The Weekly Watch

Falling into Autumn

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How's your fall color? Our trees have started early. The last few years the first blushes have been in October, but full color is common in early November. There's on and off years for color in the South. Some years it is straight to brown and falling leaves. Other years strong yellows. Some years it's reds. This year we've started with yellows. Mornings stay dark later every day till the time shift changes the sense of things again. Gardening is one way to stay in pace with the seasons. Just experiencing nature...the migrations of the birds and butterflies on their various journeys...many wintering with us...the burst of Asters from goldenrod to Liatris... in the quilt of seasonal colors. There's good and bad in every season. Leaves are a burden in the roadside drainage ditches and a resource in the garden. Looking through rose colored lenses seems appropriate under the harvest moon at the Autumnal Equinox.

Fall Weather

It is the summer’s great last heat,
It is the fall’s first chill: They meet.

–Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt

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The fall equinox arrives on Wednesday, September 22, 2021, at 3:20 P.M. EDT in the Northern Hemisphere. The word “equinox” comes from Latin aequus, meaning “equal,” and nox, “night.” On the equinox, day and night are roughly equal in length. After the autumnal equinox, the Sun begins to rise later and nightfall comes sooner.

... it’s not strictly accurate to say day and NIGHT are equal, because of twilight. If useful daylight ends about an hour after sunset, and you add in the dawn twilight too, then most places don’t have equal day and night until around November 10. A more precise equinox event is that the Sun rises and sets exactly in the east and west.
Another equinox phenomenon is that the Sun moves in a laser-straight line across the sky.
By comparison, for the past six months, the Sun’s path has displayed an upward curve, concave to the north, like a giant smile. Starting right after the equinox, the Sun’s track across the sky starts to bend like a rainbow, with the concave part aimed downward. Birds and butterflies migrate along with the Sun's path.

https://www.almanac.com/old-misunderstood-equinox
There’s an old-wife’s tale that you can stand an egg on its end of the equinox. Well, yes, it’s true (and fun to try). But it’s not only on the equinox. The laws of gravity don't change with daylight.

The fall equinox has been a day of celebration for cultures since ancient days. People tracked the transitions of the Earth’s journeys around the Sun.

  • At Machu Picchu in Peru, an ancient stone monument called Intihuatana—which means “Hitching Post of the Sun”—serves as a solar clock to mark the dates of the equinoxes and solstices.
  • In Mexico, the Mayans built a giant pyramid called Chichen Itza. On the equinoxes, it looks as if a snake made of light slithers down the pyramid’s steps.
  • In England, Stonehenge was also built with the equinoxes and solstices in mind.

But the Sun isn't the only way the ancients marked time. The Moons defined the "moonths" so to speak.

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Perhaps the transition from a Lunar based societies to a Solar based social and calendar system has to do with the shift from hunter-gatherers to farmers?
None the less, many peoples have maintained their ties with the moon.

The Oldest Lunar Calendars and Earliest Constellations have been identified in cave art found in France and Germany. The astronomer-priests of these late Upper Paleolithic Cultures understood mathematical sets, and the interplay between the moon annual cycle, ecliptic, solstice and seasonal changes on earth.

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The First (Lunar) Calendar
The archaeological record’s earliest data that speaks to human awareness of the stars and ‘heavens’ dates to the Aurignacian Culture of Europe, c.32,000 B.C. Between 1964 and the early 1990s, Alexander Marshack published breakthrough research that documented the mathematical and astronomical knowledge in the Late Upper Paleolithic Cultures of Europe. Marshack deciphered sets of marks carved into animal bones, and occasionally on the walls of caves, as records of the lunar cycle. These marks are sets of crescents or lines. Artisans carefully controlled line thickness so that a correlation with lunar phases would be as easy as possible to perceive. Sets of marks were often laid out in a serpentine pattern that suggests a snake deity or streams and rivers.
Many of these lunar calendars were made on small pieces of stone, bone or antler so that they could be easily carried. These small, portable, lightweight lunar calendars were easily carried on extended journeys such as long hunting trips and seasonal migrations.

