


Tonight is the customary Closing Ceremony of Sea Stack Appreciation Week.
Sad. By the way, it was that picture that made me want to celebrate Sea Stack Appreciation week, the way our forefathers did.
A couple of more user-contributed sea stacks located at Rialto Beach, Washington, from our own nurse ratched.
You know, now that our shared sea stack odyssey is over, I'd like to think we've all learned some things along the way. Important things. Some things about friendship, and a perhaps a fresh openness to the beauty of nature.
We've learned a little about those things. But mostly, we've learned about sedimentary rock and erosion, which I think is far more important. Because friendship is stupid and nature is gay.
To close with a YouTube-style "call to action" and engagement: What have you learned about sea stacks that you will take with you through your further experiential journeying? What Life Notes have you taken from your new understanding of limestone and schistocity which you can add to your Action Plan and Goal Agenda for self-actualization?
Another handsome fella.
I think this is one of those fish that clean other fishes' teeth.
Baby goats playing on an improvised slide.
The world's most dangerous cat. Number one may surprise you!
Very large backyard Lego train set.