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Dienstag, 24. September 2024

A new and very different bike and some thoughts on the ""bugout bike concept"

It has been in the making for a long time.  Ages ago, as it seems, when the World was a very different place, I was looking for a new bike.  There was a Surly Troll sitting in the window of my then favourite bikeshop. I was all for riding Enduro trails, though, and, well, that frame came with a rigid fork. Actually I was being aware even back then, that the party was nearing the end. I do love riding a lot. I have been riding with passion for a good 40 years almost, I have been riding races and down places and trails with 35mm of rubber eraser suspension up front that are not open to the public, including hikers, because they are too dangerous nowadays. I thought I would live to ride back then and even designed T-shirts with that slogan. I now know that it was more that I rode to live. 

I have been a people-pleaser all my life.  And a huge part of my riding with others was because I never got respect for anything I did and most of the time, for no other reason than the fact that I am different, I was actively denied it.  Mountainbike riding gave me acknowledgement, even though it came at a price.  The fact that few people talk about is that a lot (not all of it, obviously) of the progression of a lot of riders is driven either by the need for acknowledgement or a rather narcisstic impulse.  I did ride with a lot of narcisstic assholes, and, well, that seems to be, amongst a lot of awesome people, be a rather integral part of Mountainbike culture. 

This leads to a rather unforgiving culture on a ride. You got an old bike? Of course there are always great and awesome groups who will always wait for you and encourage you. I have even been gifted old freeride bikes in order to have more fun, and, Totopete, if you read this, you should know that I never forgot that act of kindness.  Others, however, see this as an opportunity to ride you to mincemeat to enlarge their tiny egos, and, unfortunately, the Club I helped found, while of course not exclusively so, developed into that category.  So, when I was shopping for a frame, while I knew perfectly well that the Surly Troll, that rigid steel frame, might be the more sustainable option, I instead opted for a Dartmoor Primal Enduro frame with a big fork up front. And do not get me wrong, I did have a lot of fun with it, and it was more than adequate riding with the morons.  

But my riding style changed. I do still love me some gnar.  But I started to go on epic rides more and more. And people want to ride the same sanitized trails and lines in the City limits over and over again in order to scrub off some seconds on STRAVA. For prestige or success, or whatever it is.  I go out riding in order to see places, wild animals, look into remote valleys and ride natural trails. Maybe have a cuppa trailcoffee or riding out to some trailside Café. Of course this is neither better nor inferior, it is just different. Often I would rise early and come back well into the night. 

Well, maybe my riding style didn't change that much.  I adapted to the group, but I have always ridden that way when I have had a choice. I find it way more wholesome than what we are taking for "progression". Progressing happens naturally when you are just doing what you like. 

That steel frame sat in the back of the shop all the while. Every fecking day the world turned into a huge pile of shit a little more.  Every day, it became a little harder to afford riding for sport alone. A sprocket suddenly cost 30ü€. That is 300€ for a wear item that maybe lasts a year. Don't get me wrong, you still get Chinese spare parts for a halfway decent price, but they are obviously not compatible. It is more cost-effective to replace the cranks and (because you then need to), the bottom bracket, than just buy a new chainring, because this is what needs to be replaced.  An overhaul of your suspension costs as much as a good, used fork. 29" is essentially just 700C or 28" with beefier rims and bigger tyres, but can cost up to 150€ more.  Nothing wrong with the idea, actually.  I am just not quite enthused if someone wants to sell me moonbeams. 

So, the Enduro hardtail getting a bit tired, so to say, and with a bit of money that I unfortunately inherited, I just said "screw it" and bought that Surly Troll.  Because it has a steel frame that you could weld back again in a smithy, because it comes with a lot of bosses for carrier racks, because it comes with a fork that doesn't cost an arm and a leg and, well, also because a pre-2012 Surly Troll had reportedly legendary ride properties, and because you do not read a lot about it. 

