Friday, August 26, 2011

Virginia Earthquake–August 23rd

OK, so today at 1:51 PM a 5.8 quake struck Virginia with an epicenter in Louisa County.  Quite a few buildings in Louisa suffered significant damage, 2 nuclear power plants shut themselves down (as designed & without other problems), the jail in Culpeper had to be evacuated to a nearby state prison due to building damage (which turned out to be minor & the jail folks were back home in less than 24 hours) and a whole lot of stores had most of there stock deposited on their floors.  The quake even did structural damage to the Washington Monument on the DC Mall (which hasn’t reopened) and did significant damage to the Washington Cathedral. 

And where was I during all of this?  On a country road between Brandy Station and Batna with a corn field on my left and cows in a pasture on my right.  Yes I felt the quake, I thought the road was just a bit rough.  Neither the corn nor the cows reacted in the slightest.  My mare Louise was a bit nervous during her hoof trimming just after the quake, but that was the only impact the quake had on my life.   Apparently various of my friends were concerned about me – sorry to have worried you all but the quake was barely felt here in Greene county.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

A Laid Back Affair August 11 - 14

Its August and time for my favorite motorcycle rally- A Laid Back Affair.  The rally is co-hosted by a Newport News area BMW Airhead group and the No-Name Motorcycle Club, of which I am a proud member.  I wasn’t able to get any time off of work for the rally this year, but the 2 days I was able to be there were mighty fine. 

IMG_0530

The Affair was at a different campground this year.  Last year the Glen Maury campground in Buena Vista double booked the group camping area, which lead to a rather unsatisfactory situation.  So this year we went to Mallard Duck campground where one of the NNMC crew has a long term camping site.

IMG_0531

Mallard Duck isn’t very large but its very nicely laid out and very well run.  The little trailer in the photo is JR’s, he brought it up for the rally.  The bathhouse is clean, the roads level and well maintained and the picnic tables are all sound.  WooHoo !

IMG_0534

The campground backs up to a small river with fishing available.

IMG_0547

This is the tent camping area.  Its level, drains well and has 2 fire rings.  We likes this site so much we voted to return here next year.

IMG_0551

Of course its really the riders that make the Affair such fun. 

IMG_0546

The ALBA historically has been mostly BMW riders, but currently it’s about half and half BMWs and Harleys.

IMG_0561

Of course there’s always a few vintage machines, dual purpose bikes etc.

IMG_0559

My faithful steed

IMG_0565

The weather was wonderful with the rain holding off enough for some serious outdoor cogitating.  The trailer in the background belongs to Paul.

IMG_0555

Paul did the cooking for the Affair, which was just plain awesome.

The Affair always marks the winding down of summertime for me.  When Kat was in school there were clothes and supplies to buy right after the Affair ended, or a trip to up to upstate New York during her college years.  Those years are past but my mind always sees the turning of the season with the end of each Affair.   The weather has stayed warm and the lighting bugs abundant here at the house but there’s no new growth in the woods and the mushrooms are beginning to pop up under the pines.  The tree frogs are silent now, replaced by the late summer chorus of crickets and their kin.  The subtle scents of early fall are there each morning too, when I come home from work.  The quiet of fall is on its way.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

A Recipe Worth Remembering

1) Take one yellow jacket nest – this one was built under the dog’s house in my back yard.  (I found it the hard way.)

YJ7-16

2) Add 2 gallons boiling water with a dollop of dish soap – do this at night when everybody is asleep in the nest.  Wear your motorcycle leathers, winter gauntlets & full face helmet just in case a few sentries are awake.

3) Repeat 6 days later

YJ8-11

The result 36 hours later.  There are still some yellow jackets capable of flight in the nest area.  It started out like O’Hare airport, now it’s a farmer’s private field. 

YJ8-12

12 hours later & its all quiet on the western front.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Hidden Treasures of the Local Library

Lazy summer days with heat indexes over 100F are not days for Mighty Mouse Projects around the house & yard – but they are fine days to sit in the shade with a glass of ice water that has just a touch of lemon & read.  So when I deliver the trash & recycling to the local county facility for trash & recyclables I also visit my local branch of the regional public library.   It is my custom to wander up & down an aisle or two of the library & pick up 2 or 3 books, whatever catches my fancy at the time.  Recently this rather haphazard selection process netted me a real jewel. 

