Monthly Archives: November 2008

Meditation With Wise Young Cat and Blogging Balance

This wise young cat seems to have peacefully accepted life as an adventurous, enjoyable ride.

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Pets are such a great pleasure. The physical and psychological benefits of pet ownership are well documented. I’ve gone through “petless” periods in my life of necessity, but always cycle back. Nothing like the simple, microcosmic perspective of a soft, furry critter to balance bleak news from the macrocosm.

Blogging Hermit Psychological Note: Yesterday’s somewhat negative post left me with a background creative angst focused on the need to return and balance that negativity with a more positive post.  The tension wasn’t a big deal, but it was noticeable. Perhaps it signals a new milestone in my blogging experiment - my first recognition of an enduring responsibility to this blog.  I apologize if this resultant post is a bit too sugary – I’m having an “Ah-ha” experience.

Thanks to HorsesAss.org’s Lee Rosenberg for posting the roomba kitty video on Thanksgiving night.

Blackest Friday: Humans Emulate Crazy Rasberry Ants

For some reason, I missed the first round of buzz on crazy rasberry ants which have invaded six counties in Texas. They’re named after Tom Rasberry, the exterminator who first identified them. Tom’s not crazy, but the ants are – they move about in random, riotous fashion rather than in orderly formations. They apparently have voracious appetites for electronics which they destroy by feeding on insulation. Even the folks at NASA’s Johnson Space Center are worried.  Texas A&M, USDA, the Texas Department of Agriculture and others have formed a task force to address the Crazy, Rasberry Ant Problem (CRAP?).

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How interesting (and disturbing) to be reading about the crazy ants today – the day we humans (with voracious appetites for electronics and moving in riotous fashion) have managed to trample to death a Walmart associate in our day-after-Thanksgiving, shopping frenzy.  We’ve also reduced ourselves to a shoot-out at Toys-R-Us, of all places. Where’s the task force on Black Friday Disease (BFD?)?

Dart the Mighty Hunter

Rodent Bigotry Part 2

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Dart-the-Cat (son of Dodge) doing what comes naturally.

Most Memorable Hermit J. D. Salinger. I Get It, J.D.

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J. D. Salinger will be 90-years-old on January 1, 2009. The Catcher in the Rye was first published in 1951.  Salinger’s reclusiveness has become as legendary as his literary contributions.  He seriously defends his privacy – with a high fence, occasionally with a shotgun, and persistently through legal means. A curmudgeonly, misanthrope if I ever [...]

Ironic Flap In Flying, Flightless Fowl (or Foul)

This award-winning tv spot from the Washington State Lottery Commission just started reappearing (it first aired last Spring and then vanished) I have to admit it’s a great ad – puts a smile on my face everytime – especially that little penguin instinctively flapping his stubby wings (flippers when he’s swimming in his natural environment).

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The Lottery Commission put a few bucks into the ad. It’s not like some middle-aged hang-glider just wandered in with the video and wondered if anyone wanted to use it.  The ad is a joint effort of  Publicis West, Sticks+Stones Studios and FisherEdit/Fisher FX. The birds were never more than a few feet off the ground, filmed in front of a green screen. (No birds were hurt or scared shitless filming this ad.)

The ad is supposed to make you realize all the crazy/wonderful things you can do (for less fortunates) if you win a bundle of money playing the lottery. If there was surge in lottery sales this year, it probably has less to do with the ad and more to do with tough economic times - which tend to increase gambling dollars spent close to home.

Subtext should include the fact that you have about as much chance of winning the lottery as the poor emu has of flying (with or without a hang-glider).

Washington State lottery dollars are distributed at approximately this split: 61% to winners; 20% to school construction (the best thing); 15% administrative & sales costs; 2.5% to sports stadiums; .06 % to economic development; .05% to address problem gambling.

Washington State is a big gambling state. The Washington State government profits from many gambling venues:  partnering on some, regulating some, totally directing others and accepting large sums of lobbying dollars.  The venues include the lottery, private card rooms, pull tabs, a large number of Indian casinos; and para-mutual (horse race) wagering.

Ironically (and ostensibly to save us all from ourselves), the Washington legislature has made playing online poker in the privacy of your own home a felony (on a par with sexual assault and distribution of pornography).  The law was passed rapidly, fueled by incidents of teenagers running up huge credit card debt at online poker sites and with the help of large sums of lobbying dollars from Indian casinos.

Teenagers running up huge online gambling debts is a parenting problem, not an online gambling problem. When online poker was legal, one could play for as little as 5 or 10 cents per wager – a fun option for people who want to play poker without investing a lot of money.  Minimums at brick-and-mortar casinos run between $3 and $5 per wager with $100 minimum buy-ins for poker games.  Poker involves skill – it’s not a blind game of chance – like lotteries.  Minimum purchase price for any of the multitude of available Washington lottery games is $1.00 per ticket.    What’s wrong with this picture?

