Category Archives: thought - Page 3

Adventure

A Spread from CQ Magazine

Last night, I was sitting in my Jeep waiting for my son to finish something and I pulled out my CQ Magazine. There was a really great spread on a team that ran a DX expedition to the British Virgin Islands. They were chasing the ghost of an Englishman who fixed up a sailboat and headed out to see the world on his own. He made a lot of contacts as he rounded the islands and was on the air for quite a while.

I’m a sucker for tales of Englishmen who head out into the world to chase something like that. It’s back to being a conquistador of the useless (a reference for those into the climbing scene of which I am decidedly only a spectator). There is no good reason for going out to sea like that. Even less to poke around with a radio. And less still to go to an island with the express purpose of being someone for people who are in their homes to call. But being useful isn’t much of an end, is it? Not most of the time, I don’t think.

I watch these folks go out and try to ship themselves and their gear to all parts of the world to sit on a lonely island in potentially harsh conditions simply to say “I’m here! Can you hear me? I can hear you!”

Living now, in the After (and there are so many things that have ended in the past few years that this is most assuredly an After Time), it’s easy to see why someone would want to drop it all and wander off. There is very little to be seen or gained from the vantage point of a computer screen.

Fishing. Geocaching. Camping. Overlanding. SOTA. POTA. Any kind of field radio, really. All excuses to get outside and check a box on a list you made yourself that is accountable to no one else. And that serves no greater purpose than to be logged in your own, personal journal.

No, I don’t have any maps open on my desk. Why do you ask?

Hammock

My Hammock View

Fathers Day is generally a day for me to relax, eat breakfast with my kids, enjoy some homemade gifts, and collect my shirt tax. That is to say, each year my wardrobe is enhanced with at least two shirts. I really dig the ones I got this year.

To add to the excitement this round, I got a hammock and a stand for it. It showed up a bit late (there’s a running joke now about how any gift purchased for me will be back ordered and miss the date) but in this case it is truly better late than never.

We set it up in a part of the yard where there is always shade. I climbed in. It was everything I had hoped. I think I will be enjoying many a book from that spot. Maybe even the occasional nap!

It’s a wonderful thing to be loved.

New Coffee

Erie Island Coffee

I don’t remember my first cup of coffee. It must have been at a scout event. That’s the only thing that makes sense. And I didn’t really get into it until college. Again, pretty much a trope there. But when I did, I was fortunate enough to have access to really great coffee shops.

When I moved away after college, I got to experience the coffee shops in NYC and even espresso in Italy. But it’s the little hometown coffee shops of Duluth, MN and Coralville, IA that I will always remember as having the best coffee. The kind made by exactly the kind of person who should be making coffee. That is to say, someone who cared about the final product.

When it comes to stuff at home, I stick to percolators or Italian stove top contraptions. I did use an Aeropress for years and it’s great stuff. But a percolator provides smooth flavor with low effort. And that? That’s my jam.

Having moved, it seems that the coffee I was accustomed to getting my hands on has changed. So I’ll give the Erie stuff pictured above a shot. I know there are two roasters in town and I will pay them a visit as soon as I have a little time. It’s good to have options.

Office Plant

A Peace Lilly

My wife has a great eye for plants. And she has a tendency to buy all of them all of the time. But this one really looks good in my office and provides just enough of a thing to look at. It also makes me open the blinds in the office on the weekend. So that’s good too.

What can’t be seen in the picture is the plastic coconut-umbrella-drink cup that the plant is in. She got me that and got one for a friend of mine who has since passed. I like to think that cup we got him is still floating around somewhere. Maybe with a niece or something. I dunno. I can’t bring myself to delete his contact info despite his dying over a decade ago.

Strange times and strange memories.

Pickin’ and Trimmin’

I watched this short documentary by Matt Morris last night that illustrates perfectly the function of music in our real lives as well as why I need to patronize a real barber shop instead of the Hair-O-Rama.

Check it out here or dig my embed. 

Pickin’ & Trimmin’ from Matt Morris Films on Vimeo.