Many (older?) cultures still use a Lunar calendar.

  • Islamic Lunar Calendar. The only purely lunar calendar widely used today is the Islamic calendar, called the Hijri calendar. The years always have 12 lunar months. Because of the varying length of these lunar months, this calendar can’t be linked to the seasons. While the Hijri calendar is the official calendar in countries around the Gulf, including Saudi Arabia, other Muslim countries only use the Islamic calendar for religions purposes and use the Gregorian calendar for civil purposes.
  • Mayan Lunar Calendar. The Mayan Calendar was a lunar calendar system based on the agriculture requirements of living in a rain forest. The Mayans invented numerous calendar systems, but the most important one was the sacred tzolkin. This lunar calendar was made up of 260 days and had two repeating cycles. One cycle consisted of 13 numbered days and the other cycle was made up of 20 named days.
  • Babylonian Lunar Calendar. The Babylonian lunar calendar consisted of 12 months that alternated between being 29 days and 30 days long. Months with 29 days were called “hollow,” while those with 30 days were called “full.” This calendar was used for over 3000 years, not falling out of favor until about 238 BCE.
  • Chinese Lunar Calendar. The Chinese originally used a lunar calendar system to determine the best times to plant, harvest, and hold their many religious festivals. Though a majority of modern Chinese citizens use the Western solar calendar for the more practical matters of their everyday lives, the old lunar calendar is still used to determine the dates of holidays and festival occasions. The Chinese people have long accepted this coexistence of two different calendar systems.
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The first nations peoples gave us their names of the different moons through the year...
I've had this list compiled in my documents for years. It is from a variety of sources.

Full Moon names date back to Native Americans, of what is now the northern and eastern United States. The tribes kept track of the seasons by giving distinctive names to each recurring full Moon. Their names were applied to the entire month in which each occurred. There was some variation in the Moon names, but in general, the same ones were current throughout the Algonquin tribes from New England to Lake Superior. European settlers followed that custom and created some of their own names. Since the lunar month is only 29 days long on the average, the full Moon dates shift from year to year.

• Full Wolf Moon - January Amid the cold and deep snows of midwinter, the wolf packs howled hungrily outside Indian villages. Thus, the name for January's full Moon. Sometimes it was also referred to as the Old Moon, or the Moon After Yule. Some called it the Full Snow Moon, but most tribes applied that name to the next Moon.

• Full Snow Moon - February Since the heaviest snow usually falls during this month, native tribes of the north and east most often called February's full Moon the Full Snow Moon. Some tribes also referred to this Moon as the Full Hunger Moon, since harsh weather conditions in their areas made hunting very difficult.

• Full Worm Moon- March As the temperature begins to warm and the ground begins to thaw, earthworm casts appear, heralding the return of the robins. The more northern tribes knew this Moon as the Full Crow Moon, when the cawing of crows signaled the end of winter; or the Full Crust Moon, because the snow cover becomes crusted from thawing by day and freezing at night. The Full Sap Moon, marking the time of tapping maple trees, is another variation. To the settlers, it was also known as the Lenten Moon, and was considered to be the last full Moon of winter.

• Full Pink Moon - April This name came from the herb moss pink, or wild ground phlox, which is one of the earliest widespread flowers of the spring. Other names for this month's celestial body include the Full Sprouting Grass Moon, the Egg Moon, and among coastal tribes the Full Fish Moon, because this was the time that the shad swam upstream to spawn.

• Full Flower Moon - May In most areas, flowers are abundant everywhere during this time. Thus, the name of this Moon. Other names include the Full Corn Planting Moon, or the Milk Moon.

• Full Strawberry Moon - June This name was universal to every Algonquin tribe. However, in Europe they called it the Rose Moon. Also because the relatively short season for harvesting strawberries comes each year during the month of June . . . so the full Moon that occurs during that month was christened for the strawberry!

• The Full Buck Moon - July is normally the month when the new antlers of buck deer push out of their foreheads in coatings of velvety fur. It was also often called the Full Thunder Moon, for the reason that thunderstorms are most frequent during this time. Another name for this month's Moon was the Full Hay Moon.

