Thursday, August 5, 2021

Hyacinth as virus

As fog rose off the water, I captured drifting water hyacinth.

Doesn't it look like illustrations of the coronavirus?

Worldwide (Map
August 5, 2021 – 200,670,800 confirmed infections; 4,264,000 deaths
Vaccinated worldwide: 4,303,804,250
June 3, 2021 – 171,746,400 confirmed infections; 3,693,300 deaths
Vaccinated worldwide: 2,002,900,000

US (Map
August 5, 2021 – 35,392,700 confirmed infections; 615,150 deaths
June 3, 2021 – 33,308,000 confirmed infections; 596,000 deaths

SA (Coronavirus portal
August 5, 2021 – 2,497,655 confirmed infections; 73,875 deaths
June 3, 2021 – 1,669,300 confirmed infections; 56,610 deaths
***
The Lincoln Project, Made  (0:55 mins)
Trump’s North Carolina Speech in 70 Seconds  (1:05 mins)

Healthy planet, anyone?

Fires, drought, and Covid plague California and the Pacific Northwest.
Scary.
Fires: The Dixie Fire is still uncontained after burning for several weeks and taking down towns  .
Another, newer fire near Auburn in the Sierra foothills  brought evacuees to share friends’ home in Grass Valley.
Even small Bradford Island in the Delta – population estimated at 15 to 20 individuals - was alight. Three residents were assisted by the fire district to evacuate via ferry boat.
Bradford Island was flooded to put out a brush fire that started early Monday morning on what is a reclaimed peat wetland in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
The fire was reported at about 1:30 a.m. on the 2,100-acre island, according to the East Contra Costa Fire Protection District and prompted evacuations. As of 5 a.m. the fire had burned 212 acres and two structures, but no injuries were reported.
Drought: As irrigated crops compete with fish for scarce water, farmers in the Klamath Basin lose hope as drought closes in. ‘It’s like a sad country song’ and they lament they may be the last generation to work the land. >> 
Covid:
Worldwide, more than 200 million people have been infected with COVID-19, more than 4.2 million people have died from the virus, a staggering figure that includes more than 614,000 Americans, 558,000 Brazilians and at least 425,000 people in India.
…remember that those figures are only the known accounts of infections and deaths associated with COVID-19. Various studies have estimated that the true toll of the pandemic is much higher in some areas. In India, for example, experts suggest the official death toll could be one-half, one-fifth or even less than one-tenth of the actual figure, which may never be known.
It took about 12 months for the coronavirus to infect the first 100 million people worldwide; the next 100 million were infected in just a six-month time frame.
Read more >> 
And yet, in the US, particularly Florida, politicians continue an idiotic path. Florida’s governor chooses to squabble with the president instead of the virus… 
Louisiana’s Attorney General Jeff Landry advises how to invoke the Bible to object to face masks in schools and encourages employees to undermine COVID restrictions.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Based on a lower temperature forecast for today, I began, soon after sunrise, to patch the houseboat’s deck roof. I’d picked up materials while visiting the inner Bay and had my schedule neatly planned. Alas, 88F has the same effect on this human body as 98F: just too hot to tiptoe around with tools.
I’d swept dust from the deck last night and this morning I schlepped up a hosepipe to wash the deck then I patched assorted cracks and holes. While waiting for this material to dry, I prepped other sections and, alas, had to destroy a nest of wasps ensconced in canvas. By the time I was ready to paint, the heat had blossomed, and it was just too hot to continue.
I’ll wait until late afternoon after the heat dissipates to continue.
Best lain plans of mice and (wo)man, etc., etc.


Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Seeing red

News blues

In the US, the summer COVID surge is predicted to get worse before it gets better. We the People can either take precautions and get vaccinated, or allow the surge to accelerate. Read >> 

Healthy planet, anyone?

