is that with the crappy summer, we will likely have a crappy winter. Don't you just love optimism?

The old timers are starting to nod when I come in, so maybe I am about to be assimilated. Now that is a scary thought! I am way to young to be an official member!

The raspberries are done! Family and friends picked about 30 pounds and the remaining 20 pounds or so got knocked off in a heavy rain and hail storm.

July 21, 2013

July 4, 2013

Thoughtless Thursday

It's thoughtless 'cause it's so darn hot and all the Boss wants to do is work on the access ramp. Somebody has to keep these critters under control. They are getting a little too far away.
 I will give them my patented Stink Eye. That should bring them in closer. Glad I didn't have to move too much!
 Don't look at me. I don't do horses. Besides somebody has to keep an eye on the Boss in case he falls of the ramp, or hurts himself. Besides, I am a bird dog, and it's too hot!
 I mean it! It's too hot! Now let me sleep.
Or maybe I'll go smell the roses. Naah, bad idea. Too far!

July 3, 2013

When Things Look Down

Have a look around. Complexity and beauty can be found in the simplest things. maybe these wind flowers are not so simple after all. they support others (note the cobweb in the left of the picture). Note the complexity of the opening flower, center right. Complex and simple at the same time!
And the colours, so pure and true!
Have a great July 4! We had a great Canada Day!

April 23, 2013

A Little Gardening History

1957: BBC fools the nation
The BBC has received a mixed reaction to a spoof documentary broadcast this evening about spaghetti crops in Switzerland.
The hoax Panorama programme, narrated by distinguished broadcaster Richard Dimbleby, featured a family from Ticino in Switzerland carrying out their annual spaghetti harvest.

It showed women carefully plucking strands of spaghetti from a tree and laying them in the sun to dry.

But some viewers failed to see the funny side of the broadcast and criticized the BBC for airing the item on what is supposed to be a serious factual programme.

Others, however, were so intrigued they wanted to find out where they could purchase their very own spaghetti bush.

Exotic delicacy

Spaghetti is not a widely-eaten food in the UK and is considered by many as an exotic delicacy.

Mr Dimbleby explained how each year the end of March is a very anxious time for Spaghetti harvesters all over Europe as severe frost can impair the flavour of the spaghetti.

He also explained how each strand of spaghetti always grows to the same length thanks to years of hard work by generations of growers.

This is believed to be one of the first times the medium of television has been used to stage an April Fools Day hoax.

How can so many people be so foolish  as to believe this?

Everybody knows that spaghetti does not grow on bushes.
Lasagna does! :-}

Wikipedia


April 18, 2013

Severe Case of Muffin Top

I don't know where I went wrong on this one. I do about two per week. Perhaps if I send away for one of those Lycra girdle-type thingies that are advertised on TV, that might be a solution. You know, the 3 piece pack- it- somewhere, figure enhancers.

 That might allow the muffin top to be stuffed back in where it belongs. After all, if you see it work on TV, it has to be true.

This muffin top lifted the lid on the bread machine. It could be a real challenge for a girdle.

What say you? Is it worth a try? Or should I just eat the evidence?



Grandpa's Cinnamon, raisin, cranberry bread

April 16, 2013

Lost by Oversight

Sometimes we get so busy, that we forget to look around. As a result, many of the mysteries of God's creation are lost to us.


 Way out in the middle of a field of snow, well away from any bushes or trees, this lowly little spider was trudging along. Why? Who knows?
Where did he come from? How did he get there? Again, who knows?
This little black speck caught my eye and stood out midst the field of white, going on about his/her business impervious to the cares of the world.

April 15, 2013

Going Way Back

Our family home going back to the 1900's. It still stands and hasn't changed much.


 One of my first hunting trips with my Dad, about 1957.

A distant relative David Lockhart in the early 1900's


What the Mayor of Kenora (my dad) had to do in 1945 in International Falls, Minnesota when he lost a bet to their mayor. (m.a Hydrants seem to be a magnet for dogs. He was forced ( at gunpoint :-} to clean it!)




