A Pattern
Em
Way Beyond Belief
One fine day in Ester
Emily liked this
encounter
closer encounter
Comety of Errors
float
Moose & Nihonjin
Party!
Evening concert
Mosquito chase
Revenge of the dead turkey
Ester dragon
Riot!
Midnight Sunset
2 foot high kick
1 minute sketches at Grange
3rd toss
Nihonjin in the arctic
warmup
26 July 2011
Before the bell
Colors
Portrait of the model as a brick edifice
Life in the fast lane
Summer Solstice
Beegone
Portrait of the model as logs in a glade
Ommmmmm
In Bloom
Reaching at the Grange
The neighbor
Away from it all
study
Portrait of the model as a boulder
14 June at the Grange
Sweet Dreams
A wild Alaskan Rose
5 ages
Quiet day in the neighborhood
Difficult landing
Stoop and smell the flowers
Not quite Prince Charming
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Sage Advice


OK, so Kōbō Daishi was wandering around Shikoku Island and came across a young Buddhist monk squatting by the edge of a raging stream. There were well placed stepping stones across the stream but, on the first stone there were two weasels, one big one and one little ittsy bittsy one, stretched out enjoying the sun.
So! Kōbō Daishi says to the young monk: "Wassup?"
The young monk replies: "Downer man, I wanna cross this here stream but these here two weasels sit smak in the middle of the first rock blockin' it. Can't cross lessen I move one and if I do I'll be upsetting the little guys and picking up some bad karma. So! So daddyoh, which one had I otta move?"
Kōbō Daishi thinks just for a second and says: Hey man, tain't no thang, just move the smaller one. Everybody know that when placed is such a difficult situation it is alway best to choose the lesser of two weasels.!"
Faber-Castell Pitt artist pen and watercolor wash on Bee's Bogus rough sketch paper. 9 by 18 inches.
One of the first rules of punning is, of course, never ever explain the pun. However… as this is a bit cross-cultural I'm make an exception to the rule: First, Kōbō Daishi was a Buddhist monk in the ninth century who is closely associated with the 88 temple pilgrimage on Shikoku Island Japan.
Second, a major principle of politics that, when necessary to make a choice twix two bad policies one need choose the lesser of two evils.
So! Sigh. Jokes and puns are funnier before one explains them! :-)
So! Kōbō Daishi says to the young monk: "Wassup?"
The young monk replies: "Downer man, I wanna cross this here stream but these here two weasels sit smak in the middle of the first rock blockin' it. Can't cross lessen I move one and if I do I'll be upsetting the little guys and picking up some bad karma. So! So daddyoh, which one had I otta move?"
Kōbō Daishi thinks just for a second and says: Hey man, tain't no thang, just move the smaller one. Everybody know that when placed is such a difficult situation it is alway best to choose the lesser of two weasels.!"
Faber-Castell Pitt artist pen and watercolor wash on Bee's Bogus rough sketch paper. 9 by 18 inches.
One of the first rules of punning is, of course, never ever explain the pun. However… as this is a bit cross-cultural I'm make an exception to the rule: First, Kōbō Daishi was a Buddhist monk in the ninth century who is closely associated with the 88 temple pilgrimage on Shikoku Island Japan.
Second, a major principle of politics that, when necessary to make a choice twix two bad policies one need choose the lesser of two evils.
So! Sigh. Jokes and puns are funnier before one explains them! :-)
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