Categories
Places

Making Our Mark

Today was going to be the last sunny day until midweek, and it would have been a shame to waste it inside. I remembered a hike I had intended to take once in the summer, Bluff View at Meramec State park, but didn’t because of the spider webs across the path. Today seemed an ideal day to try it again.

And it was an ideal day–in the 50’s, with a gentle cool breeze, and not a web in sight. Like the earlier hike, Bluff View is also a moderately difficult hike, with very rocky ground and steep hills, and narrow paths that border a cliff overlooking the Meramec River. Unlike earlier, though, the terrain was more familiar. And dry. In fact, other than having to use caution with footing, today’s hike ended up being more of a enjoyable walk than a challenging hike.

There are a couple of shelters made by the old CCC (Conservation Corp) back during the depression, along the way. Kids had spray painted messages over the one I visited. In particular, “Leslie + Jeff” featured prominently, along with various exclamation of people ‘rulz’ and ‘Jesus Savs’.

I usually get annoyed by graffiti, but wasn’t very annoyed at the marking, primarily because the shelter itself is a marking as such: a shelter that really wasn’t needed, funded by a society that was both crufty and benevolent; built by men desperate to feed their families during one of our darkest times. The trail that led to the decision to create such a shelter is one that grew over time, rather than developed naturally–the markings of thousands of hikers like me who saw the hill and had to climb it, just to see what was at the top. And it was these same hills that provided home to ancient Indian people, who used to carve pictures of animals and gods into the rocks to celebrate a hunt or protect a new child. At the most, Leslie and Jeff were just leaving this generation’s scent on stone long claimed by humanity.

The rest of the trail was without much to remark, other than the casual mention of the quiet only broken by my footsteps and the beautiful weather and how wonderful it is to stand at the top of a tall bluff and see for miles around. But Missouri in Winter tends to exist in shades of rust and brown and gray, with an occasional slash of blue or green — I’m not sure I can continue to remark on this tree or that rock without resorting to, ‘There was a tree’ and ‘there was a rock’; or variations such as ‘there is a tree on the rock’.

The best part of the hike was getting back to the car and feeling like I hadn’t walked enough. Say now, this is progress! Especially after my dismal showing in the earlier hike. So I treated myself to a gentle walk along the road that parallels the Meramec by the campgrounds.

There were a few hearty souls out camping, friendly as always when in the back woods–nodding their heads and saying hello, or stopping to chat. Yes the same ignoramuses who threw aside the chance to toss Bush out will smile at you, and tip a finger to their hats in greeting as you pass.

I noticed a group of large, predator like birds flying in circles overhead and a man and his wife passing told me they were turkey vultures. I was surprised, because I know what an ugly bird this can be, but they were beautiful and graceful in the air as they circled. I continued walking, trying to take a photo of the birds, but without a telephoto, this would be impossible. As they flew, they overlapped each other and dove and circled, but never made a sound, quiet as death itself.

(I shamefully confess to feeling no small amount of relief when the birds suddenly found something to land on across the river because it did seem as if they were uncannily matching my steps for the longest time. I know these creatures sense of smell is keen; were they trying to tell me I needed a shower after my hike?)

Categories
Technology

Code day

Maria could be describing my day when she writes:

I love days like today, when everything seems to be well padded in mist and torpor. The leaf blowers are silent, no one is out there improving their house or garden, and with the windows closed, for all I know, cars have ceased to flow on the roads.

However, our day was more a cold rain than a mist. Still, it was in ‘in’ day, spent catching up on coding projects. After a day of hiking, coding seems more fun somehow, as well as it giving my knees a chance to ‘rest’, poor dears.

I worked a bit with the OsCommerce store application and think I’ve managed to get the CSS layers and the HTML tables to play together for the layout. I am not a CSS purist, but I do strongly believe that templates are more adaptable and easier to work with when done as CSS rather than tables — tables add a lot of extra baggage, making the pages harder to read and customize. I’ve found this with the weblogging tools I’ve worked with, and I’ve been through enough weblogging tool templates by now to almost think this could be a truism.

I also worked on Tinfoil Project today, and have incorporated annotation as well as comments into the pages. I did have to use popup comments, but there’s a little ‘goodie’ included in most of the popup pages–similar to the sidebar ‘goodie’ that appears, from time to time, with these posts.

My busy fingers didn’t rest once today, and I also spent time contemplating migrating IT Kitchen weblog entries into wiki entries. After looking at the wiki database schema, I found that this isn’t as complicated as I thought it would be. However, I decided against doing a migration today, primarily because the weblog writing doesn’t translate well to a wiki environment. After all, weblog writing is fairly static and created by one author; while wiki writing is fluid and authorless. I don’t want to move people’s essays over into an environment that encourages editing.

