WARM LAPTOP AND A COLD BODY I haven't been in the mood for doing much this Saturday. I think I've got into the habit of doing nothing because I caught a bad cold last week and it had me out of action for about five days. It's actually been ten years since I last caught a cold or flu, thanks mostly to my lack of human interaction in all probability. Cold and flus, to say nothing of COVID-19, have apparantly been spreading more fiercly than ever over this winter now passed. Not that winter seems like its over. The sun is rising early, true enough, but this morning the house felt as cold as any time over the last few months. Still the frogs are liking it - singing away as they do every evening. It seems especially wet, though a map on TV showed the rainfal as right on average. I think I'm eternally skewed to expect dryness because I grew up during long droughts in the 2000s. But that makes it a great time for my dam tours. Following my visit to the West Barwon Reservoir, I tracked down some info on other Australian dams, compiling them into an initial list of interesting ones to visit. Weekend before last, just before I got sick, I made my way, by one of my very enjoyable but extremely convoluted routes, to the Lal Lal reservoir. Annoying the road to the dam was gated off, but the empty observation area did offer a perfect view of the reservoir, even accented by a few eagles riding on the updraughts and fighting with each other in the air. I continued on to Lal Lal falls, which must have been at full flow. In contrast to the reservoir, the falls were very popular and the carpark was about full. Still I found some quiet spots to admire them, in fact I got quite brave, given my fear of heights, climbing on the the roots of a huge gumtree growing on the edge of the valley to get a great photo of the waterfall framed by the tree's twisted old branches. I ran out of time to see the other waterfall though because I needed to go and pick up a 1960s US Air Force electronics textbook that someone was giving away in nearby Ballarat. Studying the map again later, I see that there's another road that goes close to the dam and stops at a camp site, so altogether it would definitely be worth another trip some time. I'm actually typing this on my old laptop, the 33MHz 486 that refuses to start up cold. I'm trying it as my new 'bedroom computer' to replace the 80s luggable which no longer boots due to a dead (and not easily replaced) hard disk. The afternoons are a rare time when it's nice and warm in my bedroom due to the sun shining in, and I usually never get to take advantage of it. So I decided to type up a phlog post from bed. Trouble is that I had to cuddle this old lappy for almost an hour before it was warm enough to boot, while flicking through Sun Tzu's The Art of War (translated by Samuel B. Griffith), and now it's not really warm anymore. In fact it's cold, and it's past time to cook dinner. So I'll bid you goodbye and skuttle away into some part of the house that has heating. Well I guess I'll try uploading this first - one plus of using this as my bedroom computer is that it actually has WiFi. via an old PCMCIA adapter, Linux 2.2, and way too much effort that I put in as a teenager setting the drivers up. - The Free Thinker