LATELY BIRDS

A deer came up our path and pooped just outside our gate.

Those little round brownish pellets in the middle of this picture are deer poop.

The nearest nesting pair of black oystercatchers were out on the sand with their youngster.

The bird at left is an adult (one of the parents. The one in the middle is the other parent. The one at right, with black shading on the end of her beak, is the “baby” already as big as her parents.

The little shorebirds are a mystery. After all these years, I can’t be certain what they are, Least sandpiper (Calidris minutilla)? Or something else?

And then the new driftwood growing up out of the sand. Usually the ocean plows them right up in a high tide, but there have been such drift logs that lasted a year or more because they were well planted.

When Portland, on the east side of the coast range, experiences seasonal hot weather, we often have morning fog. It’s been foggy the last few days when we went out for our walk, clearing once the sun is high enough to burn off the mists.

The eagle flew over our heads on its way to what Gary calls the Bird Snag on the headland north of us.

Sometimes a crow perches here a couple of hundred feet above us, but this is definitely an eagle perch.
We usually walk 3-4 miles, but the other day we walked past Arcadia, more than three miles to the north of us, better than a six mile round trip according to my old running measures. And then home.

BEACH FIRE

The largest fire in the nation is burning south of us. The Bootleg Fire has destroyed nearly 400,000 acres, the third largest fire in Oregon history, and it merged with another fire on the 19th. It is only 38% contained. We have a family member currently fighting that fire. On top of that, firefighters have been testing positive for covid.

The flames were no longer over two feet high from this nearby fire lit by tourists. However, they had abandoned it ten hours before this photo was taken without putting it out. It burned all night.

Maybe have a care?

Continue reading

WHEELCHAIR

“Write about a time when you chose to push against despair and bleakness. How did love, humor, and hope persist despite dire circumstances?”

writing prompt from Arundhati Roy
We’ve only been seeing one black oystercatcher, here taking a bath, in the creek on our walk north. There were three last month. We hope that means a pair raised their baby and then two of the three left home.

During the years my mother was dying and we were generally exhausted, stressed, and gaining weight, but some things seemed funny.

The third night in a row driving home from the ER in the dark and a bull elk jumped in front of the car. We didn’t hit it.

Spending every anniversary, five years in a row in the ER and Mom was only dehydrated. A lot of visits to the ER.

The ER doc telling a friend that he had to drive two hours to work in Seaside because no other ER in the state would hire him.

My favorite was a (visiting/resident?) doc with rings and tattoos all over her face who asked me, “Have you ever seen an Xray of your mother’s spine?” I hadn’t. She put it up, showed how insanely out-of-line and titled her vertebra were. “It’s amazing she can sit up.” Not funny, but revelatory.

The final joke was after Mom died and we were clearing her rooms. No one wanted her electric wheelchair, an expensive machine which Medicare paid for. We tried giving it to hospitals, clinics, charities. We tried returning it to the company that provided it. No one wanted the “liability” of a used wheelchair. Finally, Gary drove over the assisted living facility and left it in the entrance. There were often chairs parked in the entrance.

Every time we drove past, Gary would say: Wheelchair! This made it possible for me to pass the place where she died every workday for the next twelve years without crying. I thought, Wheelchair!

My mother was a dear, sweet, controlling, and marginally mentally ill person. She was the daughter of a single mother, on whatever prescription antidepressant was going when I was an adolescent in the 60s, was in group therapy, had a hysterectomy, and daddy issues. She had mad organizational skills and was highly valued everywhere she worked. She was a feminist who seriously expected her daughter to marry a man who would take care of her, but whose daughter would also “have a skill to fall back on.” It was only after she died that it dawned on me how insulting it was the the skill she thought I would need to fall back on was typing. Typing. No offense to secretaries everywhere, but office work was never going to suit me, and I was smart enough in school and a strong math student. Accounting might have been a better choice should my imaginary marriage to my mother’s imaginary attorney end in divorce. She told me what to do almost always—what colors to wear, “put on some lipstick,” how to arrange my hair, furniture and appliances I should or should not buy. (If I didn’t purchase items she thought I should have, she’d buy it for me and then send a check of an equal amount to my brother.) I did not always do as I was told, but I was not paranoid about her “advice.” I was at least forty before I understood that not all mothers were still dictating behavior to their adult children. I have struggled not to repeat her mistakes.

Her grandchildren adored her, but even they were scared to be in the car with her. I tried talking to the DMV about revoking her driver’s license. The woman at the window said: “I would never do that to my mother.” But since someone’s 80-year-old mother had driven straight into the side of my car while my little boys were in the backseat, I was more concerned about what my mother might do to someone else. Our solution? Gary kept borrowing her car. Eventually, she became annoyed and insisted on having her car back. But by then I realized a sad but wonderful thing: my mother was no longer strong enough to depress the clutch. She might manage to get down the three steps and to her car unaided and into the car and start the engine, but she would stall it before she could leave the driveway. Gary and I laughed in relief when I told him. Good news for the safety of children everywhere!

