Wednesday, July 4, 2018

What happened to summer?

This "summer" has been absolutely freezing.

I have a pretty good recall on weather events and temperatures over the years for one reason or another, and this has absolutely been the coldest summer I've ever experienced.  It's like Fall, and not even early Fall. It's been arctic.

It's July 4 and when I woke up this morning the temperature was in the low 50s, it's wet and overcast.  Where I live, that means that last night, the temperature was down in the 40s. 

That's winter like weather.

Granted, it's supposed to get up to the low 80s, but in July it should be in the low 80s.

Now, every now and the it'll get up to the 90s for a day and then drop back down.  The average high for July is 87F.  The average low is 53F.  If you take that, we're about a good ten degrees below normal. . . every day.

The record high for July is 106 (2006).  The record low is 30F (1972).  I'm wondering when we'll beat that.

In spite of this, I'll note, when on some odd day the temperature isn't actually in the Sitka Rain Forest in April range, somebody will complain about it being hot.  This is usually coming in or out of my office where the air conditioning has it down at the Absolute Zero range anyhow. 

One hot day doesn't make the entire summer hot.

Is the 90s hot?  Well, so be it.  Bring it on and stop the rain.

It was July 4, 1918.

Equestrian Show, Remounts from Ft. Lewis' Remount Station, Tacoma Washington.

Marching sailors, New York City.







Razzle dazzle camouflage example on a model ship, note the American and Japanese flags on the building in the background.

Japanese, Italian and American flags on the Hotel Savoy.  Dignitaries viewing parade.

Parade, Washington D. C.

23d Infantry Regiment veterans of Chateu Thierry at the La Place de la Concorde, Paris.

Parisians cheer American troops.

American soldiers passing in review at the Place de I'ena on the Avenue du President Wilson, Paris.  The statute is of George Washington.



American Army band, Avenue du President Wilson.  Group of wounded soldiers watching.

General William Scott at July 4th celebrations in Bordeaux

Allied officers at Belgian Headquarters salute the American flag, July 4.

Wounded American soldiers being transported to the Cafe des Ambassadeurs, Paris.

Wounded soldiers arriving by truck at the Cafe des Ambassadeurs.  Boy Scouts on left.



Ship builders were busy.

Camp Meigs, Washington.  USQMC

Battle of Hamel, July 4, 1918

British soldiers depicted in Hamel in March 1918, prior to their withdraw from the town in the German 1918 Spring Offensive.

On this day in 1918 Australian and American soldiers jointly attacked and took the French village of Le Hamel in northern France.

The attack was a meticulously planned combined arms attack featuring the innovative use of the fast (for the time) British Mark V tank and air support from the RAF.  It was also a joint operation, under the command of Australian General Sir John Monash, featuring primarily Australian infantry but heavily augmented by units of the American 33d Division and supported by a creeping barrage using British and French artillery.

The attack was well planned by the experienced General Monash and provided an learning example of new combined arms tactics.  It was not without its problems, however, in that the American troops were somewhat reluctantly supplied and when supplied were directly attached to Australian units at the small unit level, something the American Army did not approve of.  The American Army had approved the use of troops of the 33d Division for a raid, not an outright assault.  Indeed, fewer troops of the U.S. 33d Division were supplied at first than initially promised and when the Australians were further supplied with U.S. troops prior to the battle some were withdrawn upon General Pershing learning that they were being assigned out to Australian formations at the company level.  The augmentation was partially needed by the Australians due to the thinning of their ranks by the Spanish Flu.

The assault technically commenced at 22:30 on July 3 when British and French artillery opened up simply to mask the noise of the deploying tanks.  A harassing artillery barrage commenced again at 03:02 which caused the defending Germans to anticipate a gas attack, for which they accordingly masked.  The RAF went immediately into action at that time and deployed fighters as light bombers, with each assigned pilot flying at least three extremely dangerous pre dawn flights.  The infantry assault commenced at 03:14 with American units showing their inexperience by advancing into the allied creeping barrage.

