Went out to work recently – the commute is a real bitch, I have to walk all the way across my yard to the writing shack – and there was a guy out there in the cold on the edge of my property, doing something but it wasn't clear what.
Fixing the fallen-down fence, turns out. Planned on putting a couple horses on the 4 acres to the south of me. He had a roll of used barbwire and some staples. He's in his 80s. Still rides horses. Was just in the hospital the week before. Tougher than me, no doubt, but thankfully I'm immune to being bothered by such things.
I've never cared for fencing. It bothers me. I had to repair a stretch of fence after putting my '65 Mustang through it when I sailed off Parkway Road thanks to some black ice back in high school. Replacing the busted tie rod on the car was more fun than stretching wire. And that's the last time I fixed fence because a mustang broke through.
You can't leave a guy in his 80s out there in the freezing cold, stringing fence all by himself. So I offered to help and did, a little bit. But just a little. I kept offering, but he kept at it and I think he could sense I was useless in the fencing realm. I exude that kind of thing.
He says to me, he says, "I'm starting to get too old for this."
I says back, "I've always been too old for fencing."
He takes a look at me and says, "I did lots of fencing when I was your age."
I didn't doubt that or have much else to say on the matter, so I watched him finish up and he said "I think that'll hold, what do you think?" and I thought so too.
Then he brought the horses over. They're good neighbors. Probably because of the fence, I guess.
Jon Rombach is a writer and river guide headquartered in Oregon's Wallowa Valley. His newspaper column, 'And Furthermore,' appears in the Wallowa County Chieftain. The Gearboat Chronicles cover life on the river, updated every week at windingwatersrafting.com. Publications include Utne Reader, Backpacker, Sports Afield, Mother Earth News and other fine, upstanding journals you may or may not have ever heard of.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Friday, January 20, 2012
What's another word for thesaurus?
I thought for sure my thought for the day would stump the universe but it turns out the thesaurus does have other words for itself.
Probably because it's a 'Super Thesaurus' with special word-suggesting powers. Unless you look up 'kryponite,' which case it starts throwing up and curls into a fetal position.
Here's what Roget's Super Thesaurus suggests for alternatives to its own bad self:
lexicon, word treasury, synonym finder, word book.
OK, Super Thesaurus, I'll give you 'lexicon.'
But 'word treasury'? Little uppity, don't you think?
'Synonym finder' sounds like something a well-spoken caveman would say, with a firm grasp on fancy parts of the lexicon and very cavemannish understanding otherwise. Pretty sure if you know the word synonym you can do better than 'finder.' Howzabout 'synonymizer'?
'Word book' just . . . no. That's what a caveman says when you ask what he got at the library.
Probably because it's a 'Super Thesaurus' with special word-suggesting powers. Unless you look up 'kryponite,' which case it starts throwing up and curls into a fetal position.
Here's what Roget's Super Thesaurus suggests for alternatives to its own bad self:
lexicon, word treasury, synonym finder, word book.
OK, Super Thesaurus, I'll give you 'lexicon.'
But 'word treasury'? Little uppity, don't you think?
'Synonym finder' sounds like something a well-spoken caveman would say, with a firm grasp on fancy parts of the lexicon and very cavemannish understanding otherwise. Pretty sure if you know the word synonym you can do better than 'finder.' Howzabout 'synonymizer'?
'Word book' just . . . no. That's what a caveman says when you ask what he got at the library.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Oh, the fresh-squeezed horror
(Writing a newspaper column is great because you get to take up whatever topic you want. Occasionally friends will approach you, suggesting you might write about the upcoming Winterfest activities. Or the dogsled race. And you think, hmmm . . . no, I think I'm going to go with the orange juice. Yep, definitely the orange juice. Because that's what was on my mind. And it worked. I got it out of my system, no longer dwelling on OJ. Good for me, but the reaction to this column was pretty much crickets. There was some positive feedback, but for the most part I got kind of a "what the hell?" response. Which is exactly what I think about the OJ process, specifically the labeling: What the hell?
Check out the book Squeezed: what you don't know about orange juice, by Alissa Hamilton for more.)
'And Furthermore', Wallowa County Chieftain January 4, 2012
Check out the book Squeezed: what you don't know about orange juice, by Alissa Hamilton for more.)
'And Furthermore', Wallowa County Chieftain January 4, 2012
I go into 2012 concerned about how we complicate things in this world. Specifically orange juice and pasta. Not the usual canaries in the coal mine, but hear me out.
The worst Christmas gift I know of was given to my mother. By me. My sisters got on board too, but to their credit they were skeptical. Mom took a vacation to Italy with friends. They attended a cooking class and the homemade pasta, Mom said, was amazing. She’d make us some when we were home for Christmas.
So when it came to choosing a gift, I figured a pasta maker was ideal. I was proud of myself for having such a swell idea. Mom unwrapped it and did a good job pretending to like it. Later we assembled the thing, plugged it in, fought with it, unclogged it, called it names, abandoned it and then Mom rolled out the dough with a wooden rolling pin and sliced it with a knife like the Italian guy showed her and it was fantastic. No attachments, no electricity. The fancy pasta maker was idiotic and unnecessary, but at least it was expensive so she knew the intention was good.