Why that, you ask? Well, I no longer trust the media a lot.  I was fortunate enough to learn a bit, early on, concerning bike engineering. Essentially, we built our own components in ' em days.  To do that, you have to delve a bit into mechanics, ergonomics, and plain old physics. Also, having ridden for 40 years means you know what works on paper and what works, when the rubber hits the dirt.  At least for me. And while the media don't report utter nonsense, they are also dependant on advertising for financing. If you follow the flow of money you always arrive at the very few corporations still left on the open market. And, believe it or not, some corporations are actually part of the military industrial complex.  I shit you not.  On the other hand, well, I just want to ride.  To be honest, I try not to be a part of the shitshow, but here I am, using a Google product.  And since I simply don't matter at all, I simply allow myself the luxury of just getting away from it all when I go riding.  I know pretty much that while I obviously still push myself, I most certainly will not master some triple backflip can-can busdriver-to-hospital, and I no longer care. I know if I break a crucial part of my body it will hurt double and I will take triple the time to heal.  And I like doing things that are good for my soul, given that it hurts a bit after a life that was not exactly easy, and five un-treated burnouts in a row lead to a mindset that I do not need unnecessary stress in my life anymore. Don't misunderstand that, though. I still do push myself, but it is a part of what I am. I do not want to push myself anymore if anyone tells me I have to.  My attitude leads to performance. I like to work hard and give it my best, because it feels good.  I just refuse to adapt to toxicity anymore.  The bike industry, however, is partly rather toxic, as you will see.  
Building up the bike presented a lot of challenges.  I had to go around in my county a lot in order to find spare parts. Corporate policies of the bike industry can only be called diabolic these days. 
The aftermarket chainrings, I got, were designed not to fit the old cranks by a fraction of a millimetre, just so you get frustrated and throw the old ones away. Not with uncle Fimbulmyrk, tho', who knows which end of a file to hold.  



 Next issue was the rear derailleur.  The cogs on it where ground down by years of hard use. It was cheaper to get a new one than to fecking replace the goddamn cogs. Frustrated, I just hauled that sorry wreck to the shop. I got the impression that they were not too enthused.  Their mechanic proudly showed me his new electronic shifting system. You get an app to adjust it, and the app can also measure your torque and cadence and offer you training advice. Maybe even give you nutritional "suggestions" via AI.  Also, it is connected to Google or Komoot or STRAVA, imagine that, what a brave new world we live in! Isn't that marvellous?!

Yes, it is NOT.  Starting with the very simple fact that it needs energy, and originally, a bicycle has an efficiency ratio of 98%. A bicycle is maybe the last beautiful machine that mankind has invented.  That would be or should be completely sufficient in times of climate change crisis to completely dismantle it as unnecessary. 

But unfortunately, it is more to it. It is about customer control, and, ultimately, the ultimate citizen control.  I spare you the elaboration.  Uwe was just intrigued by the technology, and I can perfectly relate to that. Don't get me wrong on this.  It is a fascinating technology, and would be just awesome.  But I know politicians intimately, and there are, while a lot of them are pretty decent people, some, and in rather powerful positions, that are not.  Not every politician is a crackpot technocratic would-be dictator. But the very few that are should make you very careful around anything that says "digital", " AI", "Networks" , "surveillance" and "control" in one description.  And do not get me wrong again, either. I honestly cannot say, because I cannot know.  I really just want to rather be safe than sorry. 

And actually, my main reason is that I want to keep it simple and reliable and serviceable.  I want to ride. I am the one who rides, and my capabilities are propelling the bike. I haven't trained for ages and I am getting old and out of shape. I do not want to cheat myself into believing I were 20. I am not. I do not want to constantly worry whether or not I charged my motor or shifter battery or whatever. I want to be able to leave my Smartphone at home and just take along some brick phone. Not that I would, I do love the camera. But I do not want to worry about it telling Mommy in the US about my torque and cadence and heart rate and speed and calory intake or where I have been. I do want to emphasize that I cannot know.  But I go to some pretty remote places with wildlife and serene little forest trails, and I would rather not have some STRAVA- nutters spoil that for good.  I do not want to think how long my fork will hold up without service. I do not want to bother to monitor my heart rate and calory intake. I don't have a talent for racing. I do not want to indebt myself in order to belong.  I have learned the hard way that everything I could do would not make me fit in. I tried, and I tried hard, and broke myself in the process five fucking times in order to belong to fucking Karens, male or female.  Debt is a method of control. And I decided to rather be more feral.  This is the hard way.  A rigid fork means pain. But I fail to see the point of taking the sport too serious, because I do not take myself too serious. I know that I am not the centre of the world.  I want to ride.  I want to ride free. I might not be the best rider there is, but I am also not the worst, but all that doesn't matter. 


