This photo was taken during my internet vacation. I’ve also been writing poems. And reading. And working out. And lying in the hammock in the backyard, dozing in the late afternoon sun. To be continued…
Also, Husband is going to do me a favor once I leave my job. He is going to configure our connection so that I cannot access the web from home for a specified time each weekday (e.g., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) If I want to get online, I’ll have to get out — to the library (which has free wifi), or a coffee house that has free access. I know that once I’m unemployed with no schedule to give shape to my days, it will be even easier to get tangled in the web. Looks like it is possible to turn off the Internet!
Here’s a closer view of the liquid gold!



What a wonderful idea… perhaps I can have someone set that up on my computer — I can’t get out to use the internet elswhere but it would still be good for me to do other things 🙂
My favorite type of honey is from beehives which are located about 15 miles from town, at the end of the Murphy Dome Road, where their only source of nectar is from fireweed. The honey is a light, semitransparent, yellowish color, almost colorless, pure, and very sweet. Delicious!
Bill
Hammocks. They are the best. It’s very hard to worry in a hammock. I can tell you’re feeling lighter!
I have yet to take my laptop out to a coffee shop or any other such place which has connectivity. I’m gonna do it one of these days when I’m playing computer hermit.
I love honey. When I was a lad, we had rented a house in Southern Illinois for the summer, and it turned out some industrious bees had made a hive inside the framing of the house (entering, bless their little hearts, from the outside). My grandfather was an old honey gatherer, so he opened the thing up and gathered honey. I remember it being tasty.