First the 'not much else'. July has been warm and humid. I was not surprised to read where some local immigrants were interviewed about Essex County summers. They were from tropical Africa and said that the heat and humidity here is as bad or worse than where they came from. We can have temps as low as 83 F but the humidity makes it feel like 99 F. What that means is that it is difficult to breathe, and being in the shade isn't much cooler. Take 90 F in Albuquerque, a desert city, and it can feel like 86 F. Low humidity makes things more comfortable, and being in the shade feels much better. Just think of saunas. 140 F is quite nice until a cup of water is thrown on the hot rocks. It turns to steam (humidity) and when that hits your skin it burns. The temperature has not risen, just the humidity. We are expecting high 90s this coming week yet again, and with the humidity it will feel like a sauna. Sadly, air conditioning is not universal in this area. We keep our house at 77 F in the summer with central air, but our electric bill doubles as a result. Many people do not have it, and suffer a lot from the heat. This is not a nice place to be in July and August, except for a few rare days when the humidity and temps both drop to a comfort level. The heat and humidity also produce wicked storms. Our last power outage was a major one (almost 9 hours), though many people went five days without it. And it blew out a lot of computers and modems, too. We were racing around the house unplugging everything last week, as the storm hit very suddenly. The power went on and off about a dozen times before it finally went dark. That's the part that kills electronics.
Lone Mountain Homestead
A personal blog that discusses music, art, craft beer, travel, literature, and astronomy.
Sunday, 12 July 2026
Four Documentary Movies and Not Much Else
Saturday, 4 July 2026
The Big Heat and The Big Wind
Tuesday, 30 June 2026
Books Read June 2026
I only read one book per month now from my Avon/Equinox SF Rediscovery series, alternating between Kenneth Bulmer and E. C. Tubb, though a few other related authors may still trickle in now and again. In addition I read four books from my Delphi Classics collection and then one more not related. I finished up with two essays by Stephen Jay Gould. So, six books and two essays.
Scorpio Ablaze is #41 in the Dray Prescott series of fantasy novels by Kenneth Bulmer, who writes as Alan Burk Akers. This is one of the poorer entries in the series, as Dray attempts to unify the rest of Paz against the evil fish heads. The fish heads are the Daleks of this world, mostly one-dimensional mass murderers. This reader is growing quite sick of them. Once again there are epic battles, including a pretty decent air ship versus airship one. The highlight of the book is the reunification of Dray with Delia and the rest of his main buddies, an invincible group of allies if ever there was one. But Bulmer once again relies on yet another evil wizard to thwart Dray's plans, as if the fish heads weren't enough. How many times has Dray had to defeat an evil sorcerer or sorceress in this series, one who is backing the bad guys? It grows thin after six or seven times. And, unashamedly, there is no ending to this book. Dray is once again captured by the Star Lords and whirled out of his most recent crisis--Delia has been captured by the fish heads and he was giving chase. Really? Yawn. ** stars.
Sunday, 28 June 2026
Living in Amherstburg
Monday, 22 June 2026
Summer Solstice Day
It began sunny and cool and ended rainy and cool. So no visible sunset, though we marked it yesterday. We were never able to see the summer solstice sunset from our house before, but we can now thanks to a new home being built across the street. We knew it would rain, so we watched it set on the 20th. And we can also see the winter solstice sunset and sunrise from home, too. Trees block our summer sunrise. Not that we'd be up for it at that time anyway.
Tuesday, 16 June 2026
Movie Catch Up
Thursday, 11 June 2026
Zork Nemesis: A Replay Review
I first played Zork Nemesis, a PC game from 1996, in June and July of 2000. I finished it, with hints, in just under 26 hours of total game play. It instantly became one of my favourite games, scoring 86%. This put it ahead of the original Myst for me, but behind Riven and Obsidian. Thus it became my third favourite game back in the day. How does it stand up today? Deb and I played it as a team, and we took just under 17 hours, using my notes from 2000 to help us out. There are spoilers, so beware.


























































