Three weeks into summer break.

We are all still alive and well. Three down, six to go. This minor heat wave is making outdoor time a bit stressful. Not do much fun playing the farmer wannabe when the temperature goes way up. Had dome minor rain last night here, along with thunder & lightning. Not much though, as it didn’t last long. Ground was very dry when I woke up, so that’s not an ideal sign of much precipitation.

The TelMax people have begun to drill in order to run fiber optic cable in our whole town, so those Vermeer drilling rigs are all over the place along with huge reels of orange and blue fiber optic lines. The vacuum trucks are y far the loudest aspect of the operation so far. According to the spray paint, flags and guide holes, we should end up with four new holes on the front lawn, to match all of the streets water shut offs, and gas main shut offs, road signs and lamp posts that we all ready have. Marginally less grass to mow I guess. I flagged down our homes water shut off, so I hope they don’t hit that either.

I am mostly done with report #2 of (6) six, for this busy season, which ends in late September, possibly spilling into early October. Good to get the work in, and done before the weekend comes. I like to swim and hang out with my kids guilt free on weekends. God damn why can’t we get passed Covid, so many things I’d like to take my kids to, and to go experience together. Theme Parks, indoor go cart rides, movies, bowling, indoor rock climbing, a mall for an air conditioned stroll. Gah! So dull with those things stricken from the list of potential day trips and fun family time. Not that with this heat we’d ever turn down a swim, or a splash through the creek at the farm looking for fish, toads, minnows or crayfish. That’s always an adventure!

It was a busy week to ten days or so, four sell sheets, various print ads, one big report, five can labels (355ml & 473ml), icon illustrations and logo creation, and some compositing, as well as a 3D rendering for an updated product package. A solid ten days of heightened workload, followed by?… who knows what. Maybe some retail signage? New business development from another micro brewery? Packaging projects? Definitely more reports, that much I know for certain. Joy’s of freelancing I’m sure.

Plans in the rain.

You all know well enough that if I had of cancelled plans for yesterday evening, the clouds would have immediately parted and the sun shown through. But as it was it stayed blustery and tried to dribble on the walk down, but nothing much came of it. That was until around 9:45pm when it was time to walk home after a round of adult beverages (I’m a light weight, so no driving). And within a handful of steps the rains began to fall. It was more of a mild annoyance. The rain felt fine in the dark, but looked way worse in the light of the street lamps, or the cone of a head light. Then it looked pretty awful. My main concern was the flashing of lightning in the sky. But no rumbles, so I was confident it was all fairly far away. It rumble a good crack once or twice when I was within five hundred meters of home, so all together not awful. Could have been a whole lot worse. It wasn’t a completed downpour, and the lightning was far away. I could have called for a ride, but it wasn’t that bad. Plus it had been so hot and humid that the coolness of the rain on my shoulders was welcomed.

Now did any of it hit the farm? Given that it lasted roughly twenty minutes and was by my estimation blowing north east, I think it passed over the up and coming vegetable crops. So back we’ll go for our turn at watering. Nothing screams fun! Like lugging dirty hoses around the gardens.

Should I have been surprised to see so many restaurants in town that were packed to the gills last night? I visited a covered patio with a high ceiling, open all four sides, with only a few scattered guests. So I think I’m ok. I had my N95 on me, and kept my distance, but who knows if that’s enough with BA.5 at this point.

Waking up before your alarm goes off…

Ends in one of several ways. You’re either really rested and ready to get up and go (unlikely!) Or you feel groggy and then get the best six minutes of sleep you’ve ever had in your life (yeah baby!) Or it’s some kind of emergency and you get up in a panic, feel both awake and exhausted and then crumple into a heap once the shock of being awoken early has worn off.

We are heading off to harvest garlic under a stark and uncaring sun, in the sizzling morning heat. With any luck the rain we had recently will mean we don’t have to fight every single garlic clove coming up out of the ground. Given how sweaty and grumpy the first crew was about it yesterday evening, I think it’s going to be a bit of a slog to get through. Just a thought anyway. I give my kids about 30-45 seconds of work before they desire a swim, or just up and leave the garden we’ll be working in. This is when a big portable 10x10ft tent would come in handy. You could work under it out of the sun. The heat will still suck, but the full force of the baking sun would not be scorching my back the whole time. Things you realize far too late in the year!

So, the other day I milled up a couple of old reclaimed boards, and now I need to decide what to build with it all. It’s not much, so a book case or cabinet are out. I have enough for a box, or open vessel of some sort. Unless I tackle more of the reclaimed wood pile. I need to leave some in a rustic state to make a sign for my wife’s side of the family. Something that will go to their cottage at some point. Our living room desperately needs storage space. Like a big wall unit of asymmetrical shape, to fit the odd space, but gives us shelves, and drawers in which to place… stuff. Kids stuff mainly. Not that the 3ft x 2ft toy box I built helped all that much. You have to put your stuff BACK into the toy box for it to be a long term solution.