• Full Sturgeon Moon - August The fishing tribes are given credit for the naming of this Moon, since sturgeon, a large fish of the Great Lakes and other major bodies of water, were most readily caught during this month. A few tribes knew it as the Full Red Moon because, as the Moon rises, it appears reddish through any sultry haze. It was also called the Green Corn Moon or Grain Moon.

• Full Harvest Moon - September This is the full Moon that occurs closest to the autumn equinox. In two years out of three, the Harvest Moon comes in September, but in some years it occurs in October. At the peak of harvest, farmers can work late into the night by the light of this Moon. Usually the full Moon rises an average of 50 minutes later each night, but for the few nights around the Harvest Moon, the Moon seems to rise at nearly the same time each night: just 25 to 30 minutes later across the U.S., and only 10 to 20 minutes later for much of Canada and Europe. Corn, pumpkins, squash, beans, and wild rice the chief Indian staples are now ready for gathering.

• Full Hunter's Moon - October With the leaves falling and the deer fattened, it is time to hunt. Since the fields have been reaped, hunters can easily see fox and the animals which have come out to glean.

• Full Beaver Moon - November This was the time to set beaver traps before the swamps froze, to ensure a supply of warm winter furs. Another interpretation suggests that the name Full Beaver Moon comes from the fact that the beavers are now actively preparing for winter. It is sometimes also referred to as the Frosty Moon.

• The Full Cold Moon; or the Full Long Nights Moon - December During this month the winter cold fastens its grip, and nights are at their longest and darkest. It is also sometimes called the Moon before Yule. The term Long Night Moon is a doubly appropriate name because the midwinter night is indeed long, and because the Moon is above the horizon for a long time. The midwinter full Moon has a high trajectory across the sky because it is opposite a low Sun.

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The Harvesters Painting by Pieter Bruegelwas created in 1565 as an oil on wood. It was originally part of a series of six paintings depicting the times of the year.

Here in the Northern Hemisphere, we call the full moon closest to the autumn equinox the Harvest Moon. In 2021, the Northern Hemisphere autumn equinox comes on September 22. The full moon falls less than two days earlier, on September 20. Thus, for the Northern Hemisphere, this upcoming full moon – the full moon closest to our autumn equinox – is our Harvest Moon.

Harvest Moon is just a name. In some ways, it’s like any other full moon name. But these autumn full moons do have special characteristics, related to the time of moonrise. Nature is particularly cooperative in giving us dusk-till-dawn moonlight, for several evenings in a row, around the time of the Harvest Moon.

On average, the full moon rises around sunset, and rises about 50 minutes later each day. But when a full moon happens close to an autumn equinox, the moon on the following nights rises closer to the time of sunset. For mid-temperate latitudes, it rises only about 20 to 25 minutes later daily for several days before and after the full Harvest Moon.
...
The difference between 50 minutes and 25 minutes might not seem like much. But it means that, in the nights after a full Harvest Moon, you’ll see the moon ascending in the east relatively soon after sunset. The moon will rise during or near twilight on these nights, presenting dusk-till-dawn moonlight for several nights in a row around the time of the Harvest Moon. ... the Harvest Moon aided in bringing in the crops.

The name was popularized in the early 20th century by the song below.

Shine On Harvest Moon
By Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth (1903)

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGUW0uAwDyw]

While all full moons rise into the evening sky around sunset, only the full harvest moon and the waning moon over the next few nights floods landscapes with moonlight as soon as twilight ends. In other words, the moon shines brightly in the early evening for several consecutive days this time of year, gifting harvesters with extra light to glean their crops by. (Ordinarily after a full moon, the moons on the nights that follow rise about 50 minutes later and later each night, yielding a period of darkness between sundown and moonrise.2)

Why do harvest moons, in particular, offer extra moonlight? It has to do with the seasonal “ecliptic," or the path the Moon travels across the sky as it moves around the Earth in its monthly orbit.

