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Hummer
Friday, November 28, 2025
More this and that
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Van Rat
I am back from a very successful trip to Santa Barbara. Pretty beat, everything hurts. I sold well, in many different areas, but the booth basically continued the Texas, southwest theme because I still had a lot of that material in the van.We had a lot of rain in the days before I left. My roof at my store is pretty patched together and I worry about its integrity, especially near the skylights.
I bit the bullet and hired a crew to go back up and patch and seal before the big rain. Spent some money. Glad I did.
Let's see, what do I remember?A two day pack in, lights and paper up the first day, all the material brought into the booth.
Laid it out in my brain and got a wall or two set up.
The show opened Friday, quite brisk sales, will definitely miss some of my prized material.
I brought this double sided Dean Cornwell illustration, didn't sell it but I like it a lot.Another big booth.Anyway the setup looked something like this.
I bought from two estates when I was up there, purchased these great Albert Paley Millennium candlesticks from 1998 and this Tiffany bronze harp lamp base.
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| Donna and Phil at the Cow Palace, my first show after moving back to California in 74. |
Monday, November 17, 2025
Rockin' crossword
I created another rock and roll crossword puzzle. I don't think many of you, if any, can solve this one. Surprise me.
Reeling in the years
It is an old standby.
The chicken soup is still outstanding but the large bowls have shrunk considerably.
Way of the world I guess.
You get about twice as much soup here in Fallbrook at Rosas.
Afterwards we drove down the coast towards the Belly Up to see Steely Jazz.When my wife says no pictures, she means no pictures.
Went to the art opening at the library on Saturday, a little uncomfortable for me because I wasn't entirely happy with my piece.
Sunday, November 16, 2025
Saturday, November 15, 2025
Wise Sage
I saw this quote from Buffett a few months ago and my mind keeps going back to it. Worth pondering.
Buffett wrote, “We've never succeeded in making a good deal with a bad person.”“Conversely, we do not wish to join with managers who lack admirable qualities, no matter how attractive the prospects of their business,” he added in his letter.
“I learned to go into business only with people whom I like, trust, and admire. As I noted before, this policy of itself will not ensure success: A second- class textile or department-store company won’t prosper simply because its managers are men that you would be pleased to see your daughter marry."
In my line of work I have done thousands of deals, with many, many people over the years. Of all types. Buffett's words ring so true to me. If your spider sense knows that a person is a jerk, it will be born out in time. It is never worth it in the long run. And first instincts are rarely wrong about a person. Like the parable of the scorpion and the duck.
I could illustrate with specifics but I won't. There are people who you can and can not do business with. And sometimes it is not a matter of a good or bad person, it is mere chemistry. The important thing is that both sides must win. Some people never get that. Steer clear of assholes.
Friday, November 14, 2025
Stormin'
It has been a week of storms, both solar and rain.
A man got some good footage of the Northern Lights right here in San Diego, on Mt. Laguna.The Sunrise Highway is the highest paved road in San Diego, what is it, 6500'?
We drove it last week on the way back from Jacumba.
JB took this shot from his place up in Fairbanks.Looks pretty storybook idyllic.
It started raining here last night but there is a lot more to come, a level 3 atmospheric river.
You never know what that means, we were stranded for two weeks back in '93.
You sort of have to surrender to the elements and not fight anything. Let it pass by and move forward when it is safe.
On the other side of the world, Thailand, Shawn sent this shot, which looks sort of Roger Dean posed but still very cool.I have an antique show next week up in Santa Barbara, which has a hard time with the natural elements, I hope the roads and slopes hold up.Friday through Sunday.
I am pretty close to being packed and have a little free time, a rare commodity in my world these days.
Yesterday I did something I haven't done in ten months, I grabbed my camera and headed up to San Jacinto to take some shots of birds and tune in.
I was most interested in just being there, never even took the good lens out but took a few snapshots to put the camera though its paces and see if I still remembered how to use it.
Barely.
Nothing too riveting, I saw male and female harriers, red tailed hawks, a shrike, not a heck of a lot.Got a good walk in, shot this pic of an immature male vermilion flycatcher.Saw lots of coots and ibis, a few egrets, nothing earth shattering.