The  bike, which I brought to the shop in the state you can see on the photo, wheels and everything pre-installed and with little technology on it, took said shop three months to complete.  

Do not get me wrong again, all good, and I did not get mad at them. But I simply propose they were, while on the one hand, somewhat relieved about the bike that was, quote unquote "like to those in the good ol' times", also a bit pissed off by it.  Because, well, it doesn't generate a lot of money.  A big bikestore in Marburg, where I was looking for an alternative, told me they would rather not have the customer do anything on the bike her- or himself, and even offer rescue repairs in the woods..."if you get the App" in order to prevent you from even repairing a flat. When I objected that I also have worked as a race mechanic when applying for a job as a product manager with a corporation most of their wheels come from, that guy didn't even reply but elaborated endlessly about their leasing programs and how I could get bonus points when I "got the App". The magic troll and I would sit there still, had we not interrupted his mumbo jumbo by simply rising and walking out of the door.  And that is a reality. The bike industry is about making money and generating data and NFTs, not about bikes or even sustainability.  
Well, you might know how much that pissed  me off. It makes me angry what they try to create from a sport that is utterly democratic and inclusive.  Fact is, a certain percentage of riders are and have always been the rich kids. This percentage is apparently rising.  You don't meet a lot of riders on ratty bikes on the trails, and next to noone at all on the backwoods trails. Well, very well, fairnuff for me. I do not want or need company.  It is the lack of company I strive for, or rather, less, but quality company, and this mindset enables me not to give a runny shit about my bike being compatible with an average group speed. I mean, I don't think I would be too slow at all for a group ride. It is just a luxury to no longer care.  
Now you guys know that I am very much into forest and nature, and this means I also have my contact with bushcraft and survival.  And in the survival and prepping community there is that "bugout" concept. Means, when SHTF, you got a spare car or motorbike or quad or other ATV to get away from the crisis.  One famed YouTube prepper featured a bugout bike (I think it was by Jeep or something). It was a fat bike concept with an E-bike configuration. Some racks, rather martial looks, weighs in at some 25kg and obviously needs a battery.  And it sits in your garage most of the time. Because most of the prepping guys are rather overweight gun-nutters. And of course you need to spare it so that it will work in that special scenario.  It is a piece of gear you buy, and, unfortunately not necessarily often linked to mindset or attitude. 

Well, I actually am not entitled to criticize that.  I learned everything about bugging out from my father. Personally I do think that there is not a lot more to know.  During WW2, my father had been a Hitler youth, until he barely escaped concentration camp for insubordination and was no longer active.  When the allies (fortunately) arrived in the Ruhr region, the Wehrmacht recruited every Hitler youth for the "Volkssturm". Turned out that my father had different ideas.  My granduncle and grandaunt lived in a very rural area in the Sauerland region.  My father deserted and bugged out, not just out of political reasons, but because he was a kid and afraid of being killed and because it was stoopid in the first.  He had some good bike with one speed and a robust frame and balloon tyres he was really familiar with. At one time he rode some 300km to the North Sea in one go on it, so riding it 50km through the woods wasn't a real challenge. He just grabbed a rucksack with a bit of tea and bread and rode away, and it was just a regular ride for him. The bike had a frame pump, he had a repair kit, and a wrench, he went and put on plain clothing and was off.  Nearly got the bike confiscated but lied about a special messenger duty, so that he got to keep the bike and was left alone.  He laid low for a week in a shed on his aunt's and uncle 's property in the woods, the Nazi regime was defeated and he survived.  

Thing is, I want to ride.  I find it rather silly buying a rather high-maintenance bike that requires really complex spare parts to maintain.  When my father broke the cranks on his bike while launching it off a ramp, my grandfather welded them back together in an open coal forge.  Try this with some kind of pedelec drivetrain module.  The bikes of the 1920s were, for the most part, rather simple and sustainable to service.  Why is that important? 