Contrary to popular belief, harvest moons aren’t any bigger, brighter, or more honey-hued than any other full moon—at least, not unless they happen on the same date as a “supermoon” or other extraordinary lunar phenomena.

If a harvest moon does appear larger-than-usual or more golden to your eyes, it’s likely because you’re catching a glimpse of it right as it’s rising into the evening sky. At moonrise, any full moon will appear larger and more creamy-colored, since this is when the moon is nearest to Earth’s horizon. (When the moon sits along the horizon, it appears bigger as a result of an optical illusion. Similarly, the atmosphere is thicker near the horizon than it is higher up in the sky, so as moonlight travels through more air, more blue light waves are scattered, leaving mostly red and yellow light to reach our eyes.)

https://www.treehugger.com/what-is-a-harvest-moon-5198533

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Colorful fall foliage isn’t due to current weather conditions. This is a common misconception. Leaves change color because of the amount of daylight and photosynthesis.
https://www.almanac.com/fall-leaves-why-do-leaves-change-color#

As the autumn days grow shorter, the reduced light starts chemical changes in deciduous plants, causing a corky wall of cells (called the “abscission zone”) to form between the twig and the leaf stalk. This corky wall eventually causes the leaf to drop off in the breeze.

As the corky cells multiply, they begin to seal off the vessels that supply the leaf with nutrients and water and also block the exit vessels to some extent, trapping simple sugars in the leaves. The combination of reduced light, lack of nutrients, and less water triggers the trees to start the process of breaking down the pigment chlorophyll, which contains valuable nutrients and is the source of the “green” in leaves. As chlorophyll is broken down and the green color fades, yellows and reds are revealed.

Without the presence of Chlorophyll in the leaf, the bright golds, reds, yellows, and browns would be the natural colors seen year round.

The Northeastern US is renown for fall color as are the Smoky Mountains in the South. Out West the aspens glow yellow. Every region has its time for optimum color.
Check out this State guide for color if your traveling or taking a color drive...
https://www.tripsavvy.com/a-state-by-state-guide-to-fall-colors-3362305
and this map allows you to change dates to look at the progression of peak color
https://smokymountains.com/fall-foliage-map/

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When leaves fall to the ground, they begin to break down and eventually create a rich humus on the forest floor that absorbs dew and rainfall. This nutrient rich ‘sponge’ acts as a continual source of nutrients and water for trees and plants, helping to promote life and plant health in the next spring season.

It is not difficult to conclude that while the falling of the leaves protects the trees through winter, it’s likely that trees would not survive as well without the rich layer of dead leaves through the warm spring and summer months. In this way, trees' natural cycle provides health and sustainability for the forest year after year.

Those fallen leaves in your yard and neighborhood can be a gardening resource if allowed to become "leaf mold".

The easiest way to make leaf mold is to just rake your leaves into a big pile and let the pile sit there for two or three years. A leaf pile needs to be fairly substantial in size, in order to retain enough moisture and heat to get finished leaf mold within 12 months. Six feet square and five feet high seems to be an ideal size. It takes about 25 trash bags full of leaves to make a pile this large.

Leaf mold is a “cold” composting process versus “hot” composting. The decomposition is done primarily by fungi, rather than bacteria and takes longer.

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Fall Gardening
I like the fall crops...cabbage, broccoli, various greens, lettuce, and so on. I like seeing how long into winter I can keep them producing. I've got a couple of collard plants that are two years old. I cut them down, and they grow back. One of those curiosities that makes gardening fun. With our relatively mild winters, and using row covers, we often eat from the garden all year.

Autumn is typically dry in the Southeast, but not this year. So things are growing well. I did have a cut worm issue, but replanted with collars around the young plants. Until frost I keep bt dust (dipel) on the young plants to deal with the cabbage loopers. In spring it is especially important to keep them dusted.

After digging the sweet potatoes next month it will be time to visit the horse farm on the mountain to get a load of manure. We spread manure and then straw over the beds and they will be ready for planting in the spring. Jim Kovaleski considers his garden in Maine to be "grassfed". Here's his established garden (18 min) and new garden area practices (20 min). Here in the tropical south we like to begin a bed with a layer of cardboard to smother the weeds. Simply adding a layer of manure and straw mulch on top, and next season you're ready to plant.

