nopin

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Time Marches on, Time Marches on

First, there came a parking lot, then This Very Fancy™, Professionally Installed™ sign board:
And now, lining and graveling a trail section that used to be grass and mud. I appreciate the giant boulders blocking motorized access.
I feel very conflicted about this. I'm not gonna lie, I personally lean toward the more curmudgeonly side and would prefer that the neighborhood trails remain our own little neighborhood secret. But they are public lands, and we have no right to request such. The upside of development and publicizing of our local trails is that we'll get more support and more protection. I just hope I don't one day find a souvenir kiosk there selling keychains and bottle openers. ;) On the other hand, I've been a beneficiary of this Fancy Developed Trail™ because nowadays it's the only place I can walk with my bum leg.

They sure enjoy our morning trail walks!

Sunday, June 27, 2021

Broken leg items

I didn't know the things I'd need until people brought them to me or told me to buy them. So I'm keeping this list handy for when I know someone who breaks their leg. Then I will pay it forward.

  • Scooter, because crutches suck
  • Stool to use to shower, because standing on one leg in the shower is neither viable nor safe
  • Shoe lifter thingy to put onto the shoe of your good leg. The compression boot is thick-soled, and if you walk around with one leg longer than the other, you'll damage your hips.
  • Tylenol. There is some evidence that NSAIDs can impede bone healing.
  • Glucosamine, calcium, and vitamin D supplements
  • Some kind of pantacular solution, since normal pants won't fit over a cast. Giant sweatpants for winter, zip-off hiking pants for summer.
  • Some kind of walking stick for when you ditch the crutches.
On a cheerier note, here is my first bloom from the columbine seeds I gathered from UAF campus and planted in 2019! It's yellow! I wonder what colors the rest will be.
My friend made me a kuspuk that matches the colors of an Interior Alaskan summer:
Miss Thistle is very Suspicious!
Miss Cricket can look dignified sometimes!
Look at the gorgeous tomatoes in my pico! They are from a greenhouse farm in Delta Junction:
A multicultural snack: Deviled egg potato salad and oi muchim. I had this brilliant idea that for hot days, I could make potato salad or macaroni salad or pasta salad in the cool morning, and have it in the fridge waiting at dinnertime, rather than turn on the stove for a long time in the hot evenings. It's working pretty well.
Closeup of the oi muchim. Very nice for hot weather!

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Notes from Here and There

Mise en Place
It's been hot.
Even Cricket is hot.
We've been getting up super early to beat the heat. The dogs don't object to early breakfast. :)
I think my Lazy Person's Garden is very pretty. Those purple columbines were a Known. I'm still waiting for my Mystery Columbines to bloom so I can see what colors they are!
These two have prompted me to google "can dogs eat..." so many times lately. Yes to cucumbers, nectarines, pineapples, and cherries. No to grapes!

Monday, June 21, 2021

These beauties :)

This popped up in my Facebook memories yesterday:
I still mist up about weekly over Roo, and it's been well over a year. Last time was when I saw some pineapple weed in the yard, and remembered that she loved to eat it. Sometimes I think we never fully heal, but that's okay. Tis better to have loved and lost, and all that. The other thing that comforts me is I think, what would have been the way to avoid all of this pain? And the only answer is if we had never known or loved them. And that obviously is not a better choice. So I try to remember that and be grateful for the time we had.

Saturday, June 19, 2021

Historical Notes from my Childhood Home

Sorry this is a break from silicon2tanana reportage, but I don't know where else to jot down this Interesting Stuff. Please ignore if this is of no interest to you, but feel free to read, if interested. :)

Timeline:

Here is a 1903 photo of a location near my high school's present location in San Francisco:

image courtesy of OpenSFHistory / wnp36.10037

The caption reads, "Spring Valley water flume crossing a gully toward row of eucalyptus trees between present-day Stonestown and Lowell High School. This structure was demolished in 2018."

More details of the history here. That row of eucalyptus trees in the background line Eucalyptus Drive today, where I walked to and from both middle school and high school.

Apparently a series of flumes was built all over the western side of the City to channel water from Lake Merced to the downtown areas where almost the entire population lived at the time. Much of this infrastructure would later become obsolete when Hetch Hetchy became the main water source for San Francisco. Another website, the Western Neighborhoods Project, describes the photo as follows. "On May 26, 1898, San Francisco approved a new city charter that allowed the municipal ownership of utilities, effectively putting it in competition with the Spring Valley Water Company. Pictured here is a Spring Valley water flume over a gully in 1903 in the Stonestown area. The City ended up buying Spring Valley in 1930."

After the 1906 earthquake, major consruction proceeded in the neighborhood, which had been formerly sand dunes and artichoke fields. Thus my childhood neighborhood was built.

Stonestown shopping center was built adjacent to the site in 1952, some 50 years after the trestle was built. Old topographic maps of San Francisco suggest that Stonestown shopping center was built on top of a filled-in ravine. Lowell High School, which was founded in 1856, moved into its current location near there in 1962. We now have the present setting for the above trestle, which lays between Lowell High and Stonestown, which is now a mall called "Stonestown Galleria". I knew the foreman of the tile-layers who laid tile in the interior of the mall when it was converted to an indoor mall in 1987.

