Saturday, May 9, 2026

Exhausted

 

          It’s been an exhausting few days here in the Luby household.

          “What’s going on?” I know you wanna know.

          Saturday, a week ago now, Mike noticed the vision in his right eye was blurry and he couldn’t see very well. He noticed a shadow and thought his retina was detaching again. He paid attention to it all day but didn’t think it was getting worse. The next day and by late afternoon, Mike was pretty sure it was getting worse. He called up to the hospital and they connected him with the eye doctor on call.

          “If you want to come to Corning (New York) I can look at it,” a female with a heavy accent said.

          We didn’t want to go to Corning. It would be dark coming home and we live in deer country. You can’t go anywhere without seeing dead deer littering the sides of the roads.

          Mike called the hospital Monday and they got us in that day.

          Long story short, Mike’s eye formed scar tissue which pushed the retina away.

          “I’ll operate tomorrow,” Dr. McClintic said.

          I guess it wasn’t an emergency after all. That made us feel better about not going to Corning.

          I took a few pictures on our way to the hospital the next day.


          Pigs in the field next to where I’ve seen goats.



          We got stopped at the Veterans Bridge so this big boy could come across.



          He had a guy helping to steer on the back of the trailer and there was also a truck hooked up as a pusher. He’ll help push the oversized load up and over the mountains.



“Stay off the road!” I told the chickens. I don’t think they heard me.



Mike was able to slow a little as we went past the eagles nest. The eagle was feeding the babies. That’s a full-time job when they’re growing so fast.

          Speaking of eagles...

          I was going to Sunday night movie night at the church and crossing the bridge by the Kipps’ house, I spot an eagle fishing in our creek. I stopped right in the middle of the bridge and got out. The eagle didn’t mind until I started to walk to the side of the bridge, then he took off.



          It’s a shot, a moment in time I would’ve missed — if Mike had gone to movie night with me. His philosophy is if you’re not half an hour early, you’re late. When I go by myself I don’t leave as early. Who knows if the eagle would’ve been there then.

          “How did you see it,” my handsome neighbor asked.

          “Lamar, I always look at the creek when we go over the bridge. At first glance I thought I was seeing a duck. When I looked again I saw it was an eagle.”

          And checking out the creek on the way home from movie night allowed me to spot my first Kingfisher of the year.


          Turning onto the street between the hospital and the school I see geese with their goslings.

“STOP!”

Mike is a good husband and stopped, after first checking to see there was no one behind us.

 The pond is on the grounds of the hospital but these guys had crossed the street to look for bugs in the grass at the school.


We checked in around two thirty for our three o’clock appointment. They took Mike back to pre-op about fifteen minutes later. I sat and read on my phone.

          Around four a nurse came to get me. “He’s going to be so late getting out of surgery that we’re going to move you to the night surgical waiting room. We’ll take him down there for recovery when he’s out,” she told me.

          I gathered my things and followed her.

          In the new waiting room I found a seat and read for a while. Then I got up to check the board to see where Mike was in the system. His number wasn’t on the board and the ladies at the desk had gone home a while ago.


          “If anyone needs anything, there’s a phone on the desk with instructions beside it,” Last Girl Out announced.

          I decided to wait.

          People came, and people went.

          My coffee was gone. Had been gone for quite a while. I ran out of the snacks I’d taken with me. And I ran out of purse mints. I finally got up and went into the refreshment room and made myself a cup of tea.

          When I came back I saw a guy who had been there at least as long as I had. He had no drink in front of him. “You know you can get a cup of coffee or tea or hot chocolate if you want,” I told him.

          He perked right up. “No! I didn’t know!”

          “Come on, I’ll show you.”

          He got coffee and we started talking. He’d been there since noon and his wife was there for a breast lump biopsy. He told me where he lived and how far they traveled (not as far as Mike and I did, though) and about twenty minutes into our conversation, they came to get him.

          Then I was alone.


          Everyone else had left. 

       

          At some point I began to wonder. Why didn’t I bring watercolors and my practice book? I could’ve, you know. And that would’ve been something to help pass the time. I read more but ended up doom scrolling through Facebook.

Miss Rosie, doom scrolling is when you keep scrolling from one story or video to the next on your phone and you don’t even realize how long you’ve been doing it. You don’t mean to keep going — it just pulls you in.

