At a lake in Texas

 

Looking at birds.

 

And this guy comes out on a board.

 

A board that’s moving all by itself.

 

He stands up.

 

It’s like windsurfing, but without the wind.  But then something even cooler happens.

 

He’s up on a foil.

 

Just like the Americas Cup boats, he’s up on a foil.

 

A silent, electric, regulated by a Bluetooth hand controller, battery powered, foil board.  Sweet.

 

And all for the low low price of only $14,000.  What toy collection would be complete without it?

 

  https://liftfoils.com/

 

The bird migration is underway

 

These photos are of little warbler songbirds.  For perspective, they’re all, except for the vireo, sparrow-size or less.  They might look big because I was able to get close.

 

Hooded Warbler.

 

 

Worm-eating Warbler.

 

 

White-eyed Vireo.

 

Yellow-throated Warbler.

 

 

Kentucky Warbler.

 

 

I was able to get really close to this duck.

 

 

What’s the deal with Mercury

 

It’s a toxic heavy metal.  A neurotoxin.  It gets in the ocean and attaches to dissolved organic matter like decomposing plants and animals.  Microorganisms and minnows ingest the decomposing plants and animals and accumulate mercury.  Bigger critters eat the smaller critters.  Mercury is cumulative.  The top predator fish have in their systems all the mercury from all the smaller critters they’ve eaten; a dramatically larger amount of mercury than what’s naturally in the surrounding environment.

 

Too much mercury is bad for us so we should limit our mercury consumption.  Our primary mercury source is seafood.  The worst fish we can eat is a large predator fish like tuna.  I love tuna.  Freshly grilled tuna.  Baked tuna.  Tuna right out of the can.  Tuna salad.  Tuna salad sandwich on buttered toast.  A scoop of tuna salad in a sliced avocado.  Grilled tuna salad sandwich with cheese.  Tuna casserole.  I love tuna!  Grew up on it.

 

I googled how often we should eat the kind of tuna Judy and I eat, to minimize our risk of overexposure to mercury.  Google said one serving every nine days.  What?  I’d rather eat it every day.  Is tuna primarily a danger to the development of young minds and bodies?  For me, that ship has already sailed.  Sitting in class, not paying attention to the instructor, but playing with the mercury drops one of the kids got by breaking a thermometer; liquid beads of room-temperature molten metal rolling about on a piece of paper, fascinating.  Not only that, but if you get it on your fingers and massage it onto the surface of a dime, that dime will shine brighter than it ever did when it was new!  Do you suppose I’ve absorbed at least my fair share of mercury?  Yeah.  That ship has already sailed.  Without a lifeboat.  Whatever damage could be done to my development has already been well done.

 

Is there a danger of excess mercury consumption for a senior citizen?  If I eat too much tuna now, will I suddenly go senile (quicker), or suffer some other life altering malady?  I don’t know.  If there is no immediate danger, beyond whatever damage is already done, I sure would love to have at least one serving of tuna salad waiting for me in the fridge every day for the rest of my life.  What is one to do?

 

 

Lets say I’m from Mars

 

I’m observing life on planet Earth and I’m watching coverage of the prosecutions for the January 6th assault on the capitol.  I’m wondering what’s up with that.

 

For a failed military coup, would we earthlings jail all the offending soldiers and let the generals, the people that ordered them to try to take the capitol, go free?  That wouldn’t make any sense.

 

In criminal prosecutions, I see an approach that doesn’t just go after the “little fish”, but uses them to go after the “bigger fish”, the ones higher up the food chain, the ones that actually caused the criminal action to happen.  That makes some sense.  Get to the root of the problem.

 

How is it then, that for the January 6th attack, all the horror, outrage, and prosecutions are directed at the foot-soldiers that carried out the act, and not the people who stayed at a distance, organizing, encouraging, inciting, and essentially ordering the act?

 

This man from Mars is confused.