I woke up too late to see the “green comet,” but I did catch this great sunrise.
Just some clear water and colorful rocks …
I guess the novelty of winter is wearing off a bit and thoughts are turning towards spring.
Here is a short clip of some clear Rocky Mountain water and colorful glacier scoured rocks:
So, this is kind of bizarre: I have always enjoyed maps and now with the advent of Google Earth, I have come to enjoy examining places of interest from above — usually when I am dreaming of visiting the place or am planning some hike, etc. I was looking over Google’s satellite imagery of Flathead Lake when I stumbled upon a boat with two yellow elongated objects protruding perpendicularly off of its stern. I realized that I was looking at Marlene and I underway — from nearly 500 miles above!
Yeah, I’ve seen satellite images of my house and my car parked outside of my house, but I have never seen myself in motion via satellite. Wild stuff.
We live in interesting times.

+1 !!!
After waiting out the longest cold spell that I can remember in our past 15 years as Montanans, the forecast today is for +1!
+1 Celsius!
This would be cause for celebration if this temperature forecast wasn’t accompanied by a Winter Weather Advisory of freezing rain and sleet. But hey, it’s a move in the right direction.
Baby steps.
After all, its only January 18 and it will take lots and lots of baby steps to get back up to a Goldilocks climate.
When I was young I never even looked at the temperature forecast. I think that was true of most northern latitude kids. Temperature was simply a non-factor. As kids, you just do what you are going to do. If your fingers start to freeze, you go inside and warm up for a few minutes than go back out into it. It is only when I got older and had kids of my own that I began to factor in temperature.
I either got wiser or softer. Probably both.
Here’s a short funny video about winter weather forecasting from Environment Canada. Marlene and I could have easily played these parts. Yes, we have grown soft. This video hits a little too close to home.
Pulitzer-Smulitzer
My modest literary contribution, Searching for Alpha Centauri: A Boyhood Memoir, made a nice comeback this month. It became an Amazon Best Seller by climbing to #2 in its category—just behind Timothy Egan’s latest book. Yeah, the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winning Timothy Egan.
That’s what I’m talking about!
Okay, that might not impress you. I mean its second place after all. As Dale Earnhardt once so callously stated, “second place is just the first place loser.”
Ouch!
So maybe it’s not a coup, but my book did come in three spots ahead of Weird Al Yankovic’s biography.
Weird Al #5.
Me #2.
How often does that happen? How often can that happen?
Weird.
I don’t like to brag, but such victories for unknown authors are rare and all too fleeting. So please forgive me this moment of crowing …
before I sink back into the depths of literary obscurity.
Winter Bullseye
With all of our recent snowfall, I got to thinking of “the bullseye.”
Who wouldn’t?

Here is an oldy, but goody watercolor painting demonstration of a “warm” winter scene—utilizing the bullseye technique. It is an excerpt from Learning to Paint Winter’s Light.
If you are interested, you can find the entire course here: spetz.teachable.com
Deck Cam Sunset
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