Sunday, June 21, 2026

Day 5049: Happy Fathers Day! & Multi.functional Backpack

"Together": china marker drawing on junk paper collage on journal page.


                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click: Ambrosia, Biggest Part of Me.


2GN2S

 Happy Fathers Day!


Dad and I, 1994.


For Fathers Day, I was thinking today about some of my Dad stories. There are a lot of them, I call this one ... the reluctant barber.


At age 15, I returned from Australia to live with my Dad in his tiny house in Hollywood and start high school at John Marshall. As mentioned earlier, Dad was thrifty, frugal, prudent & penny-pinching. All of those! And in fairness, he did grow up during the depression. He was a single man after the divorce when I was 5, so he didn't need much or have much. Early on, Dad decided I could save him some money. He bought a barber kit from Sears.




I hated the idea, but that didn't matter, he announced that I was his new barber. I asked, what if I botch it up? He said: "you'll learn." What if I nick it and you have a bald spot? He said, "it will grow back."


I did both of those, but he never minded, since it was free. This went on for three years until I left for college. But that wasn't the end of it. Whenever we lived in the same proximity, the reluctant barber was put back on duty. This was true to the very end. Dad passed at age 86.


Some of you know, Dad had wanted a boy, so he only called me Jack.




 


A German startup has designed a multifunctional backpack that transforms into an insulated sleeping space equipped with solar panels, aiming to provide practical support for people experiencing homelessness. The concept combines portability, shelter, and access to basic energy needs in a single product.
By functioning as both a backpack and a temporary sleeping solution, the design addresses challenges such as carrying personal belongings and finding a more comfortable place to rest. The integrated solar panels can potentially provide power for charging small electronic devices used for communication and accessing support services.
Homelessness affects millions of people worldwide, with many facing difficulties related to shelter, safety, and maintaining connections to healthcare, employment opportunities, and social assistance programs. Innovative products like this highlight how design thinking can be applied to address everyday challenges faced by vulnerable populations.
While technological solutions alone cannot solve the complex causes of homelessness, they can complement broader efforts involving affordable housing, mental health services, employment support, and community-based assistance. Practical innovations may help improve dignity, safety, and quality of life for those in difficult circumstances.

This initiative demonstrates how technology can be directed toward humanitarian goals rather than convenience alone. It reflects a growing movement within social innovation that focuses on creating solutions with meaningful real-world impact for underserved communities.
 



  
 
A 7 minute video,  Autistic Teen Artist, here.
 
 
Just because ...

Grey-hooded Warbler




Sunday's Smiles ... 

 




















Hoping you see all the good things in your day.


  


 

 

 

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Day 5048: New, to me, Artist! & The Walrus.

 

"Reverie": old photo, junk paper collage, digital.


                                                                      
  

Want music?



    Click: Al Simon, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover.


2GN2S

I found a new, to me, Artist!











* I love the joy and freedom in her work, it really appeals to me.

Her website says: 

Susan Webb Tregay AWS, NWS, TWSA and Watercolor USA Honor Society, author of Master Disaster, 5 Ways to Rescue Desperate Watercolors [North Light Publishers, 2007] 
30 years of professional experience, painting, teaching and judging exhibitions. Her colorful and fun, acrylic and watercolor paintings were developed from her exposure to folk art in Hendersonville, North Carolina.




The walrus is one of the Arctic's most remarkable giants.🥰
With massive tusks, sensitive whiskers, and a body weighing several thousand pounds, this marine mammal is perfectly adapted to life in some of the harshest environments on Earth. While walruses are famous for feeding on large quantities of clams and other shellfish, one of their most extraordinary abilities remains largely unknown.
Hidden within the throat are specialized air-filled pouches that can be inflated when needed. These natural buoyancy chambers help support the walrus while it rests in the water, allowing its enormous body to remain comfortably afloat.
When the pouches are filled with air, a walrus can float almost motionless with its head above the surface and its body hanging vertically beneath the water. This unusual posture allows the animal to relax without constantly swimming or searching for a place to haul out.
The same air sacs also play an important role during breeding season. Male walruses use them as resonating chambers to produce powerful underwater sounds that can travel long distances and help attract mates.
These remarkable adaptations demonstrate how evolution has equipped walruses with unique tools for survival in the Arctic Ocean.
Few sights in nature are as extraordinary as a giant walrus quietly floating upright in the sea, supported by nothing more than air stored within its own body. 


 



  
 
A 2 minute video, Artist, Stephen Wiltshire,



 
Just because ...

Green-tailed Sunbird

Saturday's Smiles ... 

 






















Hoping you feel all the good things in your day.


  


 

 


Friday, June 19, 2026

Day 5047: Former Book/New Book & China's Big Solar Farm.

"To": junk papers collage, digital


                                                                       

  

Want music?



    Click: Paul Simon, You Can Call Me AL.


2GN2S



I finished another great book, Frozen River. Historical, based on fact, set in Maine 1750-1790, I loved it. I like character-driven plots, and this was amazing. It's always sad to end a good book, so I try to have another in the wings.


Now I know this doesn't sound like an appealing read, but it was recommended by my very smart second (?) cousin, Michelle, who knows I have a lot of work to do in order to eventually move. It is neither dour nor heavy, in fact the author assures me "despite its ominous name, Swedish Death Cleaning will not hasten my demise."     I am on book 2, so a quarter in, and feel encouraged. Can a book get me out of these doldrums? We'll see? Thank you, Michelle.




 
In China's Inner Mongolia, on land that was classified as severely degraded desert just fifteen years ago, a solar installation now covers 1,600 square kilometers — an area larger than Hong Kong — and generates 16 gigawatts of clean electricity, enough to power more than 24 million households annually. The Kubuqi Desert Solar Base is the largest solar installation ever built in a single location anywhere on Earth. But what distinguishes Kubuqi from every other large-scale solar project in history is not its generating capacity. It is what happened to the land underneath the panels while the electricity was flowing above.
Before construction, the Kubuqi was one of China's most actively advancing desert zones, with sand dunes consuming productive farmland at the rate of hundreds of meters per year. The panels were deliberately mounted at elevated heights above ground level. The shade they cast reduced surface temperatures, slowed evaporation, and allowed soil moisture to begin accumulating beneath. Within four years of panel installation, vegetation coverage under the array increased from near zero to over 65 percent. Sheep now graze between the panel rows. Crops grow in the shade of panels that generate electricity above them. The desert is physically retreating — and the wider Kubuqi development zone has seen approximately 6,000 square kilometers of previously degraded land restored to productive agricultural use.
China did not build a solar farm that happens to sit on desert land. It built a solar farm that is simultaneously healing the land it occupies, demonstrating that at sufficient scale, renewable energy infrastructure can be an ecological restoration tool as well as a clean electricity generator. The panels face the sun. Underneath them, the earth is coming back to life.
Source: National Energy Administration of China / Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2024



  
 
A 3 minute video,  Monarch Butterflies, here.



 
Just because ...

Grey Catbird




Saturday's Smiles ... 




 











Hoping you see all the good things in your day.