Really, they're nothing more than snapshots grabbed during leisurely hikes. And back then the medium was film, of course. They preserve some good memories, though, and I've judged a few worth sharing.



"Remember the first rule of photography: Have a camera."So a point-and-shoot camera is, potentially, an EDC item. For the committed photographer, however, a high-quality PhD* has other, less obvious applications.
"Quality in a knife, an ax, or a saw--or any other tool--has to be judged on proper design, suitable material, and honest workmanship. To the expert, just 'hefting' a tool--trying its weight and balance--and running an eye along its edge tells him a lot. The maker's name may influence his opinion--some--but the test will be in the using: will the knife take and hold a keen edge, does the ax hang right and swing true, can a saw bite deep and smooth and not chatter or run out of the cut?"The guidance is simple, practical, correct. I used that page quite intentionally, of course -- thanks for noticing.
"I'll sure be glad when the election is over."Like the rest of us, he's tired of being bombarded with political ads at every commercial break. This 15-year-old even acknowledged that the candidates' pitches are laced with half-truths and outright lies, and that they're not very helpful. (A budding critical thinker, that one.)
"Josh Mandel is a Marine intelligence veteran who served two tours in Iraq..."I honor his military service, of course, but it doesn't qualify him to manage Ohio's $50 billion budget -- in fact, it's wholly irrelevant.
"We had been up to the workshop and as we were driving back down, a slab of rock caved in just behind us. It crashed down only a few seconds after we drove past. Just ahead I saw a white butterfly. After that, we were caught in an avalanche of dirt and dust. I couldn't see my hand in front of my face. The tunnel was collapsing..."In a culture as superstitiously Catholic as the Atacama region of Chile, that "white butterfly" is bound to become the next BVM-on-toast -- that is, people all over the world will see an angel in an insect.
That sure puts things into perspective, doesn't it?Coming up with 11.5 million jobs (to achieve pre-recession payrolls, as noted above) is equivalent to employing the entire population of Ohio.
6.1 million American workers -- roughly equal to the population of Indiana, our 14th-largest state -- have been unemployed longer than six months.
26.3 million Americans are either unemployed or under-employed. Only one state's population (California, 33.9 million) exceeds that number, which is greater than the combined populations of Pennsylvania and Illinois.
That's good stuff there, coming from a good guy. And it's not a bunch of ideological, anti-elitist bullshit, either -- it's pro-work."I don't know that we've lost the jobs so dramatically as we have lost touch with the people who do the jobs. But of course that's always the first step in marginalizing something. ... A growing skills gap, a crumbling infrastructure. And just a general dysfunctional relationship with dirt. There really are a couple of different pieces of this country that are not connected."
"...if we don't do something soon, we really are going to be dealing with fewer steam fitters and pipe fitters and electricians and plumbers and carpenters. And that's going to be a real, real problem."
"We've got this idea that a four-year degree is basically the only ticket to happiness and success. And when you celebrate one form of education at the expense of all the other ones, you really do the whole country a disservice. ... So many of the things we define as problems -- infrastructure, manufacturing, the skills gap, I think they're really symptoms of this larger problem that so many of us are just disconnected from the people who haul our water."
As Marc Cohn sang of his childhood he sang of mine, of growing up in northeast Ohio in the late 1950s and early 1960s. I walked through my youth 50 miles south of Cohn, who's two years (almost to the day) younger than me. For what it's worth, my dad drove an Olds.He got up every mornin'
While I was still asleep
And I remember the sound of him shufflin' around
Right before the crack of dawn
Is when I heard him turn the motor on
But when I got up they were goneDown the road in the rain and snow
The man and his machine would go
Oh, the secrets that old car would know
Sometimes I hear him sayin'Don'tcha gimme no Buick
Son, you must take my word
If there's a god in heaven
He's got a silver Thunderbird
You can keep your Eldorado
And the foreign car's absurd
Me, I wanna go down
In a silver Thunderbird
This old world is a mystery,
But there's one thing I know:
This is my Home. (Larry Groce)