Mon Apr 23 09:14:17 EDT 2018 Slept from eleven to seven. Woke briefly around four-thirty. High of sixty-eight and sunny today! Work: - Check Florida Sage data Done. (...and closing was delayed, so we'll have to do it yet again.) - Order spare/Kathy computer/monitor Done. - Review Hazel Park closing stuff Done. Twenty-minute walk at lunch. No jacket needed. Home: Ten-minute walk after I got home. Saw an enormous hawk, a crow, and possibly a dragonfly. Half-moon on the blue sky. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5640191/How-letting-Mother-Nature-reclaim-prime-farmland-produced-breathtaking-results.html > In ancient times, before humans had any impact on the land, Britain was covered with closed-canopy forest. A squirrel could have run from John o’ Groats to Land’s End across the tops of trees. > Or so the prevailing theory goes. But it’s wrong for several reasons. One is that grazing animals — such as wild ox, horses and bison — were here long before the trees. > And if they’d had to live in dense forests, they would have quickly died off. Another is that Britain has had oak trees for millennia, and these require an open landscape. Fossils of beetles and snails, among other species, also indicate that the land was once largely wood pasture (trees dotted across fields) and thorny scrub. Played some Night in the Woods. Lunch: coffee, hamburger, peanut butter milkshake Dinner: popcorn, carrots