Allied objectives were calculated by Monash to require 90 minutes and in fact took just 93.  The Australians began to resupply the successful units with tanks and the Royal Australian Flying Corps immediately commenced areal photography in order to produce new maps.  The RAF, for its part, participated in resupply operations by dropping some supplies by parachute in a brand new technology which was, of course, necessarily limited by the nature of the aircraft of the time.

The Germans reattacked, using storm troopers, at 22:00 and were initially successful.  A flanking Australian attack, deploying grenades and clubs, reversed that and the shocked Germans retreated.

The battle was significant for a number of reasons.  For one thing, it was the first signficant use of an American division, partially, that was made up of National Guardsmen, in the case Guardsmen from Illinois, which was what formed the 33d Division.  Beyond that, it was a spectacular example of clear thinking in a meticulously planned combined arms attack using every new and old arm in the Allied arsenal successfully and also using forces from four different armies.  Beyond that, it showed that Allies had not only withstood four months of German assaults but were more than capable of going into at least limited offensive operations at this time, tactics which sucked up German storm troops, upon which their success now depended, who were shown to be capable of being beaten. Indeed, Australian troops in the action showed an offensive spirit so pronounced that they were willing to resort to the most primitive of weapons.

President Wilson's July 4, 1918 speech at Mount Vernon.


 Woodrow Wilson laying a wreath at Washington's tomb at Mount Vernon.

President Wilson's July 4, 1918 speech at Mount Vernon:

I am happy to draw apart with you to this quiet place of old counsel in order to speak a little of the meaning of this day of our nation’s independence. The place seems very still and remote. It is as serene and untouched by the hurry of the world as it was in those great days long ago when General Washington was here and held leisurely conference with the men who were to be associated with him in the creation of a nation. From these gentle slopes they looked out upon the world and saw it whole, saw it with the light of the future upon it, saw it with modern eyes that turned away from a past which men of liberated spirits could no longer endure. It is for that reason that we cannot feel, even here, in the immediate presence of this sacred tomb, that this is a place of death. It was a place of achievement. A great promise that was meant for all mankind was here given plan and reality. The associations by which we are here surrounded are the inspiriting associations of that noble death which is only a glorious consummation. From this green hillside we also ought to be able to see with comprehending eyes the world that lies about us and should conceive anew the purposes that must set men free.

It is significant,—significant of their own character and purpose and of the influences they were setting afoot,—that Washington and his associates, like the barons at Runnymede, spoke and acted, not for a class, but for a people. It has been left for us to see to it that it shall be understood that they spoke and acted, not for a single people only, but for all mankind. They were thinking, not of themselves and of the material interests which centred in the little groups of landholders and merchants and men of affairs with whom they were accustomed to act, in Virginia and the colonies to the north and south of her, but of a people which wished to be done with classes and special interests and the authority of men whom they had not themselves chosen to rule over them. They entertained no private purpose, desired no peculiar privilege. They were consciously planning that men of every class should be free and America a place to which men out of every nation might resort who wished to share with them the rights and privileges of free men. And we take our cue from them,—do we not? We intend what they intended. We here in America believe our participation in this present war to be only the fruitage of what they planted. Our case differs from theirs only in this, that it is our inestimable privilege to concert with men out of every nation what shall make not only the liberties of America secure but the liberties of every other people as well. We are happy in the thought that we are permitted to do what they would have done had they been in our place. There must now be settled once for all what was settled for America in the great age upon whose inspiration we draw to-day. This is surely a fitting place from which calmly to look out upon our task, that we may fortify our spirits for its accomplishment. And this is the appropriate place from which to avow, alike to the friends who look on and to the friends with whom we have the happiness to be associated in action, the faith and purpose with which we act.