Like the UIEGA, the Washington State legislation falls back on the idea that online poker players risk being cheated by unregulated off-shore sites.  There have been incidents of cheating and intentional fraud, but overall, the online poker community has self-regulated. Like other online networks, online poker players spread the word fast – sites that allow cheating or intentionally defraud fade fast.

Cute flying fowl commercials don’t erase the hypocrisy of this “protectionist” legislation. The reality is this: Washington’s government encourages you to gamble – but not unless they get their rake from the pot.

Our Well, The Red Squirrel Guard and Rodent Bigotry

A family of red squirrels has taken up residence in our pump house. Can’t blame them, the pump house is well insulated and a couple of 100-watt light bulbs keep it toasty over the winter. This will be the squirrels’ second winter there and, unfortunately, the population has increased enough that they’ve started messing with the insulation. squirrelI fear it’s only a matter of time before one takes a big, final bite out of an electrical wire. (Pretend I never said that, maybe we’ll make it through this winter with no fatalities or electrical failures.)

Why don’t I get rid of them, you ask? Simple. They’re CUTE! I can’t bring myself to evict them. I know how they get in the pump house – can’t get myself to plug the hole. They travel to and from the pump house and a large, nearby cedar. Little pump house guards, they scold the cats and me as we approach. What would I do with them if I trapped them? Using poisons near the well-head is a theoretical no-no. (Although, we have a drilled, 233-foot well, with a sealed head outside of the pump house proper, so the poison thing is somewhat less critical. Still, you don’t want to inadvertently contaminate your own water supply.)

The problem will only get worse, you say. That’s true. But I’m also armed with the knowledge that we’re rebuilding the pump house next Spring – a more exotic water system involving larger tanks and possibly harvesting geo-thermal energy. (Griz is an engineer, he can’t stop himself.) So whatever damage the squirrels render is only temporary.

So you won’t poison the squirrels to avoid contaminating the water, you say. Well, what about water contamination by squirrel poop? Hedging: a little organic matter in the water never hurts, obviously one can’t control all forms of contamination – like insect parts, dust, the occasional tiny turd. Our well-water is also treated. The guts of the pump house are a chlorination and filtration system – which would probably also handle warfarin if I decided to use poison and any made it into the water. I admit it – my squirrel diplomacy is all rationalization, based on cuteness.

You’ll change your mind when they chew the wiring and the water stops flowing, you say. But no, our well is low-flow artesian and located at the top of our sloping property. We get water even when the power is out (though with less volume – no dishwasher or laundry in power outages).

But if the wiring gets damaged, you’ll have to call an electrician, you say – and that can get expensive. Handily, of the many varieties of engineer – Griz just happens to the electrical type. (I know, I SO take him for granted.)

Squirrels are rodents, of course; but by virture of their “cuteness,” most of us don’t think of them that way. You know if a family of rats (even mice) was living in the pump house, I’d get rid of them in a flash. IT’S RODENT DISCRIMINATION – and it’s based on that classic premise of discrimination – how you look established through cultural precedents based on how your ancestors looked.

I admit it – I’m a mouse/rat bigot. Spiritually, I try to honor ALL life, but when it comes to mice and rats,  I’ll honor them outside of my house (and outbuildings), thank you. I don’t bat an eye when the cats capture a mouse or field vole (aka field mouse); I praise the cats as good hunters, look the other way and let them have their fun and snack. In summer, the cats are also reasonably successful bringing in baby wood rabbits. When the bunnies seem unharmed (other than psychological trauma), I sometimes rescue them. Definitely discrimination - possibly even betrayal from the cats’ point of view.

Although the squirrels’ arborial skills make them a rarer variety of prey, Dart sometimes snags an adult squirrel as it traverses the ground from tree to tree. But when the prey is that large (full sized voles, half-grown bunnies, adult squirrels), the cats make a quick kill and don’t play around – so there is no option for rescue. Law of the wild – that’s what I tell myself. I’m not one of those who promotes making vegans out of cats. Cats are true carnivores, not even omnivores like dogs. Other than attempting to train the cats to keep their prey out of the house (not always successful), I don’t mess with their hunts – other than when it’s those CUTE little bunnies.

I’m not going to roust the squirrels. Let them have another warm winter, although I’m a little concerned about creating a generation of red squirrels that won’t grow thick winter coats – light-bulb dependent tamiasciurus hudsonicus. When eviction occurs, I’ll handle it as the weather warms – at least give the little buggers a chance to fluff-up before the next cycle of cold temperatures.

The mice, rats and voles, of course, will have to fend for themselves against all elements, including the cats.

The Elusive Bobcat and the Blogging "OFF" Switch

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A Blogging Hermit Status Report That last post on on Most Memorable Hermit Dick Proenneke flipped a switch. It flipped my blogging switch to the”OFF” position and I’ve been searching for the “ON” switch for a whole week now. I’ve had several opportunities and flashes of insight that would have easily translated into decent posts, [...]