I still haven’t found all of my tripods out the the PODS following the move, but with the almost full Moon near the horizon a couple of days ago and the back wall there to set the lens on (and very, very short exposure times for the very, very bright moon), the results didn’t suck.
Finch At Feeder
I refilled the birdseed feeder AGAIN – two days this cycle. And I updated my Chewy “Autoship” order to once every three weeks instead of once every twelve weeks.
As we’ve brought patio furniture, some shelves, a BBQ, chairs, and other stuff onto the large back patio near the pergola, after dining the birds are retiring to rest in the shade on the new resting and roosting locations. I haven’t seen any nest building activity yet (that’s more of a spring thing) but I really would prefer they stay off of the telescope at least. There may be a BBQ cover in the telescope’s near future. (Form follows function!)
They’re also starting to peck at the small apples growing on the apple tree, but they seem to be leaving the pears alone. We’ll see what’s left to harvest in a couple of weeks.
GO TEAM BIRDS!
Filed under Birds, Forever Home
Proof Of Life – September 12th
Critical deadlines met. One way or the other. In this case, the “other” meant a marathon, 20-hour-plus work session yesterday with the final draft reports being emailed out at 03:15.
I checked with my Oura Ring to see what it thought of my two hours of sleep and the message was, “DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!! WTF!!!???”
Maybe there is something to this AI thing?
I may sleep in and sit on my ass all weekend. I trust that the remaining stuff in the one PODS container will still be there on Monday. As will be the empty PODS container that was scheduled to be picked up last Wednesday, then yesterday, then… There are certain local managers and member of the PODS C-suite that would not get my vote for a performance bonus this year. In fact, I would recommend clawing back any performance bonus they got last year!
Filed under Forever Home, Health, Paul
Proof Of Life – September 11th
Bird seed.
At the old house in West Hills we would put out a cup or two a day in bird seed and it would attract house finches, sparrows, juncos, mourning doves, squirrels, and whatever else happened to be passing through. We might get as many as ten or twelve mourning doves, but the other species were smaller flocks.
In the new house, I’ve put up four much bigger hanging feeders full of seed. No juncos, no mourning doves, one scrawny squirrel who as far as I can tell hasn’t yet figured out how to get to the hanging feeders, but will feast on the droppings on the ground. LOTS of house finches and sparrows.
When I put up the first feeder and just had the one out there, it took about two weeks to get emptied. Just a handful of birds had found it. But there were more every day.
When I put up the other three (total of four), the floodgates opened.
They cleaned them all out in a week. I refilled.
They cleaned them all out in four days. I refilled.
Three days. I refilled.
I noticed today that they’re all empty again, and it hasn’t even been 36 hours.
How? Well, when I looked out there this morning there were 50+ birds.
Paging Alfred Hitchcock! The white courtesy phone for Alfred Hitchcock! The black courtesy phone for Roger Thornhill!
If you see us starting a Go Fund Me for bird seed, you’ll know why.
Filed under Birds, Forever Home
Proof Of Life – September 10th
One small but non-trivial change in moving to the High Desert in general and to this house in particular is our morning wakeup routine. Our bedroom windows face east and we’ve gotten into the habit of leaving the plantation shutters open, so the Sun is shining in about 6:00 AM.
The iPhone can’t even come close to recording the pink and orange hues that greeted me this morning. Imagine the saturation and warmth turned up to 11! The Sun was still just below the horizon, but the sky made it look like we were inside of a ginormous neon tube. With the shutters, pergola, bird feeders, and high-tension power line towers in the distance all silhouetted against the glow, it was fantastic.
It makes it tough to sleep in, but we’re adjusting – and views like this make it worth it.
Filed under Forever Home, Photography, Sunsets
Progress Moon
We have all kinds of weird names for various seasonal full Moons these days – pumpkin moon, harvest moon, bullseye moon… I figured I would make up my own – this is the Progress Moon!
That’s it, 92% illuminated, rising over the house and the two PODS storage units sitting in the driveway. I was moving the cars out of the driveway and onto the street since they’re going to be here (in theory) at 7:45 AM tomorrow to pick up the PODS unit on the right.