With many of the world’s pollinator insects in decline, what does this mean for global food production? Just how much of the world’s food production is dependent on pollinators? 
***
Seeing red:

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Departing my idyll on a relatively slow-moving tributary of the San Joaquin River to visit friends in the inner Bay Area, I noticed the next step in California regulators voting to restrict water access for thousands of California farmers amid severe drought.
Background: The Sacramento Delta – ‘the Delta” - is California’s largest surface water source, supplying two-thirds of Californians with at least some portion of their drinking water. The state is going through what is expected to be the second driest two-year period on record. April, May and June were the warmest and driest on record since 1896.
The California State Water Board unanimously agreed to issue an emergency order that bans some farmers from diverting water from rivers and streams in the Sacramento and San Joaquin watersheds to irrigate their crops.
Amid one of California’s worst droughts, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta watershed has been suffering from low supply as demand continues to climb.
Under the new order, Californians who plan to divert more than 55 gallons per day from rivers or streams in this region must submit a petition and proposal to the state’s deputy director for approval. All water rights holders must also report their water use and submit a certification to comply with the new standards.
Any person, business or group that violates the order will be subject to possible penalties and fines. The water board said enforcement will be incremental and focused mainly on high-grade water violations that significantly impact water flow.
The order must be approved by the Office of Administrative Law and filed with the Secretary of State before it becomes effective, according to a news release from the state water board. The regulations are expected to go into effect August 16.
Read more >> 

Any water from the Delta earmarked for drinking must first be thoroughly de-contaminated. It’s a long way from potable. My mistake, when I moved onto the houseboat, was drinking water that came out of taps. A day later, I vomited outside my office at work, into the garden of the hospital emergency department. Naturally, emergency workers noticed – and brought me inside for diagnosis. Cure? Get a clue, girl and do not drink Delta water. Now I carry potable water into the boat and carefully monitor its use.
Moreover, I hope the water board monitors  the effects of their diversion plans. Or I, and others, might end up living, not on houseboats, but on a tiny houses on deep mud.
Quelle horreur.

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Babes in the water

News blues

Vaxed, yet feeling The Covid Angst?
Not surprising. It’s a Covid-angst-provoking time….
Too many opinions, too much contradictory messaging from officials, and way too much deeper, thicker, stinkier … mulch… from The Whackidoodles. Take this Whackidoodle in Tennessee …
Meanwhile,
Anthony Fauci, the White House’s chief medical adviser and The Whackidoodles’ most-hated scientist, warns, ‘Things are going to get worse,’ and shares his COVID-19 Projections >> 
How did it comes to this? The Delta variant is winning, for the moment, and the CDC’s coronavirus map shows that we’re failing to fight it >> 
Some sanity from South Africa: Things to know about vaccines and Covid :
  • Vaccines will give you near-complete protection against severe illness and dying from Covid.
  • Vaccines are safe. All vaccines used in the vaccination programme in South Africa have undergone extensive trials and have been proven to be effective and safe.
  • The risk of serious side effects is similar to the chance of being struck by lightning, and side effects are treatable and generally go away on their own.
  • It takes time for vaccines to start working well — usually about two weeks, and their working steadily improves after this.
  • Vaccines differ in how well they protect against infection and mild Covid. Most vaccines will require at least two doses and provide good protection against severe illness from Covid two weeks after your first shot. Until you are fully vaccinated you should continue to take the same precautions as if you are unvaccinated.

Healthy planet, anyone?

As heavy rains and floods around the world displace people and those living in conflict zones – from Asia, Latin America and Africa (not to mention the “heat domes” over North America continent) – a Malawian farmer visiting the US wants to know: ‘Why not do more on the climate crisis?’ >> 
What not, indeed?

