This tree saw a shell on the railing that a raven had left behind.
Category: A Daily Tree
Caveat: Tree #962
This tree saw the well-drillers who drilled our well two years ago return, to drill a well on the neighbor’s lot to the east (Lot 75).
Caveat: Tree #961
This tree saw my little colorful plastic windmill-thingy spinning in the rain.
I had a lot of greenhouse tomatoes.
I used several of them, and some elk meat Joe gave us, to make spaghetti.
Caveat: Tree #960
Caveat: Tree #959
This tree (an abstraction, admittedly) represents the status of the apache (webserver) services on my main server for the new website.
Today was not normal not just because of software woes.
Arthur went to see the VA audiologist in Ketchikan. Mid-day appointments in Ketchikan are possible, but involve a full-day’s journey. I drove Art to the ferry this morning, leaving the house as 5:45 AM. His ferry trip embarked at 8, he arrived in Ketchikan at 11, he had his appointment at 12, he got on the return ferry at 3:30, I picked him up at 6:30, and we got back to the house at 8 PM.
Arthur was tired but, he said, they had finally helped him to adjust his hearing aids better. This is amazingly good news! We’ll see how it pans out. They also told him that his hearing had worsened quite a bit – which wasn’t news to me, but was, of course, news to him. But now maybe, hopefully, he’ll wear his now better-working hearing aids more often.
Caveat: Tree #958
Caveat: Tree #957
Caveat: Tree #956
Caveat: Tree #955
Caveat: Tree #954
Caveat: Tree #953
This tree – located at the center of this map screenshot – is imaginary: a real dot on a real map of an imaginary place.
I placed this tree earlier today because I am testing the functionality of the new opengeofiction map server. As of right now, the “old” server is down. The new server is running, but only in testing mode, so I won’t place a link. I’ll add a link to the tree on the map server when it goes “live” – maybe later tomorrow or Sunday. This is part of a long ongoing project, mentioned before, to build a replacement website for opengeofiction. The moment of truth approaches…
Caveat: Tree #952
This tree is under an elevated metro station from my past. Ten years ago this month I visited the Oksu station in Seoul, and took this picture. I don’t think the tree was the focus or subject of the picture, but nevertheless, there is a tree down there.
Caveat: Tree #951
Caveat: Tree #950
Caveat: Tree #949
Caveat: Tree #948
This tree saw me raise my first wall-section for my treehouse.
Caveat: Tree #947
This tree has been chopped up and turned into parts of a sort of pre-fab modular section of treehouse wall. This is my first try for my plan, but I ran into an issue so I didn’t install it. I think I’m on the right track, though. It got windy in the afternoon so I stopped.
Caveat: Tree #946
This tree saw me arrive with a trailerload of new ingredients for my treehouse, including the roofing material and rafters. This is the biggest single purchase I have made for this project.
[daily log: walking, 3km; carrying and moving heavy things, 2hr]
Caveat: Tree #945
This tree is not very photogenic, frankly.
On the other hand, this tomato in my greenhouse is more photogenic.
Caveat: Tree #944
Caveat: Tree #943
This tree is from my past. Though I took this picture in 2018, the time I remember this tree from is 1983. It is a tree in front of my freshman dorm (Turck Hall) at Macalester College in Saint Paul.
Caveat: Tree #942
This tree is in front of the clinic in Klawock.
I went to the dentist today, there.
Just to be clear, as I’ve said before, in general, I preferred having cancer to certain dentist visits I’ve experienced, and would make the same choice again. That said, this visit was relatively harmless – just a checkup and xrays and exam, preliminary to cleaning. I was also pleased to hear that I have no evident problems (i.e. caries). The dentist agreed that with my complex medical history in and around my mouth, dental work would be arduous.
Caveat: Tree #941
This tree decided to start out near this pile of rocks.
Meanwhile I added some greenhouse-fresh green poblano peppers to a batch of fish curry.
Caveat: Tree #940
Caveat: Tree #939
Caveat: Tree #938
This tree is from my past. I took this picture not far from Hongnong, South Korea (where I was living at that time), in December, 2010.
Today was a bit of a milestone in Arthur’s post-stroke evolution / recovery. Lately he’s been becoming increasingly self-aware that some of the limitations he’s lived with are, in a sense, self-imposed: a kind of affective inertia. He had a consultation / annual follow-up with the headshrinkers at the Portland VA, the other day (via video call), while I was at work. And they planted in his mind the idea that he could or should be doing more – staying more active.
Of course, this has been suggested before. But this time, for whatever reason, the advice stuck. I suspect that it being someone new and different making the suggestion, and not the same old voices, helped.
One thing that came up as Arthur and I discussed the call later was that he wanted to drive to town. That, in turn, brought us around to what I’ve told him many times before: his driving, specifically, makes me feel unsafe. This is not because of lack of skill, but rather because of his seemingly stroke-related attentional issues: twice that I remember, when I let him drive a few times two years ago, he got distracted while attempting to multi-task and essentially forgot that he was driving. Once, he was trying to adjust his iPod that he was using for listening to an audiobook, and another time, he was trying to break off a piece of chocolate that he was trying to eat. And those times were scary. So my point being: it’s not his driving that makes me feel unsafe, it’s his refusal to avoid trying to multi-task while driving that makes me feel unsafe, because these days, his ability to multi-task frankly sucks.
But I don’t want to limit him. So I said that while I wouldn’t ride with him, I wasn’t going to prevent him from driving somewhere if he wanted to. It’s the same thing I’ve said about his going out in the boat: while it makes me somewhat worried or uncomfortable, I’m not going to try to prevent him. I’ve essentially given up on my supposed role as “safety officer.”
I really don’t want to be a “control freak” – Arthur actually used that term about my behavior, which wounded me pretty deeply. And that’s not to say the term is entirely inaccurate. But then, he’s been wounding me a lot, lately. I suppose that’s his way of taking back control of his own life to a greater degree. It is not my intent or desire to begrudge him that.
So all of this, above, is preamble to the following: he drove to town today on his own, and did his weekly shopping and library visit by himself.
And apparently he survived that. That’s good.
I had the somewhat depressing insight that it made me feel useless. I’m not the safety officer anymore, having abrogated that job in protest, so what, exactly, is my role here, now?
I wish I had more financial independence. I could move out.
Caveat: Tree #937
Caveat: Tree #936
Caveat: Tree #935
Caveat: Tree #934
Caveat: Tree #933
This tree is the same tree as tree #601, which is the same tree as tree #237. I planted (transplanted) it two years ago. It’s still alive, but not really thriving. Perhaps this is a metaphor for something.
Caveat: Tree #932
This tree is on a little island just west of San Ignacio Island, along a passage there with much kelp.