Friday, February 5, 2021

A' wede away

It’s been a week for sorrow. The ashes of USCP officer Brian D. Sicknick lay in honor in the Capitol rotunda he died to protect from insurrectionists last month. Following a service attended by his comrades and members of Congress, he was laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery. Sicknick suffered fatal injuries when the Trumpists beat him with a fire extinguisher on 6 January.

Also this week an Idaho National Guard Blackhawk crashed, killing three men, who were known to one of my colleagues. As their commanding officer said, the Guard’s aviation unit is a tight-knit community, and the loss has been very, very hard.

I’m feeling the need to lament, and you know who really does laments? The Scots. “Flowers of the Forest” is one that has always managed to start the tears flowing for me, so that’s what we’re having.

The folk song commemorates the Scottish defeat to the English at Flodden in 1513. As a bagpipe piece, it is so thoroughly connected to the loss of life that some pipers will only play it publicly at funerals or memorial services. I’ve seen it associated in particular with military funerals, which seems apt.

This instance is not technically a funeral, but close enough: it’s being played at the nightly Last Post ceremony at Menin Gate, Ypres, Belgium, which commemorates the British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in and around Flanders during the First World War. Except for the period of German occupation, Belgian and British officials have conducted the ceremony every night at 2000 since 1928.

Rest in peace, Officer Sicknick, CWO Jesse Anderson, CWO George Laubhan and CWO Matthew Peltzer.

 


Thursday, February 4, 2021

Ducky

 A while ago I was walking through the ‘hood and caught something off to the side.

This is an enclosure that the townhouses have in the front to hide the AC condenser and your trash bins. Don’t want that sort of thing lowering property values.

Anyhow, someone has an imagination and a drole sense of humor.

 


 

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Uninvited guest

Well, the party’s over.

A squirrel showed up on Monday. And then back again yesterday. Only the one, though, so that’s not too bad. (I also had a swarm of robins, but I was in the middle of a call and couldn’t move to get a photo.)

Here his is, noshing his way through the snow.




Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Clearly communicating

Saturday, I had to mail a package to Canada. Since the USPS self-service kiosks won’t let you mail international parcels, I had to go into the main post office in the People’s Republic during working hours.

As I was waiting in line, I noticed the big, splashy electric banners over the service windows, the ones that let you know all the cool things the USPS can do for you:

Um…

 

Monday, February 1, 2021

Gratitude Monday: snow peace

Big snow storm came through the District They Call Columbia yesterday; supposed to be a nasty day today on account of melting and freezing. I’m grateful I don’t have to commute in it.



But it certainly was beautiful, if you didn’t have to drive anywhere. Kids in the ‘hood went sledding—or, I guess, technically, more like sliding—down the slope in the back, and folks were out with their dogs in the corporate campus beyond. (I saw one dog that I swear looked like a coyote, but since it was obviously fetching something for a human, I guess I was wrong.)

In my own back yard, I had visitors all day. At times, more than 25 at a whack, and all getting along. I must have fed them a couple of pounds of seed throughout the daylight. Some of them were picking up supper up until 1730.


And you know what? Not one single squirrel, all day long.

So, that’s what I’m grateful for today: a feast for birds without greedy Scuridae.