This, then, is our conception of the great struggle in which we are engaged. The plot is written plain upon every scene and every act of the supreme tragedy. On the one hand stand the peoples of the world,—not only the peoples actually engaged, but many others also who suffer under mastery but cannot act; peoples of many races and in every part of the world,—the people of stricken Russia still, among the rest, though they are for the moment unorganized and helpless. Opposed to them, masters of many armies, stand an isolated, friendless group of governments who speak no common purpose but only selfish ambitions of their own by which none can profit but themselves, and whose peoples are fuel in their hands; governments which fear their people and yet are for the time their sovereign lords, making every choice for them and disposing of their lives and fortunes as they will, as well as of the lives and fortunes of every people who fall under their power,—governments clothed with the strange trappings and the primitive authority of an age that is altogether alien and hostile to our own. The Past and the Present are in deadly grapple and the peoples of the world are being done to death between them.

There can be but one issue. The settlement must be final. There can be no compromise. No halfway decision would be tolerable. No halfway decision is conceivable. These are the ends for which the associated peoples of the world are fighting and which must be conceded them before there can be peace:

I. The destruction of every arbitrary power anywhere that can separately, secretly, and of its single choice disturb the peace of the world; or, if it cannot be presently destroyed, at the least its reduction to virtual impotence.

II. The settlement of every question, whether of territory, of sovereignty, of economic arrangement, or of political relationship, upon the basis of the free acceptance of that settlement by the people immediately concerned, and not upon the basis of the material interest or advantage of any other nation or people which may desire a different settlement for the sake of its own exterior influence or mastery.

III. The consent of all nations to be governed in their conduct towards each other by the same principles of honour and of respect for the common law of civilized society that govern the individual citizens of all modern states in their relations with one another; to the end that all promises and covenants may be sacredly observed, no private plots or conspiracies hatched, no selfish injuries wrought with impunity, and a mutual trust established upon the handsome foundation of a mutual respect for right.

IV. The establishment of an organization of peace which shall make it certain that the combined power of free nations will check every invasion of right and serve to make peace and justice the more secure by affording a definite tribunal of opinion to which all must submit and by which every international readjustment that cannot be amicably agreed upon by the peoples directly concerned shall be sanctioned.

These great objects can be put into a single sentence. What we seek is the reign of law, based upon the consent of the governed and sustained by the organized opinion of mankind.

These great ends can not be achieved by debating and seeking to reconcile and accommodate what statesmen may wish, with their projects for balances of power and of national opportunity. They can be realized only by the determination of what the thinking peoples of the world desire, with their longing hope for justice and for social freedom and opportunity.

I can fancy that the air of this place carries the accents of such principles with a peculiar kindness. Here were started forces which the great nation against which they were primarily directed at first regarded as a revolt against its rightful authority but which it has long since seen to have been a step in the liberation of its own people as well as of the people of the United States; and I stand here now to speak,—speak proudly and with confident hope,—of the spread of this revolt, this liberation, to the great stage of the world itself! The blinded rulers of Prussia have roused forces they knew little of,—forces which, once roused, can never be crushed to earth again; for they have at their heart an inspiration and a purpose which are deathless and of the very stuff of triumph!

Winston Churchill at Westminster, July 4, 1918.

Winston Churchill at Westminster, July 4, 1918.

I move that the following resolution be cabled from the meeting as a greeting to the President and people of the United States of America: This meeting of the Anglo-Saxon Fellowship assembled in London on the 4th of July, 1918, sends to the President and people of the United States their heartfelt greetings on the 142nd anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence. They rejoice that the love of liberty and justice on which the American nation was founded should in the present time of trial have united the whole English-speaking family in a brotherhood of arms.

We are met here to-day at Westminster to celebrate the national festival of the American people and the 142nd anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. We are met here also as brothers-in-arms facing for a righteous cause grave injuries and perils and passing through times of exceptional anxiety and suffering. We therefore seek to draw from the past history of our race inspiration and comfort to cheer our hearts and fortify and purify our resolution and our comradeship.