The local snow princesses in Kenora, 1946. The blocks of ice were cut from the lake to build castles and ice sculptures on the street corners. Lights were put inside the blocks. What a way to celebrate Winter carnival 


This is a little more recent, 1997 in Thunder Bay Ontario when we received two snow falls of 50 cm each within 3 days! It took a week before we could get out.

"Smile things could get worse! We smiled, and they did!"



April 7, 2013

When Spring Comes..

Thoughts turn once again to flying. I was digging through some old photos on the computer and came up with the 1933 Pietenpol that I almost finished over a 10 year span. I had it all ready for covering when I retired and moved to Whitecourt. It soon became apparent that flying as a hobby was an expensive luxury.

Elaine with fuselage
The wings were Sitka Spruce, aircraft grade, with about 5000 1/2 inch nails and a lot of special glue holding it together.
Wing ready for covering
I rebuilt the engine to factory specifications. I only wanted 95 horse power out of it. I could do that without going to a gear reduction. Some folks used this motor to power sand rails, getting 850 horse power! This was without breaking any rods.
"69 Corvair engine in basement being rebuilt

6 Cylinder opposed engine, Air cooled
I had to learn oxy acetylene welding to do the motor mounts, landing gear and struts. I passed the gas welding test.
Engine mounted
The cockpit was simple, with just enough instruments to make it legal for visual flying rules.
What the cockpit would have been like
The pilot sat in the back with the passenger up front right on the center of gravity so that no adjustment for weight and balance was required.

What it would have been like
The original designer built 31 of them at his factory in Wisconsin?, I think. The original was still being flown5 years ago and may be going yet.

The plane had several innovative break thoughs ( for 1933). It had an under camber wing that said if the nose rose up, the  wing would return the plane to level flight. Similarly, if the nose dropped, the wing would increase lift to bring it back up. This made trim tabs unnecessary.

It also lined the cock pit with3/16 inch plywood that crumbled up in the event of a crash. Previous to this, the pilot had a good chance of being skewered by broken longerons. A fellow dove it straight in from a couple of hundred feet, and walked out of it. The cockpit area was reduced to saw dust. Think of the modern car. It is designed to absorb shock the same way.

Even though it has been snowing night and day for 4 days, i still get these urges to go flying in the spring.
It would be real expensive now because I have allowed my pilot licence to lapse. A guy can still dream though, and remember the time in the air.



March 24, 2013

Things I Remember

Growing older, a lot of the day to day happenings in life get lost by the wayside. There are a few things that stick forever, it seems.

This is a short list, but one that reminds me just how far humanity has come, and yet, in some cases, how far we have to go.

1. Today, 50 years ago, the Beatles recorded their first record album! I clearly remember their first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show ( A really good shew). I also remember how my Mom and her friends clucked at the "Noise". However, they did change the music industry forever.

2.Also on the Ed Sullivan Show there was a young man called Elvis. He managed to change music and music appreciation. My Mom and her friends also clucked at the gyrating hips.

3. The Cuban Missile Crisis had everybody planning for annihilation.In 1962 the world was as close to the edge as was possible without falling off. Students in schools did not expect to be around to graduate. People flocked to churches to pray for a resolution. People built back yard bomb shelters.

"Nuclear catastrophe was hanging by a thread ... and we weren't counting days or hours, but minutes."
-Soviet General and Army Chief of Operations, Anatoly Gribkov

4. November 22, 1963, I was lying on my bed in the residence, waiting to go to English class when the word came through that John Fitzgerald Kennedy had been assassinated. All the students congregated in the cafeteria, the gym, and the hallways. Classes were cancelled. Girls and a few guys were weeping. This was the death of a man that had the cojones to stand up and say "no" to nuclear proliferation in the Americas. He knew what he was doing, and what the consequences could be, but stood firm and deescalated the situation.

"Ask not what your country can do for you," he said. "Ask what you can do for your country." Quite a change from the mindset of today!


5. Neil Alden Armstrong (August 5, 1930 – August 25, 2012) was an American astronaut and the first person to walk on the Moon. This was done on July 1969. What struck me here was the fact that my Dad was born in the year (1903) that Wilbur and Orville  Wright first flew a heavier than air craft at Kitty hawk. 66 years later, a man was on the moon!

