Category Archives: Health & Nature

life = risk

If you haven’t failed, you haven’t lived.

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Photo of the Day – Gray Squirrel

Squirrel

Gray squirrel in our yard (photo by Kenn Stearns)

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Photo of the Day – Rain

Down pour

A "frog-strangler" in Northwest Houston (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Last weekend the heavens opened and massive amounts of moisture were released. It was the first measurable precipitation since April 17.

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Photo of the Day – Home Sweet Farm

Organic farm blackboard menu

Blackboard menu for Home Sweet Farm is off the Bluebonnet Trail in Washington County near Brenham, TX (photo by Kenn Stearns)


The 22-acre Home Sweet Farm near Brenham, TX grows more than 100 vegetables using natural techniques. Farmer Brad has been a professional organic horticulturist since 1991.

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Photo of the Day – Live Oak

Live Oak

Live oak (photo by Kenn Stearns)

It was news to me that live oak has more to do with a tree staying green through the winter (hey look, I’m alive!) than a specific type of oak. But there is a Southern live oak that’s an actual species. Ever heard of a mott? In Texas, a mott is a small grove of live oaks. If you wanna see a mott in Britain you may meet a prostitute. A mott in Dublin is a girlfriend. Who woulda known?

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Photo of the Day – Blue Jay

Blue Jay on the Peanut Pantry

Blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata) takes a peanut (photo by Kenn Stearns)

This morning I upgraded our peanut feeder because the blue jays were emptying it within one day. The new “Peanut Pantry” has a larger capacity and the blue jays wasted little time getting to work.

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Photo of the Day – Dentistry

Dentist Bill

Closeup of an American Dental Association claim form for dentistry services (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Dentists, oral surgeons, and orthodontists played a leading role in the drama of my youth. My teeth were a much bigger mess than they are now. They were growing in funky directions, some permanent teeth never made it, all photos from my formative school years reveal a face full of metal, and my jaw doesn’t function like everyone’s. Over the decades the interior of my face has been stabbed, drilled, cut, carved, sliced, wired, banded, filled, bridged, capped, and professionally flossed. In my mind, Freddy Krueger is a wuss compared to anyone engaged in dentistry. But my current dentist changed all that, one year and filling at a time.

In an era of ObamaCare, health maintenance organizations, and multi-office dental clinics staffed by a dentist-du-jour, my dentist only has one office and works with his wife. My dentist and his wife know my name, and the names of my family members. My dentist doesn’t need no stickin’ hygienist – he and his wife handle my checkups all by themselves. My dentist gives me a new toothbrush after each visit. Over the years I’ve recommended my dentist to friends. I trust my dentist to care for my wife and children. Remarkably, I’ve become good friends with my dentist and his wife.

While it’s not out of the ordinary for anyone to consider having a dentist as a friend, it is from my perspective extraordinary. I am dental fear’s poster child. Whatever you call it – odontophobia, dentophobia, dentist phobia, dental anxiety – I’m there. The horrific hallucinations I’ve experienced while under the influence of various anesthetics propelled dentists to a level of abhorrence for which there are no words. Drill-wielding goggled freaks in crisp white jackets have played a starring role in my nightmares for decades. Rinse and spit. Giant stainless steel syringes with glistening needles. The first time I saw the infamous Is. It. Safe? scene in the film Marathon Man it was easy to identify – finally, an accurate portrayal of how I felt.

I’m not the easiest patient. I use humor and antics to express my über nervousness. It would be easy to imagine my dentist retelling stories to his senior dental students about another strange encounter with his eccentric patient who asks too many questions, talks incessantly, and interferes. Not long ago when a permanent crown didn’t feel to me like it was seated properly, I reached in and took it out as soon as my dentist turned away. In the process I almost swallowed the little jewel. It wasn’t a conscious act of stupidity, but rather a misguided effort to help. Yesterday only once did I catch myself not breathing during drilling for a shiny new filling.

But my dentist shrugs off these peculiarities. He and his wife do their best to allay my fear. My dentist can administer a shot of Novocaine better than anyone else on the entire planet. I used to require “sedation dentistry,” nitrous oxide (aka laughing gas) before enjoying the Novocaine, but my dentist got me over that. Yesterday I went in with a broken tooth and we talked and laughed about popular issues – family, health care, politics, and the economy. My dentist proposed a filling when others may have recommended a more expensive crown. We laughed about my dental insurance coverage. I don’t ever recall laughing about anything while visiting a dentist.