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Autumn Fires

This 1885 poem by Robert Louis Stevenson is a simple evocation of fall that even children could understand.

"In the other gardens
And all up the vale,
From the autumn bonfires
See the smoke trail!
Pleasant summer over
And all the summer flowers,
The red fire blazes,
The grey smoke towers.
Sing a song of seasons!
Something bright in all!
Flowers in the summer,
Fires in the fall!"

Fall traditions...
We often spend time around a campfire as cool weather arrives. The tendency is to build large bonfires, but we usually opt for a small "indian" fire. The term bonfire is from "Bone Fire" thought to originated when burning bodies during the plague. Therefore the fires needed to be large.

I learned this one from the Georgia Mudcats. It reflects on fall, making sorghum syrup, barn dances, and harvest time....

The Old Cane Press
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcAek6LnW2U]
Mason Williams · Byron Berline · John Hickman · Rick Cunha

My first couple of years at Auburn I rented a place in Loachapoka, a few miles out side of town. Their fall festival was called a Syrup Soppin', and they would grind the cane sorghum and boil it down into syrup. I see they've now changed the name to Pioneer days, but they continue the sorghum tradition. Sorghum festivals are common in the south.

It is the time of year for apple festivals too. Nearby Ellijay, GA has a big apple fest every year. https://www.georgiaapplefestival.org/ There are several orchards in the area. Today's apples have been bred to be sweet, but early American apples were used primarily for hard cider. Apple brandy is delicious...and potent.

The County Fairs are usually this time of year as well. They even let school out for one Friday every year so the kids could go to the fair. https://dekalbcountyvfwfair.com/

When you drop by the fair, you can enjoy several exhibits of handmade crafts, canned foods, photography, drawings, flower arrangements, and quilts. You’ll also get to see live animals such as cattle and chickens.

It is indeed a community event. In nearby Summerville, GA the fair has already been held.

Fall music festivals are also popular. For years there was a festival at Horse Pens-40 near Steele, Alabama. I saw and heard so many fine musicians there in my youth. Once the owner died the festivals there have been spotty. Then there's the Tennessee Valley Old Time Fiddler's convention over in Athens, Alabama. I used to go every year and we won best "old time band" a few times. Have not been in years, but still have fond memories.

Hayrides are a popular Fall tradition that is enjoyed by all ages and are a wonderful way to take in the Fall season and the natural beauty that it brings. Some hayrides will feature scenic views of endless land, while others take you through acres of cornfields. An entertaining way to capture the breath-taking views that the Fall offers

Enter your location at the link above to find a hayride near you.

I bought an old wagon many years ago from an older gentlemen. His barn was falling down and he wanted someone with a barn to keep the old wagon from rotting. The wagon was ordered from the Sears catalogue and came to the valley in the early nineteen hundreds. I'm the third owner and it has been in the same 10 mile radius for over a hundred years.

Living here in Alabama I can't omit football, which is a game I don't care for, and that is like heresy around here. I liked Andy's description in his routine "The Big Orange" "People try to run from one end of the pasture to the other without getting knocked down or stepping in something." (5.5 min)

My Mom signed me up for football when I was 7 or so. First you had to dress in these ridiculous clothes and padding then were told to "hit" the other kids. Let's just say I didn't like it and never have since. Now nothing against those who enjoy the game...each to their own (favorite form of brain damage).

John Denver wrote an entire season suite. Here's His tribute to Fall. (1.5 min)

September Midnight

Sara Teasdale wrote this poem in 1914, a memoir to autumn filled with sensuous detail of sight and sound. It is a meditation on saying goodbye to the season and on sealing the memory of the soon-departing season into the poet's mind.