Again JFK set the stage, and a target.
President John F. Kennedy delivered this speech, "Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs," on May 25, 1961 before a joint session of Congress. In this speech, JFK stated that the United States should set as a goal the "landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth" by the end of the decade.

He got it done!

6. Less we offend! One of the worst pieces of legislation ever to come out (in my opinion) was The Charter of Rights and Freedoms . It's intent was to give equality to all peoples of Canada. In fact, it took God out of the classroom, thereby causing the majority to give way to the minority. All religions in Canada are recognized in their own right, but this prohibited Christians (the Majority) from teaching God's code of behavior as has been done since before the founding of our nation. It also legalized practices forbidden in the Bible, and thus against God's commands, Abortion, homosexuality, and a few others were legitimized. It has gone to the extreme where one individual protesting can cause instruction in a religious school to be stopped

7.I started into computers with a Radio shack Colour Computer 2 about 1980. This had a whopping memory (ram) of 16k and used a tape recorder as a data storage device.In a year or to, I updated to a 5 inch floppy disc.It had an LPT-1 printer that printed out one line of text at a time. Slow? Yes! I was able to use it to convert a company that used mainframe computers (IBM) to a graphical financial set of record keeping. To do this, i had to learn basic programming language. I progressed up the line to my present HP Pavillion (now 7 years old) with its 500 megabyte storage, DVD drive and colour printer. This has all happened in 33 years. You don't service a car, or almost anything without a "card reader". Where will this be in another 33 years. There is one major downfall, and that is its vulnerability to EMF, say from a dirty bomb air burst. I well remember that COCO2 , though.

8.I don't remember where I was when the word came through that the World Trade Center had been attacked, but I do remember sitting in front of the TV watching as the details unfolded. My thoughts at the time went something like this "those people are crazy" and "this is going to change how we perceive the world", and, "Wow, what can we do to halt this". I also remember some folks (non-caucasion) cheering in a gas bar as the news came up on their screen. They have since moved on. This was the start of major paranoia in the Americas.

9. I watched as the war in Iraq started, wondering how they found out so fast about the source of the terrorists. I also watched as the U.S. Britain and others jumped on board the story of weapons on mass destruction. I wonder to this day where the weapons are. As far as I know none were found. I also remember how it says in the Word of God that in the end times, many will be deceived!

10.The Christian Church continues to amaze me in its longevity. For 2000+ years, God's Word, The Holy Bible, has remained true and unchanging in intent. There are many interpretations of the Bible and also many divisions in the Church. These divisions, in my opinion, are caused by men attempting to interpret the Bible to suit their own beliefs. Different practices have come in and different interpretations. However, over the course of history, the gist has remained true. I was once challenged that it was made up by man (true, but under divine guidance by the Holy Spirit). I was challenged that the author /historian Josephus disproved the Bible. After a tough read, I found the opposite to be true, that the entire book of Isaiah was present in the early first century, and when compared to today's version, very little was changed. 

These are the things that I remember and that stick in my mind.

How about you? What is memorable in your opinion?



January 25, 2013

This Sums it Up

I am quoting from a CTV show this morning.

" There are three types of people in the world:

1. Those that are Scots
2. Those that want to be Scots
3. Those with no ambition at all."

Happy Robbie Burns Day everybody!

November 22, 2012

Something to Think About!

Author is not known to me. 

   MERRY CHRISTMAS  


 
YOUR FIRST CHRISTMAS CARD
Cleverly done!!!
Twas the month before Christmas
When all through our land,
Not a Christian was praying
Nor taking a stand.
Why the PC Police had taken away
The reason for Christmas - no one could say.
The children were told by their schools not to sing
About Shepherds and Wise Men and Angels and things.
It might hurt people's feelings, the teachers would say
December 25th is just a ' Holiday '.
Yet the shoppers were ready with cash, checks and credit
Pushing folks down to the floor just to get it!
CDs from Madonna, an X BOX, an I-Pod
Something was changing, something quite odd!
Retailers promoted Ramadan and Kwanzaa
In hopes to sell books by Franken & Fonda.
As Targets were hanging their trees upside down
At Lowe's the word Christmas - was no where to be found.
At K-Mart and Staples and Penny's and Sears
You won't hear the word Christmas; it won't touch your ears.
Inclusive, sensitive, Di-ver-is-ty
Are words that were used to intimidate me.
Now Daschle, Now Darden, Now Sharpton, Wolf Blitzen
On Boxer, on Rather, on Kerry, on Clinton !
At the top of the Senate, there arose such a clatter
To eliminate Jesus, in all public matter.
And we spoke not a word, as they took away our faith
Forbidden to speak of salvation and grace
The true Gift of Christmas was exchanged and discarded
The reason for the season, stopped before it started.
So as you celebrate 'Winter Break' under your 'Dream Tree'
Sipping your Starbucks, listen to me.
Choose your words carefully, choose what you say
Shout MERRY CHRISTMAS,
not Happy Holiday!
Please, all Christians join together and
wish everyone you meet
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Christ is The Reason for the Christ-mas Season!
If you agree please forward, if not, simply delete.

