mid October
Willow checks out the snow.
The local elections have come and gone. It worked out as I figured. Still there is some hope.
It has been decided to borrow money to buy a parcel of property at river’s edge. The choice was who to develop the land a private business or the District. The choice of leaving the land alone was not on the ballot.
Plastic bags will be banned in retail stores within the District of Invermere. This is a good thing. Still, it rings hollow. We know how to make a difference to the environment. How about banning motorboats that cover the lakes in summer or the second homes that surround the same lakes. Can there be a bigger waste or polluter than either or?

Back in the old days there was always one guy who built his outhouse over the river. He did it because he didn’t have to dig a hole and his shit sailed away with the current. As for the folks downstream, he didn’t care or even know they existed.
We are not much different today. All those motorboats and vacation homes with treated docks are the same as that old outhouse. We still don’t care about who lives downstream.
Now we carry our groceries to our cars in fabric bags made in India and figure we’ve made a difference.

There goes the winter kale.
***
These late October days have been wonderful. Sky blue and rivers clear. The snow is coming along with the chill. Lisa and I are never really ready for it. Probably less so as we grow old.




Andromeda and a Perseid share the sky above the ribs of earth.
Lisa captures a stunning meteor emanating from the heart of Perseus.
Backroads. A Perseid Meteor flys (left) over the haze and below the stars.
On the benches, coming home. Mars shining through the smoke (low, left of the Milky Way). The tip of a bright meteor at the top of the frame.
Un-cropped merged panorama. A satellite points back towards star clusters, Chi Persei and H Persei.
A meteor (left) streaks toward Perseus at tree line. The light of Andromeda Galaxy

Willow’s smile.
Babies Breath above the graves.
Indian Paintbrush.
Wood Lily.
Yarrow illustration by German Botanist Walther Otto Muller from the 1800’s. He illustrated many important botanical books of the time.