Then I got a data warning on my phone. I stopped watching video reels and exited out of all the apps and put my phone away. I got up and walked around. I was tired of sitting. They had three TVs in the waiting room, all playing a different channel. House flipping on one, the news on another, and crime drama on the third. I could see one from where I was sitting so I took a turn and stood in front of each of the other two for a while. I did some heel-toe raises—and almost fell over.

Aye-yi-yi. Getting old is a challenge.

I finally went to the phone and called the number posted next to it.

No answer.

If no answer, call this number, the sign read.

So’kay. I called the second number.

“How can I help you?” the nice man said when he answered.

“I was wondering if you could tell me where my husband is at in the system. His number isn’t on the board.”

“Certainly. What’s his name?”

I told him and he looked him up. “Oh. He’s an eye patient. He’s in surgery. They use a different number system over there and that’s why his number’s not on the board.”

          Several times I’d kicked myself for not having thought of bringing along my paints and practice book, and so I did it one more time.

          “Well Peg!” Me says to Myself. “You can’t do anything about it now! You might just as well get over it!”

          Me is very practical.

          Mike’s first surgery back in February was only an hour. This one took a little over three hours. It was almost eight o’clock when they finally came and got me. Sara, the night nurse, went over all his instructions with us as Dr. McClintic had been called away.

          And I drove home. In the dark.

          “Lord, please keep all the deer and little critters off the road for me,” I prayed.

          We saw deer beside the road and even had some cross in front of me, but I could see them far enough in advance that I was able to slow down and let them pass.

Shiny little eyes came from the left side of the road and when we passed, Ol’ Mr. Possum turned and went back into the weeds.

          I drove slower than Mike would’ve but I got us home without hitting anything. God is good.

          “Why didn’t you stay in a hotel like you did last time?” you wonder.

          I did NOT want to. It was a miserable night the last time and I’d rather drive home in the dark than have a repeat of that night! We’d be more comfortable in our own home and I’d drive back up the next day. “Just make the appointment for later,” I told Mike.

          It’s a little over an hour to the hospital. We always leave ourselves at least an hour and a half because of Mike’s rule. We left at eight thirty for a ten twenty appointment.

          Plenty of time, right?

          Wrong!

          We were late.

          “How could you be late?” you ask.

          The little town of Wysox was doing some work on the street. They had one drive lane and the center lane blocked off so it was down to one lane of travel.

          We were stopped before the railroad tracks on 187 and waited about ten minutes before we got on The Golden Mile, as they call it. Then we were almost an hour getting through that mile. Fifty minutes, actually.

          “Who can we call to complain?” I asked.

          “What good is that going to do?” Mike asked.

          “I don’t know but they’re not doing a very good job of directing traffic.” We had spits and sputters and even some long lines of opposing traffic but we didn’t seem to be moving at all.


          “Let’s go back to Tractor Supply and take the road over the mountain,” Mike said.

          I made a U-ey.

          We get back to the other road and there’s a ROAD CLOSED BRIDGE OUT TWO MILES AHEAD sign.

          “Will we turn before that?” I asked.

          “No. We’ll be on that road for a long way.”

          “Should we follow the detour?” I wondered.

          “I don’t know where it goes,” Mike said. “Let’s get back in line.”

          Mike called the hospital and told them we were going to be late.

          “That’s okay. I’ll let them know. Just get here when you can get here and be safe,” the receptionist said.

          We were only about fifteen minutes late for our appointment.

          Dustin, Dr. McClintic’s nurse, did all the things he’s supposed to do before Dr. McClintic comes in. He checked Mike’s eye pressure and administered an eye test. While chatting with Dustin we found out that Mike had a scleral buckle placed on his eye and that they used oil instead of gas to press the retina back in place.

          We got an education, that’s for sure.

          I took a photo of Mike’s eye when Dustin took the guard off.


           And this is the next day.


          “It’ll be tomato red,” Dr. McClintic warned and he was right! It makes my knees hurt just to look at it. Like a little electrical zap. That’s my empathy chiming in. It happens when I see or think about anyone getting hurt.

          Mike has more vision in his eye than Dr. McClintic expected.

          “It’s because all of our church peeps are praying for me.” Mike gave the glory to God.

          “Hey, I’ll take all the help that I can get,” he responded.

          Mike has two prescription eye drops we have to put in four times a day and an ointment before bed. He’ll wear his eye guard at night, too. He’s to stay face down as much as he can over the weekend then at least fifty percent of the time for the next few days until we go back for his one-week check.