October 11, 2012

When I Was Younger

1. We walked to school in the  rain, snow or sleet, +30C (86F) to -40C (-40F), uphill, both ways. We also came home for lunch at noon. There was a public bus, but only weenies rode it.

2. The snow was much deeper then, up to our thighs at times.


3. We played outside, no matter what the weather, walking 3 miles each way to ski at the golf course.

4.  We swam about 3 miles per day in the summer, in the lake, unsupervised, from a beach to an island to a dock to another beach and back.

Kids Play On The Beach Stock Photo - 110682775. Our parents were not paranoid about us getting drowned, hurt, or abducted.

6. The local police had a way of straightening out delinquents that is not socially acceptable today. It worked, and generally left no marks.

7. There was a place for Juvenile Delinquents, where you definitely did not want to go! (See 6, it didn't always work)

8. The newspapers published names, so that the community knew who and what they were dealing with.

9. You left your house, garage and whatever unlocked when you were out. (See 6,7, 8 above)

10. The first day for swimming was the 24th of May, even if it meant breaking ice on the creek.

11. We sang "Oh Canada" and had morning prayers in the public school system. That meant that we knew where we lived and who God was. Non-believers were few, and could be excused from singing or attending the prayer session if they so wished. A few would sit it out, but no one commented on it.

12. After a few warnings, children could be strapped in the school system. It hurt like heck, but also hurt in the pride. Trust me, I know! When word got back home, it generally called for another licking as a reminder.

13. Parents could spank their children when necessary, without Social Services showing up at the front door.

14. Kids respected their parents, their parents property, and the property of others.

15. Graffiti? What's that?

16. If you fouled up and damaged something, your parents were responsible for restitution. (See 13)

17. When you encountered a bully, you duked it out which generally resulted in a resolution. If you won, problem solved. If you lost, problem also solved, as the bully knew you would fight back. If you were caught, Item 12 above applied which was a lose/lose situation for both.

18. Children respected and honoured their parents.

19. Children knew who their parents were. If a guy got a girl in the family way, he was expected to drop everything, get a job, and marry her. At age 16 to 18, that was a BIG deterrent.

20. Divorce was almost unheard of, and seen as shameful.

21. From the age of about 13, you were responsible for your own actions. I was underprivileged because my parents were alcoholics, separated, black, white or ? did not cut it. My Dad was a Justice of the Peace, and to make a point at about this age, he took me to the local  gaol, into a small room, and had me stand on a square on the floor. Yes, it was the hanging room, and yes, our Provincial Jail still hung people in those days. It made an impression that bad things can happen to people who make bad decisions. It's a little more than the slap on the wrist you get nowadays. Oops, can't slap on the wrist any more!

Looking at Society as a whole today, I would much rather be raised in  "The Good Old Days" than the way it is today.  It's too bad that this part of the clock can't be turned back! Maybe it could be if people would take the time to revert to the old values of God and Country and a judicial system that promoted responsibility!
FWIW.




October 1, 2012

Take Note Canada!

Summary "Lifted" from:
http://hackwilson.blogspot.ca/2012/09/democrats-government-is-only-thing-we.html

This is well worth some thought when applied to our Canadian Government!

"The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite."
---James Madison


"Most bad government has grown out of too much government."
---Thomas Jefferson

"I think we have more machinery of government than is
necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the
industrious."