What’s needed is the ability to ‘freeze’ pages in a wiki, and annotate with the author–a ‘essay category’ page. Better yet, the ability to pull data in from the WordPress/Wordform database and format it as a wiki page, sans the editing capability. The code is so nicely organized and documented in MediaWiki, it wouldn’t be an especially difficult task, and could be a fun exercise. The hard part would be to merge discussion between the two tools, weblog and wiki. That could be tetchy.

I’m finding out that I really enjoy ripping into open source code, blending bits and pieces of different products together. I was even eyeballing OsCommerce code today, thinking, “You know, this could be combined with a weblog for subscription based online publications…”

So many possibilities, so little time. Speaking of time, congratulations to Scott on his five year blog anniversary, and Karl for his almost five year mark. Reading both of your weblogs, I found your words are still fresh and youthful–like the words of young blogging babe instead of the old blogging codgers that you are.

Categories
outdoors

Making our mark

Today was going to be the last sunny day until midweek, and it would have been a shame to waste it inside. I remembered a hike I had intended to take once in the summer, Bluff View at Meramec State park, but didn’t because of the spider webs across the path. Today seemed an ideal day to try it again.

And it was an ideal day–in the 50’s, with a gentle cool breeze, and not a web in sight. Like the earlier hike, Bluff View is also a moderately difficult hike, with very rocky ground and steep hills, and narrow paths that border a cliff overlooking the Meramec River. Unlike earlier, though, the terrain was more familiar. And dry. In fact, other than having to use caution with footing, today’s hike ended up being more of a enjoyable walk than a challenging hike.

There are a couple of shelters made by the old CCC (Conservation Corp) back during the depression, along the way. Kids had spray painted messages over the one I visited. In particular, “Leslie + Jeff” featured prominantly, along with various exclamation of people ‘rulz’ and ‘Jesus Savs’.

I usually get annoyed by graffiti, but wasn’t very annoyed at the marking, primarily because the shelter itself is a marking as such: a shelter that really wasn’t needed, funded by a society that was both crafy and benevolent; built by men desperate to feed their families during one of our darkest times. The trail that led to the decision to create such a shelter is one that grew over time, rather than developed naturally–the markings of thousands of hikers like me who saw the hill and had to climb it, just to see what was at the top. And it was these same hills that provided home to ancient Indian people, who used to carve pictures of animals and gods into the rocks to celebrate a hunt or protect a new child. At the most, Leslie and Jeff were just leaving this generation’s scent on stone long claimed by humanity.

The rest of the trail was without much to remark, other than the casual mention of the quiet only broken by my footsteps and the beautiful weather and how wonderful it is to stand at the top of a tall bluff and see for miles around. But Missouri in Winter tends to exist in shades of rust and brown and gray, with an occasional slash of blue or green — I’m not sure I can continue to remark on this tree or that rock without resorting to, ‘There was a tree’ and ‘there was a rock’; or variations such as ‘there is a tree on the rock’.

The best part of the hike was getting back to the car and feeling like I hadn’t walked enough. Say now, this is progress! Especially after my dismal showing in the earlier hike. So I treated myself to a gentle walk along the road that parallels the Meramec by the campgrounds.

There were a few hearty souls out camping, friendly as always when in the back woods–nodding their heads and saying hello, or stopping to chat. Yes the same inbred ignoramuses who threw aside the chance to toss Bush out will smile at you, and tip a finger to their hats in greeting as you pass. Those savages.

I noticed a group of large, predator like birds flying in circles overhead and a man and his wife passing told me they were turkey vultures. I was surprised, because I know what an ugly bird this can be, but they were beautiful and graceful in the air as they circled. I continued walking, trying to take a photo of the birds, but without a telephoto, this would be impossible. As they flew, they overlapped each other and dove and circled, but never made a sound, quiet as death itself.

(I shamefully confess to feeling no small amount of relief when the birds suddenly found something to land on across the river because it did seem as if they were uncannily matching my steps for the longest time. I know these creatures sense of smell is keen; were they trying to tell me I needed a shower after my hike?)

I stopped at the end of the walk to take some photos of the cliff across the water as the colors seemed pretty. When I got home, I looked at one of the photos and thought I saw spots of red in the picture. Alarmed, I grabbed my camera to see if something was wrong with it, but it was fine–the red was in the pictures. I enlarged the photo and cropped down to the trees with the red.

Then I enlarged the photo again and cropped out just one of the red dots. Looking at it under magnification, it looks like a Christmas tree ball.