Or you could just spend an occasional weekend at your mountain cabin.Maybe 2 out of a million actually love to live the Nature B.S.
The rest of it is total crap. Uncomfortable always, at natures risk, of course.
See, total ****! The rest of nature is total hell. Want to enjoy misery?
Well just enjoy the spring floods too. Look at a beautiful winter scene and
realize the complications one has to endure to go to the Doc or Wal-Mart.
AC the Earth at 78F. tops summer and 55 F. lows winter. yea beautiful.
You want snow order it have a couple semi's blown on your place around dinner time.
Ya want a Tornado have a bulldozer stop buy. Ya want a spring flood have the city open
the fire hydrant and drown your ***.
YesMaybe 2 out of a million actually love to live the Nature B.S.
The rest of it is total crap. Uncomfortable always, at natures risk


LOL @ " lay-z-boy jockey".Yes
Not many are willing
and those that are, do suffer some
I found it worth the risk and misery
Seeing the cabin come into view after a long trek in the ice and snow, and temps so low a slight breeze will rip yer face off
It's a relief and comfort beyond words
View attachment 370286
Of course, coming in from that cold
and warming by the fire
is a wonderfully simple pleasure, unknown by the typical lay-z-boy jockey
I'll take it
View attachment 370287
lay-z-boy jockeyYes
Not many are willing
and those that are, do suffer some
I found it worth the risk and misery
Seeing the cabin come into view after a long trek in the ice and snow, and temps so low a slight breeze will rip yer face off
It's a relief and comfort beyond words
View attachment 370286
Of course, coming in from that cold
and warming by the fire
is a wonderfully simple pleasure, unknown by the typical lay-z-boy jockey
I'll take it
View attachment 370287
LOL @ " lay-z-boy jockey". View attachment 370290
The thing about nature's art
It's totally unpredictable
It will halt you in your busy tracks
and give pause
View attachment 370225View attachment 370227
Even more so with a moon shot
It's tricky
Gotta have the SLR settings just right
View attachment 370331
Even more so with a moon shot
It's tricky
Gotta have the SLR settings just right
View attachment 370331







Lots of critters in the mountains
Bear
Big cats
Wolves
and my beloved coyotes, and their eerie songs of an evening
But, the deer and their quiet grace stole my heart
I hunted them for years
to put food on the table
No longer care to do that
I learned to look forward to their spring migration back to out mountain
The mule deer are huge
And plentiful
View attachment 370675
But
the town deer here are the tiny blacktail
and are hard to successfully hunt
as they tend to crawl thru the brush
One day I saw what I first thought to be an elk
just out of town
But, it was a huge trophy mulie
Hunkered down, under the overpass, calmlywatching traffic go by
Had to get a shot
View attachment 370674
OK
I've polluted this wonderful thread enough
Along with White Tails, we used to see quite a few Mule Deer wandered up our short gravel driveway. Neighbors have pastures downslope and to the east of us. But for the last 15 years or so, when any deer get near our fences or gate, they're the WTs. Don't even see the MDs on those pastures anymore. In our general area we're more likely to see a few elk in some spot than a MD.
I have noticed and enjoyed the more long term changes in our forest. Both plant/tree life and the different animals that come for a season or two, and move on. We have had geese stop at our pond for awhile, and beavers live in our creek and move on. The changing landscape is a real joy to see morph/or not see morph when it really is.Along with White Tails, we used to see quite a few Mule Deer wandered up our short gravel driveway. Neighbors have pastures downslope and to the east of us. But for the last 15 years or so, when any deer get near our fences or gate, they're the WTs. Don't even see the MDs on those pastures anymore. In our general area we're more likely to see a few elk in some spot than a MD.
Over time, some wildlife species don't actually disappear but fluctuate... come and go in our immediate vicinity, as is the case with coyotes, eagles, and herons. They shift around within our general area.