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“Gosh come quick — the clothesline fell over and it’s starting to rain!”

The world lives primarily on solar energy. However, in order to convince us to stay addicted to fossil fuels, there are whole series of stats demonstrating our dependence on them. Of course, as my father used to say, you can make statistics prove anything.

If you wash your clothes and dry them in an electric dryer, that pumps up electrical usage stats. If you use a gas dryer, it pumps up gas usage stats, but if you use solar energy to dry the clothes… oops, somehow or other that DOESN’T count for solar’s stats.

This creates an unbalanced presentation of energy consumption patterns and is used to sway public opinion to keep thinking it is okay, no necessary, to be addicted to oil.

Besides environmental considerations, I also prefer a clothesline over a dryer because of the intangible of sweet smelling laundry that no chemical additive in detergent can approximate.

When we moved into our current location, one of the first things I did was put up a clothesline. At that time I made a field expedient decision to reuse a locust post because it was the right size and readily available. I didn’t have a cured post long enough for what I needed, and didn’t want to wait a year for a freshly cut one to cure.

While the life expectancy of a post can be 25 years or more when installed cured, uncured it can be half that. If i can’t remove the bark from a locust post by hand, I won’t put it in the ground. So I took a chance on a used post that I thought was early in its cycle.

Apparently I was wrong, because there was Vidya yelling for help, only 12 years later. I hurried out and sure enough, it had started to sprinkle a bit so we hustled to get the clothes off the line which was complicated by some of them being pinned under the post.

Due to the urgency of the sprinkling rain and the darkness of the incoming clouds, I didn’t take the time to grab my camera and snap a shot with all the clothes lying on the ground. Would have made a better shot.

Back around 1986 I bought a Mac Plus. I had it for years. The power supply burned out on it eventually, and I replaced it, but when the second one fried I abandoned it. Still, I had payed so much for it at the time (computers used to be much more expensive than they are now), I didn’t have the heart to throw it away.

I’ll probably show up in the court of Yamarajah with it in a backpack.

I had put a second crossbar on the locust post and made a platform on it so I had a place for the Mac Plus. When the post fell over, the Mac went flying but did a tuck and roll and landed on its feet.

I shortened up the lines and made the previous center post the new end post. This cuts the capacity of the clothes line in half, but with all the kids gone, it is adequate for our current needs.