Working vacation

The View by Tygh
The View, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

This is a rest stop about an hour outside of Burns, Oregon. We stopped here to stretch our legs and to take in the scenery. This patch of highway offers views that seem to stretch out for miles.

Once we got to Burns, we found a our little bed and breakfast which I think must really be the pride of the town. It’s called the Sage Country Inn and it is very pleasant.

We are staying in the “Cattle Baron Room” which is supposed to be the room where all the boys slept. This little tidbit is relevant to my stay because one of those boys is a colleague of mine.

I don’t know what I expected, but the place is really just a cute room, There are no Foghat or Ted Nugent posters on display from his formative years (or Raquel Welch for that matter). There is a case with some antique guns inside and a small collection of old coins and bills. There is a dress hanging int he closet that hearkens back to an earlier time in American history.

Tonight we ate at Linda’s Thai Room in downtown Burns. We chose it because it was really one of the only places open. My advice, is to go into a meal at the Thai room with an open mind. It’s not the same Thai food they serve where I come from. Also, think hard about how hungry you are. We were unable to eat everything and the Waiter seemed disappointed that we couldn’t take any of the food home,

I’m looking forward to an early day tomorrow heading out to get some birding in before we report to our next hotel. I’ll keep you posted.

On the road

Sun
Sun, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

Going off to see the birds tomorrow. I want to get off to a good start, so I should probably be off to bed ASAP. Hoping for sun, but I’ll take dry. Flooding is a pretty big problem where we are going, so I’m bringing the boots and raincoat…

Actually, it probably isn’t the rain, it’s the sun causing the water problems. Lots of snow melt flowing into the rivers. I should have access to the internet at night. I’m hoping to be able to get a small amount of key work done on a few critical projects, but I have already told most of my clients that I’ll be inaccessible.

I’ll post when I can.

Puttering

It’s hard to work very hard when the sun is out. Sometimes, I allow myself to get distracted when I am supposed to be hard at work. “Say, are those buds about to bloom? Maybe I should take their picture”

Reach for the sky
Reach for the sky, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

…or, “Hey, is that branch broken? Maybe I should go get a paperclip and fix that – and then take its picture.”

Prosthesis
Prosthesis, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

So when the sun goes down, it is a little easier, but concentration is an art and a discipline. Vacation is coming up soon; more on that in my next post.

Window Seat

Window Seat by Tygh
Window Seat, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

Yesterday, I took off from work a little early and headed up to Saddle Mountain in the coast range. I had a couple of motives for heading up there.

The first thing I wanted was to get out of the house. The second reason was that I wanted to test some network gear that – at least theoretically should allow me to get work done in the evening while I am out of town next week.

I’ve thought about this a lot. I don’t have to report anywhere for my job, I simply need to be able to access my VPN and be able to put in a good 6-8 hours a day on the various projects I am working on.

So in my head, I’ve been thinking about maybe planning a bit of a road trip; see the Grand Canyon, see the great lakes, drive all the way down the coast – both coasts.

I don’t know. This idea could very well be one of those ideas that sounds like a great idea until you try to put it into practice.

In the end, the technology yesterday worked great, but these were the challenges:
1) I ended up spending three hours on the road and once I got there
2) There was off and on rain which made it difficult to be productive.
3) when it wasn’t raining, there was considerable glare on the computer screen and this made it difficult to see.

All of these issues can be addressed. As for the mileage, this just needs to be accounted for in the plan. The other two issues can both be addressed with a good umbrella.

Just thinking here.

Rasputin

Watching by Tygh
Watching, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

Once upon a time, I hated starlings. These birds are really aggressive and ferocious. They eat everything in their destructive paths, evict other cavity nesters and make life generally difficult for native species.

A starling will devour a cake of suet in about the same amount of time it takes to put a new one out. The rudeness of these creatures is just appalling. …and there is never just a single starling. In my early days of birding, I was at a loss for how to control our local population of these demons.

Somehow during all this, it dawned on me that the existence of a pellet gun, along with the skill to use it could potentially address the problem. I had been an expert marksman in the military and I was confident that I had the technical ability. On the other hand, I was also a vegetarian who was appalled by what I felt was unnecessary cruelty at the center of the way we produce food.

In retrospect, it was a ridiculous notion. Making a dent in the population would have required a pile of starling bodies that would have made Buffalo Bill blush. I’m going to skip to the end of this story and tell you that I made no such pile of carcasses, but I didn’t take the high road either.

There was a single starling casualty at my hands. It was supposed to be clean and simple… a single shot and one demon less. I don’t want to go into the details of what happened, but I am compelled to write that the ferocity these birds show at the feeder is a reflection of the way they cling to their lives. An animal that will fight a dozen other birds for a scrap of food is not going to just die quietly.

Underestimating that animal’s tenacity was a hard lesson for me. I gained a respect for the individual, and the species that will always be a part of me. I still don’t like wasting bird food on them, but once in a while I allow myself to stare back at a starling and I am haunted by the knowledge of its fierce heart beating within.

 

Hidden Sparrow

Hidden Sparrow by Tygh
Hidden Sparrow, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

I love the way the light reflects off of the wild roses in the field behind our house. We haven’t had enough sun this year and so when there is a break in the rain, I like to go out and take a few pictures.

This was a moment when everything was still wet from the last downpour and the clouds cleared long enough to make all these new leaves glow in front of me.

Fierce

Fierce by Tygh
Fierce, a photo by Tygh on Flickr.

She is much tougher than she looks.

I made a mistake tonight. A pair of chickadees hijacked a nest box from some Nuthatches a couple of weeks ago. Anyway, I hadn’t seen anyone come in or out of the box for a couple of days and so I was concerned that there might be a problem. I imagined an abandoned nest, perhaps some dead chicks or a parent. So I staked out the nest box for a while. I watched for what I thought was a long time and I saw no activity. After a while, I went outside and tapped on it and listened for any movement inside. Eventually, I stood on a chair and tried to peek into the entrance hole.

When I was pretty sure there was nobody home, I lifted the box down and carefully removed the lid…

… and there she was.

At first I wasn’t sure what I was looking at. I saw the edges of a nest and just darkness at the center of the box. Once I could see a little better, I saw her tail and her head. She was not moving, she was hunkering down. I thought she might be dead, but something told me that she wasn’t. She was defending her precious clutch with astounding discipline.

I quickly put the lid back on the box and hung it back where I found it. Then I looked at the box for a while making sure that she didn’t leave her eggs. She didn’t.

I am so sorry for disturbing her. If she is going to use that box again, she is going to have to feel safe. I hope that if the nestlings fledge that she ultimately remembers that the box was successful and forgets the brief but serious invasion of privacy that she suffered this evening.