I managed to remember to put the Flag out by the County highway. With imagination and squinting it soon looked like this!

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New things on the Fan
The year – 1990 – after moving to here the wind seemed to blow relentlessly. This year is a repeat. I only remember the year because I remember the year we moved to this location.
There other things I wish I knew the dates of. For instance, I took a photo of a doe and her fawn this week.
It seems a little late in the year, but I really don’t know. Information on the internet claims birthing begins in late April to early May with peaks during the summer months.
Thus, seeing a new fawn in late June should be expected. So much for my thoughts! This is an iPhone 12 photo and not of great quality, but the attentiveness of the mother impresses me.
Golden currants are ripe and showy among all the green (when the Autumn Clematis isn’t smothering them.
https://www.pnwflowers.com/flower/ribes-aureum
On this site, if you click on “more photos” and then click on a photo it will expand with information, including the location. Photos are by Mark Turner. I took this one early this week.

Arriving soon – maybe Monday – is a SKIL table saw.
Many years ago I had a very basic table saw. I loaned it to the man that was taking Brittanys for Nancy when she couldn’t go to a show. I no longer remember why he needed a saw, but it was in a shed that burned. I also do not remember if he offered to replace it. If he talked to me, I don’t remember. It was an inexpensive model and I guess that might have been when I bought the now deceased Craftsman radial arm saw. Anyway, it will be new here next week.
My weather has been benign (except for the wind) this week while the north central and eastern part of the Nation have been hot and stormy. Things change. For me, the NWS thinks Monday and Tuesday will go above 90°F. The south-center part of WA will likely go over 100 for those two days. Ouch! Summer is like this in WA.
I paid $4.46 for gasoline today. But Powerade was reduced from its regular $1.39 to 89¢. My favorite ice cream was $3.50, normally $6.95. I should mention WA’s gas tax goes up 6¢ per gallon on July 1. The fee on large Carbon Dioxide producers helps push WA’s average cost per gallon [$4.42] into the top five of the states. The lowest are Mississippi at $2.69 per gallon, followed by Louisiana at $2.79 and Texas at $2.80.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John H.
Summer Starts with Flowers
Locally, Summer started cool and damp. This hasn’t stopped some of the plants from putting up a show. Here are two, photos Sunday by John:

Syringa is the State Flower of Idaho. It is native and fire-adapted. When completely top-killed by fires, it will re-sprout from rhizomes and root crowns afterward. A fire that burns across the root system of clematis will burn the soft rope-like root system. Sagebrush is also killed by fire as it burns down into the roots.
The Autumn Clematis is an invasive plant that can look pretty while blooming but it is our Kudzu. That one is found in Texas and across the south and to the east and north.
When I wrote the check for the water pump replacement, I screwed up and did the numerical part and the written part differently. Banks use the written line. That had One thousand and should have had One thousand seven hundred (or seventeen hundred would do). I realized this on Saturday and called Kelly and left a message. A check for $700 will get mailed on Monday.
So far in 2025, that’s my dumbest stunt.
My 40-year-old (?) Craftsman Radial-Arm saw stopped last
week. Several phone conversations later, I’m convinced it is not coming back to life. Unfortunately, the service desk person at a local shop said bring it in, so I built a ramp and managed to get it slid into the bed of the pickup. At the store, the head repair guy said “Oh, that’s an electrical tool and we don’t work on that sort of thing.”
Perhaps the first full-week of Summer will be better.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John
Summer Approaches
It is not yet here. The few days of near 100 degrees in central Washington have reverted to 77 on Sat and 84 today – Sunday. The weather gurus think the airport temps are about 3 degrees too high – investigation is underway. Anyway, I set the house for 68° and slept with a sweatshirt on. This cooler period is expected to last, at least, to the 4th of July.
We had a game of Pétanque Wednesday and dinner at Phil & Audrey’s home in Quincy on Saturday.
Not much else this week.
On Monday, the new heat pump is to be installed.
There are native plants blooming. I will have photos next week. I hope.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John
Motor Week
The motor (pump) in the well was replaced and this always causes stirring up of years of accumulated deposits of orangish “rust” – – bacterial cells, and slimy materials that stick to well casings, pumps, pipes, plumbing fixtures. With the well open and the new pump placed the standard plan is to pour a gallon of bleach into the hole and then pump a lot of water through an outside faucet {not into the house}. After many gallons of orange water has been pumped out and new water has seeped through the rocks the water will be cleaner. Then the valve to the inside house gets opened and filters replaced, and life begins to return to normal. With that done, I did a load of dishes and a load of laundry.
I had clean water stored in plastic bottles for cooking. While the “cleansing” was happening I carried water from the creek for flushing. Trees and flowers benefited from the dirty water, rather than just letting it run onto the ground.
But, there is always something.
I’ve been using an old Craftsman 10″ radial arm saw. I can’t find a date on it. The motor was made by Emerson in the USA. We moved to Troy Idaho in 1974, and I think the saw was bought shortly after that.
This week it stopped on an overload and hasn’t responded to the normal fix of cooling and pressing the red “reset” button.
Recently, I’ve been cutting small lengths of trees and tree limbs to firewood size, about 15 inches. Sometimes these are oddly shaped and twist and bind the blade and I have about a second to hit the stop button or the motor shuts off. This week a stop occurred, and the rest button doesn’t work.

