Thanks for the comics PeterL. I saw more about Hunter Biden in them than anywhere else. Not even FoxNews tells us about the illegal skullduggery Hunter Biden is having with China. I’m certain that Hunter will escape with no penalty.
Our country is headed into the wrong direction. I keep telling myself that at age 90, it is none of my business. I willl not see the effect. But it really bothers me to see what is hapening to us.
And this so-called virus shutdown is making a bad thing worse.
Good morning! We are looking for a cool down this weekend, and maybe some snow. I am looking forward to thinking of something other than COVID and school.
Finally got to see Second today. She is still tired, and, as she says, grief always comes and goes. But I think it helps that she has the needs of the little ones to attend to. Tiny was present while we talked, and while she gave me a very long hug, in other respects, she was her usual funny self.
Good morning! I just received an email from a church member who is offering to deliver Thanksgiving meals to our WMU ladies who may be staying home and not seeing family for Thanksgiving. Such a kind gesture that warms my heart. And yesterday another church friend brought two giant bags of clothes for me to look through before she donates to charity. Her taste in clothing is so similar to mine. I need to do a big purge of clothes since I basically have two wardrobes, one for office attire and the other casual. I think at this stage I need to delete the office attire.
I have considered after seeing our Governor speak on the news this a.m. what an awkward situation he is in since he was our former Secretary of State. He basically was put into the position of having to chide the man who got his former position. Awkward to the max!
Rkessler, so thankful that you are getting that well deserved break. You amaze me with what all you are involved with as do others here do, too. So many productive lives here who are helping others in a myriad of ways. Blessings to you and your family and I give thanks to God for you♡
But saying that, it is not to make light of what those of us who are more in the role of homebodies now. We have more time to devote to prayer and though the total results are never fully recognized by our human senses, it is a priceless work of love for others. I add my thanks to those who spend time daily lifting up prayer needs. Only God recognizes the full value of that work. We should not discount ourselves and the assignments God has given to each of us.
Saturday. It’s dreary today, with possible rain and 40s, after a week of sunshine and 60s. Oh, well. It’s November, which can be the autumn version of February, except for Thanksgiving.
It will be a beautiful day here, sunny with highs around 70°. I wish I could share it with others . . . but considering the turmoil in this state right now, we need this cheerful weather to lighten the burdens.
Lots of challenges with electronics today. Have given up on the Ipad, and have shifted here to share this.
After finishing Amos, I’ve moved over to Jeremiah (why not? Just in time for the holidays!), and read this wise comment: “False gods are always abusive.”
Isn’t that the truth?
Then why don’t we see it when we get caught in their sticky traps? Shouldn’t that be the first clue we are not worshipping/spending time/obeying the one true God who loves us and wants only the best?
Good morning. I am about two thirds through Jeremiah now. In fact, this morning, as I was curled up in my nice warm bed, I told God I was not interested in getting up today and hearing more of Jeremiah. He reminded me that daughter and son in law are on that road and I needed to get up and going.
I read the second chapter of 1 Peter this morning. It reminds that ” . . . The stone that the builders rejected ‐‐‐ this one has become the cornerstone . . .” referring back to Psalm 118:22. It is wonderful to see Jesus in the Old and the New Testaments, but also sad to consider how so many have continued to reject Him through the ages.
Michelle, you had asked for me to let you know what I thought of The Promised Land by Elizabeth Musser after reading it. Wow! It is a wonderful book on many levels. It has great character development, several different storylines moving along and weaving together in first person narratives. It has a very satisfying ending without loose threads. As one who enjoys travel, I think you’d enjoy its charming descriptions of places along the Camino.
I was reading Galatians 5, which we all know as ending with the fruit of the Spirit. But before that there is such a list of sinful attitudes and actions. A much longer list and very convicting.
Michelle, I loved Code Name Verity! Thanks for the suggestion.
We are buried deep in Leviticus right now. It’s quite a hard book to read every day, but there always seems to be something to ponder over. Imagine that!
I’m reading through the Pauline epistles and I read three or four of the shorter ones yesterday (ending with 2 Thessalonians) over several sittings, including 1 and 2 Thessalonians straight through together–a real blessing to read Christ’s words through Paul.
My husband and I had someone else do our shopping for us this week, and we had him get us a fresh (not frozen) turkey from San’s Club. I figured that would make it easier to get the neck and giblets out (my least favorite part of cooking a turkey) and it’s supposed to be better meat. We haven’t gone out to eat since February, and if it costs a little more, it costs a little more. The per-pound price is hardly exorbitant anyway ($1.19 here). My husband had read reviews from one or two who said the bird is actually partially frozen. Well, yesterday I took off the wrap, and it definitely wasn’t ready to eat, so we put it back in the fridge until today. Today it still isn’t, so now it’s back in the fridge till Monday. But I’m making the mashed potatoes and baked sweet potatoes today.
I’m dealing with some sore/pulled muscles today in my upper left leg — and the house really needs picking up and cleaning. You’d think I’d taken up playing hockey with all these muscle/knee issues I’ve had since summer, sheesh.
Is the election over yet? I think we need the election to be over so we can just move on.
