Caveat: Tree #1241

This tree is living on the edge.
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My garden yielded a small carrot. It tasted pretty good though.
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picture[daily log: walking, 2km; c107065058084s]

Caveat: Tree #1239

This tree was near a parking lot in Klawock.
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picture[daily log: walking, 3.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c109077078085s]

Caveat: Tree #1238

This tree is a guest tree from my past. I took this picture while walking to work in April, 2017. I thought the ball looked forlorn and sad, so I took a picture – but the trees are interesting, too. I remember the exact spot where this ball was, along Juyeop plaza about half a block south of work.
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picture[daily log: walking, 6km; c114065083085s]

Caveat: Tree #1236

This tree had been presumed dead – for the last 6 months. It arrived from the live tree order service I use with only one leaf, which it promptly lost. So I left it in its bucket with its equally dead peers, lined up in a “failed tree” graveyard on the western side of the greenhouse. And this morning, I noticed this dead tree had put out two leaves. Interesting!
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picture[daily log: walking, 5km; retailing, 7hr; c106058062085s]

Caveat: Tree #1235

This tree sheltered a dog from the drizzly sky.
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picture[daily log: walking, 3km; dogwalking, 4km; c116053051085s]

Caveat: Tree #1234

This tree was in order, in sequence directly after the previous tree.
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Like counting numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4.

picture[daily log: walking, 3km; dogwalking, 3.5km; c097059065085s]

Caveat: Tree #1232

This tree saw heavy clouds and raindrops catching the camera’s flash.
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picture[daily log: walking, 3km; dogwalking, 3km; c109070064084s]

Caveat: Tree #1231

This tree dodged a rainbow, just barely.
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picture[daily log: walking, 4.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c098062057084s]

Caveat: Tree #1230

This tree witnessed a boat undergoing a launching – more reliable than some software I won’t mention.
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picture[daily log: walking, 8km; c103068068084s]

Caveat: Tree #1228

This tree had an eagle in it (exact center).
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I spent my whole, long weekend working on a particular computer/database problem, related to what’s called the overpass API and overpass-turbo application for the map server.

Not even sure it’s working properly. But anyway, it’s sorta working.

picture[daily log: walking, 3.5km; dogwalking 3km; c105066057084s]

Caveat: Tree #1226

This tree saw some rhododendrons beginning to bloom in front of Mike and Penny’s house.
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picture[daily log: walking, 3.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c103064055084s]

Caveat: Tree #1225

This tree is a guest tree from my past. I took this picture in early June, 2015, standing in front of my place of work. I was noting the “gentrification” of my neighborhood in Ilsan, Korea, via the opening of a new Starbucks location.
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picture[daily log: walking, 3.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c100066057084s]

Caveat: Tree #1224

This tree found a new angle on the situation.
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picture[daily log: walking, 5.5km; dogwalking, 3km c098065064084s]

Caveat: Tree #1222

This tree waved to a cloud across the way.
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picture[daily log: walking, 8.5km; retailing, 6hr; c114074083084s]

Caveat: Tree #1221

This tree was befogged.
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I, too, was befogged.

I spent the day doing a very strange thing (for me): I was working in Microsoft Windows on my computer. I always use linux. I’ve been using linux at home quite consistently for 10 years now – I remember when I triumphantly installed it on my posh new home desktop in that old, run-down apartment in Juyeop in Korea in the Spring of 2012. I remember the smell of the street through the open windows and the sound of traffic.

But something prompted me to make sure the old Windows boot on my current desktop computer still worked, to run updates, to make sure I could at least do some basic stuff with it. I think I’ve been feeling that my computer skills have been getting “fragile” – that I depend too much on linux and suffer a lack of “tech resiliency”, or something like that. I want to remain able to adapt.

Windows is pretty sucky, but there have been some improvements. One thing that is to be found in recent windows versions: the so-called “Windows subsystem for linux (WSL)”, which allows a linux hacker like me to use familiar bash commands to do things while working in windows.

One thing that I did get working, somewhat unexpectedly: iTunes. Apple doesn’t make an iTunes version for linux, but it does make one for Windows, and I did get it working. I think this is important because Arthur’s capacity to navigate his quite baroque iTunes arrangement on his macbook sometimes seems dangerously compromised, and we somewhat rely on this for our evening entertainment (the ripped-and-stored TV shows and movies that we watch on his AppleTV).