I did run across a pair of pheasants, no doubt escapees from the neighboring hunt club.
Good for them!
Such beautiful birds.
I drove home and came to the common realization that I honestly have better birding in my own front yard, a red tailed at twilight, and a yellow rumped warbler.
I pulled the card out of the long dormant camera and realized I had some flea market portraits of old comrades I had never seen or processed before.
I give you Jim, Stephen and Dave, for your viewing pleasure.
Strange but wonderful birds indeed!
Hardy souls who have plied the pavement for what seems like an eternity.
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Steely Jazz at the Belly up Sunday.
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Sailors take warning...
What a beautiful sunrise this morning!
We may not get northern lights but the view to the southeast is pretty spectacular.
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I have mentioned repeatedly that I relinquished my Democratic membership over a year ago.
I'm pretty much a lost sailor, who dislikes both extreme left and right and tries to tack somewhere in the middle.
So it was difficult for me in choosing to vote for Proposition 50.
But I did.
Why?
Honestly, I think that gerrymandering like this is awful.
California Republicans and the communities they represent deserve to be heard.
But our hands were forced. Propositions like this don't happen in a vacuum. Extreme Republican redistricting efforts pushed by Trump in Texas, Ohio, Indiana and elsewhere required an answer and Newsom fought fire with fire. Thankfully there is a time limit on the proposition and things revert back to the old ways in 2030.
I also think that it was a bit disingenuous for California Republican Congressmen to feign indignation about the proposition while barely giving lip service to the fact that their party was doing the exact same thing nationally, in spades.
If they decried it, it was very quietly. Can't upset you know who, you know?
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In another story I think that the recent shutdown should be addressed.The group of eight moderates who agreed to move forward are being vilified by progressives, I think somewhat unfairly.
There was never going to be an outright win with this Republican House and this Republican speaker. They may not even take the bill up for a vote in the house.
The eight who crossed over were also sympathetic to their own constituents, many of whom were federal workers in places like Virginia, who could not feed their families and were being dismissed en masse.
The eight made a pragmatic decision regarding what they thought was best for their voters. I can not fault them.
Somewhere between 75 and 80% of the American public think that Obamacare or the ACA is a good thing.
The Republicans have had fifteen years to come up with another plan, they have not. I am not a betting man but would wager that they will not be able to cobble something together palatable to the American people in the next two months. Or convince the American public how bad the current status quo really is.
So they own this one now. It is front and center.
The issue has been perfectly framed. Americans are facing a doubling or tripling of their health care premiums if we do nothing or we continue to subsidize premiums, like most of the other developed countries of the world. Horrors, socialism! But it is okay to throw forty billion at Argentina or the orange one's favorite dictator of the week. And it is okay to cut the populace's food stamp budget in half, the lazy scofflaws. The great majority of whom happen to live in red states.
Wonder which option the public will want? Should be a real interesting issue in the midterms.
On the other hand, I read a rural red stater bemoaning their loss of snap benefits and they were wondering how they would feed their five children.
If you have no or insufficient income, why have five children in the first place? Because the good lord directed you to?
Back to the shutdown. AOC and the progressives are sharpening their knives and the conflict is becoming generational. Take out Schumer, Durbin, kill the old guard. Silly me, I trust the old guard far more than the young lions, they have been in the fire before and they know that government needs to actually function to work. I trust old doctors and older politicians, people who have made their mistakes and been around a while.
And sometimes that means working with and striking a deal with the opposition.
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Isn't it an amazing coincidence that when Epstein says Trump was with a girl for three hours, he claims it was the one who committed suicide last year and can no longer speak?
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I got a call from a reader today, who left a voicemail. She can't figure out if Trump was working for Putin as an agent. Did I think he had anything on him? Well, sheesh, that one is way out of my pay grade. But let me take a swing at it. It would not surprise me if he was and if the pee tapes were real. Pure guess and conjecture, mind you, but totally plausible.
Now let me bitch.
I went over to the Sketcher store to try to buy a pair of shoes. I like their fit and memory foam. To my chagrin they were all slip on now. The laces were a mere surface adornment with no real function or utility. Something vestigial, like a prehensile tail or a necktie.






















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