Friday, August 29, 2025

Will you pardon me?

Well, alrighty then—today’s earworm is in honor of our brave National Guard troops deployed to our nation’s capital to tamp down crime against DOGiE bros. Those champions of freedom, whom our drunken sot of a SECDEF is pleased to term warfighters. Who bravely strap on cammies and Kevlar to…pick up trash and spread mulch, just to keep them away from the Krispy Kreme.

I really like that reflective vest over their tactical kit look. Very “community service in lieu of jail time” vibe.

(Not that picking up trash and tending the plants aren't important work, and it's good that someone is doing it, since the DOGiEs fired most of the National Park Service staff whose job that was. It's just that this doesn't seem to be in line with the administration's testosterone-heavy view of the military's role in the world.)

Anyway—what else could it be today but “Tiptoe through the Tulips”, with that über macho manly man, Tiny Tim. Here he is on the Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In show.


©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Consumption

If you want to know how long I’ve had this sixer of Gosling ginger beer, it’s since long before the industry ditched the plastic loop packaging three years ago.

I’m thinking from around 2016.

But it still has all its taste, unlike the odd Diet Coke I sometimes find at the back of the fridge.

 

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Persistence and prevailing

Sunday morning I was doing my weekly scout of the construction site. Most of the paw prints from the previous week were gone—stomped over by boots and heavy equipment.

But there was this:


 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Foraging

You know, one of the bits of collateral damage from the Covid pandemic is that supermarkets have stopped having bins of mushrooms, so you can pick as few or as many of as many types as you need for a particular recipe.

(I developed one for wild rice that I steam with chicken stock, then sauté a mix of fungi—portobello, oyster, shitake, cremini—with some diced shallots, mix it all together and put it in the oven while I’m roasting chicken breasts marinated in orange juice, soy sauce, Dijon mustard and ginger root. Delish.)

But since the pandemic, you have to buy pre-packaged mushrooms, which starts running into some serious coin if you want a variety, not to mention you get what they pack, not the ones you want. This is the case not only in the big national and regional chains, but also in the Asian and Latino grocery stores I frequent.

(A friend who lives in the Seattle environs swears that they’re all free range there, but I have to wonder.)

So I have to say that when I came across these guys on one of my walks, I was tempted…


©2025 Bas Bleu

 

Monday, August 25, 2025

Gratitude Monday: street-legal

Last Wednesday I took my car in to the garage. The dashboard was telling me it needed service and—this being August—I also needed the annual inspection.

Plus—the Check Engine light had been on for a couple of weeks. (Although this is not always indicative of something major. In fact, almost every time it’s come on it was either a hiccup or something extremely minor. So I didn’t really take it as being something urgent.

However, on Tuesday, the engine took to stalling when I came to a stop light, so I was glad I’d made the appointment for the service.

The Saab guy at the shop had told me that the 120K (the car actually only has 116K miles, but the dashboard won’t shut up about service until the mechanic turns it off) mile service is a full-day affair, so I was prepared for that.

However, late in the day, when I called for a sitrep, the guy said that the check engine fault needed a couple of parts, which “Saab’s not making anymore”, and so he was having to call around to source them.

The good news was the vehicle passed inspection. Bad news was I couldn’t pick it up.

We went through Thursday the same way. At about 1600, when I called, he said he’d found the parts and hoped to have them in the next day.

And this is where I—a fourth-generation native Californian who grew up in LA—began to stress. I can’t be without a car. It’s not just that I live in the suburbs where bus service sucks. (I can, in fact, walk to two grocery stores, but it’s the carrying stuff back that makes it impossible to anything except emergency shops.) It’s not even that I had any appointments that I needed to get to, as in actually driving somewhere.

It's that the very notion of not having a reliable personal vehicle that I can hop into and go somewhere gives me the jim-jams.

The cortisol buildup was considerable.

Friday was also looking bad—another day of looking out my front window and seeing an empty space where a silver Saab should be. I called just after 1300 and he told me the same thing: he’d received one of the parts, but was still waiting for the other.

So, there I was, facing the prospect of having to go through the weekend without wheels. I considered applying for refugee status.

I called a friend and wailed for 40 minutes about the injustice of not having a car. But around 90 minutes later, he rang me to say the second part had come in and the car was ready for me.

Well, I put on my walking shoes, stuffed my driver’s license and Amex card in my pocket and walked the two miles to the garage. In 84-degree weather. (Yes, I could have called Uber, but I know from experience that it’s $15 for that two-mile journey, plus tip, and I needed to work off the cortisol.)

And $1100 later, I turned the key in the ignition, the car started and didn’t cough all the (two-mile) way home. I parked it in its slot and patted it on the hood as I went inside.


(Yes, okay: I'd wash it. Right after I harvest the crop of radishes.)

Order was restored to my world.

That evening, my friend and I had this exchange.

Well, as it happens, my neighbors were moving in on Saturday, and their van blocked my car in until early afternoon, so I couldn’t use it. But it didn’t matter, because it was there.

And all weekend long I’ve been reminded of how grateful I am to have an operational, reliable vehicle. I’m running low on butter, so I need to make a Costco run.

 

 

©2025 Bas Bleu