environment
rain
0It rained here yesterday. A short 5 minute rain that pounded itself into the earth as if the skies knew how much we, and the earth, needed it. Today, the thunder is clapping loudly and the scent of rain is in the air. If you can imagine this (and it’s true), people are walking around, noses up in the air, sniffing. We are rejuvenated by the scent. It means that relief to this dryness is finally coming.
Last night I couldn’t sleep. At 20% humidity, it felt muggy. I know…you’re laughing, aren’t you? *smile* But 20% is about 15% higher than our highest humidity in 4 months.
The fires to the southeast of us continue to burn but are at 75% containment. Now, if we can avoid the dry lightening storms and move right into monsoons, we may be saved.
Funny how the earth can save us. It does, though. And it’s the sweetest thing.
fire!
1Last night (and again this morning) I could see the pink haze spilling across the eastern horizon.
I live about 150 miles away but the intensity of the fire is spilling upward (in elevation) to our carved out valley. We have a ring of smoke surrounded this town.
36,000 acres in less than 36 hours. 36,000 acres.
I haven’t even the words to describe how this is making me feel.
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So, with this very dry weather, people are suffering, too. Dry skin is becoming a norm. Everyone I know is getting bloody noses on a daily occurrence. Even humidifiers are not helping. I’ve even resorted to caking my nostrils with vaseline before I go to bed. I know…sounds weird but it actually helps with moisture. These days, though, nothing is helping. I still get bloody noses.
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Sierra Leone has a problem. Ok…the country has many problems but NPR educated me on a very serious problem today. Young women who were taken prisoner by opposing forces are now not being allowed to return home.
Why you may ask (you did, right???). Well, these young women were victims of violent sexual assaults. They are now tainted. They are unclean.
Unclean.
Their families want nothing to do with them. Men are shunning them. They are not allowed in schools. They cannot worship.
They have become the unclean.
Victims twice over.
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I want to thank all of my readers for really insightful comments on my postings. You all make me think on a daily basis and I love the feedback.
Thank you.
and in the duh! category
0Thank you all for your insightful comments on the links between media and violence in our society. While I don’t believe that it is the only cause for violence (yes, violence occurred long before movies or TV came around), I do believe that it can add to the misperceptions that people have and the relations between sex, violence, and current culture.
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Is anyone else distressed that a woman was burning a letter and caused the *worst* fire in Colorado history? Now, I understand being upset over a letter from an ex. I understand wanting to burn it. But she is a TRAINED professional. She knows how to make sure a fire is OUT before moving on. She made a horrendous mistake that many other people will also have to pay for (including us when all of those people make claims for their homes and property to their insurance companies).
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We went to a Renaissance Faire yesterday. It was the first time this group had decided to put it on in our area and it was fun. We laughed, had some great food, and asked them to please do it again next year. Heck…I might even buy a dress to fit the part. ![]()
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I know that during summer people tend to disappear from online communities. I’ve been in online communities since around ’92 and I’ve watched the ebb and flow of entries, connections, and social conversations. That doesn’t mean that I don’t miss people when they disappear. I understand but I miss them. There are a few around Xanga-land that I’m missing. Their daily words never fail to make me laugh or think.
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Warren and I went and saw two movies this weekend…The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood and Insomnia. Both VERY different and GREAT in their own ways. I recommend both wholeheartedly!
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No rain in sight, yet. We’re worried that if a fire starts here, it will make the Colorado fires look like small campfires. There is no green, none, anywhere to be found. It’s a bit scary, to be sure.
miscellany
0When 9/11 occurred, I was like most Americans. I was shocked, hurt, upset, and angry. This all left me relatively quickly, though, I must admit. I live 3000 miles away and it was very distant from where I was while it was occurring.
My way to deal with issues is to analyze them, figure them out, ask questions. I began, nearly instantaneously, to dissect the issue at hand and to try to hear what was *not* being said.
I was flummoxed when we were told over and over that this was a surprise attack, that the government did not know it was going to happen and that they could not have prevented it. I questioned that. We have some of the most advanced tracking equipment in the world and we have some of the most protected airspace in the world. But we didn’t know that an attack was going to happen and had no way of stopping it?
I feel somewhat justified in my questioning of the “facts” now that I hear that we *did*, in fact, know that Osama bin Laden was planning on hijacking planes and was planning on some sort of attack. I feel justified because I was called anti-American, a terrorist, a loser, and all sorts of other things…because I questioned my government!
I don’t think the whole story is out yet. I doubt it will be while this President is in office. He’s secretive about nearly everything and if he made a mistake on a grand scale, I doubt we’d hear it while he’s in office.
Suffice it to say that now we’re hearing of FBI agents who did tell their superiors about large numbers of foreign students taking flight lessons but were ignored. We now know that the White House knew of a threat.
Skeletons don’t stay in closets too long.
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I exercise my right to question as an American. I believe I live in a great nation that welcomes diverse and sometimes unconventional thinking. This kind of thought has gotten us to great heights. It can also be our downfall. However that may be, I enjoy my right to partake in it. I do not take a stance that my country is not without its share of evil or malicous intents. We’re just as bad as the next guy. We’re also just as good.
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Wacky Links
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What is your Road Rage Quotient?
