These days I am at the marina about 6:45. This is a very nice time of the morning. The sun is just rising about the tall trees to the east. Skull Creek is often a smooth sheet of water. It is quiet, except when I startle birds on the dock. Most squawk and fly away on my approach, but one great heron does not. There are two species of large white herons here. Great and Snowy. Great have yellow beaks and black feet. Snowy have black beaks and yellow feet. This particular Great stands on the main dock beside a large power boat. He is about waist high to me. He keeps an eye on me as I keep literally an eye on him. He lets me pass within an arm or neck length. I could reach out and pat him on the head. He could reach out and stab me with his beak. Neither of us do so. We pass one another in peace and go about our business. Me to work on GANNET. He to catch his breakfast. Though one day I did say, “Good morning” as I passed. He pulled his head back and looked startled.
I painted the bilge and the small stowage compartment beneath the companionway yesterday. I am finished painting GANNET’s interior. Hooray.
I sanded the floorboards today and will apply Deks Olje to them and the remaining interior wood tomorrow. I expect the floorboards will need more than one coat. But this job is done. A photo will follow.
One of the sites I view each morning is Ars Technica. They recently ran an article about AI cheating at Brown University which I find interesting in many ways, including that the reaction from the university administrators is described as ‘fairly tepid’.
I bicycle to GANNET. Before Carol retired and began to live here full time, I bicycled everywhere. I enjoy riding a bicycle. We forget how socially revolutionary an invention the bicycle was. Suddenly the range of the great majority of people who did not own a horse or a boat was greatly extended.




















