Following Willy’s visit yesterday afternoon [7/11], this morning Jonathan (Johnny), son of Walter “the contractor” showed up at about 7 am. Shortly after, Walter came, then still later, Willy. Discussion and decisions. Still later, workers Rubin and James came. Walter and Willy left for other jobs.
We checked my on-site paint and have about 5 gallons of the newer blue-blue, not the old gray-blue. Rubin and James are washing the 2 front walls that can be seen from the driveway. When dry, they will paint those. Johnny is setting up ladder-scaffolds to finish painting the big shed. After painting is done the Copper-looking metal will go on the decorative walls in front of the passage between the shed and the house, and in front of the main entry door. Repairing (smoothing) the walls inside the big shed is on the agenda, but maybe not today. Temperature is 86° at 11:30, on the way to 93°. To quote a famous person: “Anyway,” as regards the remodeling – the light at the end can be seen and it is not the train.
Willy’s visit yesterday interrupted my cleaning. Phyllis and Cameron arrived about 5:20 after a 2-hour meeting with an EBRG estate planner. I had managed to do some cleaning and move a table and chairs – and wine glasses – into the remodeled/recovered room with double-swinging doors and a view to the outside. “Recovered” fits because as originally built, the room was nearly useless. Now it is bright with skylights and recessed ceiling lights, doors, and half knotty-pine paneling. The difference is hard to convey, but it is stunning.
We visited and ate in that room – a first.
Back to on Tuesday:
I went to Yakima Tuesday (108°) to meet with Bob & Suzy after repeated delays – – 2 months. COSTCO’s food court is a mess, but that’s where we met. Cool inside. I bought some things after, even though I don’t need anything. Seemed a waste to go and not stockpile something. I bought a multi-pack of Zip-Lock sandwich bags and put it beside the (unaware-of) pack I already have. I won’t ever need to buy more. Gas there is about 50¢ cheaper than in EBRG; got 12 gallons. I use 4 gallons going down and back. WA State price is over $4 average, Mississippi is about $3. Building and maintaining roads in mountains is expensive. And, WA has a “Carbon” tax, that makes everything in the State more expensive.
At a large rally in Butler, PA a shooter (now-deceased) nicked Donald Trump’s right ear. Details are not available as I get ready to post this.
Butler is about 45 miles from Clarion where I lived. I only remember going through the town on the way to Pittsburgh. There was a large building – 8 or 10 stories – at the turn we had to make. The only things in Clarion that big was the County Court House and the Catholic Church {both with tall spires}. Sister Peggy visited a women’s clothing store a time or two. Otherwise, Butler was a non-entity for us and almost everybody else on Planet Earth. Now it will be a famous footnote to history.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John






Current estimated cost is $130 Billion. At the rate of progress, the full system would be completed in 42,000 years.

and a few other things. I think each award is $1,000, to be used next school year as the student desires. {I need to check on this.} The Nancy & John pot provided four awards.
The flexible plastic door is supposed to latch with magnets. In the image the metal strip is over the dog’s collar.
brevifolium). Apparently this is also misidentified as Nineleaf Desert Parsley, (Lomatium triternatum). It is above my pay scale to know such things.
About 10 years ago I bought a Gorilla garden cart. The tires were not tough and after 3 thorn-flats, I had the tires filled with foam. At that time the cost was $1/pound. It took 8 pounds per tire. No flats since, but I have to pull an extra 32 pounds around. I do use the cart a lot; gave the wheel barrow away.
These have unique shapes and are a focal point in archaeobotanical studies, because of these well-known differences and because they often are the only remains that are preserved. I think of the whole mess as soil amendments. In this case it is not composted. It is left in large bins after “the crush” and thrown on the ground in the spring or summer.
I did a little work outside in the wind and cold, mostly cleaning up dead wood of a large Elderberry plant. The stems have a soft center and the larger parts will be hollow. Compared to many trees, the heating value is lower, but it dries and starts a flame easily.