I ranked 7-20 points = You have your good and bad days on the road. Overall you only suffer from mild road rage.
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Crankbunny will not be for everyone. But if you think outside the box and like something a bit different, you may enjoy this site. There is some illustrated nudity so if you’re offended by that type of thing it’s probably not for you.
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Have you ever wanted to come up with the wackiest name on the ‘net? NameMage is for you. It’s really meant to design names for Dungeons and Dragons but you could find a name for your next child here. Heh…
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Fires are burning here in Arizona. So far, 6 lovely, large, dream homes have been destroyed about 90 miles from where I live in the Prescott National Forest. I only fear this is the beginning of a tragic summer.
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Until next time…be kind to one another.
Peace.
ramblings
0There are a million and one things in my head today that I feel I could write about. There’s so much stuff going on that is going to affect each of us in a myriad of ways.
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Ok, I’m PISSED off about the whole Yucca Mountain situation. The western U.S. is NOT a dumping ground for the rest of the country just because we have space. If you manufacture nuclear waste YOU find a place in YOUR OWN state to dispose of it. DON’T transport it clear across the country where horrible things can happen and expect all of us to be happy about it.
It ain’t gonna happen.
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The Palestinians who were holed up in the Church of the Nativity have been shipped off to various places. It’s no coincidence that 26 of them are being sent to Gaza and the Israeli army is beefing up its military in Gaza. Do we really think that there will be a trial?
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Alabama executes its first woman in 45 years.
Enough said.
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Nearly $400 BILLION dollars has been allotted, by our Congress, to a “Wartime” defense.
Please.
They approved money for a program that Pentagon officials don’t even want.
Yep…you heard that right. The Crusader howitzer program is very controversial and Pentagon muckity-mucks want it killed…not funded.
Have we elected idiots??? Do I want my money going towards a program that 1) I would never support and 2) the Pentagon doesn’t even support???
No.
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And for something interesting, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory wants to award people for finding comets online.
You, too, can try it. The Soho-500 Comet Contest could make you rich and famous. Or, well, maybe just popular with your friends.
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Happy Mother’s Day to all of those wonderful mothers out there. I hope you have the best weekend…and enjoy your kids. They probably don’t realize how lucky they are to have you.
water
0In the western United States, water is power. Water is politics. Water is life. We are constantly worried about our levels of water, where our water is going, who is using more than we are and why they are allotted more water. Along the Colorado River, there are so many agreements and treaties that the disputes over water rights are often in court.
Much of the American West is desert. We have high mountains, snow covered peaks, oceans, lakes, and ponds. But we are still in the midst of deserts. Desert doesn’t mean that you’re filled with cactus or sparse land that grows little of what most people would call lush vegetation. Desert means that you get very little rainfall in a year. It means that you must find your water by alternative methods.
I remember a few years ago when it started pouring rain in Los Angeles. Los Angeles, and the surrounding communities (something like 35 million people) had been under severe drought warnings and water restrictions for 3-5 years. All of a sudden, it starts raining. The people there, silly people that they are, decided that because it was raining, the drought was over. They could use water as they wished once again. What scientists and meteorologists scrambled to publicize is that although they got rain (for all of 2 weeks out of the year), the drought was not over. The water supplies had not been replenished and there was still a problem. Angelinos did not listen.
The Gulf of California (Baja), where it meets the Colorado, has nearly dried up. It is a wasteland of what it used to be. Life used to be in abundance as the great Colorado River emptied into the Gulf. There are now wide expanses of beachfront property without water because the water is recessing further and further into the Gulf. The Colorado is barely a trickle on good days now.
We have farmers fighting casinos, cities fighting cities, states fighting states over water rights. We push water by canal over great distances to be able to water pristine lawns where none should exist. We regulate water, deciding who is more worthy, who gets more because of the money and power they can produce.
My town, which sits at 7000 feet, on top of the mountains, is in the desert. We are surrounded by beautiful, lush ponderosa pine forests. We have lakes. We get snow. Our aquifer is so deep that we have to drill between 1200-1500 feet to hit water in most areas.
My town, which is beautiful by most accounts, is on water restrictions beginning on Friday. This town, which up until 10 years ago was small by any account and has outgrown itself with the sudden influx of new residents from neighboring states, has not taught its inhabitants to conserve water in a meaningful way. We cannot keep washing our cars in the streets, watering whenever we want, growing lawns that probably shouldn’t be there, letting faucets drip without fixing them.
This is an emerency. We must understand that water is precious. It is always precious…not just when the snow hasn’t come, the rains haven’t fallen, and the water levels in our resevoirs are at all-time lows. It is always precious.
We are in a state of emergency. We need to take action now.
quote of the day
0It is not enough to fight for the West; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. So get out there and hunt and fish and mess around with your friends, ramble out yonder and explore the forests, encounter the grizz, climb the mountains, bag the peaks, run the rivers, breathe deep of that sweet yet lucid air, sit quietly for a while and contemplate the precious stillness, that lovely, mysterious and awesome space. Enjoy yourselves, keep the brain in your head firmly attached to the body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much; I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those deskbound men with their hearts in a safe deposit box and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: You will outlive the bastards.” ~ Edward Abbey