A great harmony exists between the spirit and language of the Declaration of Independence and all we are fighting for now. A similar harmony exists between the principles of that Declaration and all that the British people have wished to stand for, and have in fact achieved at last both here at home and in the self-governing Dominions of the Crown.

The Declaration of Independence is not only an American document. It follows on Magna Carta and the Bill of Rights as the third great title-deed on which the liberties of the English-speaking people are founded. By it we lost an Empire, but by it we also preserved an Empire. By applying its principles and learning its lesson we have maintained our communion with the powerful Commonwealths our children have established beyond the seas.

Wherever men seek to frame politics or constitutions which safeguard the citizen, be he rich or poor, on the one hand from the shame of despotism, on the other from the miseries of anarchy, which combine personal freedom with respect for law and love of country, it is to the inspiration which originally sprang from the English soil and from the Anglo-Saxon mind that they will inevitably recur. We therefore join in perfect sincerity and simplicity with our American kith and kin in celebrating the auspicious and glorious anniversary of their nationhood.

US troops on parade in Paris July 4, 1918 - silent film newsreel

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

The Mexican Border . . . today.

Already  here?  Movie Poster announcing the film Sicario, Day of the Soldado is "coming soon".  On the border it's already arrived.

I recently had the privilege of catching up with an old friend from Texas.  A native born and bread there, although one who in his old age has take up residence for most of the year in Wyoming.

He's an interesting character and very well informed on a lot of things, including things going on, on the border with Mexico.

"You don't hear about this on the news" was a comment he made a couple of times, and he's quite right.  The things he was referencing, and he's a trustworthy soul, were hair raising.  

Indeed, so much so that the situation described reminded me very much of that depicted in the movie Sicario.*  For those who haven't seen it, Sicario is a violent film depicting the drug trade, corruption and ambiguous allegiances on a nearly lawless U.S.-Mexican border.  It goes beyond that, however and weaves in corruption or nearly illegal activity by the US government in regards to the situation, including the quasi legal use of special US armed forces units in order to attempt to address it. To hear my friend describe the situation, it doesn't differ much in reality from what is depicted in the film.  

Indeed, I was sufficiently surprised that I asked a couple of other knowledgeable Texans I know and they confirmed the degree to which the US border has become lawless and basically abandoned in some areas by agricultural operations.  People who work and live on the border go about armed in many areas for self protection.  The U.S. Park Service restricts its employees from entering some areas in one of the rare National Parks in that region as its too dangerous for them to enter.**  Large ranches have been abandoned and sold as they're too dangerous to operate.

And yet, as my friend notes, "you don't hear about this on the news".

Human trafficking and drug trafficking are the sources of the problem.   While news on the abhorrent separation of children from adults has been much reported on recently, the bigger problem isn't.  Even with a large reduction in Mexican illegal immigration into the US the border is still basically partially out of control and having an out of control border is irresponsible for any nation.  It makes a joke out of an immigration policy to start with, and the U.S.'s policy, which accommodates a huge legal rate of immigration, is out of control to start with.  The sources of illegal immigration now are Central American nations that have descended into chaos, largely due to the drug trade.  A person can hardly be blamed for wanting out of that situation, which is so bad in some areas that armed gangs control entire regions.  Mexico does little to control the trafficking through its territory for a presumed variety of reasons, in part because it has plenty of its own drug related problems and in part because the migrants are traveling through Mexico to the US and not stopping in it.

Drugs are also the reason that northern Mexico, in large areas, is controlled by criminal gangs that field what basically amount to sizable guerrilla armies.  The most well known, in the US, of these are the Zetas, named for the letter Z, which not only have a guerrilla army, basically, but were in fact formed by deserting members of the Mexican special forces.  It certainly isn't the only Mexican drug cartel by any means.  Nor are the cartels active solely in Mexico.  They have extensive contacts with the US and are allied and associated with various criminal gangs in the US.