This move! DAMN!
They say that which doesn’t kill you will only make you stronger. Bullshit. Between packing, getting out of the old house, closing escrow, filling these PODS, unpacking all of the “primary” stuff that the movers brought up, getting to a functional state since I still have a job, trying desperately to stay caught up at work through a particularly busy time of year to begin with, unpacking the PODS… Actually having this shit put me in the hospital sounds like a break at this point.
But a push over the last weekend got the first of the PODS emptied, so tomorrow it gets picked up. With luck I’ll finish getting the other one emptied out this upcoming weekend – so, by Christmas, right?
It’s a good thing we’re loving the Forever Home, ’cause we’re NEVER leaving!
All hail the Progress Moon!
Filed under Forever Home, Photography
Beauty In Desert Weeds
It’s the freakin’ desert, after all. Okay, Death Valley’s worse, but even just a couple miles from civilization it can get brutal out here. Hot. Dry. Unrelenting. You have to be tough to survive in the wild under these circumstances, and tough often is the same as “something only a mother could love.”
Most of the yard, front, back, and sides is either “desert landscaping” (i.e., colorful gravel) or artificial turf. Along the edges, all over, are these scraggly-ass looking things. I really need to find the yard trimmer at the front of the PODS unit and clean them up, that is, chop them to bits and dispose of them.
But there’s this one by the front sidewalk, right next to where I found my new little lizard friend:
What are these pretty, pink flowers at the base? At first I though it was a piece of plastic wrap or trash that had gotten caught there, but they’re definitely flower petals.
Maybe?
Upon closer examination, those flowers have a woof and a weave to them. They’re frayed on the edges. They’re fake.
So that leads to the next mystery – who put them there? It certainly doesn’t look random or accidental.
Does our quiet little suburban neighborhood have a secret weed decorator?
Was it the lizard?
Filed under Flowers, Forever Home, Photography
New Little Lizard Friend
Being the desert and all, I was expecting more lizards up here than at our old houses in West Hills. God knows you can find enough pictures on her from the last ten years of both fence lizards, large, small, and tiny, and the occasional alligator lizard (good sized critters, especially the ones that came up through the toilets). But through the first six weeks, it’s been slim pickings.
When I was taking the trash bins out to the curb last Thursday evening, this tiny dude was chilling on the curb. I figure the west-facing concrete was probably still warm after sundown and it was sucking up every photon it could get.
It didn’t move until I got really close, then it scooted under that big bush. The markings are noticably different than all of those we had in West Hills – they were more scaly and “granulated” with the classic blue bellies and throats. While I didn’t get super close and I didn’t get to look at it at length, it seems that this one is more striped than spotted.
I’ll keep my eyes (and camera) open to watch for more of the area lizards and get more data.
Filed under Critters, Forever Home, Photography
Proof Of Life – September 06th
Damn, that was a LOT of lifting and moving and unloading and unpacking and I am SOOOOOO over all of this…
It’s a marathon – good thing I’ve run a few and trained for them. One foot in front of another…
Meanwhile, a 99% full Moon rising over the mountains looks spectacular. We know that I love sunsets, and the sunrises here aren’t bad at all. I guess we can add moonrises to that list.
Filed under Astronomy, Forever Home, Photography
Big Things Over The Horizon
It was a nice day here (aside from the small brush fire that they stomped on pretty quickly with a half dozen aircraft and kept to about 33 acres) but out in the desert late in the day there were a couple of odd, big, convective cells building up.
This was off to the northeast, up toward Barstow. Probably at least 40 or 50 miles away, but the cloud tops at 15,000 to 20,000 are impressive.
When we got past sunset here but the cloud tops were still lit, it got better.
There was another big group of cells down toward Palm Springs.
This extremely large, round object was also seen coming up, moving in its orbit toward a full lunar eclipse on Sunday (which we won’t see at all here – enjoy it in Asia, India, Africa, and Australia!).
Once everything on the ground started turning pink, it had risen above the mountains, clouds, and haze to become a bright, white beacon.
Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Sunsets, Weather


