Well, a bicycle is fun and a very beautiful machine for its efficiency.  
There are some goodies I do not want to miss, like decent disc brakes, modern geometry and shifting mechs. 
A bicycle can take you places. If said shit hits the proverbial fan, you need to be able to ride fast and for maybe a longer time through maybe rougher terrain.  
You need a certain amount of training to do that. Relying on a motor is a more complex situation. You want to minimize the chance of things going wrong and a bicycle is not just a single use item.  It is a very useful tool for foraging and going places. And it is also good for the morale, because, if you associate fun with any riding, it offers you a lot of resilience.  So you might consider getting a bicycle also for fun and resilience, not just for some prepping scenario.  

The situation with the bike industry, however, makes it already rather difficult to get a simple, sustainable bike.  The Troll frame and a lot of other Surly frames offer you the option of using rim brakes and a single speed setup.  Making rim brakes is not rocket science, and you can find rim brakes even on junkyards. And fortunately, there are a lot of little corporations like Jones bikes or Binary bikes and other manufacturers catering to those requirements again. Maybe the tides are turning a bit.  
Finally, I could fetch the Troll. Of course, I had to tighten every screw, adjust the mechs and have the brakes serviced (again), but finally got to show it some trails.  
And what can I say? I had heard about the "legendary ride qualities". And, while I have gone to rather exhausting lengths with this post to state that I do not buy into the hype of anyone, well, I cannot but agree with that. 
The bike has a standard, but well-balanced geometry. The fork length is still adjusted to fit a suspension fork, the top tube is 575 mm long. Look here for a spec sheet for the newer model of Troll (but that is no longer available, either): 


Apart from the longer top tube and fork, it is what I have got.  The tubing is Surly 's own triple-butted True Temper 4130 ChroMoly tubing, which can be heat treated.  

The bike, as I said, is quite the opposite of my Enduro hardtail.  But riding it was a rather strange thing.  On the Dartmoor, I got a rather narrow saddle and a dropper post. And get my meaning right: A dropper post is a great thing to have on any bike.  On the Enduro, it is almost as much in use as my shifters.  

On the Surly, I mounted a vintage Brooks Colt saddle, which is not exactly narrow.  

I realized quickly, that, while I intended the Troll to be a commuter and gravel and lighter duty forest trails bike, it asks for more.  If you bang it through some rock gardens, you obviously notice the absence of any squish at all, and of course you go a bit slower, but you don't miss the suspension too much. And when you forget you got a rigid bike and sail off a drop, well, of course it goes #klunk. But there is a rather weird sensation, which few other people might be able to relate to: It whips through as if you were parrying a blow with a really well-made sword. The frame is actually heat treated, and by someone who really knows their shit. This sensation is quite addictive.  Sooner than I had expected, I was flying down trails I also ride my Enduro on. And thing is, I only noticed when I was through the gnar that I completely forgot to lower my saddle at all.  You know, that  Grampa couch of a saddle.  Do not get me wrong: No suspension means you cannot make any mistake at all.  One root not taken on an ideal line will send you arse over teacup into the bushes.  I am most certainly slower than on the Enduro (didn't check yet, because I honestly don't care), but boy, is that fun.  It has its shortcomings on high speed tech, but excels on slow tech and singletrack, up and down, no matter what, you just keep riding.  
It simply does everything. It inspires you to ride, no matter what. 
Epic trails, toodling around in the Skatepark, commuting, getting groceries, bikepacking, foraging, you name it.  I will work on the concept more and maybe build it with some other parts with time (and I also want to get myself some decent racks), but this most certainly is the best thing I ever bought, at least it is the best thing I bought in years.  

If you can still get one, you most certainly will not regret it. And do not fall for the bullshit, in the bike industry as well as in the survival and prepping community.  Have fun.  Get on the bike, if you have one. If you have not, you might want to consider keeping it a tad more simple. It is and always will be about the mindset and attitude. Good gear is fun, but just like some prybar of a knife sucks at real life tasks, so do bikes marketed as "bugout bikes". Don't see it as a primary tool for bugging out in an emergency, too.  Don't forget to play, because it is good for one's mental health and resilience in an emergency.  

Take care, and have fun! 