An update will follow next weekend.
A few of the plum trees are dropping small fruits, or self-thinning. A good paper on this is from Purdue University.
The photo is of my dwarf Shiro Plum tree.
My April 27th post started with a photo of this tree at the height of blossoming. Lots of flowers need lots of bees but the trees don’t want that much fruit. If I touch a small yellow one it will fall. They will naturally fall and wind helps.
How do they know to do that?
The high temperature in EBRG was 97° today Sunday. Likely similar on Monday and then by Thursday the NWS says 76°. I’m usually 2 to 3 degrees cooler. The atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean next to Washington is going to send a cooler and cloudy week or two our way. In fact, Monday may be the highest for the Month of June.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John
Water Pump went on strike
Episode #37 of “There is Always Something”
Thursday: A no water day! Pump and controller are 25 years old.
I had enough running water to make 8 oz of coffee this morning. [I do have a couple of gallons in plastic bottles.]
A worker, Dylan, for a local Pump etc. place came and replaced the controller on the wall but that didn’t solve the problem. We couldn’t lift the pump out of the well so momentarily I’m without running water. [I also had an appointment at the Ford dealer to have the truck serviced.] I was going to cancel that but when we discovered the pump was stuck 80 feet down, I went to town. Dylan and Kelly (well-guru and business owner), returned after supper and finished the job. However the water is the color of dark honey – colored by the oxidized iron and whatever else has accumulated. The well also got a gallon of bleach (this is called “shocking”) so until I pump 100+ gallons out onto the ground (near trees and flowers) and the color goes away – I don’t have running water in the house. House filters would clog in minutes with that water in the pipes. I went to the creek to get water for flushing and got my boots and pants wet. Uff da!
Submersible water pumps typically have an expected lifespan of around 8 to 15 years, although the manufacture often has a 5 year replacement guarantee. So. I guess I’m lucky this one lasted 25 years.
On a lighter note, Wednesday afternoon Geography had a food and awards party. A good time was had by all. I met the Nancy&John awardees and others. I brought home sandwiches, cookies, fruit, and chips that will feed me for three days. The weather was nice and waited until midnight to change to cool and windy with a trace of rain. 
Next door to geography is a green house with a resident tortoise named Snorkel. Photo is from 2016. He is now 17 and weighs 120 pounds. I was early, so I stopped into the greenhouse and met one of his caretakers. She is named after Carl Linnaeus who created the system to classify living things. Her dad was a biologist and they named her Linnea.
Today, Friday, was warm (84o) with single digit wind. Saturday Noon that is expected to change.
I won’t be cutting trees down this weekend.
Much of the world calls June 1st the beginning of Summer. So welcome to Summer.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan.
John
Kiss a Pig
I did not realize that kissing pigs was a thing.

I’ve been “brushing out” around several dead trees that are destined for fuel for the wood stove. One of the plants is Western Choke Cherry that is near the end of its flowering. It looks like the photo on the left and in late summer will have black berries.
Folks with lots of time have been known to make jam.

