I went for a three-mile walk today and a two-mile walk yesterday.
OK, maybe I am gilding the lily. I turned around 40 yards short of the stop-sign because the brush that was breaking the wind stopped.
14F actual. +1F if exposed to the wind (which I avoided).
I was wearing carpenter jeans (unlined), tee-shirt, Sherpa-lined and hooded overshirt, light work-coat, gloves. I also had a knit hat and was wearing socks and light hiking boots unlike savages in Alberta who stroll about Oddmanton in January wearing cargo-shorts, boonie-caps and crocs as they nibble on pickled eggs skewered upon their dirk.
God willing, I hope to lift tomorrow at the gym.
Neighbors
I ran across a neighbor while walking. I collected his phone number which could be handy in the future.
Weedy trees and trashy fish
I had a fellow kindly point out that Black Locust is considered a "weedy" tree in many locations.
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| The weedy trees to the left of the ditch are mulberry trees. China. Mulberry can be a very abuse tolerant species. Source of image |
I am not going to disagree with him. Any species (plant or animal) that is described as "weedy" generally means that it thrives in the disturbances created by humans. I, for one, appreciate the over-achievers that increase in spite of our insults to the environment. Yes, orchids are beautiful but there is much to be said for mulberries, Black Locust, Box Elder, dandelions, blackberries, bullheads, Channel Cats, rabbits and starlings.
Even tomatoes can be weedy. I have seen a dense jungle of Yellow Pear tomatoes growing on a a sandbar in the Red Cedar River half a mile southwest of downtown East Lansing. Squash can be a weed in compost piles and grape vines along fences.
I sort of understand the mystique of exotics, but life is so, so very much easier if you invest the majority of your effort on boring, proven, robust crops and technologies:
- Potatoes
- Cabbage
- Corn
- Beans
- Squash
- Tomatoes
- Peppers
- Garlic
- Cucumbers
- Turnips
- 12 or 20 gauge shotguns
- .22LR rifles
- 9mm-to-.45 handguns
- .308 Winchester or 5.56 NATO rifles (or anything in between). Or if you have a source of ammo, 30-06, .303 Brit, 8mm Mauser, 7.62X39mm Ruskie....
- Lots of patches and ATF fluid or 0-20 synthetic motor oil for cleaning and lube
- Knives with full-tang, carbon-steel blades between 3" and 8" long
- Angus cross beef animals or Holstein or Jersey crossed with anything.
- Plymouth Rock or Rhode Island Red chickens
Daniel Boone or Davey Crockett would have been thrilled to have any of those technologies available to them.
They are "common" to the point of forgettable for very good reasons. They work.
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I work outside, natural gas piplelines. Work in generous with flame proof protective clothing we can choose. But three years ago my wife gifted me a balaclava that has made a world of difference. Absolutely windproof. Fits under a hardhat. My 65 year old fingers need something like that, but alas, dexterity won't allow.
ReplyDeleteI have always had a soft spot for mulberries & 45acp 1911pistols
ReplyDeleteShould that not be Oddmantown?
ReplyDeleteGreat boring, proven list. Crops add onions. Technologies add shovel, hoes, rakes, axe, saws, files and hones.
ReplyDeleteAnd add in at least multi-tool in belt sheath or pocket. Those make great Johnny-On-The-Spot repair tools that address the problem right now, instead of waiting - retrieving 'perfect tool' for the job.
ReplyDeleteThat is a good 'boring list' of items that work with few problems. For us who live far south of most of you, the military helmet cap liner is a go-to for a cold December deer stand hunt. It does have effects on the appearance of your hair when removed, lol, but in cold temperature - who cares !!
Good list. I’ve read that weeds are plants growing where you didn’t want them. thank God for hardy dependable crops as you listed. For me, butternut squash have been reliable and needed minimal care.
ReplyDeleteNot only frontiersmen, but many soldiers over the years would be thankful for better clothing and supplies you listed.
Southern NH
Did you collect any seeds from those Yellow Pear tomatoes?
ReplyDeleteNo. I was not impressed by the flavor. Maybe they would have been better if they were grown in a sunny spot and were not packed in so tightly.
DeleteLots of great tasting tomatoes that are easy to grow.
Boring and available are fine with me. Exotics don't pay off in the long run.
ReplyDelete