Caveat: Done & Stung

I finished the “first draft” version of the well-head shed (doghouse). I call it a first draft, because I need to buy some supplies (electrical and plumbing) to now reconfigure the inside, now that I know how the pump works and what’s needed, so that the whole system is “hook up ready.”
I also need to get some proper fasteners for the scraps of metal siding I’ve used (which I found in a pile down by one of Arthur’s sheds).
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Only 5 minutes after taking this picture, as I carried some of the tools I’d been using down to the house, I got stung by a bee (or yellowjacket?). I don’t think I’ve been stung by a bee in at least a decade. I’m sure I was never stung during my sojourn in Korea.
So now I’m just resting. I’ve never had a severe reaction to beestings, but it does swell up. This sting was on my collarbone – I think the bee got caught in my shirt somehow without my noticing.
Ow.
 

Caveat: Tree #173

The tree seems incidental to the mountain across the inlet: jumping in from the left side of the frame and photobombing the scene.
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[daily log: walking, 3.5km]

Caveat: An old man and the sea

Art wanted to go fishing. We launched on a drizzly morning under gray skies and smooth waters.
We drove out to the open ocean. I have never been in the open ocean with Arthur in this small boat. The swells weren’t so big, I suppose, but they seemed big to me. They rolled beneath the boat and towered over it, reaching for the white surf on the rocky shores of Noyes Island. And still, no fish were caught.
Arthur gets impatient, which strikes me as a difficult trait for a fisherman. Despite my discomfort (psychological, not physical) on the surging sea, I was willing to wait, but we’d only had a hook in for halibut for about 20 minutes before he gave up and said we should head back. We stopped at Siketi Sound and trolled for salmon for a while, but no bites there, either. I simply say nothing, during these efforts. I don’t really have fishing skill. Anyway, Arthur would not find advice from me to be compelling. I stay silent, and do as he asks.
Call it “Zen on the gray-blue sea.”
At least he didn’t seem to allow his vertigo to interfere with his efforts. He constantly complains that it is unchanged, yet his functionality isn’t so bad – it must be somewhat improved in comparison with last weekend.
Here is the flat water at launch.
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Here is a picture of our course, plotted on the boat’s GPS tracker.
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Caveat: Tree #171

A tree was seen by me in October, 2013, on Ganghwa Island, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea.
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[daily log: walking, 3.5km]

Caveat: Fetched

The neighbor-down-the-road, Joe, helped us pick up the boat from the service shop today. We towed it to the launch area and put it in the water, then Art and Joe drove the boat back to the house while I drove the truck with the empty boat trailer.
Here is the boat, back at its home dock.
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Caveat: Tree #170

This tree (from a stump) is near the cistern shed, which is near the new well and pump.
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[daily log: walking, 1.5km]

Caveat: Pumped up

The well-drilling guys finally came back, today, and installed the in-well pump and controller for the new well.
So all the digging I did last month finally had a purpose. Now I have to build a little shed (which Arthur and I are calling the “dog house” because of the approximate scale) to enclose the new out-of-well pieces.
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Caveat: Tree #169

This stump arch and accompanying tree is along the western property line.
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[daily log: walking, 1km; tromping 500m]

Caveat: Tree #167

I saw this tree walking across the creek to lot 73 (i.e. not traveling there via the road, but rather by the cistern shed).
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[daily log: walking, 2km]

Caveat: Tree #165

Arthur seems to be recovering apace. He ate oatmeal for breakfast, tomato soup for lunch, and a bit of a grilled cheese sandwich for dinner. Considering he hadn’t eaten for a day and a half before this, that’s a very good sign.
I wish he could find a way to be optimistic – or at the least. pretend to be optimistic. In fact, even just pretending to be optimistic has positive psychological effects – almost as many positive effects as actual optimism. I speak from experience.
Here is a tree, with a largish stump next door.
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[daily log: walking, 2.5km]

Caveat: POW, emergency

Prince of Wales Island (called by most locals by the initialism simply “P.O.W.”) has exactly one emergency room, as far as I can figure out. It’s in the clinic at Klawock – it’s not really a full blown ER, the staff is on call (meaning they drive there and meet the ambulance or whoever wants to go there, rather than sitting around inside the ER on shifts).

Yesterday Arthur went to the ER. He is experiencing severe, debilitating vertigo, leading to uncontrolled nausea and inability to even walk. My paranoid, hypochondrical side wants to believe that this is related to his brain injury from last year, but medical personnel can’t point to cause-effect, and will only say, “it’s possible.” Meanwhile, it’s simply labelled “benign positional vertigo,” where the word “benign” doesn’t mean what you want it to mean, because really it seems to be medical slang for “we can’t find the cause.” It’s hardly benign. It’s utterly debilitating.

We spent about 4 hours at the ER. He got fluids via IV (replace lost to vomiting). He got some medications. Hours later, it’s not clear they’re that useful to control the underlying vertigo, but at least they seem to prevent the vomiting.

You know you’re in a rural Southeast Alaska ER because the view out the doors (where I spent a lot of time standing and pacing and feeling useless) includes a shipping container and a lot of trees.

