
Olive comes through with a scientific solution. Good on her! It also helps that this “lawn mower” (of course, we’ve all noticed it never seems to have a blade beneath it) runs over the track more than once to help accelerate the mud production. So sure. Somehow enough of that water made it down through the grass and into the dirt to produce enough mud to bog down the mower. Well … why not. Let’s give Rusty a break for once. Will this really work? Wouldn’t Ernest just cut a new path around it? Wait, too much logical thinking here.
Art Dept. I do think the wet tracks forming in panel 1 are quite naturalistically presented. Not so much the ambiguous and sketchy scene in panel 3. At the same time, I’m continually amazed at how objects can get bigger or smaller for no apparent reason. The mower that Honest Ernest rides today is about half the size it was from yesterday (panel 1 for June 5). Perhaps an optical illusion based on the point of view, you think?
As for that panel 1 in yesterday’s strip, the overall concept is good, but the execution doesn’t match up. Look closely at Olive. I’ll wait …………… And are those three actually above Ernest? Or are they looking up from a hole or gully? That’s one of the challenges in drawing a bird’s eye scene like this: elevations are tricky. But some more line work or hatching might have helped better suggest the elevation.
So Rusty has taken a science class? He must know that 42 gallons of water weighs a bit more than 350 pound plus the weight of the barrel. I don’t see any way for the three of them to move that much weight into the forest, with no apparent vehicle or cart.
Also, great call on the mower that does not have blades…
As my millenium daughter says, “Do better Jules.”
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Indeed, Daniel! I reckon the barrel is why they called in Dirk! He’s the designated “Hoss” of this “Cartwright” clan, living in their own “Ponderosa.”
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Not to mention the magically disappearing/reappearing roll bar on the back of Ernest’s vehicle. The roll bar(?) was there in the first panel of the June 5th strip, only to disappear by the third panel. The roll bar reappears in today’s third panel.
All these observations together prove Rivera needs to spend more time on continuity and less time looking for tasty waves and a cool buzz.
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Ah ha! You’ve been following her BlueSky account, haven’t you!?
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