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Even as I settle into my floaty life – my version of a tiny house and living gently on the planet – I rise to new challenges. The latest challenge suggest a parallel between babes in the woods and a babe on the water.
Background: with help, I attached the heavy 1983 15 HP Johnson/Evinrude outboard motor to the transom of the Sea Eagle inflatable. Alas, I had trouble starting the motor with the rope pull. Turns out the fellow that I hired to “service” – and check, replace if needed, the pull rope – instead simply greasing various joints after he - strong, healthy, young - easily started the motor.
Trustingly, I paid him… before he dashed off to Las Vegas… and after learning he couldn’t help attach the motor as he has “a bad back.”
I found someone else to help to attach the outboard. Even then, I wasn’t able to start the outboard. Instead, I switched out the gas/petrol-fueled Evinrude motor with a small, light and easy to manage, battery-powered electrical trolling outboard.
I hopped into the inflatable, pushed off from the pier, and… ran into weeds. Yes, I know there are weeds, after all I swim through these long stringy weeds every day. This babe in the water, however, never guessed a motor would be beaten those same weeds!
For, alas, the trolling motor cannot handle the long strands of water weeds that tangle in the propeller and prevent it from propelling.
Additionally, the outgoing tide simply carried away the inflatable. Trying to paddle with oars, I watched the houseboat until it was out of sight.
Invasives to the rescue! Tangling with invasives slowed the vessel as I entertained scary thoughts (carried willy nilly into fast water? arriving in San Francisco Bay … then under the Golden Gate Bridge …then into the ‘potato patch’  ?).
I noticed nearby a lovely boat with a large 120 HP outboard - and a trolling motor - piloted by two confident fishermen.
I called out, “Can you tow me home?”
I explained the weed/outboard/lack-of-experience experience. Generously, they towed me back home.
Back to square one.
A short while later, I noticed another, smaller Sea Eagle inflatable with a man, woman, and young girl aboard, struggling with their similar-sized trolling motor succumb to tangling weeds and outgoing tide. That family, too, was towed to a pier.
Babes on the water….
The reality? If I’m to enjoy the inflatable, I need to fix the rope pull.
You Tube to the rescue. As always, You Tube offers great, on the ground information. I found a detailed demo on how to replace the rope pull.
A new challenge. And, a name for the inflatable? The Challenger.



Thursday, July 29, 2021

Turning tables

Worldwide (Map
July 29, 2021 – 196,414,175 confirmed infections; 4,194,100 deaths
September 17, 2020 – 29,902,200 confirmed infections; 941,400 deaths)

US (Map)
July 29, 2021 – 34,724,000 confirmed infections; 612,050 deaths 
September 17, 2020 – 6,630,100 confirmed infections; 196,831 deaths

SA (Coronavirus portal
July 29, 2021 – 2,422,155 confirmed infections; 71,431 deaths
September 17, 2020 – 653,445 confirmed infections; 15,705 deaths

News blues

There’s a new trend beginning: no more BS about “freedom” and “rights” to not get a vaccination… As idiotic Republican congress people continue to whine about masks  it looks like commonsense is resurging. Let’s hope so, anyway….
***
The US is giving 5.66 million Pfizer Covid-19 vaccines to South Africa, the US embassy in Pretoria has announced. Half of them will arrive by plane on Sunday and the other half on Tuesday.
The acting US ambassador to SA, Todd Haskell, explained this was part of President Joe Biden’s promise to give 500 million vaccines to the world by the end of 2022.
The vaccines will be channelled to South Africa through Covax, the international aid initiative to try to ensure that low- and middle-income countries are not left behind in the global effort to vaccinate against Covid-19.
Haskell said the 5.66 million vaccines for South Africa would be the largest donation of Covid-19 vaccines to a single country by the US. The second-largest would be four million to Nigeria.
Read >> 
***
The Lincoln Project Heroes  (0:57 mins)
LP chief breaks down at cruelty… 
Rematch  (0:58 mins>

Healthy planet, anyone?

Photos: the week in wildlife >> 
***
Three Americans create enough carbon emissions to kill one person, study finds 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

More heat. It’s been unrelenting heat since I returned to my houseboat in California. Sure, I take time to hunker down in friends’ air con homes, but no air con on my boat. My small fan doesn’t cut it as an effective cooler. And, no, I do not intend to buy a portable air con system. The reality for millions of us, in California and beyond, is that climate change is here to stay (at least for the remainder of my lifetime). Temperatures unhealthy-for-humans are now part of life.
I’ve been waiting out the heat – getting up early to work on the boat, siesta-ing during maximum heat, finding enjoyment as the day wanes and cooler temps prevail. But productive years of my life are flitting away. Can’t go on this way….
***
So, Prez Biden suggests $100 to each vax-hesitator who overcomes his/her hesitation and accepts a jab
We shall see. 
California offered $50 to anyone getting the jab after April or May.
I had intended to be vaccinated asap after re-entry to US. The day after I returned, I did exactly that. At the local grocery store. Vaccinations are available almost everywhere.
Soon after my second dose and quarantine ended, I was sent a congratulatory text with a one time code that, supposedly, would allow me to claim my $50 within 65 days. I’ve tried several times and – no go. The online site will not accept my code. I followed directions and contacted the help line. I was shuffled from one human filter to the next, each passing me to someone who was promised to help. No dice. The final person – fourth person and 55 minutes later – said someone else would call me “within 3 days.” I’m still waiting. So, my advice to the $100 bribe-for-vax folks? Don’t hold your breath.
The irony? I didn’t get vaxed to get $50, but now I’m determined – well, sort of – to harass the system until it does what it promised.
Fifty more days to go.


Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Time out

News blues

President Ramaphosa addresses South Africa on coronavirus and the recent violent looting.  (32:55 mins). Level 3. Alcohol available again.
***
The Lincoln Project Wayne Berman  (1:18 mins).

Healthy planet, anyone?

For climate campaigners, 26 May seemed like the start of a long-awaited reckoning for oil and gas companies.
Over a single 24-hour period, a Dutch court ordered Shell to dramatically cut emissions, shareholders voted to force Chevron to reduce emissions from the products it sells, and a tiny activist investment firm secured three positions on ExxonMobil’s 12-member board for candidates committed to climate action.
Read “The truth behind corporate climate pledges” >> 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Day at the beach was marvelous. Kehoe beach never disappoints. Yesterday’s weather was cool, some might say cold. I wore a short-sleeved t-shirt under a long-sleeved t-shirt, a hoodie and a windbreaker… and a cap with the hoodie pulled over it. Long pants. I’ve not worn that many layers of clothing all at once in… well, years! It was a treat.
Excerpt from and information about a different visit to Kehoe beach, in 2018:
My intrepid hiking partner and I braved weekend freeway traffic and headed to Kehoe Beach at Point Reyes. The weather was perfect: not too hot, not too foggy. We exited the freeway at Lucas Valley Road, and it was clear why California is called the Golden State.

On this map, draw an imaginary line through the middle length of Tomales Bay south (to the bottom right corner). That’s the approximate location of the California’s most famous fault, the San Andreas, and the current boundary where the Pacific Plate meets the North American Plate. Tectonics explain much about California’s geology and geomorphology and it’s quite visible at Kehoe Beach. (This map of faults in northern California  show how dizzyingly rocky life can be around here.)

Rocking near Elephant Mountain Lucas Valley Road presents many views of Elephant Mountain , also known as Black Mountain (after cattle rancher James Black who bought it back in 1851 for $2000). Despite never having hiked it (it’s private property) Elephant Mountain has worked its way into my visual memory ,and I look for it each time I visit. Maybe it’s its rocking history…. If it looks familiar it may be because the rock band Youngbloods used a similar photo for an album cover whose music was played near here, in 1969. RCA Records published the album, “Elephant Mountain.”

The area is replete with rock ‘n roll history. Grateful Dead played music around here. Elephant Mountain could be seen from the spread of late music impresario Bill Graham. (Sold, razed and rebuilt after Graham’s demise, the replacement $25 million home is Marin County's most expensive...so far.)
Star Wars’ George Lucas located Skywalker Ranch here, to the dismay of locals fighting the idea of more development and more traffic. So far, of the more than 4,700 acres (1,900 ha) of the secluded ranch, only 15 acres (6.1 ha) have been developed. (Lucas Valley Road is named after an early 20th century landowner not related to George Lucas.)
Prince Charles and Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall dropped by Marin County and Pt Reyes Station in November 2005 as newlyweds. Of that visit winemaker Sean Thackrey of nearby Bolinas said, “Prince Charles is serious about organic agriculture, and Bolinas is serious about organic agriculture....He's kind of an oddball prince, in a good way. And, this is an oddball town. It somehow fits.”
Redwoods. Marin County is home to youthful redwoods, too. There’s nothing like a grove of redwoods to induce feelings of inner contentment and awareness that life is a precious gift. (Feelings were enough on this day. We didn’t stop to photograph redwoods but many others have. )  Exquisite Kehoe Beach caption: Google Earth view. 