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Caveat: Tree #163

Things have taken a bad turn with Arthur’s health.
I don’t want to say more than that – the situation is not clear.
Here is a tree picture from a stockpile of tree pictures.
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[daily log: walking, 1km]

Caveat: Tree #162

I walked along the road, and saw a tree.
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I also saw a piece of rusted scrap metal – maybe the rusted out floorboard of a truck or trailer. I propped the scrap on rock and took a picture – I like the composition, lights and darks.
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[daily log: walking, 4km]

Caveat: Boat Goes to Boat Doctor

Arthur and I took the boat to the boat doctor today. Meaning, it’s at the mechanic. We’ve had some troubling engine symptoms, and so this is what it’s come to. Hopefully the boat shop will make it right.
I experienced a great deal of anxiety over this adventure, prior to it happening. It involved both Arthur and I being competent, which is questionable, for each of us, for our separate reasons. Arthur has experience hauling his boat out of the water, and has done it many times, and is generally competent at such things anyway. But he had his head injury last summer, and he’s often forgetful or absent-minded, in ways that can be quite worrisome. Meanwhile, I haven’t got that forgetfulness problem, but I have never hauled any boat out of any water anywhere, ever. So we had a case of “the blind leading the deaf.”
Arthur took the boat into town, alone. Here is a picture of him departing the dock.
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I drove the truck into town with the boat trailer attached. We arrived at the Craig municipal boat ramp, at the north edge of town, at about the same time, waited our turn (it’s a busy place) and then backed the truck with trailer down to the water, pulled the boat onto the trailer, strapped it down, and drove up off the ramp. Here we are, checking the tie-downs.
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Then we drove into town and parked the trailer with boat at the boat doctor.
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In the end, it was a successful venture. Arthur was very tired, however. He pushed himself at his current limit for longer than he really had it in himself.

Caveat: Tree #161

Here is a tree by the pond – possibly shown here before, but looking very summer-greenish.
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[daily log: walking, 3km]

Caveat: Tree #160

Another treepocalypse, farther down the road… and one tree still hangs on.
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[daily log: walking, 3.5km]

Caveat: Tree #159

This is a pine tree in a spring-like setting (Mike and Penny’s yard, down the road at 9 mile).
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[daily log: walking, 1km]

Caveat: Tree #157

Arthur and I went out in the boat to Noyes Island (just past Siketi Sound). While out there, we passed a point of land and I saw a tree (well, several – the one I had in mind here is the one farthest to the left).
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We actually caught one fish. It was not a desirable salmon, however – rather, a fat lingcod.
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I made fish soup (Chilean style fish chowder) with it, when we got home.
[daily log: walking, 1km; boating, 60km]

Caveat: Tree #156

This is a tree out along the road, on a lot recently cleared by someone perhaps intending to sell or build. Note that the tree is not quite vertical – so by arranging the tree in the picture frame to appear vertical, the rest of the world is tilted.
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[daily log: walking, 4km]

Caveat: Tree #155

Here is a tree. Well, more than one, actually – but one on the left is closer and more salient.
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Earlier, Arthur and I went out in the boat. We caught one (1) fish. A small sea bass type fish. But perhaps it’s a step in the right direction. Here is a bald eagle supervising traffic at the entrance to the Port Saint Nicholas fiord.
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Later we went into town. I saw this car elevated in an unusual way. Alaskans take the availability of heavy machinery for granted.
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[daily log: walking, 1.5km]

Caveat: Tree #153

I’m going to count this as a tree picture, even though the tree is cut off on the left hand side. Really it’s more of a sunset picture.
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[daily log: walking, 1.5km]

Caveat: Tree #152

Arthur and I went out in the boat in the morning. Still no fish. I worry, sometimes, that Arthur is making some major mistake with respect to his fishing technique, which is causing the fish to avoid us. I wouldn’t know if he was – because I have very little experience fishing. On the way back to the house in the boat, we experienced some disconcerting engine behavior with the outboard motor. So we need to deal with that.
In the afternoon, we took a walk down the road. We met a bear. Arthur said, “Looks like it’s time to go the other direction.” I agreed.
Here is a tree past mile 9.
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Here is water looking out at San Juan Island, in the morning.
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Here is the bear (blackish blur, lower center of picture).
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[daily log: walking, 3km]

Caveat: Tree #151

Arthur and I went out in the somewhat debarnacled boat this afternoon, after getting it back in the water. There was a steady drizzle. No fish.
So I didn’t take a picture of a tree. I offer this fine tree from my archives – taken near Kaikoura, New Zealand, 2011.
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Here is the boat, back in the water.
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[daily log: walking, 1km]

Caveat: Tree #150

I got Arthur this morning.
I took this picture of a tree while walking along the road. I decided to show the tree in a different way. “Up close and personal.”
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[daily log: walking, 4.5km]

Caveat: Tree #149

I went to the airport to pick up Arthur on his way back from the VA in Juneau – but the leg of his flight from Sitka to Klawock was canceled due to weather. It is misty and drizzly with very low visibility. So I came back home.
Here is a purplish tree in front of someone’s house along the expressway. Some kind of maple. It came out somewhat blurry.
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[daily log: walking, 3km]

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