"Lyric night of the lingering Indian summer,
Shadowy fields that are scentless but full of singing,
Never a bird, but the passionless chant of insects,
Ceaseless, insistent.
The grasshopper’s horn, and far-off, high in the maples,
The wheel of a locust leisurely grinding the silence
Under a moon waning and worn, broken,
Tired with summer.
Let me remember you, voices of little insects,
Weeds in the moonlight, fields that are tangled with asters,
Let me remember, soon will the winter be on us,
Snow-hushed and heavy.
Over my soul murmur your mute benediction,
While I gaze, O fields that rest after harvest,
As those who part look long in the eyes they lean to,
Lest they forget them."

I learned this song about the seasons by the Dillards from this clip many years ago. It was back in the day of walkman cassette recorders which I used to to record it off the TV, and learn the lyrics. This was long before YouTube, which is a resource for musicians and grinners alike. The song looks at a lifetime as the passing of seasons...

It had been many years since I've heard this source. Interesting the way you make songs your own after singing them for years.

Well, I hope you'll share your favorite fall stories and memories...or anything else on your mind in the comments below. Enjoy Summer's last Sunday!

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Comments

Lookout's picture

I tire of war and our destructive activities. There are pleasant aspects to life which we rarely discuss. We all ride the wheel of the year from cradle to grave...

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Enjoy your ride...

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15 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

mimi's picture

I can't read it now, but it shines all through the letters and leaes and notes that it is a wonderful OT.

Do I need to unpublish my ranting ghastly words? The ghosts have tricked me writing them out.

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10 users have voted.
Lookout's picture

@mimi

Don't take down your questions. I'm curious to see any answers you might get.

Digital communities are not like truly being together... no facial clues, voice intonation, nor pheromones. That said, I feel lucky to have this community...and especially through the pandemic. I've gotten to know many of you over the years. However, because of this medium we can't fully know one another...but can we ever FULLY know anyone including ourselves?

In my part of the world, the politics are pretty bad and many people are captured by religion, sports, and tradition. So C99 is a wonderful outlet for me to have to exchange views outside of the normal accepted media world.

People in the South are nice (at least to your face). So it is easy to be friendly with those whose ideas are very different than mine. Plus I've lived here half my life and know most people in our small town of about 600 folks.

We all just have to make the best of our situations. Don't let the digital world get to you, just take advantage of the benefits.

Wishing you the best. Peace, friend.

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11 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout
It's all is ask. Beats the Hell out of the North!

Another brutal Northern winter on the way. Will it be my last? I no longer care.

I miss my old house in Virginia. Except for the constant "Yankee Yankee Yankee"

Never heard it on my trips to Alabama. Or Texas for that matter.

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7 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Lookout's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness

a southernism to be aware of, is when people have the ass at you, they will not confront you directly. They will criticize you to someone who they know is your friend hoping they will relay the message. I prefer direct conversation, but it is what it is. Folks don't like confrontation.

Just like in everything there's good and bad everywhere. I live here so it is plain I think despite all the issues it is a nice place with mostly nice people. Hope your escape comes soon so you can get another round of trees going!

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6 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout
in which Archie reminisces about the old days when every ethnic group lived in their own neighborhood and beat the Hell out of outsiders.
I remember those days. It wasn't just New York.

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4 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Lookout's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness

I didn't bring it up cause it continues to be painful. It is as much class as race these days and times. As Coretta King said, "the color ain't black or white, it's green."

"Otherism" is perhaps a human trait embedded from our tribal evolution?

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7 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout
Black man with white woman predominates. Judging from Chicago newspapers of the 1960s, that was a death sentence then.

I also remembering visiting Biloxi/Keesler AFB in the mid-60's. Three of us white northerners were walking abreast on the sidewalk. We came upon three black young men doing the same. We were about to step aside and let them pass as we would in Chicago. I already had one foot on the grass when THEY stepped aside for US! But I noted the hate in those downcast eyes and thought to myself "This place is going to explode some day."

Also noted the on base housing at Keesler. They had a four star General (forgot which command) whose government furnished housing looked like a set for "Gone with The wind". The enlisted housing was tar paper shacks.

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3 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Lookout's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness

There are two families on our road. Sure do have attractive kids too.