The US appetite for illegal drugs is a huge part of this problem.  It's temping to say that the US is unique in this fashion, but that really wouldn't be true.  The US is indeed a huge market for illegal drugs, but Europe and Russia also have illegal drug problems and therefore trafficking.  Indeed, illegal drug trafficking tends to be sort of freakishly related everywhere as circles that smuggle to one region often end up connecting with others that expert the illegal substance on to somewhere else.  As a market, illegal drugs are darned near the perfect model of what Adam Smith imagined, in some ways, in regards to the wonders of free market economics.

Be that as it may, a semi unique aspect of the problem to the US is that the US has an extremely long border with a nation that's only now entering the First World and which isn't in control of all of its own territory.  The situation is so bad in Mexico that Mexico uses its armed forces against drug cartel armies, something that would be regarded as illegal in the United States save for the situation of armed insurrection, which in fact it basically is.  

We've posted here a lot here about the border in the early 20th Century. We haven't posted much about it after the 1920s.  Maybe we've been remiss in that.  There's never been a period in which illegal crossings, in both directions, haven't occurred, but not every period has been the same.  During the revolutionary period the border with Mexico remained tense, slowly easing as the 20s wore into the 30s.  The Depression brought new pressures to the border, but the modern border era really came in during World War Two when policies were created to allow for seasonal agricultural workers, which American agriculture very rapidly became dependant upon.  Still, that did not create a great deal of illegal immigration until the 1970s when economic migration from Mexico turned into a flood.  Policies designed to deal with that largely failed and its only been recently when they seemingly started to get in control, which has a lot to do with the Mexican economy, in spite of being burdened as it is, has improved and Mexico has become a middle class country for the first time in its history.

The period of large scale illegal migration from Mexico is largely over, which doesn't mean that it still doesn't go on, but now we're enduring a second period of large scale migration from Central America, and that doesn't seem to be close to abating.  And the drug trade, which has been a problem dating back into the 1960s, remains a full scale problem to the extent of causing local rebellions, effectively, and a species of warfare.

All of this summarizes the problem but it doesn't offer any solutions. What is clear is that turning a blind eye towards the problems does not amount to a solution.  Pretending that massive drug importation and creating a border that has become a No Man's Land in some areas hasn't happened is irresponsible.  Also pretending that American appetite for drugs hasn't created his problem is also irresponsible.

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*For those who may be curious, the word Sicario means "hitman" in Spanish and Italian, from the Latin word sicarius, which meant the same thing.  That word came about from the word sica, a curved dagger, which was the weapon of choice in Palestine for such operatives against the Romans when they were there.

**As an aside mini editorial, those politicians in Wyoming who constantly proclaim the virtues of "taking back" the Federal domain should note that there's next to no public land in Texas, which has brought about the current situation in which the general public has very little access to wild lands at all.

Monday, July 2, 2018

The Big Picture: Gila Forest Camp, N. Mex., 109th Engr's., 34th Div., June 1918, Col. F. E. Downing, C.O. Copyright deposit, July 2, 1918.



"Members of Division [sic] standing at attention, men in covered wagons and carts behind, tents, and smoke from fires in background."

The Big Picture: Lebanon Pennsylvania, July 2, 1918.


Antidemocratic Liberals and Democratic Conservatives. The politics of Federal Court appointments

A really rich and oddly ignored aspect of the politics of Federal Court appointments is that political liberals opt for judicial liberals who are heavily antidemocratic.

That would seem to be contrary to the "liberal" impulse, but in fact it isn't.

This is very loudly pronounced in terms of judicial appointments.  Right now, political liberals, to include a large number of lawyers, as lawyer tend to be politically liberal, are whining and crying that Anthony Kennedy's long overdue departure from the Supreme Court means the end of the Republic. . . by which they mean they're worried that the people might get to vote on stuff.

Horror of horrors.

Judicial liberals haven't always operated in this fashion, but following the voting rights expansions of the 50s and 60s, which they supported, they have.  That has been, in fact, the hallmark of their viewpoint.

