66: wendall, keeping maryland beautiful, woolly caterpillar, field basketball, another staring contest, flying saucer meets tree trunk, a bale of turtles and some cool collectives, a non-green green heron, wodb?, home in an alley, flooded cumberland - My Midlife Crisis - CycleBlaze

June 17, 2025

66: wendall, keeping maryland beautiful, woolly caterpillar, field basketball, another staring contest, flying saucer meets tree trunk, a bale of turtles and some cool collectives, a non-green green heron, wodb?, home in an alley, flooded cumberland

Paw Paw to Cumberland

I had a pleasant chat with Wendall, from California. He's riding with his wife and son, heading in the opposite direction. Fortunately for him, he's already done the muddy part east of here so he's getting a ride to the paved section.
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I heeded the sign yesterday by leaving.
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The trail is much better today.
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I saw 20-25 bikers in the first hour, but after that were only a couple until I got closer to Cumberland. One of those early birds was wearing the exact same RAGBRAI jersey as me. We realized it at the same time and as we passed simultaneously yelled: “Nice jersey!” and “Nice shirt!”
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Bill ShaneyfeltLooks like a giant leopard moth caterpillar.
https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/63028-Hypercompe-scribonia/browse_photos?term_id=1&term_value_id=6&place_id=33
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1 week ago
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I took this picture to show you that there is nothing at all....
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...near this basketball goal out in the middle of a field.
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Carl B.Mark, I consider myself a minimally “sport-sy” person. I appreciate that your label “basketball goal” means that I’m not the least “sport-sy” person out there!
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1 week ago
Wet, but no muddy patches all day, though the humidity is >80%.
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We stared at each other for a full minute before he got bored and slowly started eating again. I never got bored.
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Steve Miller/GrampiesWell, some are more easily bored than others. 🤣🤣🤣
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1 week ago
At first I thought these were some type of mushroom or fungus growing on the tree, but upon closer inspection it looks like it might be part of the tree itself. Still not sure, though.
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Although they could be flying saucers that collided with the tree and remained embedded. That's also quite likely.
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Rich FrasierI'm going with the flying saucer theory. Way more fun!
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1 week ago
Bill ShaneyfeltI wondered how shelf fungi attached to trees!
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Rich FrasierAgreed!
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1 week ago
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This was taken seconds before their Synchronized Swimming performance began.
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Carl B.One of the best wildlife pictures you’ve posted. This one should make it’s way to a wildlife photo contest!
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Carl B.WOW! That's quite the compliment! Even better than the millipede coming out of the wood?
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1 week ago
Karen PoretThe last turtle is ready to perform the “pike” in synchronized swimming terminology ..or should I say turtleology.. Great movements and form! GOLD MEDAL 🥇
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1 week ago

When I was trying to find the collective term for a group of turtles (a bale), I came across some other interesting group names: 
a shrewdness of apes
a destruction of wild cats
a peep of chicks
a quiver of cobras
a bask of crocodiles
a parcel of deer
a charm of finches
a flamboyance of flamingos
a tower of giraffes
a siege of herons
a cackle of hyenas
a bloom of jellyfish
a mischief of mice
a parliament of owls
an ostentation of peacocks
a bouquet of pheasants
a drift of pigs
a shiver of sharks
an escargatoire of snails

Lockhouse 68
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a non-green Green Heron
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Cherpumple Mike calls carp "big, slow, and conspicuous," which is exactly how I feel at times.
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Lockhouse 70 - I hadn't found any of the lockhouses to be the same until this point. This one, at first glance, appears to be identical to Lockhouse 68, the one three pictures previous. However, upon closer inspection, there are some differences... besides the fact that this one is in focus.
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Rich FrasierGood to see that you regained your focus.
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Rich Frasieryeah, me too... for a minute there I thought I was going to have to start wearing glasses or contacts! :-)
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1 week ago
Karen PoretBe glad you don’t have the Scott Anderson sight issues! However, he still can take great photos and wax poetic ( with some garbling thrown in) with the best of you CB’ers!
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Karen PoretI agree 100% - So many of his pictures are just amazing, and he and Rocky have provided so much information to the cycling community.
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1 week ago
Lockhouse 71, not far from 70 - sometimes they're close to each other and sometimes they aren't
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Which one doesn't belong?
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Steve Miller/GrampiesHi there Sesame Street graduate.
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Steve Miller/GrampiesA great show for any age
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1 week ago
Bill ShaneyfeltThe duck that wanted to be a turtle?
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1 week ago
Carl B.Takes me back to childhood issues of Highlights.
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1 week ago
Karen PoretBasking poetically..:)
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1 week ago
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I hear bullfrogs croaking all day, and even more so at night, but this is only the second one I've seen since I started riding on the towpath. He was gone a split second after I took this picture.
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Cumberland, upon seeing it for the first time from the trail, seems like a quaint town. Still not there, though.
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The last lockhouse, number 75. Lockhouses 6, 40, 41, 47, 53, 55, 59, 60, 61, and 67 were swept away when the Potomac flooded in 1936, and several others had significant damage. It wasn't even a major flood.
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Bill ShaneyfeltCatalpa tree. The caterpillars you might sometimes find on them make great bluegill bait.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalpa
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1 week ago
Karen Poret“Petal rain”…soft and sweet…
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1 week ago
the giant silver onion
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Peter BrownDigester, at a sewage plant.
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Peter BrownIt does sort of look stomach-ish. Thanks!
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1 week ago
Karen PoretOr Zippy the pin head getting his brains sucked out by a vacuum …
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1 week ago
getting closer
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Carl B.I like that this is “America’s Greatest Footer’s Dye Works.” The rest of them aren’t worth a dime.
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1 week ago
There's not a road back there.
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on the way to the B&B
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This picture of the St. Patrick’s Day flood of March 1936 was hanging in our B&B.
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It was great to see Heather after these past few weeks. We went into town and had some ice cream, then, after a couple of hours, massive amounts of Italian food (me, not her), then some ice cream (me, not her).

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Today's ride: 30 miles (48 km)
Total: 1,752 miles (2,820 km)

Rate this entry's writing Heart 12
Comment on this entry Comment 4
Suzanne GibsonI love your collectives! Then - and I didn't make these up- there's a whiteness of swans and a kaleidoscope of butterflies.

Great journal! I wish you less mud and fewer mosquitoes in the days to come, even if your descriptions have been highly entertaining.
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo Suzanne GibsonHow perfect! Thanks so much, Suzanne!
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1 week ago
marilyn swettHere's another couple of group names to ponder- a squadron of javelinas and a murder of crows.
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1 week ago
Mark BinghamTo marilyn swettI've heard of the crow collective, but not the javelinas. I love it!
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1 week ago