Big Diggers…

…supposedly dredging the two little lakes in town. Unfortunately, these machines were not in place yesterday when we stopped by to have the twins give us their opinion of the operation. (Did I mention that they are experts on every kind of heavy equipment?) (Did I also mention that this operation depends on very cold temps and very deep frost to keep the big diggers from sinking into the muck, and is therefore doomed to become one of Whitewater’s more memorable fiascos?)

On another note, last night’s dinner of crispy chicken schnitzel on a bed of greens was something less than a fiasco.

Back To Hard Ice and Crusty Snow

Cold again, but that’s okay, at least for a little while longer. Afternoon walk along the creek was invigorating, but the morning’s adventures were even better. Coffee and a scone at a very unusual shop in Milton, in the lower level of a Carnegie financed library, built in 1907, on the campus of the now defunct Milton College. We had the space in the lower photo all to ourselves for nearly and hour while we sipped and read.

After coffee, we visited the excellent library in Fort, where, alas, I found noting of great interest on the new arrival shelves. But, no problem; I’ve got plenty else stacked up.

Fun In The City…

…a Habesian adventure with Bob and Cathy.

Two mile walk from Sheffield to and through Lincoln Park and then Lakefront Restaurant/Theatre On The Lake for tomato bisque and a glass of wine. Then Lyft to Macy’s (Marshall Field’s) where the Walnut room was set aside for the four of us, (with one exception, we were the only customers there) and where the salad was delicious. Subway back to the hacienda, and then a not-too-bad drive home.

Everyone masked, and photo ID and proof of vaccination required for entry anywhere.

Fun times.

Designing The Arboretum…

…preliminary steps.

Today Sherry, Nick, and I walked the park with landscape architect Danielle, and her assistant, discussing what might be. Danielle will give us a proposal, and if it seems reasonable, which I think it will, then she will be our designer. My constant refrain: “Let’s imagine what this place will be like in ten years.”

More Daylight

Noticeably more, morning and evening. Over an hour more.
Today a walk at the Meyer Nature Preserve, south of Eagle. Hundreds of acres of prairie and oak savanna.

The lane pictured below is not drivable for the public, but it is a nice walk, and a mile down it is an old log cabin (also pictured further below), and the headwaters of the Mukwonago River (not pictured).

Let’s Go Oystering

The Skipjack is ready to sail.

The Chesapeake Skipjack model is complete, at least as complete as it will ever be. Countless hours, plenty of frustration, but lots of fun.

Sometime after Christmas Sue straightened up the basement and came across a box that had been kicking around various basements for more than thirty years. The box, from Midwest Products in Hobart, Indiana, had been opened, but close inspection suggested that, although the supplied glue had long solidified, all the various bits and pieces of a model of a Chesapeake Skipjack were present and intact. 

After some internal debate I decided it was now or never; I had the time, the weather was suggesting indoor activities, and Sue had cleared all her sewing stuff off the dining room table. The agreement I made with myself was that I would give it a try and continue until major structural failure, or until things got so bolloxed up that continued work would be pointless. (N.B. the last time I built a model was probably in high school when I slapped together a plastic airplane.)

So, I set up a job board on the dining room table (over the usual cushioned pad, of course). There, the project was visible and enticing. (If I had set up on the workbench in the basement we’d be talking about something else besides skipjacks.) And I went to work—ten minutes here, fifteen minutes there, sometimes even applying a few drops of glue late in the evening after watching an episode of something (such as The Detectorists, which I highly recemmend.)

It was a challenge. Building a model like this requires an “infinite capacity for taking pains,” and a willingness to have your fingers stuck together. Any model builder, in this case me, (and this model required quite a bit of fabrication) really needs to solve a great many intractable problems and to invent a great variety of unique tools (mostly clamps, such as rubber bands). But, that’s the fun of it.

This skipjack model required 365 discreet operations. But, of course, when those operations are done improperly and then have to be undone and redone, that number increases substantially. But then again, fixing messes is part of the fun, is it not?

The one obstacle I had most difficulty with was the overall tininess. Big, clunky fingers have trouble with the minutiae—and can do a lot of damage, especially when they jerk back from some inadvertent disaster. I could never have finished without the help of more nimble fingers and more acute eyesight.

Would I do it again? Maybe, next year. Meanwhile, let’s go oystering,

Time Out For Bluebird Houses

Switch from model boats to bluebird houses.

Fellow Urban Forestry Commission member, Bill, actually has a greater interest in birds than in trees, especially purple martins and bluebirds. He came up with the idea of selling bluebird nest boxes at our First Annual Tree Sale, coming up in April, as a fund raiser. So, today, he and I got to work on 8 boxes.
Each box consists of 7 pieces, and today we got them all cut and drilled, and ready for assembly tomorrow.

It was just as in my little story, “To Build A Birdhouse.” Bill even brought kringle.

02/02/2022…

…and it feels like it. Back to cold, although the Woodstock marmot did not feel the caress of sunshine.

Thought I was going to finish the Skipjack model today but underestimated the difficulty of the chainplates, deadeyes, and shrouds. Even with Sue’s steady hands, keen eye, and sewing prowess, only one of four sets got finished, despite the fact that swear words were abundant.
Finish line in sight, however, not that far over the horizon.

Checking In With B and C

Always good to keep in touch with longtime friends, so lunch with them on the day before Groundhog Day in the town where Groundhog Day is an annual celebration.

And, while together, we work on solutions to problems like the separation of church and state, voter stupidity, and anti-vax-and-mask insanity.

Furthermore, today marks the beginning of February, which is good because February is a good month, primarily because of its brevity.

The Essence of Marcescence

The feature of certain trees to hold on to their leaves beyond fall, through winter, and into spring.

As in this young swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor). Many oaks are marcescent, as is one of my other favorite trees, the American beech (Fagus grandifolia). The rustling of marcescent trees makes a cold winter’s wind rather more enjoyable.

Very Busy…

…doing what?

A little Arboretum stuff, and then, whenever I walk by, a good ten or fifteen minutes dropped on the Skipjack model. I continue to follow my standard procedure—make a big mistake and then figure out how to fix it—which does consume the minutes. (Still fun.)

When the winter chrysanthemums go,
There’s nothing to write about
But radishes.
—Bashō