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Sunday, November 16, 2025

Bell Choir- November 2025


Bell Choir Sunday! This first one was pretty easy. Hymn of Grateful Praise, which is a medly of "For the Beauty of the Earth," and "All Things Bright and Beautiful."



Our second song was a lot harder, but we got it pretty good. This is "On Eagle's Wings," a moving and powerful song that was written in the 1970s and is based on Psalm 91, Exodus 19:4, Isaiah 40:31. I'll put the words after the video.



On Eagle's Wings by Michael Joncas

You who dwell in the shelter of the Lord,
Who abide in His shadow for life,
Say to the Lord, "My Refuge,
My Rock in Whom I trust."

Chorus:
And He will raise you up on eagle's wings,
Bear you on the breath of dawn,
Make you to shine like the sun,
And hold you in the palm of His Hand.

The snare of the fowler will never capture you,
And famine will bring you no fear;
Under His Wings your refuge,
His faithfulness your shield.

Chorus

You need not fear the terror of the night,
Nor the arrow that flies by day,
Though thousands fall about you,
Near you it shall not come.

Chorus

For to His angels He's given a command,
To guard you in all of your ways,
Upon their hands they will bear you up,
Lest you dash your foot against a stone.

Chorus
And hold you in the palm of His Hand.

This may be Omer's favorite song.

And, of course, my new computer won't use the same video software and the new version is just awful. I managed to make it marginally functional. I'll have to try to figure something out another day.

I walked after church, came home, discovered I was tired. So, I made it pretty much a real rest day!

Miles hiked in 2025: 443.6

Ludington School Forest, various trails. 3.1 miles

See True Blue Gumby II

Saturday, November 15, 2025

One Dang Autumn Olive Bites the Dust


Woo hoo! I finished cutting down that one big autumn olive I showed you the few remaining trunks of a few days ago. I raked the area where it had dropped all its leaves and killed any other vegetation.
space where a bush was removed


I cut up the larger trunks for campfire wood. It's not the greatest. It's a soft wood like aspen. But I checked just to be sure it doesn't give off toxic smoke or anything. I wouldn't put it past this noxious plant. But it's ok to burn.
firewood in a wheelbarrow


I treated all those cut stumps with the Tordon. Bright blue was just treated today. I put it on right while the cut is fresh. That blue-ish one on the left was treated a few days ago.
stump treated with Tordon


And what is my magical wand for getting at least this done? I bought a cordless pruner. Took me all summer to look at brands and decide what I wanted. This is Greenworks brand. It was purchased primarily because it's not too big for my hands. So far, I'm happy. The company makes over 100 tools that all take the same battery pack (so the inventory is expandable), and I got this on sale.
Greenworks pruning saw


Now go back and look at the first picture again. See what's behind where this bush was? See what's beside where this bush was? More autumn olive.

In other news, I worked really hard today at necessary tasks- computer, editing, this yard stuff, kitchen cleanup. I hereby pat myself on the back.

See Before It Turns White

Friday, November 14, 2025

Beauty in the Details


We got another beautiful day! I had decided to use it to do my fall walk-through of the trail section I maintain. It was an easy amount of work. I had time to look for interesting details. This is the best.

I'm pretty sure this is a false chanterelle. Cute.


Still on the topic of mushrooms and fungus, this is some variety- I have no idea what- but see how it's growing in sort of a net pattern? The mycelium is under the bark and it puts up fruiting bodies in the softer cracks between the plates of the bark.
small white mushroom growing between bark plates on tree


The bottomland hardwood swamp is completely dry. I've seldom seen it without any pools of water. This tree decided to become a terrarium. Probably Intermediate Wood Fern.
ferns growning around the roots of a tree


This just made me chuckle. It's an apartment building for some critters. I wonder who lives upstairs.
two holes at the base of a tree


The trail work was easy. My section is in good shape. I only pulled a couple of small, downed trees off the path, clipped a little, and flipped away loose sticks.

Oh, a pic of my piece of trail? Sure.
North Country Trail in woods


And I did laundry and some editing.

Miles hiked in 2025: 440.5
NCT miles hiked in 2025: 244.8

North Country Trail, Lake and Mason Counties, Freesoil TH to Koenig Rd and back to Tyndall Rd. 3.5 miles.

See Work Day

Thursday, November 13, 2025

The Indoor Plants


It's astonishing, but I can't think of anything interesting to blog about!