But yes, the pandemic uptick has been a discouragement for everyone, too, right now, especially as the holidays are here. But a neighbor said to me last night “How do we really know it’s really increasing — or if they’re just saying that?” There is so much distrust right now. It’s good to question, but I’m afraid many are falling into questioning things based on very few, if any, real facts.
Every many doing (or in this case believing with little basis in fact) what is right in their own eyes.
We’re back to long lines outside stores and empty shelves here where the hoarding and panic again is taking hold — on top of the regular mass shopping for stay-at-home Thanksgivings, of course. I guess it was a madhouse at Costco the other night. I haven’t been to a store in a week now, but will have to pick up a few things at some point. Or go back to delivery and pay more.
DJ, I know it’s really increasing because people in healthcare are saying it and because I know a lot of people who have it right now, or have had it in the last month. That’s anecdotal (I can’t prove it to someone else), but it’s enough for me personally to know it. And the numbers are going way up in Indiana, and in other states too. (Though that is the part “subject to manipulation,” put those two together and yes, the numbers are going up.)
Also we are hearing of numbers going up around the world, and that is in line with the expectations of cooler weather. What I’m not hearing is large numbers of deaths, but I can’t say I’m actually tracking it in detail.
That’s what I told my neighbor’s wife, who has the same doubts that rising cases are actually occurring. It’s occurring in other countries so thinking it’s a political ploy somehow to control an election or for other nefarious purposes in the U.S. doesn’t fit that scenario — although, that said, I agree we need to beware of any political move to make even some of these restrictions extend beyond when they’re needed. But for now, I’m simply not seeing that.
We all hate this, it’s been a long year already, and it was hoped that the holidays could be a bit more ‘normal’ (assuming more stabilized case numbers). But here we are. News of the vaccines helps, but that’s still a number of months away for the general population (although here’s hoping our front-line medical workers and nursing home patients will be able to get those first, either late this year or early next).
I was thinking back to a year ago and how none of us then had even a notion about what was just around the corner. We wouldn’t have believed it if someone told us.
Daughter’s in health care in Idaho are definitely concerned with the increase. Entire families being hospitalized. Deaths but I don’t think they have suggested that has increased.
For Bible reading, I am making my way through Acts, again, inspired by the recent city church series in that book. You know, it is only this time I realized that the Agabus mentioned as predicting a famine, triggering the Antioch church to send relief to the Jerusalem church was the same Agabus that took Paul’s girdle and tied himself up in it, predicting that the owner of the girdle would be bound in the same way in Jerusalem. It got me thinking of the other prophets, such as Philip’s daughters, and how Acts is a direct and literal fulfillment of Joel’s prophecy of the last days, a prophecy that Peter quotes from in the opening sermon of Acts at Pentecost (Acts 2:17-21).
For book reading, out loud, I am reading ‘Agnes Grey’, by Anne Bronte, to my mother, and ‘The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe’ to Tiny. I am always reading snatches of books personally, but most of the books I own, I have already read. So, with my birthday gift money, I did buy a brand new book to me, one by the author whose interview with World I linked to a week or so ago, Michael O’Brien. The book I got is his first, ‘Father Elijah’, an end times thriller with a difference – his mission is to convert the man suspected to be the Anti-Christ. I am about halfway through it. He is a good writer, no doubt, but perhaps a little too Catholic to please a wider audience.
It is the hospitalizations more than the deaths that have always been the concern. We cannot change the rate of death for a virus, but hospitals that are full of COVID patients cannot treat the accident or assault victims, the cancer patients, or those who suffered a life threatening emergency such as a diabetic coma, or an aneurysm, or an anaphylactic attack. Less people will survive all those everyday occurences if the hospitals cannot respond because they are full. And that makes for an uneasy, restless population. The average person does not realize how much good healthcare helps keep law and order.
And people seem to be fearful of going to the hospital or clinic for things that could be life threatening if not treated because they fear either getting exposed to covid or that the hospital is not accepting anybody but covid.
We are having lots of cases of Covid right now. I know quite a few people who have it and quite a few who have died of it. Many have it with few symptoms, too.
I am reminded (by reading some of your posts) that I need to take my turkey out of the freezer. Thanks. 😉
AJ is the only one who had confidence in Indiana in the football pool. My husband watched the whole game, me just minutes. (I don’t understand football and don’t want to understand football.) But in spite of some errors, they managed to finish just seven points behind in a high-scoring game where IU was the visiting team. My husband said that Ohio’s quarterback acted like he had just lost his best friend, as though they had actually lost the game; it was technically a win for Ohio State, but barely. (The betting had OSU winning by 21 points, and in a much lower scoring game. No one expected IU to have 35 points and only lose by 7 points.)
I gave up keeping up with Covid a while back. My brother told me one day this week that my neighborhood was named on the radio as a current hotspot. I think that could have related to the Covid test site in my church’s parking lot.
LOL, I texted Wesley to see if he had read that book since it reminded me of him. He said he assigns the Introduction to the book for his students to read.
I have ‘On Reading Well’. Eldest gave it to me as Christmas gift a few years ago, just as she gave me two other of Karen Swallow Prior’s books, the autobiographical ‘Booked’, and the biography of Hannah More, ‘Fierce Convictions’. I have read them all.
