You sure have some beautiful scenery around your "fort".
Frank
Frank
Thank you, we feel lucky and blessed to live here.Casa Escarlata Robles Too said:You sure have some beautiful scenery around your "fort".
Frank
Big wind and big windrows of pine needles on the ground. Is this why it's called "fall?"ski3pin said:We returned home late yesterday afternoon. It, now, is definitively Autumn!
The high country has a brand new dusting of snow and we drove with ice on the pavement. We currently have a high wind advisory that we hope will knock down most of the pine needles from the ponderosas. It is cold and the furnace in the house is now on for the season.
I have to agree, it is a delight to have more light in the morning, but the Eeyore in me says it’s sure gunna get dark early.ski3pin said:Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy (and three oh girls too!), we are enjoy early morning light today! Finally.
Yes, but you know us. We're morning people.Wandering Sagebrush said:I have to agree, it is a delight to have more light in the morning, but the Eeyore in me says it’s sure gunna get dark early.
Very true. But meeting friends, appointments, store hours; we can't get away from the "clock."MarkBC said:As a retired guy who can set his own schedule, I wake up and go to sleep when I feel like it -- regardless of the official clock time. So DST or not doesn't affect me much.
But there's sure no avoiding the seasonal changes in daylight length and times -- the ones based on the Earth's tilt and orbit, not the law (without doing some equator hopping).
Stormy here, too. Experimenting with a pot of Heartbreak Soup. Hopefully another good fit for the season.ski3pin said:Raining and storming this morning. Put together a batch of French Onion soup in the crockpot. That's a good fit for the weather.