Like I said today the color is green...it is more of a class thing, mill (etc) worker vs college educated professional each looking down at one another. That's kinda the red blue line too, but just the opposite of my youth. The workers are the Trumpeteers and the Dims are mostly the professional class. Tweedledumb or tweedledumber?

Not to say race isn't an issue. Old habits are slow to fade, but as the boomers check out even more change is in the air. We'll see what we see. Our line is - it's better than when it was so bad.

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6 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Especially in Santa Fe, New Mexico.. Not technically fall, but late August and September is green Chile season and the smell of roasting chiles is a wonderful thing. The Chile roaster at the Farmers Market here in Santa Fe is somewhat of a “carny” and he attracts a crowd to watch the turning of the chiles and of course buying some to take home and make green Chile stew and other green Chile delights.

Back in the late 1800’s, there was a fire up in the mountains and when the area grew back, aspen dominated the burn scar. As a result, going up the mountain toward the ski area, as the leaves are turning, it is a technicolor experience. The first year Divine Order and I retired from teaching we headed out west to see the fall colors. We were amazed at how vivid the colors were and as we traveled through Independence pass in Colorado, we had to pull over just to sit for awhile and enjoy.

Thanks for the OT today. It was good to think of some happier memories and what fall is bringing to my life experience.

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Life is what you make it, so make it something worthwhile.

This ain't no dress rehearsal!

Lookout's picture

@jakkalbessie

Walking under colorful trees is a cathedral like experience. I wish they roasted peppers here, but just isn't part of the culture/cuisine. I've been out west when the aroma filled the air in cities and towns.

Hope you have a lovely last of summer and a super start to fall!

It is summer's end (John's last song)

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7 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Raggedy Ann's picture

I, too, love the smell of roasting green chile. I’ve put mine up for the year.

Summer is my favorite season but fall runs second!

Enjoy the day! Pleasantry

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7 users have voted.

"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Lookout's picture

@Raggedy Ann

If I had to name a favorite, I guess I would pick spring, but fall is a close second. However every season has its good and bad points. No matter....round we go!

Thanks for dropping by today, and hope you have a good one!

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5 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout
Fall is death and corruption. Animals desperately seeking Winter food and shelter. Plants withering and dying.

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1 user has voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Lookout's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness

a balance of life and year.

All the best!

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5 users have voted.

“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout
Yes, winter is nigh.

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2 users have voted.

I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

Just lovely. Thank you.

It's still summer in NYC no matter the calendar. 80 degrees and sunny and the petunias on my balcony look as full as they did in May. It would not be too surprising if I still have flowers blooming until November this year, as the old rules and dates are nothing but memories.

Some personal good news: it seems I have fully recovered (yes, again) from the Vax after effects. This morning was the first time in 7 weeks that I've felt strong enough for my River exercise.

All in all I am feeling a bit more positive and hoping we can all enjoy this new season.

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NYCVG

Lookout's picture

@NYCVG

Nothing like feeling well. Health is indeed our greatest wealth.

Enjoy the river, and the coming Fall! Thanks for coming by and commenting. I appreciate it.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

ggersh's picture

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

Lookout's picture

@ggersh

Well, I cratered on that one I'm afraid.

Hey how 'bout, "a shot of moonshine"?

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Where I am from, it is often only 2 or 3 weeks. The time to enjoy fall foliage is very brief.
As for blending "yankees" and "red necks", it is mentioned as a joke. We have numerous "yankees" that moved here to avoid state taxes.
We are having fewer racial tensions as we go forward, although they exist.
Interracial marriages, or at least co-habitation, is common. More and more white men are coupling with black women.
We will be howling at the moon soon!

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

Lookout's picture

@on the cusp

I was ready for a lighter topic this week. None the less find myself sucked into the endless COVID conversation. What a trip it has been.

Rainy here today. Managed a brief trip to the garden, but now rain again.

Not that I'm complaining. We've had years when the grass was brown and crunchy about now. Fortunately it's nice and gentle so helping the water table too.

