Day 275 (part 1)
Pioneers Week.
Some of the PEA Achievements have a certain confluent tendency, in that with just a little forethought, in the
course of achieving one it's possible to simultaneously achieve another.
For example: I cut and limbed at least 50 junkpoles, each at least 8ft tall, and once I put them together into a
fence I'll have earned the Apprentice Fence-Builder Achievement (worth 1
Wood.) Because I mostly dragged whole
trees over to a single spot before limbing them, I was able to concentrate my limb dropping in such a way as to cover a mostly contiguous area, about 250 square ft, earning me the Minor Mulcher Achievement, (worth 1 Grain.)
The first picture below illustrates what 50 junkpoles and ~250 sq ft of mulch looks like. Totally attainable, right?
I had a couple pb&j sandwiches for lunch. Sandwiches for lunch everyday for 5 days is an easy way to meet my food needs with little time and effort.
I did my observation journaling just before noon today:
"I seem to be sitting on the snow-covered ground in a grove of doug firs somewhere in the vast uncharted wilderness of Wheaton Laboratories.
I have just been limbing, cutting, and gathering
fence material so I am breathing heavily and my heart is beating faster than usual. I am warm, too warm, so I remove my gloves, hat, and hood. My hood dumps the load of snow it was collecting.
I drink from my water bottle. The liquid is soothing on my dry mouth and throat. Soon my breathing gentles and my pulse slows to normal.
My saw is in the snow beside me, golden-brown bits of wood still stuck in its teeth like spinach, a frosting of snow on it's mirrorlike surface.
Immediately in front of me is a baby doug fir, less than 3ft tall and no bigger around than my thumb. Too small to be worth gathering for my fence.
I pick off a few fir needles and pop them in my mouth. The familiar astringency is still there, but doug fir needles taste better in the spring. This doug's winter needles are not as deep a green.
A tiny growth of yellow lichen clings to an elbow of the doug's branches. An even tinier growth of light teal lichen has established itself below the other. Dark green fibers of old man's beard moss weaves its way through the doug's needles. A few of the needles are trapped, along with dozens of little air bubbles, in a piece of ice, melted and refrozen snow that managed to filter down through the
canopy above.
Looking up, I can barely see the blue sky through the gray branches and green needles.
A snowflake lands on the screen on which I am typing and instantly melts, leaving tiny prismatic droplets that quickly evaporate.
My bare neck is gently showered with a bit of snow shed from the branches above. It is refreshing, but I am cooling down now, reminding me to get back to work, so I stand up.
My legs and feet tingle from sitting cross-legged so I hold onto the baby doug's mother for support while my legs wake back up. She is plenty sturdy at 7 or so inches in diameter, even with a substantial curve in the base, and she stands more than 20 ft tall, reaching for the sun."