Slip Slide and Away
It looks like something from a horror movie, but it’s just me leaving the light on so I know where to pee at night.
Still no snow in the forecast. Damn strange. I picked a helluva year to get a part time job plowing snow. Every morning regardless of the forecast I get up at 3 in the morning and look out the window for snow and to see if I should suit up for work. It really isn’t that big of a hassle, because at 3 am I’m usually due for a piss.
One night in December I got up looked outside. The snow was coming down in sheets. I grabbed a quick bite and headed out, only to find there was no snow, it was clear as a bell. Now I put my glasses on before I look outside.
Yesterday we drove behind the mountains up the creek. I parked in the snow on a slight incline. Willow and I got out for a look around. I only took a few steps before I noticed the truck rolling down the road backwards. Lisa, in the passenger seat, seatbelt still on, didn’t look impressed. I chased after the truck, jumped in and got it stopped.
I thought I’d left the truck in gear, but the warm weather had turned the roads to glare ice and the truck had started to slide. I found some chunkier snow to park on. I wasn’t impressed with the conditions.
Lisa said it was lucky I hadn’t fallen on the ice trying to stop the truck and had it run over me. I agreed, yes that was lucky. She is always looking on the bright side.






Cresting the summit.
Morning light touches the mountain tops. Willow scans the trail ahead.
Maynard and Willow walk the ridge. 
Looking back along the windy ridge.
Hypnotizing Maynard and Willow with a piece of cheese.

It will take more than a little snow to damage the kale.
Mountain road.

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