       With Mike’s eye, the traffic in Wysox, and me having to drive all put together, it’s been physically and emotionally exhausting.

          On our first trip up to the hospital, we left early enough that I could stop at the thrift store. I found this set of three framed photographs and it was signed.


          When I got it home I opened the back thinking there might be more information there. There’s not. They’re printed on one long 17x8 sheet of Epson photo paper.

I couldn’t find out anything about the photographer. I asked Copilot to search for a photographer who signs his work Tom Tom but he didn’t find anything. When I showed Copilot the signature, he thinks it’s Tom Yan. Regardless, he couldn’t find anything under that name either.


I took a picture of it and asked Copilot to check for these exact images on the web. He didn’t find these exact images but says a single red umbrella against a winter scene is very popular among photographers.

Famous or not, worth a million bucks or not, I just love the photos.

“You didn’t buy junk — you bought a real person’s creative work,” Copilot said.

           

          Speaking of creative work, I finished Almond, a dog portrait I was commissioned to paint by my best old friend in West Virginia.


          I went into the wayback and found a box to hold Almond as well as a few other things I wanted to send Trish. I left the box on the table and went to gather those things. When I came back, guess who had claimed the box?

          Yep.

Tiger.


I wasn’t in a hurry to pack the box so I let him stay in it as long as he liked. Once he vacated, I packed the box and printed the shipping label. Almond is on his way to his new home. I really hope she likes it. If she doesn’t, she doesn’t have to buy it. I have a sister that will take any and all artwork I want to send her. Phyllis loves me, even though I wasn’t always the best sister to her.

“We were kids. We were stupid.” She forgave me a long time ago.

          I was showing Almond off to one of the gals at the hospital. Lori and Mike bonded rather quickly and once I met her, I knew why. She’s a sweet lady and very personable.

          “Will you paint Ruger for my daughter?” she asked.

          “I’ll try,” is my standard reply. “If you don’t like it, you don’t have to buy it.”

          “He died about a year ago and this is our favorite photo of him.”


          “Are you sure your daughter would like a painting of him?” I asked.

          I’ve learned that not everyone wants a visual reminder of the heartache they endured when they lost something they dearly loved.

          “Oh yeah!” Lori said. “We even had his picture put on a mug and we have his paw prints on a plaque.”

          And my next question is also a standard. “Are you in a hurry for it?”

          “No. Take your time,” Lori said.

          “Good, because I don’t work very fast and I’ve got three commissions ahead of yours.” But I think this little guy will be fun to paint.

 

          I’m pretty sure that all mothers teach their children to wash their hands after they use the bathroom. Maybe not all mothers but at least the good ones do.

          When you’re in a public restroom, do you notice when someone walks out without washing?

          I do.

          Even walking past a restroom door or sitting in a place like, say, McDonald’s. The door opens and out walks a person (can be either male or female) and you can hear the toilet still flushing behind them. Do you think they took the time to wash their hands?

          It grosses me out.

          Walmart, McDonald’s, your church, or a hospital, I’ve seen it all. This is just the latest. Tan shoes in the stall next to mine, a blue coat passes my door and then the outside door opens and closes. Okay lady, I’m calling you out. If you don’t wash your hands after using the restroom in public, I bet you don’t wash them at home either.


          These people are the reason viruses and sick bugs get spread, the reason there’s poop germs on all our money.

          Wherever we go, Mike and I sanitize our hands when we get back to our car. A habit we picked up during COVID.

         


          Mike is a good husband and doesn’t deny me anything. I think you may have heard that before. Recently I asked for a five-tier artist cart from Phoenix Art Supply. It came up on my Facebook page and once I looked at the video reel, it came up on every page I’ve looked at since then.


        I really did want this the first time I saw it, but it’s expensive. It’s on rollers so I could push it out of the way when I wasn’t painting and it would be handy to have my supplies all in one place rather than having to get up and get something off the shelf—

But did I really need it?

          No.

          They wore me down.

          Tracking said my box would come when we were at the hospital.

          “Put a note on the door and ask him to put it on the patio and lock the door,” Mike said.

          “Will he do that?” I asked. “I once asked a delivery driver to set something inside and he said he couldn’t.”

          “They’ve done it before when I left a note,” Mike said.

          I left a note.

          We came home from the hospital to a giant box on the patio. I got a hold of a strap and drug it inside.

          “Look at the box,” I told Mike. “It’s really damaged.”