Donnerstag, 18. Juli 2024

Why I protest the current move towards more knife restrictions in Germany

The law of Germany (GermanRecht Deutschlands), that being the modern German legal system (Germandeutsches Rechtssystem), is a system of civil law which is founded on the principles laid out by the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany, though many of the most important laws, for example most regulations of the civil code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, or BGB) were developed prior to the 1949 constitution. It is composed of public law (öffentliches Recht), which regulates the relations between a citizen/person and the state (including criminal law) or two bodies of the state, and the private law, (Privatrecht) which regulates the relations between two people or companies. It has been subject to a wide array of influences from Roman law, such as the Justinian Code the Corpus Juris Civilis, and a to a lesser extent the Napoleonic Code. " (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Germany) 

Is what Wikipedia, quite neutrally so, says about the origins of the German judicial system.  

On a recent audition on the novelty offensive weapon act that is currently pushed forward by "centre left" political forces in Germany, Association Of National Criminal Investigators interns stated a connection of the current judicial system with the Third Reich. (https://www.bdk.de/der-bdk/was-wir-tun/aktuelles/brauchen-wir-ein-schaerferes-waffengesetz), which I had to learn that it is quite a historical commonplace.

Mr. Winkelsdorf also declared the entire offensive weapon act a failure and implied responsibility of diverse political agendas for the fact.  

That said, given the Nazi regime was, by international law and consensus, declared and, categorically speaking, righteously so, defined as criminal, and given its judicial system was still not evaluated and defined as keeping its validity, there have to be reasons for it. 

Let us not get too much over the top about it and keep some realism: Of course it would be a bit impractical to overturn every single law just because the villains also used it. Murder is still murder, in every single human society and culture worldwide. There are nuances, of course, but the young Republic of Germany had a lot of other pressing issues to tend to at the time. 

The other aspect, however, is a really dark thing that lies at the core of the many problems we are faced with today.  The rise of nationalism worldwide is a symptom of it.  

Relating to the works of Professor Dr. (PhD)  Eckart Conze, Marburg 2024, concerning the  biography of Alfried Krupp, a German Entrepreneur and Nazi, it becomes evident that the Nuremberg courts might have missed something. Alfried Krupp, who was sentenced for his role as a sponsor of the SS even in the Republic of Weimar, actively sponsored and promoted former SS officials into the judicial system and political positions even after his time in prison (Conze 2024). And that was just one example of heads of big corporations and high finance with a more or less Nazi background influencing political forces in the Federal Republic of Germany. To check my own bias, I also looked up other areas of the judicial system. Another example of a symptom of Nazi ideology still in effect was the institutional discrimination of people of diverse gender and homosexual persons. As late as 1990, homosexuality in Germany was criminalized.  

Another example were the racist attacks on migrants in 1984, where another form of institutional discrimination of the victims took effect.  In context of the contemporary  DVU murders, Minister of Homeland Security Hessia, Peter Beuth, played a dubious role in concealing evidence about the case.  

Herbert Reul, Minister Of Homeland Security in North-Rhine-Westfalia ordered the clearing of the protest camp of deforestation protesters in the Hambach forest, which led to the death of a journalist. According to NGO Campact e.V., he then was member of the board of RWE corporation then, without his salary being able to be deduced from a concrete business-related activity. (Campact et al). RWE is an energy provider that claimed the Hambach forest in order to mine for surface coal.

Boris Pistorius, now Minister Of Defence, is said to have played a crucial role in the so-called BAMF-Scandal (Federal bureau of immigrant affairs).(Campact, global witness, Anonymous et al).

Please do not get me wrong, I am not claiming that all this is true. I obviously cannot investigate all these political rumours, and of course one would need such an investigation from a neutral position, and I do not claim to be in such a position in the first, and would, secondly, be very, very relieved if all this were just some conspiracy nut's raving. Really, I would give a lot for that. 

What do these gentlemen, however, have in common apart from their dubious possible part in these latter events?

All of them tried to push through an even more restrictive offensive weapon act, and have done so for a good decade. In itself, that would be perfectly in line with the democratic obligation of every citizen to promote the freedom of every citizen, even if that means to accept restrictions on your personal freedom. And let me be totally clear about this: In no way do I want to illegitimate this obligation. As I said, I grew up as the son of a deputy law enforcement officer. Obeying the law is second nature to me and I have an intrinsic motivation to do so. And because of that, I would of course accept any restrictions if they secure the democratic rights of my fellow citizens. 