Kehoe - birds eye view.
The first (man-made) thing a hiker sees (after the clean, well-supplied long drop toilet) on the trail to the beach is a well-intentioned sing warning of tsunamis.
The trail beckoned us into tsunami corridor...and we followed….
We’d just commented on the joy of hearing the loud buzzing of bees among the summer blooms, interspersed with the occasional call of birds--buzzards, harriers, and seagulls--when a fawn hiding near the trail broke cover. It was more curious about than frightened of us for it stopped and took a longer. We weren’t quick enough with the camera to photograph the osprey that pulled a large fish from the surf - first time I’d ever seen that - but we saw the resident blue heron in the nearby marsh.
Besides miles of beach and water, Kehoe Beach offers intimate views of the meeting places of granite, sandstone, and thoroughly unique. Look for Doris Sloan’s book,  “Rocking Out at Kehoe Beach: A Trip Through Time on the Pacific Plate".
Other trips to Pt Reyes: Limantour Beach 
***
Shocker: Nicasio reservoir, in environmentally conscious Marin County, is drying up. While I did not take photos of the drying devastation, the local newspapers reports this, as does local water board. The same thing is happening all over the west. In California: Lake Mead  … and Lake Shasta to name just two.
In Utah ….
Drought is here to stay >> 
***
Today, back to the marina where temps will rise into the triple digits for the next 3 days.
OMG!

Sunday, July 25, 2021

Decisions, decisions

News blues

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the delta variant, first detected in India, now represents more than 83 percent of cases circulating in the United States. People infected with the variant appear to carry a viral load that is more than 1,000 times that of those infected with earlier forms of the virus, allowing the virus to spread rapidly among unvaccinated people, scientists have found. Read more >> 
***
On the one hand, in South Africa,
…might be heading towards a merry Christmas, getting closer to herd immunity in December, thanks to South Africans aged 35 to 49 who broke records queueing to get vaccinated. Read their stories >> 
Then, there’s the United States,
… where the variant is estimated to be causing more than 4 out of 5 new infections, largely among the unvaccinated, the outbreaks in places like Arkansas and Missouri have once again placed health systems under stress. They’ve also led to more questions about whether delta even poses a threat to people who are vaccinated and complicated the discussion about what precautions schools need to reopen fully in the fall.
Read more >> 
The Texas city of Austin’s return to Stage 3 risk-based guidelines marks the first time a major Texas city has reversed direction in the trend toward normalcy. The city announced stricter coronavirus protocols for unvaccinated residents as cases increase. But it can’t legally enforce those restrictions. Other cities also report surges in cases >> 
***
The Lincoln Project Brady  (1:08 mins).

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Another week under the “heat dome” coming up…
Temps will rise above 100F/38C mid-week. I’d like to escape to my friend’s home where air con reigns supreme. Alas, since blossoms drop off my sun gold tomatoes when the temps rise, I’ll stick out the hellish heat on the river in an effort to cajole the blossoms into also sticking it out. Can I persuade them that life, as nutritious, tasty, and beautiful sungold-ness, is worth a little heat? I cajole them by explaining that sun golds are the best tasting cherry tomatoes in California – if not the world – and not to deny us paltry humans their delicious presence.
We’ll see if that works, eh?
***
I’m getting closer to starting and, please the gods, driving my inflatable with the 15 HP outboard motor. My hesitation to date? I’ve no idea how to do that. As an elderly 1983 model, the paintwork on the tiller that indicates gears/controls has worn off.
Then, after a fellow marina resident suggested 15 HP was too much power for the inflatable – and for me - I lost my nerve.
Couple of days later and I’m regaining my confidence….
***
Big day tomorrow: I will have a TB test to ensure I’m fit for the workplace. (Yes, after 2 years out of the workplace, 2 years without a steady income, I’m re-entering. More on that later.)
After the test, I will join friends for a trip to lovely Point Reyes, my first trip to the California coast in four-plus years. Weather on the coast is far cooler than inland. (I trust the sun golds understand it’s just a day trip before the real heat sets in mid-week.
I notice by the packaging waste in the marina’s recycling bins that marina residents are installing portable air con units in their boats. I have a portable fan and, so far, little interest in air con in my boat. Isn’t paying for a unit then paying to cool (or heat) a boat with inefficient insulation counter intuitive? Isn’t it, essentially, paying to cool (or heat) the great outdoors? Perhaps their boats are better insulated than mine. Open windows, sun-blocking curtains, and a fan do the trick “well-enough” for me. 
At least, so far.

