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The Rise of the Secret Vacations

  I recently took a secret vacation.   Judging from both my personal and my business social media accounts, many of my friends and family have also taken secret vacations over the last several months.  It seems no one has traveled anywhere or done anything all summer.  I can't be the only one who has noticed the flood of secret vacations going on this year.  I know for a fact that many of my closest family and friends have indeed taken family vacations, road trips, flights, and experienced camping adventures but not once posted a single thing about the vacations on social media.  Most summers my feeds are flooded with vacation pictures, travel stories, and the like but this year has been crickets.  I have my theories as you probably do and when I returned from my recent trip, I struggled to decide what I wanted to post or not post about my vacation. Based only on my social medi a accounts, I have had a total of two friends travel since March.  One was posting each day about a very

Returning to the Real World From Technology Break

  My technology break lasted two weeks.  I wasn't one hundred percent technology free but as much as I possibly could be and still stay in touch with my family and make memories with those I was with.  I have been back to normal technology use for almost a full week and I thought that returning to the real world of connection would be like riding a bike.  Instead, I have found it generally positive since I missed some aspects of my technology but I also continue to find it challenging at times.   The Positive I mentioned in my last post that I forgot a few passwords and had many emails to sift through but on the whole, the world kept turning and wasn't the worse for having me escape for a time.  Easing back in was fairly simple after the first few days and I found myself in a routine for my workday and managed by work and home life well enough though with a varied schedule than before the break.  I love change and routine is something that I find boring so a shake-up of routi

My Two Weeks Virtually Technology Free

The pull of the ever-present technology of life is strong.  It has woven itself into so many components of my life which is not necessarily a bad thing however it can become overwhelming at times.  I recently took a vacation and decided to go almost technology free for the duration of the holiday and a few days before and after my trip.  The end result was almost two full weeks of virtually zero technology.  I will say that I don't consider my camera to be technology as he is more like a close friend and I would be hard-pressed to go very long without taking a photo of something that catches my eye.  Vacations are a little easier to get away from technology as the demands of work and your normal life are not present however the first few days were very difficult.   My main goals were to  do nothing work-related,  not read a bit of news, stay 100% off all social media and email, and use none of the apps that I use on an almost daily basis.  Those apps that show you daily streaks and

Sea Glass: Collecting Beach Treasures

Last weekend, I was looking through my collection of sea glass and I offered a few suggestions about what to look for and where to collect in my last blog post.  Today, I would like to share a few finds that are a little less common and thrilling when found well tumbled on the shore.   These two were among my first finds on South Padre Island in Texas and began my hunt for sparkling treasures any time I find myself along a coast.  The blue is fairly rare and likely from an old Noxzema container, V icks bottle, or other medication or poison that has not been packaged in cobalt blue glass for a long time.  I have a few cobalt blue pieces but not many.  The knob is slightly bowed underneath so I would think the lid to pottery jar or jug.  Both are exceptionally s mooth and well tumbled.  Both likely churning in the ocean for 50 years or more. At times I will find glass with writing, patterns, or the spirals of the neck of a bottle which are always fun to try to identify.   The spiral pi

Monterey California Sea Glass Adventure

I was recently "organizing" my collection of sea glass which basically means that I was taking time to explore and admire my collection.  I began collecting sea glass many years ago when on South Padre Island in Texas and I found a piece of beach glass and pottery at the waterline.  I didn't even realize that pottery or glass became so weathered and smoothed by the ocean until that point and I was hooked.  On my many trips to a beach point since my first find, I am on the lookout for the gleaming piece of glass lying in the sand. After I began looking for glass, I would find one or two pieces on most trips to Southern California but on my last trip to the Monterey Bay area of California, I brought home almost four pounds of glass.   Most of my finds were common glass colors of green, white, and brown but there were several rarer finds of blue, milk glass, or pieces that have clearly been tumbling for close to 100 years.   If you are interested in finding or collecting sea

Grackles Command the Backyard

  The grackle is one of the larger birds that I see frequenting my backyard.  They do not tend to go to the feeder thankfully as I imagine that they would make quite a mess.  They will, however, peck in the grass and on occasion eat the jujube fruit dropped by the sparrows.  As I explained in an earlier post , the sparrows seem playful and happy in their fruit feast.  The grackles however become very territorial and if they find a fruit that they claim as their own, they will continue picking it up and flying here and there until they feel they are safe from thieves and then very quickly eat.   I will admit that the grackle was one of my most disliked birds in Arizona until my daughter began pointing out all the interesting things about this bird.  My dislike stemmed from a large ficus tree that we had in the backyard of a former home.  The grackles would nest in the tree in the evening and would make so much noise that I would need to close the door while having dinner just to hold a

Life Among the Saguaro Cactus

  Life Among the Saguaro Cactus Last week, I shared my enthusiasm for the mighty saguaro cactus that towers over the Arizona desert.  As I was organizing photos I came across several that reminded me of the varied life that not only survives but thrives among the cactus needles.  During the early spring and well into the hot summer, a wide variety of birds can be seen making their nest in the many holes of the cactus.  The Gila woodpecker will peck away at the flesh and carve out an ample opening for their nest and then year after year a variety of birds claim these cavities as their temporary home.   These entrances are typically high in the air and are well guarded by the parent.  As you can see in the photo above, as the birds come in and out the needles can be worn away and the area directly around the entrance may be void of those prickly needles. At times, a rather large area of a saguaro has been carved away and doves tend to prefer these areas for their home.  They are protect