But there is one democratic right that is the highest value of democracy: The assumption of innocence by the authorities towards any suspect. It means, every citizen is assumed innocent in case of suspicion. You are not obliged to prove that you are innocent of a crime by default, but the authorities of law enforcement must investigate whether or not you are guilty.  

Now these aforementioned gentlemen were crucial in the establishment of so-called "weapon restriction areas", mainly around railway stations and in inner cities.  I perfectly understand why someone gets the idea, but there is a very grave problem. 

For utility knives, as is the case even in the UK, are exempt from the Offensive Weapon act. Not just that, but they are defined as "useful tools " in the very text of the law and the administrative order for law enforcement personnel.  These utility knives, however, are defined as weapons in the weapon restriction areas, therefore supposing a criminal intent for every citizen that carried a pocket knife in a weapon restriction area.  The fact is made worse by introducing the possibility to prove your reliability (read: innocence) by buying (!) a "small " weapon license.  Thusly indicating criminal intent in law-abiding citizens, an original custom from the Third Reich.  Not my idea, but investigated and evaluated by several German Courts of Administration (OGV Berlin, Leipzig, Düsseldorf et al). 

The selfsame parameters of the weapon restriction areas (which have been evaluated as antidemocratic by several courts) now should become institutional, and would then no longer be an upturning of the assumption of innocence, or rather, you needed to appeal to the High Court of Constitutional Justice to make any such claim valid, which is neigh on impossible for any citizen of medium or low  income. 

Plus, law enforcement and political forces actually and explicitly state that it would be desireable to be able to do full body searches without judicial suspicion, which is the original wording of Third Reich officials.  Means, you travel through Germany as a businessman, maybe a POC, some huge copper slams you into the wall, while another holds a gun to your neck and strips you naked, and if he finds anything, from a manicure set to a small pen knife, can either put you in the box or leave you be on a whim. We had that already in Germany, we tried that, and it tickled a bit too much for my liking, no thank you.  

The fun part comes in when you inquire with political forces about this. You immediately get framed as antidemocratic.  

Which is ridiculous, of course, but it comes as no surprise.

If you talk to law enforcement personnel about your reservations and worries about the enforcement of these practices(I do and did), you often get the answer " but it will not affect you, you are not a target person "( quote). What is a target person then? Young people and people of colour or otherwise an obvious migration background is the simple and devastating answer.  

Please do not get me wrong.  There is the elephant in the room, and it is that a lot of migrants in Germany are not necessarily what they seem to be. Some are violent, some are even terrorists. But I have worked with migrants from many nations.  They are, for the most part, just people, neither good nor bad. Their cultural influence can be a really great contribution for a society to stay healthy, when in moderation.  For the most part.  But of course, they need to learn how things work in another culture. It is not even easy to live in Germany and stay sane in the process for a German.  But without someone taking you by the hand and showing you the inner workings, it is neigh on impossible. 

In the Third Reich, my grandparents, my mother and father reported, that they were affirmed, the restrictions on Jews and the deportations were none of their concern, because they were not a target person.  Until my father, as a "Pimpf " unit leader ripped his rank badge and Cord from his uniform because he refused pointless military exercises as chicanery for his unit and awaited punishment for insubordination. Actually he came out lucky, but only at hair's breadth. He was eleven years old at that point. 

This might sound a bit over the top, and hopefully it is not the same thing.  I still think that we are very privileged to live in a democratic system where I can say these things. I do not assume that this is all due to some Nazi conspiracy. But if it looks like a duck, smells like a duck, sounds like a duck, and you have looked it up in the great book of ducks and checked and counterchecked it by comparing it to grouse and goose and eagle, there is a certain probability that it is a duck. This situation looks a lot like a duck.  

The solution to less crime is social welfare, housing programs, social responsibility, education, violence prevention programs, integration offers for migrants (I worked voluntarily because the project I worked for had no funding, and was living off the woods and collecting bottle refunds, just so you get the picture). 

Plus, while I do not want to state a criminal altright background of several political forces in charge, which by the way were a bit... well... let us call it counterintuitive, because a lot of these politicians are rather known for centre-left agendas. But discrimination by law is systemic in Germany, historically speaking, for the reasons e.g. Eckart Conze evaluated. It is a bit of a beacon of hope that it was the Alfried Krupp foundation that actually funded the current research and explicitly states the will to take responsibility for the past. Not every business is fascist or fascistoid, not every politician is a liar.  And we still are very privileged to live in a democratic country. But then not every migrant is a criminal, neither is every citizen, and neither is every user of knives or even collector. 