So it’s good to have the possibility that I could host these TV shows if Arthur ever eventually decides to give up doing so, or simply can’t. I struck another blow against excessive “tech fragility”.

picture[daily log: walking, 4.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c103069069084s]

Caveat: Tree #1219

This tree was humbled by the vastness of the sky.
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picture[daily log: walking, 4.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c102062062084s]

Caveat: Tree #1218

This tree malingered through the afternoon.
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picture[daily log: walking, 7km; retailing, 6hr; c112065062084s]

Caveat: Tree #1217

This tree saw the framing-in of the west wall of the treehouse.
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Now… I still need some more 3/8″ plywood for covering the framed-in walls, and I then need to engineer some doors – the door-openings are of course non-standard sizes (and likely not even square), so the doors will have to be custom-made. This will push my wood-working skills past any previous benchmark, if it proves successful.

picture[daily log: walking, 6.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c113068075084s]

Caveat: Tree #1216

This tree could be seen among other trees.
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picture[daily log: walking, 12km; retailing, 6hr; c101064057084s]

Caveat: Tree #1215

This tree suffered under a big gray cloud.
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picture[daily log: walking, 7km; retailing, 6hr; c117072061084s]

Caveat: Tree #1213

This tree saw me making some steps along the path from the driveway down to the treehouse. These are not the only steps necessary – more, other steps are necessary; but these steps seemed the most necessary – there’s been a little mini cliff that I had to navigate along the path until now.
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Here is another angle on those steps.
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picture[daily log: walking, 5.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c108062067084s]

Caveat: Tree #1212

This tree saw the former storage tent (“studio”) finally rest in peace. I have completely cleared the original location of the storage tent.
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It involved a lot of walking back and forth, carrying stuff – I made a new “under tarp” storage facility in a different location.
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picture[daily log: walking, 11.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c102062072084s]

Caveat: Tree #1211

This tree saw the fog dissipate.
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I was walking down the road to fetch the dog and looked down and saw this. Random detritus of an optimistic civilization.
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picture[daily log: walking, 10km; dogwalking, 3km c108063064084s]

Caveat: Tree #1210

This tree saw the final installation and activation of electricity for lot 73.
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I reparked and plugged in the RV, and turned on a little heater inside it, and watched the meter record my first 2 watts.
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picture[daily log: walking, 7.5km; dogwalking, 3km; c109066073084s]

Caveat: Tree #1209

This tree saw the return of the GDC (RV camper) to Lot 73.
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I had loaned the GDC to some neighbors-down-the-road. Brad is energetically building a house at 12 mile, and wanted a place for one of the workers he had to stay in. So in exchange for some much-needed maintenance work, I loaned him the RV.

It’s been a whole string of frustrations and disappointments, these last few days. I finally got Alaska Power & Telephone (the local utility) to come out and hook up the new meter-base for electricity for Lot 73. I learned there was an unexpected, quite high charge associated with this hook-up. Essentially, it’s a bureaucratic “reactivation fee” because I took so long in the time between when I first had the utility pole and power drop set up and when I got the meter base installed. It’s a kind of “procrastination fee.” I’m disappointed because I specifically asked, at the time the pole was put in 3 years ago, if there would be other charges if I delayed putting it in, and the people at that time said something to the effect of: “nothing major, a small fee.” $700 doesn’t seem small, to me.

Then today, I was planning to drive into town to JS Hardware (the one and only hardware store on the island), with the cargo trailer. I wanted to buy some more plywood and longer pieces of lumber, to best continue my treehouse project as well as to construct a small shed to replace the weather-destroyed storage tent.

I had the trailer all hooked up to the Blueberry (the Chevy Tahoe), and the brake lights were even working, and I realized the trailer’s registration was expired. Although evidence is thin on the ground, I suspect Arthur simply forgot – despite surely having received some kind of reminder in mail form and probably email form as well. And I blame myself, because at this point in things, it’s really my job to keep track of Arthur’s multitude of bureaucratic obligations. I simply didn’t think about it. But my luck being the way it is, I’m not going to drive to town with expired tags – that’s inviting a revenue-raising stop by the Craig Police.

So the trailer was re-parked, and we’ll have to sort out the expired trailer registration. Because the DMV in Craig is only open 4 hours a week, by appointment only, that is not something resolved promptly – it’s on “their schedule.”

These experiences just reinforce my feelings of general incompetence, lately.

picture[daily log: walking, 5km; c101062062084s]

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