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Photo of the Day – Iris

Iris

Irises in our back yard (photo by Kenn Stearns)

The name iris comes from the Greek word for rainbow, reflecting the many colors associated with the flowers. There are almost 300 species in the genus Iris – with names as colorful as the flowers: snake’s head, blackberry lily, and Siberian iris. The Tennessee State Flower is the Purple Iris. Several famous paintings by Vincent van Gogh featured irises. The fleur-de-lis is a stylized iris. Orris root (rhizomes of an iris variety) are used in medicine, perfume, and gin. Iris plantings are often incorporated into waste water processing efforts to improve water quality because the plants consume pollutants. We use irises at home in our back yard as ornamental plants – and they’re at times closely admired by our children.

Iris Admirer

Iris admirer (photo by Kenn Stearns)

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Photo of the Day – Avian Chaos

Avian Chaos

Avian chaos (photo by Kenn Stearns)

As a follow on to yesterday’s post, this is an earlier behind-the-scenes view of some pieces parts associated with our back yard bird feeders. The mourning doves seized the moment, cleverly exploiting the opportunity to gain access to seed. They created a chaotic feeding frenzy by upsetting containers, spilling seed, and repeatedly tipping over parts as they flew from one piece to another. Click on the photo twice for a larger view. There are more doves on the ground, out of frame. Clever birds, not.

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Photo of the Day – Caged Bird Feeder

Caged Bird Feeder

Caged bird feeder (photo by Kenn Stearns)

For years our back yard bird feeder has been overrun by larger birds, primarily mourning doves and grackles. These birds move through a large amount of seed in a short time. They also make a mess by plowing through seed in search of favorites while flinging the rest on the ground. Despite a few ground feeders, the spill germinates in the grass and makes a new mess.

Adding a cage surround to the feeder means mourning doves and grackles cannot fit through the wire to get inside. Cardinals, house finches, blue jays, sparrows, and other medium- to small-size birds have easy access. The feed lasts longer, there’s less waste, and the larger birds, now relegated to ground feeding,  help reduce spill so there’s less unwanted growth in the lawn. Add a baffle to the pole and even the squirrels are befuddled.

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Photo of the Day – Queen Elizabeth Rose

Queen Elizabeth Rose

The Queen Elizabeth Rose® from our garden (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Known for its beauty and elegance, the award-winning medium-pink Queen Elizabeth Rose® was bred by Dr. Walter Lammerts in 1952 and marked the ascension of Elizabeth Alexandra Mary to the throne. Known as the “father of scientific rose-breeding,” Dr. Lammerts’ work drove the American Rose Society to create an entirely new class of rose called Grandiflora (Latin for “large-flowered”) and in 1954 the Queen Elizabeth became the first member. Grandiflora class roses are prodigious bloomer, vigorous, hardy bearers of large showy blooms with tall deep petals. Some varieties produce long-stemmed, individual roses.

In 1922, Lammerts (1904-1996) graduated from Riverside Polytechnic High School. He earned both his undergraduate degree and and doctorate in horticulture from the University of California, Berkeley. From 1940-1945 he was a professor at University of California, Los Angeles. With a doctorate in genetics, he produced almost 50 new varieties of roses between 1940 and 1981. He was one of the fathers of the creationist movement, studied the Bristlecone Pine (the oldest living organism on the planet), and conducted extensive studies of Galapagos Island finches. He was a rose breeder, author, plant horticulturist, and researcher.

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Photo of the Day – Springtime in Minneapolis

A dusting of snow in Minneapolis

Springtime in Minneapolis (photo by Kenn Stearns)

April in Minneapolis may include a dusting of snow.

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Photo of the Day – Daffodil

Spring Fishing

Spring fishing in Oklahoma (photo by Kenn Stearns)

The first daffodils of springtime along the banks of a river in Oklahoma with our son fishing in the background.

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Photo of the Day – First Rose

First Rose

First rose (photo by Kenn Stearns)

The garden theme for Photo of the Day continues. At dawn’s early light, after dragging almost a dozen bags out to the curb for the garbage collectors, I wandered to the back yard to admire what hours of work invested over the weekend had produced. We have several rose bushes, but our first bloom is on one of the climbing plants. Low warm light from the sunrise seemed to make it glow.

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Photo of the Day – Blooms

Azalea blooms

Azelea blooms (photo by Kenn Stearns)

Springtime is my favorite time of the year in Houston. Although the annual Azalea Trail happened earlier this month without azalea blooms, they’re everywhere now. Texas wildflowers adorn the highways, especially bluebonnets. White and pink Indian hawthorns blooms are out. Everything has been brown for so long it makes the blooms all that much more appreciated.

I took the photo above a few minutes ago, trying to mix a little of the afternoon sun with the bright color of the buds. The blooms will fire off soon and be gone soon after Easter. In Chinese culture, azaleas are known as the “thinking of home bush” (xiangsi shu). No matter where I travel, when I see azaleas in bloom I always think of home.

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