Take, for example, the topic of abortion.  No matter how else a person might wish to phrase the issue, the real impact of Roe v. Wade was to remove the topic from state legislatures.  At least one state had moved towards opening up abortion, no matter what a person might think of it.  Others had opposed such moves in no uncertain terms.  The Supreme Court decided to remove the issue from the voters entirely and declare, in Platonic Oligarchic fashion, what people's rights and burdens were, irrespective of what they wanted to do.

All the subsequent argument over the Supreme Court decision has kept that feature.  The argument isn't phrased in that fashion, or even conceived of in that fashion, but that's a prime feature of it.  When this argument is presented as an argument for "reproductive freedom", or whatever, what the pro abortion politicians are really arguing is "For goodness sakes, don't let this go to the voters as they don't agree with us."

It isn't just this issue either.  Kennedy's Obergefell decision is a prime example of it.  Kennedy and his fellow travelers jumped the gun on what was felt to be an evolving trend in state legislatures in what looks like an effort to be hip and cool and declare in one swoop what they felt would likely be a decade or more political debate.

And judges deciding an issue because they don't like political debate is antidemocratic.

In contrast, conservative jurists tend, one way or another, to just apply laws as written and figure if people don't like them, they'll rewrite them.

And that's what the liberal debate about a new Supreme Court justice is all about.

Political liberals don't trust you at the ballot box to think they way they do, so they want judges to decree in dictatorial fashion what you ought to think.  Peasant.

Issues In The Wyoming Election: An issue that won't be there. The Courts

Note:  I started this post before the recent retirement of Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy.
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Wyoming had a judicial appointment system for Court appointments.  It's called the "Ohio Model".

The way it works is this.  A committee takes in and interviews applicants. It chooses three candidates and sends the names to the Governor.   The Governor picks one of the three.  And then, when his first term is up, he stands for retention and stands again every so often.

With that being the case, you'd think that this would be a consideration in the Gubernatorial race.

It isn't.

It is never mentioned.

That may be a good thing, really, as it may mean that Wyoming judicial appointments are pretty good as a rule.  Every governor has a different style, but the choice for the bench isn't solely up to the governor.

The judges do vary, of course.  And some judges are more conservative and some more liberal, but all in all, they're good solid jurists.

And so, this doesn't end up an issue in Wyoming's elections.

I'm not suggesting that this means something on a larger level. I'm just noting it.

Sunday, July 1, 2018

It's amazing how much they changed in just a few short years.


I'm not really very good at identifying automobiles from the 1960s, but I think this is a 1964 Chevrolet Impala. If I have the make, or even the model, off, it won't be off by much.


It's odd to think of how much this model of car changed in just a few short years.  The Impala was introduced in 1958 and was one of the classic giant sized, roundy, cars of the 50s.  The next year, it started changing.  Nobody was making a car like the 50s cars by the early 60s.

2nd Division Captures Vaux, July 1, 1918.



The 9th and 23d Infantry Regiments of the U.S. Army, elements of the 2nd Division, captured Vaux on this day in 1918.

The battle isn't one that you hear a great deal about, perhaps because it was so perfectly executed.  The Army carefully studied the ground and planned and executed a late afternoon assault supported by artillery. The Germans were caught off guard and lost 500 men as prisoners and an additional 500 as casualties.  Losses to the U.S. Army were 300 casualties.

The town itself was a ruin, having been devastated by the fighting in the region.


Camp Dodge Iowa, July 1, 1918.



Losing Connection With the Seasons?

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Rock Springs Wyoming..

Churches of the West: Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, Rock Springs Wyoming


Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church is located one block from St. Cyril and Methodius Catholic Church in Rock Springs in what was probably an ethnic neighborhood at the time the churches were built.  In addition to having a sizable Slavic Community, Rock Springs had a sizable Greek community as well, both drawn to the area in the early 20th Century by coal mining.

Best posts of the week of June 24, 2018

Best post of the week of June 24, 2018:

Issues In the Wyoming Election. A Series. Issue No. 1 (e). What about those other industries?