I edited, I did computer stuff, I shopped, I filled the veggie tray using my new chopper (it looks beautiful), but how many times would you readers find the same tray filled with the same vegetables interesting? I started to look up a little bit about the next generation in the genealogy, but as I suspected, there isn't much to find. I may have to get that DAR membership to learn much (which would be easy except for the dues because Granny and Mom were both members- so I don't have to start from scratch to prove anything). It was this generation's son-in-law who fought in the Revolution, and gives me the right to belong.

I played my game (but I MAY be able to be calmer about it.) They've added many layers of events because the really top-level players need things to do. So there's no way mid-level players, such as I, can explore all the lands. So I can just pick what I want to work on and try to meet my own goals.

It's fun. The current quest is to assemble a skeleton of the "Loch Dess" (not a typo) monster. You have to get some of the bones from an Inuit who was making oars of the ribs, a dog who wants to keep some of the bones, and a clown who is charging people to look at the skull. You have to go find the things these people and the dog want to trade for the bones. Along the way, there are rewards you can get, resources to collect, etc. And you have to keep your home station operating in order to have enough energy to do all this stuff.

Anyway, I'm pretty sure you really don't want to see a lot of screenshots of a game you aren't playing yourself.

How about the plants I'm nurturing in the house over the winter? Still not too exciting, but it's the best I can do today. I am attempting to keep a bunch of Coleus going. I brought in the 'Lemon Coral' sedum and the 'Sea Urchin' sedum. I have one sprig of 'Blue Elf' sedum, the wandering jew, a tiny aloe that manages to live but not thrive, and a whole bunch of the Aloe squarrosa which is a houseplant. I'm still trying to give several of those away if you are interested...
houseplants


Remember the cleaning/sorting project I mentioned in September? Well, the point of that was to make space on a table where I can keep these plants for the winter. I think that space gets enough light to make them happy. And it doesn't matter if some water leaks onto the plastic cloth or the junky table underneath. In my dream world, I have one of those earth-sheltered greenhouses attached to my kitchen door by a breezeway, so I can keep plants and grow vegetables over the winter. Meanwhile, I have a rusty folding table and an old plastic tablecloth. It works.

Tomorrow is going to be nice again. I have a plan to do something more exciting than grocery shopping.

See Last Hurrah, Rock Garden 2025

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Cornelius White Sr. 1682-1755


Born: March 28, 1682 Marshfield, MA

Second child of Daniel and Hannah (Helen?) White.

Married: Hannah Randall on May 22, 1706

Children: Lemuel, Cornelius Jr., Paul, Joanna, Daniel, Gideon, Benjamin.

Died: January 21, 1755 in Marshfield, MA

Buried in Centre Marshfield Cemetery, Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts

He is listed as a shipbuilder in The Mayflower Descendant magazine.

Cornelius bought a pasture and orchard from his brother John, and also a valley pasture and uplands. All the property was in Marshfield. He left all this plus 14 pounds to Cornelius, Jr. His estate was valued at 1375 pounds, and included a fishing boat, a ferry boat, and outdoor tools.

Since Cornelius is listed as a shipbuilder, and that he lived in Scituate, I am making the assumption that is where he worked on the ships. Scituate is located on the Atlantic coast between Boston and Cape Cod. It was a major shipyard from possibly as early as 1646 (records vary) to 1872.

Not sure of the date of this photo, but it's certainly from the 1800s, long after Cornelius died. But it possibly looks similar to the 1700s.
Scituate Harbor 1800s


But the only other related graphic I can find is a hand-drawn map of the harbor from the 1700s. The attached key to 58 numbered locations reads like a list of places in a fantasy game: Light House, Cedar Point, Old Dr. Jeffer's House, Gun House, Tin Shop, Stables, etc.
drawing of scituate harbor


Cornelius was Daniel's second son. As such, I guess he did not inherit the family farmland and orchards, but chose a trade as shipbuilder.

From here on down for two generations, I don't think I'm going to be able to find a lot of detailed info about the people. But we shall see.

I think discipline as relates to getting back into the Klondike game isn't even on the table. Hopefully, I was just spending lots of time today as I tried to get back into remembering how to play. But I'm afraid I can't ration my playing time very well. I really like it.

Nevertheless, I managed to get some editing and computer work done. The snow is all gone and the sun was shining this afternoon.

See his father Daniel White