And
Mrs. Cardinal
He
looks like another clump of sand, but there is a giveaway.
That
menacing claw. It looks big on him, but the entire crab is maybe 2 inches
wide, so it’s not too scary.
Noticed
while walking through a South Texas industrial area, packed with small
businesses building and repairing things.
The
sign read:
Dirty hands.
Clean money.
It
doesn’t exactly describe the life of an accountant, but we recognize and admire
the sentiment.
But
there are plenty of them at the Birding and Nature Center on South Padre
Island. They’re a rescue center for alligators that cause trouble with
people. The problem lies mostly with the people, not the gators. If
a gator gets fed, it learns from that experience and becomes a “nuisance” and
has to be removed. Or maybe it shows up on a dock or in a swimming pool.
There
are small ones in tanks.
To
larger ones in ponds.
All
the way up to Big Padre.
Twelve
feet of gator!
Freshened
up our camping meals on the road.
We
pack a little Coleman stove and a nonstick pan. Judy has upped our
camping dinner game.
I
just can’t get enough of these tangled oak branches.
Made
a day trip to Lost Maples State Natural Area.
To
everyone’s delight on a warm day.
Now
we’re home.
The
upgraded office. A fold-up portable table, just the right size. A
second screen for the laptop that doesn’t add to the footprint on the tabletop.
Just
enough room for a mouse on the right. I’ll put the 10-key pad on the
right side as well, but didn’t bring it this trip.
The
second monitor attaches magnetically to the back of the laptop. It
rotates and folds around the back when the laptop is closed. They stay
together and fit inside the laptop sleeve of my knapsack. (I had a two
extra screen setup, but it was cumbersome and complicated to get all the cords
plugged in right. It required its own power. This one is
simple. One C to C cord plugged into an outlet on the computer.
Done.)
Very
handy.
For
internet, Starlink is working great. Sometime there is too much tree
cover for it to work right at the van, so we stretch out a long cord to reach a
clear view of the sky.