          “Take pictures,” Mike said, so I did.



          It’s packed really well but one of the rips in the box extended through the Styrofoam on the inside. One of the brackets had been torn loose and later I found the missing screw.


         There was a ding on one of the pieces but it wasn’t where there was damage to the box. That tells me they did it before or during the packing process. For what we paid for this, I want to ding it up myself!


          There were no instructions or parts list but I looked online. That’s when I discovered they sent me two tops and no bottom. I laid them out and took pictures.


          The next morning I contacted the seller. They’ve determined that the screw being torn out wouldn’t affect anything and they would give me twenty dollars for the ding, if I agree. As for the two tops and no bottom, they agree, it’s wrong. They’ve already arranged to send me the right bottom, but it’ll take more than a week because it’s being shipped directly from their overseas factory.

          “Are you happy with that?” Mike asked.

          “I guess. It sounds reasonable.” I know if I had not agreed they might’ve given me more money back or a new cart, but I’m not out to get something I don’t deserve, I just wanted it made right. Although, if they would’ve offered to send me a new cart, I wouldn’t’ve refused.

          I know, right! I’m too easy.

 

          One last thing before we call this one done.

          Mike has to be face down again, just like his first retina surgery. Last time we rented a massage chair and it was expensive. This time we didn’t.

          “You could sit over the workout bench,” I suggested.

          Then we found two big mirrors and lined ‘em up so the TV wouldn’t be upside down for him. One of them is propped against my art cart box.


          “I want you to be really dedicated this time,” Dr. McClintic told Mike. “Face down at least over the weekend except to eat or go to the bathroom. Sleep on your side or at a forty-five-degree angle. After that, I want you face down at least fifty percent of the time until I see you again.”

I asked around for someone to rent or loan us a message table, but no luck. We’ll just have to get through this the best we can.

          Mike isn’t very comfortable here and spends some of his time in the recliner at the forty-five-degree angle or laying on his side. If it’s good enough at night, he reasons, it’ll be good enough through the day for napping or watching TV.

          Say a prayer for his comfort and healing, if you would. Please and thank you.

 

          Until next time...

          Let’s call this one done.

          Done!

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Short Stories

 

          I might be a little short on stories this week but I won’t be short on road pictures, that’s for sure!

          Nick, one of our church peeps, married his love, Aubrey, last weekend. They’re on their honeymoon and I took this photo from Nick’s Facebook page.

          Mike and I attended the wedding, where Pastor Jay officiated.


          It was a barn wedding and I ordered a long dress just for the happy event. I thought this dress, paired with cowboy boots, would look western enough. Although this one is yellow-green in color, I ordered it in a rusty reddish-orange. When it came, it was wrinkled.


          “I’ll just wash it,” I told Mike.

          “I wouldn’t put it in the dryer,” he said.

          “I won’t. I’ll hang it to dry.”

          Well, even after it was dry, it was still wrinkled. I ironed it and it looked great, until I was all done and held it up! I thought I was re-wrinkling it as I moved it around the ironing board so I ironed it again, being more careful. The wrinkles came right back. I tried again, misting it this time, then I tried steam. Nothing was working. I worked on it for hours before I gave up. It was a wet, raw day for the wedding anyway, so I ended up wearing slacks and a pretty top, along with my boots.

          And speaking of my boots that was something else I worked on for hours. They’d been in storage for something like twenty-five, thirty years. I don’t know when or why I quit wearing them, but I did.

          They were dirty.

          I washed them with a mild soap.

          A couple of spots were really stiff and I just knew they’d rub on me if I didn’t soften them.

          “I thought I heard that WD-40 will soften leather,” I told my peeps on my morning love note.

          “WD-40 is not recommended for boots. It dries out the leather,” they said.

          Other oils, like mink, coconut, and baby oil will work, but they need time and time was something I didn’t have. It was the day of the wedding.

          “Nothing like waiting until the last minute,” I told Miss Rosie on our morning love call. “I just hope they still fit.”

          “Don’cha think you should try them on before you put all that work into them?” she asked.

          I don’t remember how I answered her, but that certainly would’ve been more prudent.

          I ended up using my fabric steamer to soften the leather in a couple of spots that were heavily creased, then I oiled them. I do have coconut oil in my cupboard, but I also have this bottle of baby oil that’s more than thirty years old. I don’t often have a use for baby oil so I thought oiling my boots would help use it up.


