BlueCapra

Using Technology To Solve Problems and Create Solutions

  • About Alan Reeves
  • Curiosity & Learning
  • Projects

Have you read these posts?

June 14, 2012 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Time marches on.  Information comes and information goes.  While the newest information is often the most relevant, there is no denying the wisdom of the past.  Timeless, evergreen content is everywhere, you just have to find it.  There may be a few posts that are several years old that resonates with you so much, it changes your life.

If you are looking for life changing content, check out the blogs and content from these amazing people:

Seth Godin

Tim Ferriss

Dan Miller

Below are some posts you may have missed from this site.  Some are popular, but most are just personal favorites and in no particular order.  Thanks for reading

How to read a book

What’s Your Story?

Hiking and armadillo classification

Strive to be the best???

What are you complaining about?

Prejudice, being different, and what we tell our kids

The power of never and always

Creativity, Classical Music, and TED

Filed Under: General Tagged With: armadillo, Dan Miller, reading, Seth Godin, Story, Tim Ferriss

Hiking and armadillo classification – The Video

December 12, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Back on November 25, 2011, I wrote a post titled Hiking and armadillo classification.  Although my descriptions were the best at the time, they were just words.  It is said that a picture is worth a thousand words and if that is so, then this video must be worth a million or more.  Hope you enjoy

Filed Under: General Tagged With: armadillo, classification, hiking, video

Hiking and armadillo classification

November 25, 2011 by Alan R 5 Comments

I enjoy the outdoors.  My family and I were fortunate enough to go hiking in the Muddy Creek Wetlands Management Area.  I have lived in Mobile, AL almost my entire life (most of it within 6 miles of Muddy Creek) but had never heard of it until my wife and kids went on a field trip there.  It is a great place to get some exercise and be out in nature.

In nature, there are animals.  Some animals are cute and cuddly and some would rather eat, bite, or otherwise harm you than look at you.  Some animals are all around us but we never see them.  Along the trails at the Muddy Creek Wetlands Management Area there are a variety of animal tracks to identify and learn about.  If you are lucky, you might even see a live critter that is stranger than the common birds or squirrels.  You might see….. an armadillo.

I like armadillos.  Not sure why.  I have been interested in them enough to be fascinated with any product made in their image.  I have a pewter armadillo, one made of glass, a Beanie Baby armadillo, etc.  I am not obsessed with them, but I am fascinated.  That leads me to the common practice of their identification.  I am no scientist, but I have come up with my own armadillo classification system.

My system for classifying armadillos is fairly simple.  There are no in-depth examinations needed, no books to reference.  There are only a few questions needed:

  1. Is the armadillo walking around?
  2. Is the armadillo in one piece?

There are three types of armadillos: Type I, Type II, and (you guessed it) Type III.  The definitions of the types are as follows:

  • Type I – Armadillo is up walking around. This type is the most rare and sought after by the amateur armadillo watchers
  • Type II – Armadillo is stationary, in one piece, and often found on the side of the road. This type is more common than the Type I and has been seen posed with a bottle
  • Type III – Armadillo is flat, often in more than one piece, and sometimes mistaken for raccoons, opossums, and other flat critters

So, how do you tell what type of armadillo you have spotted?  Ask yourself the questions.  Is the armadillo walking around? if Yes – Type I, if No, go to question two: Is the armadillo in one piece? if Yes – Type II, if No, Type III.  Simple, to the point, efficient.  When I tell my wife I just saw a Type I armadillo, she understands.  She may not believe me (remember, they are rare) but she understands.  Still not sure, check out this video that explains it all.

We all have our funny little quirks.  They are what makes life memorable.  So the next time you see an armadillo:

Is it walking around?

Is it in one piece?

What type of armadillo did you just see?

Happy hiking…

UPDATE: See the exciting video explanation for armadillo classification

Filed Under: General Tagged With: armadillo, classifications, hiking, Muddy Creek

Find what you are looking for

Books I've Read

48 Days to the Work You Love
Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error
How Doctors Think
The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life
Dirty Rotten Strategies: How We Trick Ourselves and Others into Solving the Wrong Problems Precisely
Brainstorm: Harnessing the Power of Productive Obsessions
The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life
A Book of Five Rings: The Classic Guide to Strategy
Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul
Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition
Startup Guide to Guerrilla Marketing: A Simple Battle Plan For Boosting Profits
Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel
Seeking Wisdom: From Darwin To Munger
Multiple Streams of Internet Income: How Ordinary People Make Extraordinary Money Online
Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Birth of Modern Nations
The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks & Win Your Inner Creative Battles
The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich
Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation
Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything
Build Your Own Wicked Wordpress Themes


Alan Reeves's favorite books »

Copyright © 2025  ·  BlueCapra.com  ·  Built on the Genesis Framework and Centric child theme   ·  Affiliate Disclosure

Copyright © 2025 · Centric Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in