Potential roaster today.

So take care, and stay safe while the heat and humidity play out over the next two days. Stay in the shade. Sit in your tub submerged in cool water. Turn on your AC if you have it. Go walk around a mall with AC if you don’t have it at home. Drink lots of water. Try not to over exert yourself in the open sunshine. Plop yourself infront of a fan. Hit up a public pool or splash pad if available in your area.

It is Tuesday, and July is nearly 3/4 done. Crazy how time flies when there is no escape from anyone.

Hey! Do you want to do something totally not fun at all.

Go stand in line at a Service Ontario office for two hours to renew your plates, and exchange those plates for new ones where the numbers and letters have not come off the metal. Surrounded by hot sweaty people in a humid office building hallway. Some masked (yeah!) And some not (boo!).

Watching crowds of people wander in off the street, take one look at the lineup outside of the office and then reverse course. There were, what I thought, nine people ahead of me, not great, but not awful. That was until I saw into the actual room itself to see fifteen or so clumps of people waiting patiently for their turn at the counter. Intermingled with countless car dealership folks floating in and out in a near constant stream. Blargh. Not a fun Monday afternoon treat. But altogether not that bad. Seventy five minutes of standing and waiting, followed by a very quick ten minutes of action, and then going about putting the plates back on and getting my paperwork sorted into the appropriate spot. Near painless. But one vehicle is done until 2024, so go team!

The kids finally found the D&D terrain board…

And they are tromping around the boards using their collection of LOL Dolls. I’m not sure it’ll withstand the level of punishment that they dole out. But what a good excuse to build new ones if the bash and beat my current one beyond repair. Not that I want to see four hundred dollars worth of static grasses, tufts, trees and miniature flowers, rocks, stones, tree barks and sculpt a mould, and paper mache, and three types of foam  not to mention the two to three months I spent, painting, modeling and building it all. I made a small dock and a water/beach area, open plains, mountains and a grid plateau where I have ancient ruins of a temple. There is an underground cave network, and a road, road signs, ladders and a marsh too. I hope it survives, as we haven’t gotten around to playing any D&D games with it yet. I usually have it left as a diorama of a battle/fight.

I keep meaning to reread my books and create a campaign that my young kids can enjoy, but I have been distracted by home DIY projects, sculpting, guitar, model building and making furniture as of late. Plus throw in paid day job and parental commitments and my D&D dreams of family conquests of far away lands has laid dormant for quite some time. Could be worse.

We are back to Monday, and a good amount of rain has fallen since late last night. I do hope, nay – pray that all this rain finds it’s way to the farm. They had a full inch of rain last week, but more during the month of July is always welcome. A steady drizzle over days that soaks into the ground rather than a massive singular downpour that runs off into the creek/river is preferable. But at this point, rain is rain. France is bacon. As it were.

Not a whole lot of domestic duties will be accomplished on this Monday, nor any Monday in the next seven weeks. I need an empty house in order to get a worthwhile cleaning session in. Not to say we aren’t cleaning up after ourselves. But a touch of a lackadaisical approach to the floors has entered the chat, if you know what I mean. Laundry, dishes, food prep surfaces are unaffected by the kids 24/7 presence. But the floors? Hoo boy, not their proudest moment. Cabinets ate looking shabby from a plethora of grubby hands touching them constantly. Blood and food has found it’s way back onto the hallway walls – again. This is why the first week of school is spent decluttering and cleaning the house from top to bottom. My kids spent nine weeks getting grime over every surface imaginable. Chocolate milk spatter on the ceiling? Check. Blood streak on the hallway base board? Check. Face imprints of both sides of every glass door or window? Check. Takes several hard working days to get rid of it all once I have them both back in school come September.

I am trying very, very hard to not get mad or have an outburst regarding the current state of our home. But it’s always there, just under the surface. Itching to throw away any and or all items left on the floor after weeks of requests to tidy up after themselves. I did build a series of large toy boxes for this exact reason. So I wouldn’t step on anything sharp every single god damn day. But growth, exploration and experimentation are key building blocks for well rounded youth. Just wish a healthy dose of tidying the fuck up, was as important to them, as making a huge fuctangular mess of my living room floor. But I digress.

This weekend we visited the Mediterranean festival in town and enjoyed some funnel cake and ice cream. Not going go lie, had hoped to find that Fish Taco food truck that swings by once in a while that makes fantastic – well, Fish Tacos. Squeeze of lemon juice on top, fresh from the batter and fryer. So good. Was sad to not see it. The whole thing was a Fusion event, with lots of Greek cultural stuff to explore. Smelled so good down at Memorial Park on Saturday.

Brain fog, intestinal fortitude and the peculiarities of children at play.

