Thursday, April 02, 2026

The Thursday Ramble: Along the Waterfront

For my gentle readers (and the rest of you too) who are looking for clues to my April Fools question. Sometimes I am the fool. I thought I had moved this post to next week, I hadn't, the post about one of the two true answers will post at Noon, New York time today. The other clue will post tonight at midnight New York time.  

The western property line of the farm I grew up was the east water line of Gravel Creek. We learned this after my Grandmother sold the front half of the farm to my father, he owned it for a few short years, and the neighboring farmer stopped on day and made him an offer he couldn't refuse to buy the land. He agreed to let my parents use the house, the pond, the farm buildings for as long as they wanted - they were a few years away from retirement. After the ownership had transferred, the farmer had the land re-surveyed and set the property line along the edge of a field, leaving the entire creek on the adjoining property - his property. Why, the creek had moved over the 200 years since the original survey, leaving my father's farm with about 10 acres of what had originally been a part of the adjoining farm. A gain of land by the movement of a water course is accretion, a loss is disacreation. 

In addition the creek along one side of the farm, there was a five acre spring fed man-made pond, and a couple of acres of wetlands that had enough water in it to have fish in it. Hence I grew up around a lot of water. Minnesota may known as the land of 10,000 lakes, but Michigan is not far behind with thousands of lakes carved out by the glaciers of the last ice age. 

Less than a month after I moved to the DC area area, I stepped outside one morning and realized I could smell the nearby water. Not in a foul way, but in a pleasant there is a lot of water here way. I realized then, that Lexington Kentucky did not have that smell. There are a few shallow creeks that pass through Lexington, but no major rivers and certainly no lakes. Kentucky has some massive reservoirs, dammed up rivers, but no natural lakes.  And we didn't live near any of them. 

I do enjoy getting out along the water here.  We are close enough to smell the water, and the walks along the waterfront never fail to bring calm to me.  The building we live in is also about 150 feet higher than the river level, living on top of a hill I don't worry about flooding. In fact with global warming and rising sea levels, we could end up with waterfront property in 100 years. 
 

15 comments:

  1. The flowering ornamental tree is very beautiful.
    Is that the Potomac River you are talking about?
    While I don't like being on a beach, unless it is for walking on hard sand when it is not hot, I like to be near the coast line.

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  2. Speaking of water, the very first legal assignment we had to research and write in law school concerned riparian rights.My first thought -- sheesh, what the hell does THAT word mean?

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    1. The first of many of those thoughts in law school.

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  3. I have often in my life lived by an ocean or sea. I always loved it. It’s one thing I do miss now.

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    1. You do have a river nearby. But it is not the same,

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  4. One of the things I must have is access to an ocean. Living in California I was anywhere from ten minutes to ninety minutes from the ocean; in Maui it was a matter of feet, or at least it felt like that. Miami is near and perhaps soon to be under the oceans thanks to climate change and here in Camden we're an hour or so from the coast and have the Wateree River minutes from the house.
    I once went for an interview in Santa Fe, one of my favorite spots on the globe, but it was 15 hours from the Pacific and 15 hours from the Gulf of Mexico. I did not take that job.

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    1. You are far enough inland to have less hurricane risk,

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  5. I will say, while DC is not one of my favorite cities, it is always one of the prettiest in the spring season.

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    1. DC grows on you, kind of like a fungus.

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  6. Why do you tease your readers so David? Keeping us on tenterhooks as we wait for the April Fools Day solution. It's downright cruel and I can almost hear you cackling with glee.

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    1. I felt foolish when I looked at this mornings post and it was not what I had spent so much time working on yesterday afternoon.

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  7. We have a lovely Riverwalk in our city along the DuPage River. It's a favorite spot for my walks and I love the sound of water bubbling by me.

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    1. Listening to the running water is good for the soul.

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  8. go on being The Fool; best card in the deck.

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