Thursday, July 22, 2021

Babes in the woods?

The following Covid numbers compare today with the numbers 7 weeks ago, Week 61, Day 427, on the eve of my departure from South Africa - after an unplanned stay of 1.5 years. Still grim.

Worldwide (Map)  
July 22, 2021: 191,945,000 confirmed infections; 4,126,300 deaths
May 27, 2021: 168,418,000 confirmed infections; 3,499,000 deaths
Tracker for worldwide vaccination rate >> 

US (Map
July 22, 2021: 34,226,300 confirmed infections; 609,900 deaths
May 27, 2021: 33,190,300 confirmed infections; 592,000,000 deaths

SA (Tracker
July 22, 2021: 2,327,475 confirmed infections; 68,200 deaths
May 27, 2021: xx ,645,600 confirmed infections; 56,100 deaths

News blues

New study presents most comprehensive picture yet of true toll of pandemic in India, finding the true COVID death toll is likely in the millions .
Read in The Guardian >> 
***
An unbelievably large segment of Americans refuse to accept a free, life- and community-saving vaccine. Meanwhile, millions of people around the world would love, love, love as easy access to a vaccine that so many Americans eschew.
Again, Americans display to the world their myopic, self-centered and self-absorbed, navel-gazing worldview.
Science, medicine, and, yes, growing experience show that Covid-19 breakthrough infections do happen, are preventable, but that it's going to take a big effort to stop them. 
Question is, how? 
As long as charlatans masquerade as news journalists on Fox and Republican politicians promote distrust about the vaccine, all people, Americans foremost, but all people across the world, are exposed to the high likelihood of more virulent variants in the future.
Read more >> 

America’s vaccination rates have fallen off a cliff, and nothing seems to help
***
The Lincoln Project Fox is killing us  (0:57 mins).

Healthy planet, anyone?

The heatwave in one of the world’s coldest regions has sparked forest fires and threatened the Siberian city of Yakutsk with an “airpocalypse” of thick toxic smoke, atmospheric monitoring services have reported.
High levels of particulate matter and possibly also chemicals including ozone, benzene and hydrogen cyanide are thought likely to make this one of the world’s worst ever air pollution events.
Local authorities have warned the 320,000 residents to stay indoors to avoid choking fumes from the blazes, which are on course to break last year’s record.
Read more >> 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

It’s not easy, in California, to take a page from Italy’s playbook and siesta during the hottest hours of the day. Here on the river, the hottest hours of the day are about noon to 6pm. That’s most of the day. I can't siesta for most of the day: too depressing.
Swimming cools things down. So does regularly wetting my t-shirt or tank top. In the end though, it’s a losing game: small boat, hot sun, drought, and, oh yes, runaway climate change with no constructive response by politicians and destructive response by corporate apparatchiks.
***
One thing for certain: help is hard to find. While I was still in South Africa and since I’ve returned, I’ve tried to find a carpenter-type handyman-type to fix the bathroom floor in my apartment that the last tenant destroyed. No dice. People advertise their availability, sometimes even makes appointment to evaluate the work, then simply never show. Turns out this is a feature, not a bug, of carpenter- and handyman-types all over the planet. Is that called a “lifestyle”?
Similar trend at the marina. Lots of talk, no follow through. I did, however, finally get someone stronger than me to lift the too-heavy-for-me small 15 hp outboard motor onto my Sea Eagle inflatable. Took me weeks to get to this point. Now I’m “girding my loins” to install the sun canopy and then start the thing – with a pull rope.
Sometimes I wonder what the *** I’m doing, trying to live a quiet life on an elderly houseboat. I’d say I’m a babe in the woods, but I’m not a babe. More like, senior citizen in the woods or bright-eyed senior citizen in a circus.