These small trees, out in direct sun, seem to grow only about 10 feet tall. In shade the trunk doesn’t get much larger than 4-5 inches in diameter but the upper branches grow long and spindly. This makes for lots of clean-up for not much wood. Cut fresh, it has a high moisture content and seems heavy. After a year or two of drying about 30% of that weight will be gone and the remainder (10-12% moisture) will be ready for winter heat.
Two other common plants I have to deal with: Red Osier Dogwood and Washington Hawthorne. I leave the former and reduce the amount of the thorn tree. The Dogwood has white flowers and berries and red stems. The fruits of all three plants are utilized by birds and other animals.
My new toaster arrived to be tried Monday morning. The slots are such that a long slice – Seattle Sourdough – will fit.
The photo on Amazon has tomatoes and an avocado beside the toaster. I’m not sure why. The brand is Mueller. I checked the local BiMart store but didn’t see anything comparable.
The airport’s high temperature on Sunday was 88°F.
The forecast for the next seven days doesn’t have anything that high nor any rain.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John
Oops!
It is Monday morning, and I forgot to post anything over the weekend.
Other than my toaster having a glitch, nothing exciting has happened.
The toaster won’t engage — stay operational — unless I hold the lever down.
I will have to “kick” it a time or two and if that doesn’t work a new one
is in my future.
The relentless wind has paused. It is forecast to start again this evening
and continue until Wednesday morning. With little wind, I should spray weeds
but it isn’t warm enough. Go figure.
John
Brushing
Mother’s Day: My mother was born on Wednesday April 3rd, 1907. That being 118 years, 1 month, 8 days ago.
After the visit of Ann and Fred last Sunday, this has been a week devoted to watering flowers and brushing. Meaning cutting small trees and scrubs that grow where I don’t want them. Mostly these are west of the house and shed and to lessen fire threat they need to go. I have short paths through the “swamp” {now wet/damp; later dry} that need maintenance. The brush is relentless and occasionally dead trees or limbs block the paths. I also want to get most of the woody parts removed – much can be burned in the wood stove after two years of drying.
Cutting lengths into stove-size pieces happens on the radial-arm saw — works well for pieces less than 3 inches in diameter. I also have a Milwaukee M18 Sawzall for somewhat larger diameters. Larger trees require using a chainsaw. Twigs and leaves land on the path before the larger parts are carried out. I don’t have to go to a gym to exercise.
On Saturday, prior to a few games of Pétanque, I had lunch with Phyllis and Cameron (winery folks).
The Pétanque place is only 5 miles downriver on a basalt bluff east of the Columbia River. It is a little farther by road. Garret had visitors from Bainbridge Island (in Puget Sound, just east of Seattle). I’m a novice, they are much much better. Still, I filled out one of the teams of three. I was on Jimmy’s team (he being the best player there) and he gave advice that I tried to follow. The boules (balls) are steel and weigh almost 2 pounds. The target is called a jack [cochonnet (piglet)]. I had not participated since last fall and my throws were tending to fade to the right. I need to strengthen my wrist, I think.
This game is a favorite of French folks, thus the names of the target and balls.
I have several scheduled activities this coming week. While the brush grows. Bummer.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John
Trees, flowers, and friends
The pruning of grape vines ended on Thursday. I’ve been doing outside chores, mostly cleaning growth out of the hole (Jay’s Folly) behind the house, making a little firewood, sprayed one tank of weed killer. We’ve had lots of the famous Kittitas County wind that has prevented more spraying. The maximum gust yesterday was 46 mph and today only 38 mph. After Midnight it is supposed to calm a bit, into the single digits.

Last fall I bought bulbs from an internet source. They came and needed to be planted before I managed to get a nice border and fence in place. The photo is the site seen first as one inters the driveway. There are two others. Some are deer-resistant, such as the Hyacinth in the front and Daffodils farther back. The Tulips are showy but deer eat them.
There is/was a small irrigation ditch thirty feet behind the flowers. Trees have been growing along it for years. Some, and perhaps all of them, are invested by boring insects.
On the left side of the photo the result is shown.
I’ll cut these down and photograph what is in them, although I have seen borers in others, I want to inspect these. The wood is destined to be firewood.
Lunch today was at the Red Horse Diner in EBRG. The Joyal’s came from Marquette MI. They have family in Spokane and down toward Moscow ID. They visit each summer and we meet, eat, and talk for about 3 hours. 
Often we have had one of the wait-crew take a photo. They were busy when we left, so Fred took a photo of me and Ann. We didn’t get to Ann’s age but Fred is about 10 days older than I am. I think I need to lose a few pounds.
The Red Horse hark backs to the Flying Red Horse of 50s era Mobil Gas stations. The place has hundreds of signs of all things automobile from that period. And the food is good and they don’t mind us staying for 3 hours.
I’m late today, so that’s it.
Keeping Track
on the Naneum Fan
John