Booka

Now the title would led one to believe this tale concerns some non-canonical text or other, but this is not the case at all.  Rather it’s the tale of  the twin Presbyterian Scot sisters who found  the Sinaitic Pamplimsest  (a Syriac translation of the 4 canonical gospels) while searching for old Syriac manuscripts at St. Catherine’s Monastery in the Sinai desert.  The text is c.325 AD & thus rather important to the field of New Testament manuscript studies, but the best part of the story is the story of these 2 remarkable women.

These 2 Victorian Scot ladies were over 50 when they made their first trip to St. Catherine’s and they went unescorted by either husbands (both were widows) or fellow scholars.  The trip involved negotiating all transport from Alexandria on, including arranging for food & staff to prepare it, tents for themselves, camels for the land journey etc.  The year is 1893 & the Ottoman Empire is not a particularly safe place to travel.  Ok, Ok, so they both spoke Greek & Arabic, but that doesn’t make the trip itself safer.

Janet Soskice writes of Agnes & Margaret’s whole lives, not just finding of the manuscript.  It’s a good read whether or not you have any interest in manuscript studies. 

Meanwhile late summer is slowly morphing into early fall.  Only a few lightening bugs are rising each evening & there are no new plants in the understory of my woods.  I haven’t seen the brown skink in awhile but there are at least half a dozen little blue strip baby skinks running around the same brushy stump.  The nightly woods chorus has added insects to the frogs & toads of mid-summer.  The bird’s nest in my front bedroom window now has 4 Carolina wren babies in it.  Both mom & dad are busy keeping them fed.  And of course there are hummers – at least 2 nests of hummingbirds are in the white pines along the property line.  As the late summer orange flowers bloom along the wood line I’m sure I’ll see more hummers of an evening.  So the cycle of the seasons moves at its own pace.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Lazy, Hazy & Way Too Hot

The lazy, hazy days of mid summer have arrived along with way to much heat & humidity.  The trim painting project is on hold until the heat index is below 90 & the daily thunderstorms are over.  All that rain maybe great for the water table but it also means I’m still mowing the yard weekly & barely keeping up at that.  I’ve also made progress on minor projects around the house, but even sorting through boxes of books etc. is hard when the heat index is still over 100 at midnight.

7-23-11a

The praying mantis of course are perfectly happy with the hot & humid weather.  There are plenty of bugs for them to eat & plenty of lush green plants to ambush said bugs on.  This one is just shy of 3 inches back on July 27th.  The lilies have bloomed & are drying back so the mantis have moved on to other hunting grounds.

Nest7-18b

The nest in my front room window was built by wrens.  Currently the hen is sitting on 4 brown speckled eggs which should hatch in another 7-10 days.  I’m sitting in my back yard rather than the swing in the front yard until the birds have grown & gone. 

Else its been a good summer.  Last Friday I took my daughter’s Ninja in for its annual inspection & then rode it up to her on Saturday morning.  We had a great day staying cool at her place with lunch at the Amphora with Carly, Dean, Don & Dolores.   Sunday I drove to Lynchburg & spent the day with Gypsy Jane at the Izaak Walton League campground.  I got a bit too much sun swimming in the lake there  (yes I put sunblock on, twice even) but that’s healing up nicely.   Wednesday was a marathon lawn mowing session & house chore day so I could spend Thursday again with Gypsy Jane.  We had a great time chillin’ & of course swimming in the lake.  (I wore a t-shirt over my suit so as not to re-burn my previous burn.)

GJHome

Here’s Gypsy Jane’s New-to-Her RV with my truck parked behind it.  The silver mat over the front window is heat reflective material so the inside doesn’t become an oven.  She’s got mats for all the windows but only the front one goes on the outside of the rig.  Her work has had her working nights the last few weeks so the mats are needed to keep the rig both cool & dark inside.  It’s a very neat rig, a great place to a full timer to live although its not as easy to drive as her previous home. 

Ah the 1st week of August – can A Laid Back Affair Motorcycle Gathering be far behind?

Blog Archive