What a day to end week two of the summer holidays. Hot and sunny by 9:00am. If these past two weeks are any indication, we aren’t even going to know the days date, or which way is up or down by the time summer is halfway through. These kids are – a lot. My wife remarked that at least when she taught summer school she actively knew what day of the week it was. But now we’re all adrift in the new possibilities and utter sameness of every day. The biggest demarcation of the days is going to be the weather. Windy? Cloudy? Raining? Or a vast string of hot sunny days that run together into one massive lump.

I am fairly certain that next year both kids will do several weeks of camp in July at least. They need the structure and the chance to see other kids their age. I get that Covid is here, and it sucks. So we have stayed isolated a fair deal. But when we do happen across friends of theirs they are so happy. Summer is a difficult season to navigate as we all have such different schedules and preferences for off time. Can be a real challenge to nail down a day to visit and keep all parties invested in keeping that date. Or maybe that’s just me?

Our kids are like chalk and cheese. One second they can’t bear to be apart, and the next instant are kick boxing and scratching at each others eyes, then back again, on a constant loop all day long. Tired, hungry, happy it doesn’t seem to make a difference. We work them in the sun at the farm, swim them, ride bikes & scooters, lounge with movies and bake and attempt to clean. But still, split second shifts between besties and enemies. We don’t seem to be able to find that fine line between just exercised enough to be docile, and over tired tyrant that needs to pee ten times instead of going to bed and falling asleep at a reasonable hour.

I was going to go into a bit about boiling, roiling guts that wake you up at 3:40am in a panic, but that picture paints itself fairly vividly without much prompting. So consider yourselves lucky.

Children of time.

Just finished the book Children of time, by Adrian Tchaikovsky. What a strange but entertaining novel. I was entertained enough that I purchased the follow up and am now three chapters deep. I haven’t found a new author that I like in a while. I’m not on the fence so much, as not entirely sold yet. It may sound snobbish, but I like to read two halfway decent books by the same author in the same series before I add them to my roster of followed authors. Because it can take some of them a year, or three, or even more to put out a new book, it’s good to follow several authors so that you can read new stuff, or at least new to you stuff, fairly often. I hate when I get all caught up on new book purchases and then have to wait months for a new release. Oh! What a problem to have, I know, I know.

Once I get through the second book: Children of ruin, I plan to read The Grapes of Wrath. Which is an American classic, so not new, but is new to me as I never read it. We did Margaret Atwood and Sir Oliver Mowat, and George Orwell among others, in Canada. Even Of Mice and Men if I recall correctly. I read a bunch of ancient classics in grade twelve english, and OAC English lit. I kind of want to read Moby Dick too. But we’ll have to see about that. I want to read Crime and Punishment, but I fear that the length, and depressive material may not suit me much. Who knows, maybe it’s the classic lit I’ve been waiting for. I’m far more interested in slotting in older classics inbetween the science fiction and fantasy novels that I usually read, the older I get. Not for a fear of having missed out, but those are considered classics for a reason, must be something to them for their continued longevity.

Two weeks into break and time has nearly lost all meaning…

Except in the case of deadlines for paid work, I can’t tell a Tuesday morning from a Friday morning. Oh, turns out, today is Friday. Thought it was Thursday. Kids are mental, as per usual. So no surprises there. Have some events coming up in the next week or so, and I strive to get more paid projects completed, so that I can start new ones in a fresh state of mind, and not with lingering change orders hanging over my head. Hard to be creative if you need to go back to old work to make a stream of client requested minor tweaks.

Our niece will be coming by for a visit soon, so it’ll be mayhem here for an hour or two. They all play well together as they are equally spaced in age. Which is nice, for a change.

Have been sleeping terribly these last two weeks, not sure why. Possibly the stress/tension of everybody being home 24/7 and never having any personal space from one another. A lot of panic driven dreams. Yikes. Probably adds to why time is feeling disjointed and out of sorts.

Why is it that every time I shave…

I seem to miss somewhere on my neck that I find later on in the day, when it is most inconvenient to do so. It’s not like I shave in the dark, or quickly for that matter. And it never seems to be the same place twice. I am absolutely baffled by this persistent experience of hysterical blindness when examining my skin for hair follicles. Doesn’t seem to matter if I use a straight razor, or electric, wet, dry, doesn’t matter. I always seem to miss something, and it irritates me to no end. I’ll have to resort to putting a pen lined grid on my face & neck to make sure I clear every block before moving on. I also need to rinse in between because a blocked razor might pass over the hair and not cut it, which I think is the culprit here. But I could very well be wrong about that. I’d have to tape myself shaving and look to see what I’ve done wrong, and find out how I always seem to miss a different patch on my person each time.

In other news, it’s a beautiful day here in southern Ontario. Had some rain the other day, which was welcome. Farm instruments say we got about an inch of rain. Which is good for this week, but does little to alleviate the lack of rain last week, and what about next week? Need an inch or so every four to five days for things to be optimal. Or so I’m told.