Thursday, January 23, 2020

GOING BANANAS


Bananas hauled me out of the house this morning.  No, bananas is not the name of a pet chicken.  Bananas is bananas.  We all know how fast bananas ripen and if your like me and eat 7 bananas a week every week you know the narrow time frame between hardened green under ripe and brown spotty over ripe.  It's quite an acquired art buying just the right colored banana at just the right time.   Example: If I was totally out of bananas which I never am I would buy two yellow bananas, two yellow green bananas and two greener bananas which theoretically should make each banana about right for the day I needed it.  Colleges should add 'banana buying 101' to their curriculums.  Also, I buy the shortest bananas I can and not those big foot long ones.  Why??  Well, each morning I put one banana in my morning shake and I've been doing this for the best part of twenty years now except during winter months when we were traveling south.  RV fridges aren't big enough for all my morning shake ingredients like romaine lettuce, carrots, and celery, etc.  So it was a morning banana run to Goderich for Pheebs and I today.  Of course it's not always just bananas we pick up it's other odds and sods as well.  And I bet when you read the title you thought I was 'going bananas'.  Well somedays that is absolutely the case!! 
GODERICH'S HARBOR HILL RETIREMENT COMMUNITY IS ADDING AN ADDITIONAL FOUR STORY WING
Our usual swing down around the harbor to make sure the shoreline construction was properly under way.  It was.  Noticed offshore ice out about half a mile with smaller ice floes in the harbor.  The Algoma Conveyer was at the salt dock.
LAKE ICE IS BUILDING ALONG THE LAKE HURON SHORELINE
BANK RESTORATION WORK IS GOING FULL TILT


THAT ICE WAS FLOATING INTO THE HARBOR FROM LEFT TO RIGHT
REFLECTIONS OF THE SALT MINE
LOOKS LIKE THE ALGOMA ENTERPRISE IS HERE FOR THE WINTER
Back up from the harbor we slid around to the lighthouse atop the bluffs and took a few photos of the lake and harbor below.
Temperatures had come up in the night to nearly thirty two degrees and with no wind in a slightly sunny sky a short walk along a snowy trail east of Goderich was doable.  Felt good to get out and get my legs moving again.
WONDER WHAT THE STORY IS BEHIND THIS PAIR OF HIKING BOOTS AT THE HEAD OF THE TRAIL
THOSE HIKING BOOTS CAN BE SEEN AT THE BASE OF THAT POST ON THE LEFT
IT WAS EASY WALKING ALONG THIS PACKED SNOWMOBILE TRACK
A SIDE TRAIL LEADS TO A FOREST
SUMAC
Home again I grabbed the snow shovel and worked on the driveway for a bit.  With temps predicted to be above freezing for a few days the snow is going to get heavy so figured I had better move more of it out of the way while I could.  Plus the exercise is good for me.
IF I WAS A BIRD ABOUT TO LAND ON OUR FEEDER THIS IS WHAT FINAL APPROACH MIGHT LOOK LIKE

Since receiving my diabetes diagnosis earlier this week I have been working once again on changing some of my eating habits.  I've done this before, lost weight, felt better, then slipped back into my old patterns again.  Same thing happened to me years ago with alcohol, cigarettes, and a heavy coffee addiction when it took me many tries before I had them all wrestled to the ground.  I switched from homogenized milk to skim milk about 35 years ago, went from bread to flat bread 25 years ago, quit sugar in coffee so long ago I can't remember, don't drink pop at all except for a root beer once a year at Los Jilbertos in Borrego Springs, California.  I've never bought a pie or cake in my life but offer me a piece of pie or slice of cake and I'll never turn it down and even sneak seconds when your not looking. I might eat two chocolate bars a year if that.  Leave a butter tart or a doughnut sitting on the counter and I'll grab it before you can turn around.  Potato chips are not my thing and when it comes to burgs and fries or bacon and eggs I'd say maybe once a month if that.  A carrot muffin most every morning is a problem but haven't had one in a week now.  Diabetes is in my family on my Dad's side.  Not sure. but his Dad (my Grandfather) was diabetic and I think he died from it.  My Dad developed diabetes in his latter years.  Anyway I am working on my problem, have reversed my recent weight gain, and have actually lost a pound on my way down the weight scale again.  I was 196 last summer and am 203 right now.  Ideally I would like to get down to about 185 or a tad lower.  We'll see what additional help the diabetic Nurse person can offer me next month.
LIKED THE COLOR OF THIS DOOR I SAW IN GODERICH THIS MORNING
::An Archive Post:: A Beehive Of Activity This Morning.  It was January 11th 2008 and we were boondocked in the desert about 6 miles south of Quartzite Arizona.  It was our second year at the annual big RV show.  A big Kansas cross-wind had ripped our awning off the coach a few months before so this day we had that old tattered awning replaced with a new one.  Also had a nice Blue Flame heater installed at the same time so it was a busy day.  And it was here a few days later we began taking out and selling our Motorhome's furniture.  (Couch, dinette, and tub chair) More about that maybe tomorrow:))  And two years ago today I posted, Kelly Comes To My Rescue In The Night.
HERE WE ARE BOONDOCKED ABOUT 6 MILES SOUTH OF QUARTZSITE ARIZONA IN JANUARY 2008
::Al's Musical Favs:: Antissa by E.S. Posthumus.  Another one where the voice grabbed me first time around.
PHEEBS ALWAYS KEEPS A CLOSE EYE ON ME WHEN I'M OUTSIDE THE JEEP TAKING PICTURES
GROANER'S CORNER:(( A man approached a local person in a village he was visiting."What's the quickest way to York?"The local scratched his head."Are you walking or driving?" he asked the stranger."I'm driving.""That's the quickest way!"
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“I live in an airport but when the security guard comes at night Heathrows me out.”---------------------------------
A man phoned to find out whether he could get insurance if the nearby volcano erupted spewing plumes of ash. They assured him he would be covered.
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5 comments:

  1. Just looking at those frigid icy waters chills me to the bone! I've been in California too long.

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  2. Freezing along the shore line at this time of year is always an indication of more to come. Those waters look cold for sure.
    I enjoyed the memory lane!! Made me chuckle. Pheebes is getting pretty white around the face. She's always a cutie.

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  3. Look at all those squirrels!!! Mine have all disappeared. I think we have predators around.
    Butter tarts eh? They seem to be a hot topic today, haha.

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  4. Enjoyed the icy pictures. My Nephew sent me a few from Ontario today and he is happy his job ends in 7 days and then he is heading South. That six month job, lasted three years with no days off. Canada took 53% of his pay in taxes but other than that, he liked being there. That squirrel sure is limber.

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  5. Favorite photo tonight was the very last one of Miss Pheebs - she is so photogenic.

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