Hope y'all are having a nice end to summer!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout of the landscape, and the slowly dropping temperatures, even though our summer was unusually mild.
We had this horrible month of rains and storms, then it dwindled off to the occasional sprinkle. If we had put in the garden, it would have been a season of running up the water bill. You can't catch rain that isn't there.
I can't believe how COVID has brought out such animosity, and how a medical a decision one way or another marks you as a political tool of one of the 2 parties. Who really believes an individual took a vax to show solidarity with Biden? I am scratching my head over that.
Anyway, the medical information is very hard to find, and not everyone has time or the skill to dig deeply into the science. That site members are so well-researched, such as yourself, that I consider myself fortunate to be able to rely on what I read here.
Now, moving to a pleasant subject, your rain. Be ready to fix the road. And be ready for your harvest of greens!

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

Lookout's picture

@on the cusp

and gravel due next week, so in the way of things....road degrades, road improves. Welcome to our lane which we call Sisyphus Way!

Have a great week!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

enhydra lutris's picture

and moons and calendars and all. Here, of course, we get but hints of colors amid the swaths of evergreens. It isn't just the conifers, either, but a lot of the native shrubs and even trees, ceanothus, coffeeberry, various salvia and even our orange tree. Our pear, apricot and redbud are starting to turn, and the apple soon will. The grapes, iirc, will turn in October sometime.

The tzolkin, as you note, was a ceremonial and/or sacred calendar, a type of subset/offshoot of a couple of others. They were prodigious astronomers and arithmeticians, and their calendars accounted for numerous celestial cycles and the intersections and interactions thereof, accounting for not just the sun and moon, but a lot of planets too, plus conjunctions, eclipses and the like.

Their overall, master calendar, enumerates the days since what we would call August 8,3114 BCE. This is around the date of the death of Otzi, the Iceman, the start of Stonehenge, the rise of the Minoans and the earliest Egyptian hieroglyphics and Sumerian cuneiform writing and like that. For the record, this is about 166 years before Noah was born and hence well before The Flood, which somehow covered all the earth EXCEPT mesoamerica.

be well and have a good one

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Lookout's picture

@enhydra lutris

All things time intrigue me. Amazing how we can "feel" the changes. Perhaps it is more sense, but there's some deep evolutionary shit going on too...like bird migrations, we are tied to the sky and earth.

Thanks for the visit!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

enhydra lutris's picture

@Lookout

hanging out the past couple of days, must be passing through unless here for the season.

be well and have a good one

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Lookout's picture

@enhydra lutris

We've seen several and heard a bunch of different warblers, but they are just passing through. Fun to hear them.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

amazing how people seem to crawl out of their skins around a full moon
the harvest is happening for sure. all of the sudden the butternut squash is
everywhere for sale cheap. the white corn is still poking out all over.
love the sun's slanted rays, makes for deeper shadows ..

Thanks for the OT Mr. Lookout. It's an enjoyable hayride!
punk ins and all Wink

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Lookout's picture

@QMS

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wjs5W267Bfg]

I wouldn't know, but that sure looks like profit material to me. Not that that is the goal in life, but as someone who goes twice a week to trade day, I can recognize opportunity.

Anyway, you came to mind. Hope the beautiful boat you fitted out sold, and you benefited from the sale!

Celebrate the Fall and change is what I suggest!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Lookout's picture

Here it is again...
Not with Toni today but Josh Turner,
who as you will hear is also and excellent player and singer.
What I'm Losing - written by Reina del Cid (featuring Josh Turner)
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=430qMTESTVk]

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

@Lookout @Lookout @Lookout

has Venus leading, followed closely by Neptune (invisible without a telescope) so far away.
Next comes the full harvest moon. Just clearing the tree canopy now. The stellar sparks are
very obvious tonight here. Hope you have a clear sky tonight as well.

West-Southern-Hemisphere-Sept-13-2021.jpg
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Lookout's picture

@QMS

front comes through Wed. for the equinox. We're building a fire at the camp house and celebrating as the moon rises!

Thanks for the view from your sky!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”