Month: October 2020
The End of October
Looking up, maybe.
Mill Creek on a Gray and Noisy Morning
Sky
Not including the frequent flyover aircraft, as this section of the creek is directly in the flight path of the nearby WW Regional Airport. Not quiet, especially with the huge gaggles of geese now.
Geese
Extrapolating from a nearside count, I looked down the creek for about half a mile and estimated at least 1,000 geese in various states of flotation, loitering, landing, takeoff and cruising. And sounding off.
Crows
Always in abundance. Always plotting murder.
Hawk
Circled directly over me (a potential target?) for awhile.
Some Very Small Creatures
Coronavirus Diary – October 28
Downtown, Banner Bank on Second Avenue:
Street still life on Maple (with Audi Q-ship):
One of the neighborhood cats likes to recklessly sun itself in the middle of the street:
Meanwhile, trying to avoid thoughts of the upcoming election …
UPDATE 10/31/20: Revisiting the Neighborhood Cat
What the Constitution Means to Me
Now, on Amazon Prime Video, this award-winning and -nominated Broadway production:
Coronavirus Diary – October 27
Morning Sky:
Dogs, Still An Ongoing Factor:
Nature Journal’s COVID-19 Modeling Forecasts
Nature, first published in 1869, describes itself as “a weekly international journal publishing the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology on the basis of its originality, importance, interdisciplinary interest, timeliness, accessibility, elegance and surprising conclusions.”
Its Nature Medicine article published yesterday, October 23, 2020, entitled “Modeling COVID-19 scenarios for the United States” presents a fascinating and sobering (and perhaps somewhat terrifying) forecast. The idea was to explore the potential outcomes from differing levels of social distancing and mask usage. The article is lengthy and demands close attention to its rigorous scientific detail and presentation (and I haven’t finished the whole thing, even after studying it for over two hours), but an overall conclusion states, in part:
“Projections of current non-pharmaceutical intervention strategies by state—with social distancing mandates reinstated when a threshold of 8 deaths per million population is exceeded (reference scenario)—suggest that, cumulatively, 511,373 (469,578–578,347) lives could be lost to COVID-19 across the United States by 28 February 2021. We find that achieving universal mask use (95% mask use in public) could be sufficient to ameliorate the worst effects of epidemic resurgences in many states. Universal mask use could save an additional 129,574 (85,284–170,867) lives from September 22, 2020 through the end of February 2021, or an additional 95,814 (60,731–133,077) lives assuming a lesser adoption of mask wearing (85%), when compared to the reference scenario.”
Wear your masks, people.
Update – 9:43pm: I see that Twitter is talking about this report.
Wedge

Downtown on a Rainy Day

Back in the Days …
A recent post by my friend jamesa …
Back in the days when an informed populace was deemed important to the strength of the country, schools taught a class called American Government.
Here’s your final exam.