This long way around to something straightforward brings me to orange juice. I like it. I think OJ is good. I gladly buy the premium stuff. Not-from-concentrate, pure, fresh-squeezed 100% all-natural juice. I know something’s going on since it’s available year-round and doesn’t spoil. But there’s an awful lot of somethings going on.
I wish I’d never laid eyes on the articles that made me think about orange juice. I’ve got much better things to be bothered by. I’m mainly appalled at how the words used to sell juice have been put on the rack and tortured until Webster wouldn’t recognize them.
Here are two recipes for 100% fresh-squeezed all-natural pure juice:
Squeeze oranges. Recipe #1 stops here. Just drink it.
Recipe #2 is a tad more involved. Heat the juice to pasteurize it, remove oxygen, store deaerated (that’s a word) juice aseptically (also a real word) in a tank for up to one year. One OJ processing plant boasts of their one-million-gallon indoor storage tanks. They have 56 of them. That’s a lot of deaerated, aseptic pure and natural. Not exactly straight from the grove, but technically it was fresh-squeezed at one point. Good enough for marketing departments and the FDA.
The taste disappears when the oxygen is removed, so the next step is to hire yourself a fragrance and flavor engineering firm to mix up a custom, proprietary “flavor pack” – basically perfume for the tongue – to revive the blah liquid back to what you would recognize as something that came out of oranges. Throw in some ethyl butyrate and other things that don’t sound right. Check with the FDA about mentioning your flavor pack, they say don’t worry about it. Charge a lot because storage tanks are expensive. Pour and enjoy. Mmmm. Delicious.
I’m not opposed to pasteurization, additives, preservatives or chemistry projects. They have their place. But terms like 100%, pure, all-natural and fresh also have their place and it’s not on the label for something that’s been sucked of its being, suspended for a year and then artificially resuscitated. That sounds more like a zombie movie and I don’t condone those either.
To review: the people in charge of breakfast have kidnapped familiar words and used them for a process that is the reverse. What next, breakfast industry? Peanut margarine? I don’t know what to believe anymore.
So my resolutions for 2012 include not reading things on the internet anymore ever again. I also plan to find an old-fashioned juice squeezer with a handle you lean into. I will now and then press fresh fruit and drink the results. I will also, on special occasions, make pasta from Mom’s recipe: a few cups of flour, a couple eggs, dash of olive oil, pinch of salt, dribble of water, roll out, cut into little strips, make al dente, eat.
Simple. Honest.
Happy New Year. And thanks for reading these pure, natural, 100% freshly-typed words which have never been stored in a tank. Though I did add a flavor pack to bring out the citrus undertones.
Happy New Year. And thanks for reading these pure, natural, 100% freshly-typed words which have never been stored in a tank. Though I did add a flavor pack to bring out the citrus undertones.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
January in Hells Canyon
Went down to Hells last weekend on a volunteer cleaning detail to pick up some trash and whatnot at campsites. And by whatnot, I mean gross things people shouldn't be leaving where they know other people are going to be visiting.
I kept samples of the gross things or soiled toilet tissue in question, stored in hermetically sealed vials after being recovered with kitty litter spatulas. These samples will be tested for DNA at the lab and I will then track down each offender and they shall know it is I and vengeance shall be mine when they look out their living room window to see a guy squatting on their lawn taking . . . great care, um, to rake their leaves, because I want to set a good example and counter bad deeds with good. Either that or I'll take a crap on their lawn to teach them a lesson. I'm divided on that. But vengeance shall be mine, either way.
Here's a pithy observation from Ace Barton, tacked on the wall of the museum at Kirkwood Ranch:
And here's a solar panel below the airstrip at the Forest Service admin building, across from Pittsburgh Landing.
Mike Baird and I went along with the Forest Service folks and had a fine time, even though the mission was to clean up after folks with bad manners.
View out the back of the Forest Service jetboat.
I kept samples of the gross things or soiled toilet tissue in question, stored in hermetically sealed vials after being recovered with kitty litter spatulas. These samples will be tested for DNA at the lab and I will then track down each offender and they shall know it is I and vengeance shall be mine when they look out their living room window to see a guy squatting on their lawn taking . . . great care, um, to rake their leaves, because I want to set a good example and counter bad deeds with good. Either that or I'll take a crap on their lawn to teach them a lesson. I'm divided on that. But vengeance shall be mine, either way.
Here's a pithy observation from Ace Barton, tacked on the wall of the museum at Kirkwood Ranch:
And here's a solar panel below the airstrip at the Forest Service admin building, across from Pittsburgh Landing.
Looks lonely. So ronery.
Mike Baird and I went along with the Forest Service folks and had a fine time, even though the mission was to clean up after folks with bad manners.
Pack string.
Cows.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Driveway Rage
Battery-powered Jeeps rank very high in the awesomest-ever Christmas gift index. Very high. Nieces Claire and Anna must have done something right this past year because Santa kicked down for one of these prized plastic chariots.