          After steam heat, which can be drying, I worked some oil in and put clips on to keep the creases flat until they cooled.

          It worked. And more importantly, they still fit.


          A few pics from our ride to the wedding venue.



          The barn was beautiful but not really conducive to an early spring wedding. You could see outside between the boards and it was cold. They had giant heaters but that didn’t help unless you stood right next to them. Everyone, except the wedding party, wore their jackets, and I bet they put theirs on after the ceremony!

          Mike and I only stayed for a couple of hours. On the way home Mike noticed the docks around the lake had been cantilevered. Interesting.


          I started seeing a few tiny ants in my kitchen this week. Sugar ants, I think they’re called. I just crushed ‘em with a finger or thumb. They’re so tiny they don’t leave much guts behind. I know ants leave trails so I was hoping to avoid more ants by eliminating the scouts.

          It didn’t work.

          I woke up to a full-scale invasion one morning as they marched across the front of my sink.


         I wiped ‘em up with my dish rag, rinsed it in a bowl of soap and bleach water and crushed any stragglers I’d see after that.

          “Terro is good for ants,” my handsome son (and others) recommended.

          S’kay. I’ll put it on the shopping list.

          In the meantime I kept doing what I was doing and as of this morning I have very few ants. I might not need to buy the ant poison after all.

 

          My handsome mountain man has wanted a front mower for a couple of three years now. They’re not cheap.

          “You don’t need one,” I’d say.

          “But, Peg, it would be so handy to get under the bushes and out over the edge of the pond with,” he’d say.

          I agree. It would be handy. Mike has lost his gas cap a couple of times going in and out and around the bushes and he does get scrapes, too, but is it really necessary?

          I was at the kitchen sink when the printer started up and spit out a piece or two of paper. Mike was printing something from his computer and came out to get his paper.

          “What ‘cha got?” I asked.

          “Nothing. I don’t wanna tell you,” he said.

          “Okay...but I’ll find out sooner or later. You might just as well tell me now.”

          “I found a front mower I’d like to have,” he said, showed me the information page with the pictures, and proceeded to tell me all about it.

          Mike is our CFO. Mike is a good husband. Mike doesn’t deny me anything. He doesn’t really need my permission to buy something he wants, but he does like to have it.

          “If it’s a good deal, if we can afford it, and if you really want it — get it,” I told him.

          I’m sure he was shocked since I’d been so stubbornly against it for so long.

          “It’s in Michigan. You wanna go on a road trip?”

          “Sure!” Think of all the road pictures I’d get then! “The girls travel well and we could get a hotel room for one night. The cats and birds will be okay for a day, but I bet Lamar would come up and give them their morning treat.”

          Mike contacted the seller and got all of his questions answered. Then the next day he found a different front mower.

          “This one’s cheaper and closer to home. You wanna go look at it?” he asked.

          We got around, I made travel coffee, and off we went on a three-hour drive.

          How about some road pictures to start us off?

          The cow by the tree was having a rub.








          Rocks, in varying colors all lined up like this remind me of my cute little redheaded sister. Diane studied rocks and pointed out the different ones and even named them when she last visited us. My photo doesn’t do it justice.



          We drove through an Amish or Mennonite community. I don’t know how to tell the difference or if it even matters. This guy was in the field with his team of horses. Plowing or spreading manure, I don’t know. I had a hard time getting any kind of photo because of the trees.


          Nearby stood two more horses and they were watching. Maybe they’re wondering if they’re next.


          I think the one boy sees me taking pictures. When I looked at it on the computer, he seemed to be looking right at me.




I thought this church burned until I saw it on the computer. Now it looks like it just...died.

          Old buildings can live a long time when they have the breath of life in them.

          Speaking of buildings dying, how would you like to be attached to this guy?




          The highway opened up in front of us and Mike was going a little faster than he should. He always says something like, “Is 70 in a 55 too fast?”

          I usually say “You’ll think it’s too fast if you get a ticket.” That’s what I usually say to this all too familiar banter between us. But this time I said, “Not for me but maybe for that cop we just passed.”

          I was kidding, of course. We hadn’t passed any police officer monitoring for speeders. Nonetheless, Mike slowed his roll.

          Guess what we pass a few miles later.












         Mike didn’t like either of the mowers we went to see. And that’s fine. It’s an investment and he won’t be happy if he settles for something just because it’s cheaper.         

