In an attempt to be positive, if you positively detest Daylight Savings Time as much as I do, here’s a reminder that my solar clock will always tell you what time it really is, wherever you are. (On earth, anyhow.) And if anyone can make this into the lock screen for my phone, give me a holler.


Meanwhile, here are some flowers. Actually there were so many blooming along the Eno River today that I could not find a place to sit down to eat lunch without squashing them. So I ate my PBJ while walking.

trout lilies and sping beauties blooming at the base of a tree (actually only a stump, which you can’t tell from the photo—but now YOU know, ha ha!)


There’s a project in there somewhere… if I just keep planing maybe I will find it

one heck of a mess on my workbench. hand planes, wood, shavings


Time to harvest some spinach.

spinach and lettuce in the garden, some cut in a colander


I enjoyed my Leap Day hike yesterday… thinking I will make it an annual tradition!

sign with atrow saying Howell Woods Environmental Learning Center 8 miles


O to walk the greenway fair
When meadows all are grassing—
The birds singing their morning air,
And sewer pipes off-gassing


I think that we should all strive to swear more colorfully. The trouble with the casual use of certain words once held in certain circles to be unutterable is not that they are coarse but that they are boring. As an alternative, I have been trying to use woodworking-specific oaths when I screw up or cut myself, such as “Mother Ann’s knickers!” The challenge is trying to remember it in moments of extreme distress, so like any new habit of mind you may want to practice it when you don’t really need it. It’s these little changes in ourselves that make the world a better place, you know?


Currently reading: Stalingrad by Vasily Grossman. It is about the Battle of Stalingrad in the sense that War and Peace is about Napoleon’s invasion of Russa, so the incendiary bombs start falling on about page 550 of 1000. It is one of those books I wish I were reading with someone, so I could talk through what I think about it.


Bought these from a guy who looked oddly like Harvey Korman.

packet of seeds labeled Eggplant: Thai Green Frog Fingers


The Met is hyping a new opera that is a “searing exploration of the psychological pressures of modern warfare.” It may be quite good, but do they describe La Boheme as a “searing exploration of the devastating effects of poverty on relationships”? They do not. One suspects there is a reason.