Looking out my primary viewing portal on the world you might guess that I arose after the sun on this last day of October.
Your guess would have been correct.
We need not discuss why I awoke much later than my norm. Suffice to say I was tired.
Today is Halloween. Tonight I'm going to put on my Kay Granger costume and go trick or treating.
Switching the subject, now, to my favorite subject. The temperature.
In a very rare coincidence, this morning, the temperature at my current location and my old location in Washington are the same.
45 degrees currently.
Speaking of my old hometown location, the town I grew up in, Burlington, Washington, this morning the Skagit Valley Herald had a little article about Burlington.
Growing up in little Burlington, currently with a population of less than 9,000, sort of warped my view of the world. Burlington is sort of a boom town, with sidewalks lining every street. And a very good library.
And then I moved to Fort Worth.
I did not know parts of America were 3rd world-like until I moved to Fort Worth.
Below is a blurb from this morning's article about my old hometown from the Skagit Valley Herald....
Take a drive down Burlington Boulevard, with its bumper-to-bumper weekend traffic and door-to-door strip malls, and it’s hard to imagine the Burlington of 40 years ago.
The major food processors that once dominated the landscape — Darigold, frozen food packers and canneries — are all gone. A shopping mall, big box stores and auto dealers have sprouted from farmland once bursting with crops.
Burlington has had to redefine itself many times over through the years, as technology, transportation and an ever-increasing population have transformed it from an agricultural hub to the shopping mecca of Skagit County.
Many Burlington residents say all that development — and the tax dollars it brings — is just fine with them. In fact, some would say it’s a reflection of two of the city’s biggest assets: its community cohesiveness and the foresight of its leaders.
For all of the town’s changes, the values of Burlington residents — what they want out of life and how hard they will work to get it — haven’t wavered, said Margaret Fleek, the city’s planning director.
“There’s no apathy in Burlington and there never has been,” said Fleek, who lives in Lyman. “People really care about their little town on the flats. ... It totally has its values intact regardless of what’s happening on the I-5 corridor.”
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