Life has been keeping me quite busy as of late so I have not posted as frequently as I would have liked (probably all three of my readers were becoming weary of the blather), but today I thought I should subject everyone to another post. The garden is more or less on hold until the weather breaks. In between rainy spells, I have been keeping the weeds cut down with the scythe and a newly acquired weed whip: https://tinyurl.com/y9uhvxgx Although the scythe slices through the grass quite well on a relatively level area, the steep hills around the house were a challenge. The weed whip does an admirable job on the hills and with surprisingly little effort. In addition, the serrated blade appears to do a better job dealing with the dry old growth grass and weeds. In light of the devasting fires that ravaged northern and southern California, I feel I should make a special effort to keep the defensible space around the house cut low as possible. I hope to be able to dispense with the motorized weed eater altogether. The added bonus is fresh air and exercise. In these times of energy scarcity, there seems to raging debates on energy policy, and based on this article by Kris De Decker, policy makers may be taking a totally wrong approach to energy efficiency: https://tinyurl.com/ybyq2alx Ultimately, the energy market is going to dictate energy policy. As energy prices continue to inch upward, not only will household energy expenditures will climb (forcing consumers to conserve), but manufacturing costs will rise. I tend to find myself in the conservation mode more than efficiency. I am writing this while logged in to my Raspberry Pi Zero: https://tinyurl.com/yb2d8sds That's right, this computer set me back $5 USD. Obviously this system on a chip (soc) is very spartan on the power consumption front, but there are some sacrifices. There is not enough horse power to play youtube videos from the browser, but I can download and play the videos locally. Admittedly, it is a bit slower, but it is significantly faster than my 20 year old Toshiba laptop...which I still use by the way. Also the power consumption required to serve up a document on a gopher server is a tiny fraction of the power required to serve a web page that is choked up with ads, compiled java script, and other fluff. No mega server farms required to Run a gopher server. It can even be done from this Pi Zero. The gopher protocol will never replace the web, but I suspect as energy costs continue to climb, gopher will become a more appealing option particularly for large enterprises. Back at the ranch, I have been doing some preliminary research on getting the road finished out to the back side of the property where the third well head is. The goal is to get some infrastructure back there to have power and plumbing to have this well operating. Water was a bit tight last summer and fall so if we can get this well worked into the existing lines, we should be in much better shape. This well is much more productive at 7.5 gpm. Once the weather stabilizes, we'll get to work on that one.