I'm envious and considered stealing it, but Claire somehow sensed my plan and ran me off with this look:
I believe Claire could run a grizzly bear off with that expression. Or an army. Or star in a movie, co-starring a priest.
Anna looks like she just wants it all to be better.
To be fair, I brought this on by teasing the girls. Lifting up the back of the Jeep so it wouldn't drive and so forth and then asking them to make a scary face. Uncle stuff.
But asking for a scary face is one thing – downloading your Christmas photos a week or so later and finding results like this made me reach for heart pills I don't even have a prescription for.
I'm guessing Claire will score high on nonverbal communication if her school tests for such things.
Here's a smiley one, after I asked them for a non-heart-stopping scary face:
And I like this shot a lot, of Mom pedaling her bike while we were having our driveway fun run.
I'm envious and considered stealing it, but Claire somehow sensed my plan and ran me off with this look:
Yikes.
I believe Claire could run a grizzly bear off with that expression. Or an army. Or star in a movie, co-starring a priest.
Anna looks like she just wants it all to be better.
To be fair, I brought this on by teasing the girls. Lifting up the back of the Jeep so it wouldn't drive and so forth and then asking them to make a scary face. Uncle stuff.
But asking for a scary face is one thing – downloading your Christmas photos a week or so later and finding results like this made me reach for heart pills I don't even have a prescription for.
I'm guessing Claire will score high on nonverbal communication if her school tests for such things.
Here's a smiley one, after I asked them for a non-heart-stopping scary face:
So cute.
And I like this shot a lot, of Mom pedaling her bike while we were having our driveway fun run.
About that sawdust in my eye
So it goes a little something like this – I'm kerfing out some endgrain on a 2-inch thick slab of wood. I don't really know whether kerfing is the right woodworking term here and in my old age frankly I don't care. Making channels on two slabs of wood to join them, inserting a glued piece in their respective slots.
So. An operation like that sends up tremendous poofs of sawdust and 24% of it bounced off my face, 1.6% of it deciding to homestead in my eye.
Safety glasses would have been good. A ham and cheese sandwich also would have been nice, if I'd had any ham. Or cheese. Or bread. I did not.
Entonces, the next day my eyes were a little red. To be expected. Day after that, one eye was really really red. I shot some old contact lens solution in there. Held my head under the faucet to flush it. Borrowed a fire truck and shot myself in the face to flush it out and relieve me of this speck.
Yeah, well, I had pink eye. Conjunctivitis, if you're in polite company.
Features of this condition include looking like a horror show, waking up to your eyelids welded shut by caked boogers. It's, uh, not great.
Talked to a teacher friend while this was going on and she related how a student of hers had a bout of the pinkeye and the word around the classroom was that she had got it because someone had farted on her pillow.
Egads.
I was reminded of Frank McCourt's description of his eye troubles as a youth, a condition he says made his eyes resemble "two piss holes in the snow," I believe is how he phrased it.
My new best friend is a little bottle of fancy eye drops that made it go away. Thanks, little bottle of eye drops.
So. An operation like that sends up tremendous poofs of sawdust and 24% of it bounced off my face, 1.6% of it deciding to homestead in my eye.
Safety glasses would have been good. A ham and cheese sandwich also would have been nice, if I'd had any ham. Or cheese. Or bread. I did not.
Entonces, the next day my eyes were a little red. To be expected. Day after that, one eye was really really red. I shot some old contact lens solution in there. Held my head under the faucet to flush it. Borrowed a fire truck and shot myself in the face to flush it out and relieve me of this speck.
Yeah, well, I had pink eye. Conjunctivitis, if you're in polite company.
Features of this condition include looking like a horror show, waking up to your eyelids welded shut by caked boogers. It's, uh, not great.
Talked to a teacher friend while this was going on and she related how a student of hers had a bout of the pinkeye and the word around the classroom was that she had got it because someone had farted on her pillow.
Egads.
I was reminded of Frank McCourt's description of his eye troubles as a youth, a condition he says made his eyes resemble "two piss holes in the snow," I believe is how he phrased it.
My new best friend is a little bottle of fancy eye drops that made it go away. Thanks, little bottle of eye drops.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Eyeball dustbin
That's kind of creepy, actually.
This week on Handyman's Corner I want to talk about eye protection. Specifically when you don't use it. When you're leaning over your Skilsaw, reeaaally getting your face down in there because it's a delicate cut and you don't want any wavering.
It occurs to you this may be a good time – nay, the perfect time – to put on safety glasses. Then you think, Nah, I'm almost done.
Two things: I didn't lose an eye or anything. Instead, I gained about four pounds of sawdust, added to my eyeball cavity and I think it migrated up into my brain. Really need to sweep that up.
It would have taken two minutes to find and put on some glasses, but thanks to my time-saving decision to not bother, my eye has been on fire for the last two days, geysering out tears and fluids and causing children to scream and run because it looks like half my face is glowing red.
In conclusion: sawdust in the eye is a pain in the eye.
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