Mom had her faults beyond what I have written here. All people have their faults and most do the best they are capable of doing. She was, on balance, a good mother and a great grandmother. She loved her family. Mom and I were close, as they say. We talked most every day, except when long distance calls were expensive on land lines and we lived in different states. Even during those years we talked for an hour at least once a week. We traveled together and saw movies, shared books. We were close.

I love my mother and miss her still. I think of her when something funny happens that would have made her laugh. Gary and I suspect she probably would have laughed about that wheelchair. She didn’t pay for it.

GOOD TROUBLE

Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., speaks as the House of Representatives debates the articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2019. (House Television via AP) An adherent of the philosophy of nonviolence, Lewis was beaten by mobs and arrested 24 times.

from Letters from an American by Heather Cox Richardson:

A year ago tonight, Georgia Representative John Lewis passed away from pancreatic cancer at 80 years old. As a young adult, Lewis was a “troublemaker,” breaking the laws of his state: the laws upholding racial segregation. He organized voting registration drives and in 1960 was one of the thirteen original Freedom Riders, white and Black students traveling together from Washington, D.C., to New Orleans to challenge segregation. “It was very violent. I thought I was going to die. I was left lying at the Greyhound bus station in Montgomery unconscious,” Lewis later recalled.

. . .

Last June, Representative Lewis told Washington Post columnist Jonathan Capehart that he was “inspired” by last summer’s peaceful protests in America and around the world against police violence. “It was so moving and so gratifying to see people from all over America and all over the world saying through their action, ‘I can do something. I can say something,’” Lewis told Capehart. “And they said something by marching and by speaking up and speaking out.”

Capehart asked Lewis “what he would say to people who feel as though they have already been giving it their all but nothing seems to change.” Lewis answered: “You must be able and prepared to give until you cannot give any more. We must use our time and our space on this little planet that we call Earth to make a lasting contribution, to leave it a little better than we found it, and now that need is greater than ever before.”

“Do not get lost in a sea of despair,” Lewis tweeted almost exactly a year before his death. “Do not become bitter or hostile. Be hopeful, be optimistic. Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble. We will find a way to make a way out of no way.”

my COVID report is LOST

This is peculiar. I only noticed today because I wanted to add to it that my page about Covid-19 is entirely gone. Since early last year I kept a diary of deaths and impressions, news stories, recommendations, and quotations concerning Covid-19. During the chaos that ensued when I tried to update my “theme” this entire page went missing. It was a huge page, and it was important to me. I also discovered that both my “home” pages led to a menu, a literal restaurant menu. (Gone now.) There was a third “home” page which I deleted during the initial chaos. I suspect that was my “Covid Diary.”

WHOOPS

Sunlight over the Pacific Ocean.

I played around with other WordPress themes yesterday and managed to completely misplace the one I started with. Gone. The sidebar with personal and site information now appears way down at the bottom of this page. That is not convenient. I could pay the “Happiness Engineers” to help me, but I am so offended by that title (not to mention the cost) that I will put up with this ugliness. [Why did I ever think it was a good idea to leave Blogspot?] I do not like this layout, but it’s the best I can do.

Discuss.

[NOTE: Managed to find a “theme” with the sidebar, but now the header photos do not show on the home page and are overlaid on their own page. Better, though. imo. Yours?]

Continue reading

DON’T SAY “Piece of Cake”!

It’s a line from the RomCom Forget Paris about a couple who fall in love and then suffer a series of (eventually fatal) hardships—each time after they start something that looks like a “piece of cake” aka “easy.” That’s called tempting fate.

Gary believes in fate; I do not. Both of us are probably average in terms of superstition. We step on cracks. We laugh about Friday the 13th. But when we are beach-combing we have our superstitions. If Gary announces he’s going off to check out something a hundred feet or a hundred yards away, I will find glass. [Yeah, right, Gary walking away brings me luck finding glass.] It’s happened just often enough that we smile when it does.

Continue reading

JULY 5th

Or perhaps the best part was this morning’s coyote tracks on the sand, the black oystercatcher pair, and Gary spotting the first hummingbird in our garden since April or May.

Gary says the best part of the 4th of July was when it was over. I’d argue that the best part was at 5:30 yesterday morning during our walk. When we got home, we opened up the house—every window and skylight. Then, in early afternoon, when people started beach fires, we shut everything back up to avoid the smoke. If we’d had company, we likely would have gone out and built a small fire on the beach. Instead we watched two episodes of a British procedural, and ignored the booms as much as possible.

Good news: The booming didn’t start until dusk instead of trailing out across the entire weekend. The bad news: The explosions were too close and didn’t end until well after ten last night. Even the echo was horrific.

Continue reading