What we desparately need is a better culture of community and communication, of solidarity and democracy.  We need trustworthy heads of state and less lobbyism and we must realize that neo-colonialism lies at the core of the great many problems we are currently facing. 

Phew, not a nice post again, and I have to admit, a bit wanting for decent quotations. Actually it is just a personal view of the topic, which is rather complex, and I would be very relieved, were it all gibberish.  But fact is, that unfortunately doesn't look very probable at the moment. It is, to disclaim any political intent, an opinion based upon informed personal evaluation and therefore protected by the first article of German constitution (Grundgesetz). 

I really wished I could trust our government again, no irony intended. At the moment, it looks like a matter of survival not to.  

If you come from Germany, you can still sign this petition: https://www.change.org/p/petition-gegen-die-versch%C3%A4rfung-des-waffengesetzes-f%C3%BCr-mehr-freiheit-und-sicherheit


Samstag, 6. März 2021

Rapatap the birchsap tap rap ...☺️


The birds were singing and the sun was oh so warm. After all the cold and the shite happening all over the world this was really soothing. The woods are calling, and obviously I heed the call. 

What really feels great is that my sentiment of "why bother?" does not involve anything woodsy, crafty or natural. These things still give me the motivation to get out of bed, so to say. Because they make sense. Obviously, I am fucked, but on each outing in the woods I learn more how the woods work. Of course, they are in a sorry state, what with climate change killing fir, spruce, birch and beech, and I plant as many trees as I possibly can, but yup, we are ruled by idiots. That said, I left the politics at home. The birch sap is rising, and I like birch sap. ☺️ 
This creek is running with more water than it has in the last five years. This gives me a lot of hope, actually, that even if we get another summer of draught eventually, the new trees will eventually recuperate. As is, the woods are radically changed. 
The first spring blossoms, too, and something tasty to boot : Violets (viola, in German :Veilchen), with an anti - bacteria - effect, blood - cleaning, calming and anti - inflammatory. Also you can make a tasty tea or spice from it, a wonderful cordial and it goes into my "lawnmower - mead" 😁, Methubrawri in the language of the Dhiudhai na nÍamparaï, a mythic people I invented. Invented the language as well, BTW. ☺️ 
Now if the trees all die, how can he possibly tap a birch, some may ask. First, I very much know what I am doing, and all the trees I tapped are even now still alive, but then there was that stump of a recently felled tree, where the sap rises really strong. So strong in fact, that there was a rare bushcrafty treat. 
But first things first, out came the tools. 
And in no time the birch was on tap. 
In the meantime, I collected some last Chaga (Innonotus Obliquus, in German :Schiefer Schillerporling). And sat down to really savour a sip of tea made from rowanberries and roasted and dried apple I foraged in autumn last year. 

 On the detour then I was in for my treat... Some chunks of frozen birch sap.

It was a really cool outing. Well, pardon the pun. But actually, I could wish for little more. Sipping your sap and your tea from a gukši you have made with your own hands with a knife and a carving hatchet you have forged yourself while preparing the Chaga you have just collected in a dish you have made with your hands is more than just comforting. It is not only strangely soothing in a world gone stark raving mad, it is empowering. Everything of these items was made from junk. From scraps of steel to scraps of wood to food most people do not see. And it is all connected. 

We all need to change. Well, I never belonged at all, so maybe I can exclude myself a bit. A bit, because I still have to learn a lot. Most people think this means a loss of quality in life.

Personally I think, the opposite is true. This is how life is meant to be. I do not say this because I were a guru or something. We need less gurus and a lot of more common sense. It is nothing esoteric or philosophical. It is just getting the good stuff in, and then have a cuppa of the good stuff. And the good things are estimated as junk, and noone cares. But I do. 

I, for one, came home deeply content. It was a feeling you got when you came home as a kid and got a hot cocoa made by your mother. Only that my mother is dead now and I get that feeling in the woods. There is so much good in the world. We need to learn to appreciate more and learn to be humble and grateful... As we were as Kids, when we got our hot cocoa made by our mothers. 

And it feels plain and it feels good. 

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