I attended Lowell from 1991 through 1995, and although we had an "open campus" and were allowed to come and go between classes, we were warned--weekly, via the bulletins we got in homeroom (which at Lowell is called "registry" or "reg"; I was in reg 9510) NOT to go onto the "trestle path" that went through a local city park and led to Stonestown Mall. We were told that it was "very dangerous", but no more details, so of course our teenaged minds provided the following Reasons:

  • Girls get raped on the trestle path.
  • Teenagers of both genders get murdered on the trestle path.
  • Drug dealers conduct deals on the trestle path, related or unrelated to the above two items.
  • General mayhem.
In reality, I think the reasons to keep us kids off the trestle path were more mundane. It was a safe neighborhood, but the structure was 100 year old at that point.

Here are some photos from Steve Rotman's flickr (photos uploaded 18 July 2005)
And here are some photos from Jef Poskanzer's flickr (photos taken 1 May 2010). Poskanzer reported, "It's about 450' long! And 50' high!... Apparently it was a sewage pipe, since there are standard sewer manholes on each end... Also the mystery of why they didn't detour twenty feet east and run the pipe under the Stonestown parking lot is easily solved: the bridge pre-dates Stonestown, and the ravine must have extended much further east. Stonestown must be built on the filled-in ravine..."

Another person on flickr, who goes by Octoferret, replied, "I looked at some old topographic maps, your assumption about the ravine getting filled looks spot-on..."

Another Lowell grad on flickr, who goes by Aunti Juli, replied, "I couldn't find much, except that the students at Lowell talk about the trestle path as far back as 1965. The school paper repeats that it is unsafe (rape, attempted rape, serious accident), but it is discussed as a favorite spot to cut classes as well."

Super Exciting!

I am wakling with my girls!
These seem to be proliferating, there are so many! They will turn into The World's Tastiest Berries!
The mosquitoes are pretty horrendous though.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Nnnngg

I am not enjoying My Big Day as much as I had thought I would. Yesterday evening, a violent thunderstorm came through, bringing Noise and hail for several hours! That did poor Miss Thistle in. She even threw up. Four times. I spent half the night rubbing her ears and cleaning barf. I'm very tired today.
But still, let me take a moment to commemorate This Event! Two (2) shoes and two (2) pant legs!
I'm disappointed that I cannot wear my hiking boots, but what the heck, these are cooler and more comfy any way. The doctor said I could walk as much as I'd like, but no running or jumping jacks or cartwheels or gymnastics. Yet!

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Tomorrow is my Big Day!

Tomorrow is Dump The Boot Day! I have been looking forward to this and counting the days with more excitement and anticipation than I did before any other life event that I can recall, including 18th birthday, leaving for college, wedding day, or dissertation defense day. Dumping The Boot is Exciting!
Photo taken while holding leg up in garden because I figured you were tired of looking at my cabin floor. Also, I'm super interested to see what color those columbines will be. I started them from seed 2 years ago, and this will be the first blooming!

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Hot

It's hot. The girls are flat. I have set up my Very High Tech Evaporative Cooling System.
Hot.
My favorite driveway rose bush has bloomed some more.
These wild roses have a sweet, true rose fragrance that has not been enhanced by selective breeding. You can't smell it by shoving your nose into a blossom and sniffing. You can only smell it when you are walking by a bush, and a breeze carries it to you. The bushes have nasty thorns, though, which people call "stickers". And during the other 11 months of the year that they aren't blooming, people call them "sticker bushes". But "sticker bushes" make roses! :)

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Notes from here and there

I expanded my Lazy Person's Garden after receiving some lovely gifts. That low fence is only a psychological barrier. DL knows he is not allowed to weed-whack the bluebells, roses, and fireweed that grow within, and the dogs don't step over it either. De fence is sufficient defense. :D
Cricket always commits fully, whether it's to running, cuddling, eating, Telling Me Things, or demanding belly rubs.
Cricket also does not care whatsoever about our afternoon thunderstorms. At least until the rain comes, then she wants to come inside to avoid getting wet. But this is how she rescts to Noise:
While this is how poor Thistle reacts:
However, being a Responsble Lead Dog, she makes sure to keep an eye on things:
In every direction, too! Such a Good Dog:
The wild roses are in bloom, and seem exceptionally brilliantly colored this year. The insects are happy:
And the bluebells, too, are all out and welcoming Friends:
My favorite rose plant, in front of this spruce along our driveway. DL never cuts this one either. :)

Friday, June 11, 2021

Miss Thistle has a question

Hmmmm...
Oh! Thank goodness I don't have to say no to that faaaaaace.
Here is a photo of a bumblebee. I loveloveLOVE bumblebees!

Thursday, June 10, 2021

T Minus 7 Days!

Until I ditch the boot!

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Every dog has her comfy

Indoor comfy:
Outdoor comfy: