Welcome to GrumpyOldFartland

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I’m almost embarrassed to admit this but my wife and I have taken up probably the most stereotypically senior citizen-ish pastime imaginable. When our dog Amstel passed away a little over a year ago we started feeding the squirrels in the city park behind our condo building.

If anyone were to be monitoring our Amazon purchases they would probably think we had some kind of a hardcore addiction to walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts, and pecans. At this point we’re ordering about fifty dollars worth of nuts a month, that’s no exaggeration.

It’s all been worth it. It's been unbelievably relaxing and rewarding connecting with nature like this right there in our own neighborhood. When we’re feeling down heading over to the park always lifts our spirits. Over the last year we’ve begun to recognize certain squirrels and have even named a few.

Of all the cast of characters with names like - Capone, Speck, and Mama, none have captured our hearts quite like Magoo, the blind squirrel (named after the blind cartoon character Mr. Magoo).

https://youtube.com/shorts/TomYncHI5rs?si=tqJGB-BZxs9liB9z

This spring there’s been a bumper crop of new babies, probably due to all of this excess food they’ve been getting.

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Some of the baby squirrels that were born this year.


Magoo gets around quite well despite his lack of sight. His senses of smell and hearing are the best of any squirrel in the park. Most of the time, he finds us just minutes after we arrive. Sometimes he’s ninja-like, appearing out of nowhere at our feet. But if he’s napping or we manage to slip by him undetected I whistle and he comes running.
https://youtube.com/shorts/5WheU2iyGio?si=5QOaxvYrnqmC5LDe

https://youtube.com/shorts/mf-UTptopP0?si=arwVtyyQTLxM3GgW

As we’ve learned more about these little critters’ behavior we’ve been surprised by their intelligence.

Now, on to the heart of my story.

During our time in the park what’s also surprised us is the behavior of the children, and their parents, on the park playground.

Sometimes my wife and I will have a dozen or so squirrels chowing down in front of us. The kids are immediately drawn to the squirrels, this part I understand because we would have been too at their age. What we don’t understand is, more often than not, the children will chase and try to harm them. Despite seeing that we’re feeding the animals, the kids chase the squirrels with sticks, try to stomp or kick them. Sometimes the parents idly watch and we’ve even witnessed one parent join their kids in the chase. Most often the parents are just too consumed with their phones to notice what their kids are up to.

We’ve even had to intervene and tell the kids, “Don’t chase the squirrels!” Oftentimes this solicits the “stink eye” from their parents if they’re paying attention.

Magoo is blind and has been known to run directly towards people and catapult off of them if he’s startled (we jokingly call it people parkour). You can imagine the dismay this causes and the chaos that ensues.

Back in the 1970’s when we weren’t in school we were playing outside almost all of the time so we had more contact with the natural world. There was also a very different parent/child dynamic four or five decades ago. I often refer to it as “spank-o-therapy”. I’m sure there were some parents who took it too far but our parents never did. My brother and I were quick learners in that regard. In those days parents weren’t as concerned with always being our friends and it never, ever felt like they were our peers. Our parents knew there was a time for compassion but there was also a time for discipline. They didn’t think twice about being stern or saying the word “no'' and were quick to reprimand us if we tried to do anything like harming an animal. It didn’t take long for us to learn the long list of things that just weren’t okay to do.

Many of the kids we’re encountering today just don’t seem to be getting this kind of direction from their parents. Afterall, these kids raised in the city today probably spend most of their waking hours either commuting or in front of a screen. It’s safe to say that their parents were raised in a very similar way. Mobile phones weren’t as prevalent but they probably played video games after school and on weekends instead of having unstructured playtime at a park or out in the woods.

The disconnect the past few generations have with nature, and in the case of the parents, the disconnect from the present moment, makes me feel more than a little uneasy. We can learn so much about the world and our place in it just from observing nature. A part of our humanity is lost if we cut ourselves off from the vibrant wisdom of Earth’s ecosystem.

As I’m writing this I can’t help but wonder if every generation has had this dilemma. I wonder if that elderly woman, shaking her liver-spotted fist and yelling, “Get the hell off my lawn” when I was a five shared these same concerns. No, she was probably just a grumpy old fart.

Very soon it will be Generation X’s turn to step up and tell all the good-for-nothing whippersnappers to “get the hell off our lawns”. I sincerely hope it never comes to that. I fear feeding the squirrels might be the first step of a very slippery slope to “GrumpyOldFartland”.

~Eric Vance Walton~

Be well and make the most of this day. Thank you for reading!

(Gif sourced from Giphy.com. Photos and videos are original.)


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I think this is a bit better than having a pet at home. At least, you don't touch or change their natural life ;)

I've never thought about it that way. It is, in a way, like having part-time pets!

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Aww Magoo is so sweet! I can't understand how anyone could set out to harm something like that just for the hell of it. Today's squirrel stompers, tomorrows serial killers.

Mind that slippery slope! lol

It is definitely a slippery one! It starts a few complaints here and there and then before you know it you're in full-blown geezerdoom! Lol.

Yeah, it really does seem so much like sociopathic behavior, doesn't it? What really flabbergasted us was the one adult that joined in the chase.

Parents have lost it! Children have gone berserk like a wild cat let off the leash and society is worse for it.

I kid you not, we watched a child completely demolish a huge plastic toy someone had donated to the park. The parents just stood around and watched him do it. Most parents were probably afraid to intervene. It kind of scares me to think what these kids who've never experienced repercussions will grow up like. We're beginning to see it now in our area.

Lordy, that's terrible behaviour!! I would go through my kids if they behaved like that. Squirrels are bloody magical little things. I love them and always get dead excited when I see one, fortunately there are plenty in my bit to see! We feed them too!

I agree! Back in our day that was a super rare kind of behavior that would land a child in a whole lot of trouble. I don't know if Scotland is the same way but it seems kids don't have many repercussions these days. Probably the most common form of punishment is taking away the kids' devices for a while.

They're amazing creatures. They, 100%, recognize us by sight now (except Magoo). A few of them sprint at full speed towards us when they see us. It's become the high point of our days.

Almost 50… have been well into the “get off my lawn” stage for about 10 years. 🤣😅

Heaven forbid there is a garage sale on my street brining 100’s of car to block my front gate or driveway.

Then my husband and I happily water our lawn and whatever cars are parked too close. 😇

Ha! You have a head start! It kicked in for me around the age of 50. Noise, especially, irritates me more now. We have so many police sirens and cars with booming stereos driving by. We live on the fifth floor of a condo build so the base just reverberates off the buildings, adding to the irritation levels. Then I remember I used to have subwoofers in my old '86 Honda.

A todos los que nos importan por decirlo de esta manera, el bienestar general. Estamos destinados a volvernos unos "VIEJOS CASCARABIAS." Y mientras más pasa el tiempo, más comprendemos sus motivos y aceptando sus acciones..
Que vivan los viejitos 😄

¡Supongo que alguien tiene que llenar el vacío que están dejando los Baby Boomers! Espero que los hagamos sentir orgullosos. Jajaja.

Por los futuros escobazos, así será jejeje

We all love animals and nature and all the things like that, and the way we have a dog and it passes away, we feel a lot of sadness and grief. It's sad and it always is. It's good that you guys are eating fruit for your health. It's very good for your health. In this way, I myself have a good experience when I go inside the park.

It's so important to have parks, especially in the city.

Do you really think they will though? Gen X has already proven that they can't raise proper kids. I expect it will just be more of the same apathy and selfishness. My wife's parents have squirrels in their back yard. Jovi used to love to chase them or just watch them all day. She got one once. That's why we spread some of her ashes there. My father in law puts corn cobs on springs and they bounce all around on the hanging rope.

It's hard to say but everyone, including today's kids have so much working against them -- tech addiction, being taught a victim mentality, lack of hope due to the state of our economy. Maybe it's the natural progression of a civilization in decline. They say good times create weak people, bad times create strong people. Maybe there's hope for us yet. I'm hearing a LOT about how this decade might play out just as it did a century ago. Five more years of a booming stock market fueled by this coming wave of AI-tech then a spectacular crash akin to 1929. I set a reminder for 2028 to pop up on my phone and will be researching where to invest during times of economic Depression in the meantime. I'm trying to wrap my head about what that would even look like, it's a different world than it was a century ago.

Jovi must have been fast! Those aren't easy to catch. Amstel would bark at them but didn't have much interest beyond that. I was walking him one time and a curious baby ran down a tree and stared at him. I think that really freaked him out, he just looked up at me. Lol.

Squirrels love corn! I was growing some in the garden about a decade ago and as soon as the ears appeared on the stalks the squirrels helped themselves to them.

She was pretty fast. I think it didn't help that the squirrels were fat from all the corn! It was only occasionally that Jovi was in their yard, so they likely became a bit complacent at times too. I'd be interested to know what you find out about safe places to invest. I will likely have a lot more to lose by that time than I do now.

Corn would definitely put the weight on them! So far, every safe haven I've found so far (like T-bills) operate on the assumption that either the US government (as we know it) will honor their debt and/or the next Depression will be similar to the last. I'm still searching but will definitely let you know when I come across something promising. For now I'll focus on diversification. Hopefully it'll be a few years yet.

Sounds like either crypto or precious metals is your best bet.

I’ve found similar things with kids but what I often do myself is take on the role of the parent in the situation, besides being one, and teach the kids about the squirrels and educate them on how to treat them and stuff. It goes a long way and actually quite helps the kids, and I often get remarks from the parents like thanks and that was great. Some don’t appreciate it but I would say 75% of the kids love it and most of the parents do as well.

It’s not easy but I try as much as possible to “be the change you want to see” and it goes a long way to do so!

That's a great way to handle it!

It's very unfortunate and very unsettling to see that parents do not give directions to their kids, like they're pretty much left to their own devices. But what do they know? Kids do not have any sense, the onus is on the parents, to talk some into them.

Definitely! We call them "free range kids" because most of the parents seem more interested in their phones.

"This spring there’s been a bumper crop of new babies, probably due to all of this excess food they’ve been getting."

The babies are leveraging on the food to keep growing

No doubt! We had a very mild winter too so everything was in their favor this year.

They're so cute! Well worth the money spent on feeding them!
I'd like to say that taking up gardening or at least house plants in my case is cheaper, but I somehow always need to buy pots and plant holders, not to mention the heartbreak of knowing you cannot buy new orchids since you already have like ten...
Have fun with your furry friends!

Dead people or animals are remembered throughout life

Watch out, you'll be doing the Bob Ross thing of taking them in your house to raise them soon!

As for the kids thing, yeah, I know. I grew up as maybe you did. Gen X, parents kind of leaving us to fend for ourselves, kicked outside till dinner time so riding bikes all over the city with our friends. It was a different time. Now even the best of parents are often too scared of things they hear on the media to even consider letting their kids outside alone.

I'm not sure where kids pick up that urge to smash creatures, but they all seem to have it. With my kids I used it as a teaching experience, always reminding them to be kind to creatures, bugs, and nature itself like trees and "weeds". Even though my oldest has entered a phase where he's terrified of creatures, he still tries to be kind to them like I've taught. For example, if he sees a spider even a big one he will try to catch it to throw it outside instead of smashing it (I tell him to leave it alone actually and let it stay inside, but he's too scared to allow that right now).

Lol, I had no idea he did that but it doesn't surprise me! We watch his channel on YouTube sometimes. That's how I grew up too, we had loads of unstructured time outside and were unsupervised 99% of the time. I guess, statistically, it's safer now than it was then but I question the accuracy of that data sometimes. It must be super safe there in Japan. Are the young children there as addicted to devices or do parents impose some kind of limits'boundaries?

Good idea to use the opportunity to teach. I don't remember having that instinct to harm as a kid. There were definitely one or two kids on the block that had a sadistic streak though. My mom taught us to do the same thing with creatures that got into the house. I think my brother and I still will "catch and release" if possible. We had a bat problem in our last house and we got quite proficient at herding those things out the door.

Ah it is inevitable man. I am pretty sure we will be the only senior generation listening to heavy metal and playing video games!

With half my vocabulary apparently being taken away from me as inappropriate, and worry about kids these days with their impatience and interpretation of discomfort as an assault, I am feeling more like a boomer every day! ;)

A connection to nature is essential for us as a species not just for harmony with our environment, but simple happiness to distract us from our imaginary numbers and striving to make it financially.

As tough as it is to be parents with kids fighting the overwhelming digital addiction, we have the tools to do the right thing and time spent connecting with nature is one of those important ones.

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With all the chaos and nonsense in the world I can see how a person could get "prickly" after a while. I didn't notice much until I turned 50 but my tolerance for bad behavior isn't what it used to be. The world seems more "peopley" with each year.

Thinking back to some of the things we used to say as children, we'd be canceled in a minute these days.

Nature is the best thing by a long shot reset for our brains and improve our overall mood. I'm anticipating this societal shift that's coming soon as the wave of robotics and AI eliminate human jobs. I don't think it'll eliminate the need to work immediately but it will do so eventually. The best UBI-idea I've heard so far was from Sam Altman, each individual should own and profit from their own data. Revenue made from this would become our income. I can't see corporations like Google or Meta giving up their business model without a fight though.

For sure.

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With rapid advancement comes instability in the transition and my concern for the world becomes a heavy load I need to unburden myself with. Daily trips to the dog park and enjoyment of regular spurts of nature sure help with that.

I can feel the uneasiness with AI and battle that by being on top of the developments from a consumer standpoint with my technical team at the digital marketing company. We learn, research and experiment regularly so that we can leverage the benefits for small businesses on our community.

My big worry is how blindly we are pumping our data into the databases of these megacorps and assuming the benefits (eg chatGPT being free etc) will continue to be free. The boards of directors and greedy shareholders who are in it for nothing but money are RUTHLESS and will not behave magnanimously. Just another use case for blockchain and monetizing the attention/content of the individual in a decentralized manner. I sure hope we are onto something here!

I find myself worrying a lot about it too. The governments just aren't moving fast enough to help cushion the aftershock of volume of job loss. It's going to be interesting, to say the least.

How do we get that greed under control?! Private equity is bloating the real estate markets in so many cities.

Blockchain is the best solution I've seen to retool society for this next phase of evolution. So many of our older tools, models, and ways of thinking will be rendered irrelevant in this next decade. I've always thought blockchain-based social media was way ahead of its time. We haven't even seen that "mainstream moment" yet but it's kind of inevitable.

It is inevitable but I believe it will either be quashed by the stakeholders in fiat looking to protect their stakes, or the transition will come through a painful and bloody revolution by people being marginalized and pitted against eachother by the powers that be.

Man this is straying into a whole new conversation from the original topic!

Feeding, getting close and name the animals of nature must feel awesome. It's sad how such care is taken to peaceful friendly animals like squirrels by some parents and their children.

We are growing sadly removed from nature... and it worries me.

These worries are already manifesting as I read your words about kids chasing the squirrels and I found myself thinking how their sense of self so often is developed around "first person shooter games" where you pretty much have to kill/destroy anything that moves in order to win the game... and now that is showing up in engagement with actual life.

The oldest X'ers among us... we're knocking on 60. Sixty. My wife and I both remember having to pretty much raise ourselves... and we seemed more in touch with nature, perhaps because it was our classroom. I'm grateful the one son we have who has kids (the other two remain stubbornly childless) spends a lot of time taking them out to the park and out in nature.

I worry about that too. I think preserving and understanding the natural environment will get less and less attention as the younger generations take over. Saying you're an environmentalist and truly understanding the importance of Earth's ecosystem are two different things. This will make it much easier for corporations to deceive the general public when it comes to the environment.

Crazy to think our generation is approaching 60! It's so tough for nature to compete with the dopamine hits from our digital devices but I'm glad to hear your son is making an effort. I just recently watched an interview with Casey Neistat where he talks about the struggles he and his wife have with raising their tech-addicted kids. I can't even imagine. Video games were so primitive in the 1980's that we'd never spend more than an hour at a time playing our Atari 2600.

Squirrels are indeed adorable animals. However, in my area there are a lot of squirrels and they are a pest because they eat fruit from farmers' gardens. Have a nice day, Eric.

I bet they can become pests in warmer climates where food is abundant! They used to raid our garden when I grew vegetables. I hope you enjoy your week Eliana!

I love your Gif, Eric😂

I fear feeding the squirrels might be the first step of a very slippery slope to “GrumpyOldFartland”.

Nope, not you and your lovely wife!

I see parents of all kinds; some teach their children to be responsible and have respect, but there are those whose noses are stuck in their phones.
We have a wall above a very high staircase; some little ones used to walk on top of that wall in full view of the parents. We'd be there having a chat, and have to warn them about the danger. I now put up a rail so that they cannot walk there.

A part of our humanity is lost if we cut ourselves off from the vibrant wisdom of Earth’s ecosystem.

Very sad when kids do that to the squirrels. In that instance I would have done the same, even when in my 20s!

@papilloncharity's wife used to feed squirrels at their previous home, they live in the Western Cape. We don't have any here in Durban.

Your little squirrels are very spoilt with those nuts!

I was so happy when I found that GIF. It was the icing on the cake.

It's great that you're seeing parents raise their children the right way! That gives me hope. We just see a very small swath of families in the park and it's not an accurate representation of society as a whole. I need to remember that.

They are super spoiled! Magoo has become a bit of an internet sensation on YouTube. Lol.

It's really lovely that your wife and you are enjoying it so much to feed the squirrels! I thought, that's really a sweet article!
However, than the situation with the kids and their parents was explained and I don't understand. How could children behave so (although I could forgive them, as they're still children) but even worse how could parents just let their children behave that way?!

About ten years ago, I've worked on summer camps with children and even I (who was only 10years older as these children), was often stunned by the behavior of the children and even more of the reactions of their parents. Nearly always it was the principle:'My child, holy child' No, my child would never do such a thing...

Ofcourse I don't know how this happened in the further past, but yes I was baffled often..

Thank you! Yes, the parents so often are the root of the problem. They're either distracted or feel their children can do no wrong. My wife worked at an elementary school for a little while and oftentimes when children would get in trouble at school the parents would come in and blame the teachers and school staff.

At the summercamp it was the same case. They were blaming the animators and the other children.. Guess it's everwhere in society that people are always blaming others instead of looking into themselves (or their own children)..
It's the same in companies, politics,...

Wow! Reading your post brings up several things: For example, I forgot to talk about Mrs. Mamía (I don't know if that was her name or a nickname) in the Monday memories. This neighbour was an old woman who always scolded us for breaking her bushes. We never broke her bushes, but she blamed us for that. The other thing is that I don't think you ever talked about how you are as a father. Or at least I haven't read it.
I don't have children myself, so I can sometimes lose my patience when I see a very ‘carefree’ parent, while their child sets the world on fire. With this generation you can run into two extremes: the sensitive, nature-conscious child and the child ‘devoured’ by his environment.
I loved the videos. Mister Magoo was one of my favourite cartoons. Hugs, my friend