Caveat: building something

I have mentioned a few times that I have this kind of slow-moving “treehouse” project. For a long time, I had settled on a location up the hillside near the southern boundary of lot 73. However, over the past winter I came to realize that siting it there was perhaps one reason why I worked on it so little. And in any event, I like the idea of a treehouse near the water.
So I made the decision to move the treehouse location to a set of trees down near the northeast corner of lot 73, near the tide line. There are two Sitka Spruce there that I think will work well.
And I have been working on it.
I set up a kind of “guide beam” between the two trees today.
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This beam is not part of the eventual structure. It’s merely something to use to make sure I’m at the same level on both trees, as I attach the main supports. And it’ll be something to lean against or hoist things up with.
I am making use of a pair of 4″x12″x8′ beams left over from the construction of Arthur’s dock many years ago. They are treated to be rot resistant, and quite hefty. I am unable to lift one of them, but I dragged them along the ground down to the treehouse site. I’ll have to work out some kind of pulley arrangement when I’m ready to lift them into place. I am installing attachment loops on them currently. One down, three to go.
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I also saw a red bug enjoying a rock.
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Caveat: Art #17

I drew this University of Minnesota Transit System bus in 1989. Sorry it’s kind of hard to see – it’s in pencil. It’s the 13W Como Avenue North bus, which I took to my job at the University Press book factory that was located off-campus in Northeast Minneapolis. That’s where I had a job making books. Not writing them… making them. It was actually a pretty interesting job, though it could get very monotonous, running some machine on a bunch of books, one by one, going by on a conveyor.
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Caveat: image-shrine by the roadside

A Desolation
Now mind is clear
as a cloudless sky.
Time then to make a
home in wilderness.
What have I done but
wander with my eyes
in the trees? So I
will build: wife,
family, and seek
for neighbors.
Or I
perish of lonesomeness
or want of food or
lightning or the bear
(must tame the hart
and wear the bear).
And maybe make an image
of my wandering, a little
image-shrine by the
roadside to signify
to traveler that I live
here in the wilderness
awake and at home.
- Allen Ginsberg (American poet, 1926-1997)

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Caveat: Art #15

This is a drawing of a character in a story I was making, about my imaginary country, Ardesfera. Her name is Victoria Persson, she was a 19th century military persona. I think I drew this about 2 years ago.
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Caveat: Tree #494

Here is another tree from my past, because I forgot to take a picture of a tree today. The tree is somewhat overshadowed by General Macarthur’s statue, at Incheon, South Korea. I took the picture in August, 2009.
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Caveat: Differences among nations

I feel the below graph underscores a point I often try to make: I believe that “governance” matters. This is to say that different countries are governed in different ways, and that leads to different results. Something like this virus is a great test-scenario, since there is likely no actual difference in the way the virus itself behaves from one country to another. So the differences in the graphs below are all about the direct results of human behavior.
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Caveat: Art #12

I drew this in around 2014, I think. I’m pretty sure I shared it on my blog, back then, but I can’t find it at the moment, and anyway, this series is supposed to be a (completely unordered) complete collection. I could see it as the cover for a sci-fi book or something.
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Caveat: and the sea

Arthur and I went out in the boat today. It was the first time of the season.
The water was flat. The sky was partly overcast, but it was not unpleasant. Arthur decided to go out because he heard our neighbor Joe was going to be out – on a different boat. I think Arthur is a bit of a “go with what others are doing” on matters of seeking to catch fish. So if Joe was going to go try, well then he damn well better go try too.
I’ve observed before, that Arthur’s engagement in and interest in fishing is surprisingly social in nature. He’s always looking at other boats, speculating what and if they are catching, asking other people what they’ve caught and where, etc. And of course he is motivated by the catching more than the sport of it, too – he likes to have the fish caught and in the freezer. They are a currency that he uses to lubricate his social relationships with his far-flung friends and family down in the lower 48.
In fact, I often feel that with respect to the act of fishing in itself, Arthur doesn’t really enjoy it. He lacked the patience even when he was at the height of his faculties, and he quickly becomes frustrated with every single little mishap or unexpected complication in his procedures.
We never made it past Craig, today. First we had problems with the small motor (the “kicker,” used for trolling). That turned out to be an idiot-move on my part. The motor has a “lock” such that if it is in gear, it won’t start. And I was trying to start it in gear. And we were starting to take the motor apart. I can only blame Arthur in that it didn’t occur to him to check my efforts to turn over the motor with the starter using the ignition – where he might have noticed it was in gear.
Well, that got us off to a bad start. Arthur was grumpy.
And we had no end of difficulties with the downriggers. One simply wouldn’t work at all. The other seemed intermittent, and then he was fiddling with it and went and disconnected the coupling at the end of the wire. That had to be reassembled, which is detail-oriented work requiring fine motor skills. Arthur doesn’t have much of a supply of those, but the situation is rendered much, much worse by his lack of patience and very short temper. Soon he was cussing and throwing things.
When he gets like this in the house, I just leave. I go outside, or I hide in my attic. It passes – he doesn’t stew in it. But on the boat, there is no escape. And my very presence was one of the annoyances driving him mad. He sees me as barely competent even at the best of times, and the incident with motor before leaving the dock had only reinforced his utter distrust of my competence in the current moment. He found my efforts to help almost completely unacceptable.
He found uncountable ways to criticize things. Small things. “Aren’t you watching the shore? We’re getting too close.” No, I was trying to insert the wire in the end-assembly, I thought you were watching it. Et cetera.
To be honest, going out in the boat with Arthur has almost always been one of the most stressful aspects of my time here with him. He wants to be in charge, sees me as a hindrance half the time and an incompetent but tolerable neer-do-well the other half.
Days like today, I feel tempted to just let him go out by himself, and if that’s the end of it, so be it.
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Caveat: Tree #490

This tree is from my past. It was at a little historical park on the northern tip of Ganghwa Island, about 30 km northwest from my home in Ilsan, South Korea. I’d gone there when my mother was visiting me in Korea. I took the picture in October, 2013.
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From the promontory at the little fortress there, you can see directly into North Korea, across the river – this is the part of the DMZ where the border runs in the river. A few hundred meters away from that tree, this is a view across the river. Those mountains in the distance are in North Korea. There are little coin-operated binoculars and you can look into the North Korean town over there.
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Caveat: On random, square canyons

I’ve been trying to solve a strange programming problem on my map server. I have these files containing contour data (elevation data) for my fictional places. Because of the way this information is processed by the openstreetmap platform, I store this data split up into files divided along longitude and latitude lines. But that means there are boundary conditions between the files. When I use the specially-created terrain conversion tools on these files, I seem to often get strange “canyons” along the longitude and latitude lines. They look like this on the map’s contour render.
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So I have spent a few days trying to find the right set of parameters for the data conversion programs (developed by the founder of the opengeofiction website) to prevent these artificial canyons from appearing. It seems to be a bit of a hit or miss proposition. I’ve got it looking good now, but I’m still not sure quite what the issue is or how to systematically avoid it.
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Caveat: Cake and Boat

I made a cake yesterday. This is to celebrate something: maybe Arthur’s love of chocolate? maybe because it is Cinco de Mayo? maybe my mother’s birthday?
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Maybe in anticipation of the fact we launched the boat today?
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But we didn’t go fishing yet. It’s raining.
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