We have been continuing to wind down the garden for the winter, although we have purchased some mums and have transplanted those into containers. Let us see what happens with these. I suspect that at some point they will have to go into the green house or be brought inside. We also planted several varieties of peas as well as some spinach and fenugreek as these are cold weather greens. Rains have come a bit early this year with a good deal of tropical moisture coming from the south. The weather has delayed the well project, but the shallow well seems to be supplying adequate water for now although we do not want to rely on that well as our only source of water. Hopefully the coming rains will help improve the recovery rate of the shallow well. Lately I have been toying with software defined radio on the Linux platform I use. The cheap USB dongle I purchased for USD $10 has proved to have a substantial tunable range from 24 Mhz to 1700 Mhz. The Atom processor on my aging netbook unfortunately can not run some of the gui tools for signal processing as they are quite processor intensive. However some simple command line tools that come with the driver codebase have been able to get me going. Interestingly, I was able to run a 24 hr. sweep of the tunable range of the dongle and render a graphic representation in the form of a waterfall display. See: https://wm.sdf.org/gallery/profile.php?uid=270 (click on the thumbnail) The top scale is the frequency and of course the Y axis is time. In this case it was 24 hours. I was quite surprised at the amount of activity that the little 4" stock antenna was able to pick up considering the terrain and tall trees. I have a 20' galvanized steel pipe that I plan on using as an mast where I can mount a better antenna. Amazingly, I have even been able to get the dongle to work with the Raspberry Pi Zero. How is that for Dxing on a budget? :-D