---Thomas Jefferson


"When governments fear the people there is liberty. When the people fear the government there is tyranny." 
---Thomas Jefferson

"The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first."
---Thomas Jefferson

"There are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations."
---James Madison


"The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government."
---Patrick Henry

"Government is not reason; it is not eloquence. It is force. And force, like fire, is a dangerous servant and a fearful master." 
--- George Washington

"A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government, and this is necessary to close the circle of our felicity."
---Thomas Jefferson

"This is the tendency of all human governments. A departure from principle becomes a precedent for a second; that second for a third; and so on, till the bulk of society is reduced to mere automatons of misery, to have no sensibilities left but for sinning and suffering... And the fore horse of this frightful team is public debt. Taxation follows that, and in its train wretchedness and oppression."   
---Thomas Jefferson

"If Congress can employ money indefinitely to the general welfare… The powers of Congress would subvert the very foundation, the very nature of the limited government established by the people of America."
---Alexander Hamilton

"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
---Thomas Jefferson

"If Congress can do whatever in their discretion can be done by money, and will promote the General Welfare, the Government is no longer a limited one, possessing enumerated powers, but an indefinite one, subject to particular exceptions."
---James Madison

"The utopian schemes of leveling [redistribution of wealth], and a community of goods, are as visionary and impracticable as those that vest all property in the Crown. [These ideas] are arbitrary, despotic, and, in our government, unconstitutional."
---Samuel Adams

 "I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents."
---James Madison

"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is big enough to take everything you have." 
---Thomas Jefferson

"My reading of history convinces me that most bad government results from too much government."
---Thomas Jefferson

"That government is best which governs least."
---Thomas Paine

September 15, 2012

Who's Going to Miss It!

As the deadline for the big lock out looms (tonight), I ask myself "Just how greedy can things get?" 
Here are some of the highest paid athletes in the world from $400,000 per year up to 100+ millions saying that it's not enough, we want more. Sure, the career might be short, but not always. Properly managed, the financial earned in one or two years properly invested can set the player up very well for the rest of his life.
Then there are the owners. I really feel sorry for these millionaires. They are allegedly losing money. Ha! They have priced the family attendance to games out of this world.  Still, they want more!
The players union is a farce. They are not looking after the player's interests at all. They are on a power struggle with management to see who can "win". I have news for both parties. You both are going to lose in revenue, in fan loyalty and in reputation. 
I am interested in the outcome mainly to satisfy my inquisitiveness about how far this greed will go.
I lost interest in the NHL many years ago when it became obvious (to me at least) that the almighty dollar was more important than the game. Should the lock out occur, then maybe the networks will start carrying the World Tiddlywinks Championship events. It should be more entertaining than watching highly overpaid athletes parade around the rink.  

There are better things to do on the Acreage than watch that crap.

September 9, 2012

Hope is on the Horizon!

Tomorrow, if all goes well, we will have a new satellite internet provider. 5 MB/s of download and 20g's of bandwidth! Hopefully, then we can start getting on the internet without having to reboot and retry up to 8 times per day. They say you should never burn bridges behind you, but this may be the exception! Goodbye, Telus!

June 24, 2012

Arachnophobia, Anyone?


I've been watching this guy for a few days. Today he came out to dine on this caterpillar. This is the first time that I've seen anything eat these guys. Either the spider is very hungry, or has no taste.

 For all you folks suffering from arachnophobia, cheer up, there is probably one somewhere many, many, times his size, and hungry too!
Up close and personal! The camera lens is only about 6 inches away in this shot. I was hoping that it was a runner and not a hopper. Actually he is rather cute!
Sleep well, me hearties! They are out there!

April 29, 2012

Things We Take for Granted

Pussy Willows are often seen, but rarely does anyone take a really good look at the complexity of each and every bloom. It's just like life, a lot is going on, but is never noticed.
When you get in really close, things become more obvious.
When we get as close as possible, details that are normally hidden, or unnoticed, jump right out at you.



Often events such as this are so fleeting that they are easily missed. In this busy life, are things going by so fast that we are missing the details? Or failing to smell the roses, so to speak? Or giving thanks to the Creator for His miracles?