The German Navy's U86 commits a high seas atrocity. June 27, 1918.

Did you feel the earth shift?

The US Second Division

The 2018 Wyoming Election. Volume Three

Don't be dissin' on my fishin'

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Don't be dissin' on my fishin'


Some time ago. . .indeed quite some time ago, I started this post. 

As all I've done all summer long is work, I haven't followed up on it.  There's a lot of posts that fit that category, which is probably a surprise to anyone who stops in here, as there's a flood of posts here, it seems, all the time.

Well, anyhow.

I had some gift certificates awhile back and while I always can use gift certificates to sporting goods stores, I eccentrically sought to purchase something that, even at the time, I knew was silly. Well, what better thing to buy with a gift card that something silly, eh?

And what I purchased was a giant fishing pole.

Now, I have a lot of fishing poles, although most of them are ancient.  For years and years I used the fishing poles and rods that my father had bought.  Probably the absolute newest of those was from the 1980s and more likely they were from the 70s.  Some are older than that.

Well, they worked then so they'll work now, right?

Indeed, they will, but they will also wear out and finally I had to start buying new rods and reels, both bait casting and fly, a few years back.

Somewhere in the mix I noted this absolutely giant pole at a local sporting goods chain store.  I know darned well that they stocked this because it is a  national chain and it was meant for some use that doesn't happen around here.  That use would be, I"m quite sure, for trolling behind a giant boat.

No matter.  I had the idea that with the pole I could. . . .maybe, cast way, way out on the big lakes around here.  Like Pathfinder.

In doing to check out with it, some guys checking out in another lane were snickering of the "doesn't know what he's doing variety".

Well, Spanky, I know what I'm doing.  I was fishing. . . all types of fishing, when you were just a pathetic fryling.

But interesting how this goes.

When I was young, fishermen were fishermen, around here.  I didn't know anyone who fished who made distinctions based on the type of fishing they did. That's why I have every kind of fishing pole and rod known to local man.  My father knew how to do every kind of fishing.  I even have some ancient baitcasting reels, which I've only used a very few times.  A giant pole with a giant spinning reel was the only type I lacked.  I don't know.

And yes, I've used it.

And yes, with a little practice, you can case way out. . .and way deep.

I did hook into some deep dwelling heavy things in Pathfinder, but I wasn't able to reel them up.  Had better luck on another lake however.

Take that, critics.

Friday, June 29, 2018

I work most Saturdays.



This is very common for attorneys who do litigation. As a rule, we work at least 5.5 days a week, or 6.  When approaching trials, we work 7.

Indeed, one of the oddest experiences most trial lawyers have is somebody calling you on Friday afternoon and give you the old "well. . . it's 3:00 so you must be ready to knock off. . . ".

No, I'm not.  It isn't the weekend for me.

Sunday is my weekend.  If I'm lucky.

Anyhow, on the odd occasion I take a Saturday off, or even get close it, the home conversation is "What are you planning on doing this weekend?", which is followed by as a comment; "oh, well I thought we'd do x, y and z in the yard".

Usually followed by a claim that we discussed this.

Nope.  We didn't.

I hate yard work.  I like farm work, but yards are a big boring waste of time in my view.  My wife views things differently.  I like to have a yard, but I could care less about having the niftiest grass or any such nonsense, in my view.  I want the yard to look kept, and not messy, but that's about the extent of it. My wife, on the other hand, is one of those people who are constantly improving the yard. 

Which has caused me over the years to dread summer a bit. Spend Saturday in the yard?


Oh well, there's always the reward of a nicely kept yard. Right?

Friday Farming (sort of). The Country Gentleman, June 29, 1918.


An ode to canning.

My mother never did this, but it was pretty common still when I was a kid in the 1960s and 1970s.  I know that people still do it, but it's no where near as common as it once was.

The Girls Canning Club was, I suspect, a wartime effort.