Our GPS took us a different way home than the way we went. Don’t ask me why, but it’s done it before. You’d think the route would be the same no matter which direction you were heading. We made a turn and promptly saw a ROAD CLOSED 2 MILES AHEAD sign. We were going four miles before our next turn. Do you think the sign was meant for us?

Instead of turning around then and there we continued. I got a few pictures on that road that I otherwise wouldn’t’ve gotten, so I’m not sad. But we did have to turn around.












          We went through Minersville.



         I’m going to guess that you can guess what industry the town was named for. If you guessed coal mines, you’d be right.



          “A miner’s life is a hard life,” my best old West Virginia friend said. Members of Trish’s family worked in the coal mines so she knows firsthand.

          “Did you know we have a mine here that’s on fire?”

          “No! I didn’t know that!”

          The Centralia, Pennsylvania mine fire started in May 1962 when the town attempted to clean up its landfill, which sat inside an old strip‑mine pit. The fire accidentally ignited exposed coal seams beneath the pit, and because the abandoned mines under Centralia were a maze of tunnels, the fire spread rapidly underground. Efforts to extinguish it between 1962 and 1978 cost millions but failed. By the early 1980s, dangerous levels of carbon monoxide, ground subsidence, and sinkholes made the town unsafe. In 1984, Congress funded a large relocation program. Over 500 homes and businesses were bought out and demolished. By the 1990s, nearly the entire town had been condemned, and Route 61—the main highway—was closed due to buckling from the heat below. Today, only a handful of residents remain, and the fire continues to burn underground across several miles. Estimates suggest it could keep burning for another 250 years

          It was raining so hard that this is the best shot I took of the tail end of an airplane sticking out of the building.



          The sign on the silo reads: Jesus is coming back. Are you ready?











 

          This farm was absolutely beautiful.






          “Peg, did you do any art this week?” I know you wanna know.

          I did. All of it was practice art. Working on my sketching skills, although I don’t know why. It isn’t necessary to be able to draw if you want to paint. That’s what they make light boxes and transfer paper for.

          I did this one and for the first time I used a black brush pen to outline it with.


“What’s a brush pen?” you ask.

A brush pen is a pen filled with paint and has a soft, flexible tip, like a paint brush.

I wasn’t happy with my lines so I went back to the Sharpie.

          I can knock one of these out in a half hour, give or take. And they’re just for fun.



          This old book has dirt or chocolate on some of the pages and scribbles on others.

          I don’t really care and I don’t try to clean them up.


          When you wash your watercolor brushes you want to leave them flat to dry or hang them bristle side down. For me it’s just easier to leave them lay flat on my desk. I prop my artwork up on top of my brushes and pens and take a picture like I did in this shot I sent to Trish. I had no idea what she’d think about this, I don’t even know what I think, except Miss Rosie will like the green eye shadow. Green is her most favorite color but she likes orange, too.

          “It looks like Mama has gotten all dressed up for date night!" Trish said.


          I noticed that my desktop was getting cluttered with brushes. I decided to get a container and pick my brushes up. I could’ve put them in one of the myriad of containers I already have holding brushes but I wanted to keep these separate. They’re my favorites and I didn’t want to have to dig through a bunch of other brushes to find the one I wanted.

          The brushes get pushed under the monitor when Tiger walks across my desk. I reached under to pull them out but quickly withdrew my fingers.

          Aye-yi-yi!

          What a mess!


          My small container of black ink was on its side and the ink had seeped out. I guess that wasn’t an airtight container! I drug the computer cords through the ink as I was trying to clean it up and I had ink all over the place! Time and effort cleaned most of it up but my fingers were stained for the rest of the day.

          I love the handmade ceramic bowl I put my brushes in but it’s not the right container for the job. Not to worry. I have other containers but I was tired of looking.


          I’m trying to work out a jelly feeder. After having the dish disappear this past winter then having it knocked to the ground where the dogs could get at the grape jelly wasn’t working for me. I got a food bowl out of the cat condo. It attaches to the wire of the cage so I found a way to attach it to the bird’s feeding station.

The Baltimore Orioles have returned. He’s waiting for the woodpecker to leave so he can have a turn.



          The weather warmed and the flaw became evident. There’s no water well to keep the ants out. I’d forgotten about them. Since then I’ve gone back to the dish with the plate of water under it until I can think of something else. 

          I’m out of room. The rest of my jibber-jabber will have to wait.

          Let’s call this one done, and remember, you’re all in my heart.