Questions?
1. Why would a moose want to lick my car?
2. If a moose should decide to lick my car, what can I do to prevent it? Except drive away.
3. Good morning anyhow. Sunny/cold in Greensboro this morning.
I was reading John 20 this morning. It occurred to me for the first time ever, to wonder. It was eight days between the time Jesus revealed himself to the disciples and the appearance to Thomas. Wonder how they passed those eight days. They knew Jesus had risen, but nothing happened for a full week.
Chas:
1. A moose would want to lick your car for the salt on it. Cars in the winter get coated with the salt that is put on the roads to melt the snow. Wild animals are always seeking out salt, which they need to help regulate their metabolisms, and will go to great lengths to find it.
2. There is not much you can do except avoid areas where moose are likely to be. The signs were in Banff Alberta, where the highway runs through a national park. People often stop their cars to take pictures of the wildlife, giving opportunities for moose to come out of the forest and lick their cars. In other words, when stopping to take pictures, do not let the wildlife get close to your car – if you see them approaching, get back in your car and drive away before they get anywhere near. Once a moose has got near enough to start licking your car, you are going to be stuck there until the moose has got enough salt. Road salt is not the cleanest salt, so it is not good for the moose, and, like feeding geese or squirrels in a park, moose that regard cars as salt sources are going to be major nuisances.
I was going to reply to Chas before seeing Roscuro’s post that it had to be because of salt. But I did not know all about it like Roscuro. I just remembered that sometimes people put out salt blocks or licks for animals.
Morning…we have an occasional Moose in the area but I have never seen one in the 34 years of living here. I did however see one in Estes Park when on a retreat with the Pregnancy Center volunteers….he had our door blocked and we couldn’t get out so we had to retreat to the downstairs and meet there until he left! We affectionately called him “Bullwinkle”
It is not just wild animals that need the salt, of course. When we had goats and a horse, we always had to keep salt blocks for them to lick. It was as much a necessity as a water bucket and a feed trough.
Janice, probably. They were often tan coloured, though I remember a blue one once, and about the size of half a cement block of the kind used for house foundations.
Chas, it is available. There are many natural salt licks out there where the animals congregate. But why walk to the salt lick when the people dump it along the road? It is a big problem as it brings the big animals to the roadside where they often get hit.
Chas, there are natural salt licks where animals have dug out natural salt deposits that were close to the surface. But, in the winter, animals have to constantly dig down through ice and snow to access the salt and predators know the salt lick locations – while a full grown moose can fend off a wolf pack, it is still a hard fight for it. A car would be a much more easily accessible source and while wild animals are able to survive without easily accessible source, they will take the easy way if available – see also bird feeders.
We have moose around here and have seen them a few times. One of my children got treed by a moose when he was out elk hunting. The same one as got dive bombed by an eagle while wearing a rabbit skin hat.
One of the difficult things you learn as you mature.
You can’t do the things you used to do.
It’s embarrassing to watch a kid cut my grass.
I pay hin $20.00, butit sstill makes me feel useless.
Actually, its an easy 20 bucks. But I don’t think kids these days don’t worry about money the way I used to when I was that age.
Chas, that’s not useless to employ someone else who could use the money while you watch over your beloved.
We chose a condo rather than a house largely to free my husband from most yard work. We don’t directly pay the men who mow our lawn, blow our leaves, and snowblow our walks, but we pay fees as a community that hires it done. It’s a blessing to the men who are making an honest living, and it’s a blessing to us to free us from chores that my husband no longer has stamina to do without completely wearing him out. And I don’t have to add it to my own chore list since I have higher priority tasks.
Think we have it bad in lesser or greater levels of being isolated?
Here’s a family that spent more than 40 years hiding out in Siberia not seeing anyone outside their own family. (One woman born into this family after they fled to escape persecution has continued to live there past the death of all her family and is now in her seventies, but it was forty years before the family saw a human being outside their family.)
I am oh so thankful I can still mow our little plot of ground. It is perfect exercise for this sixty+ year old body. But a while back I did not feel like mowing so it is a gauge for me to know how I am feeling. We have to pay about $40 to get any little thing done around here. So I am well paid when I get my exercise!😀
I love my gardeners, they’re fast, efficient, and usually can do extra tasks for me such as install my new water heater. I also had them clean the roof and gutters of leaves and debris last time, a chore they did in a jiffy — didn’t even need a ladder, Alberto leaped up into the large ficus tree next to the patio and, just like that, he was up on the roof with his handy leaf-blower, done in 15 minutes). Youth, strength and flexibility — and a willingness to work.
I have other work to do every day, for my own pay, and I’m more than happy to pass some of that money on to them for what they do every month.
I love the wildlife conversation today! With a husband that is a game warden (park warden) I have so many wildlife stories, but I love reading others. Husband has also worked in Jasper Nat. Park and we have traveled that highway often.
There is a salt lick on the gravel road that I travel to work (when I’m working) and the whitetail deer lick it right down into a pot hole. The grader comes by and smooths it all out and the deer are back digging it out again and a pot hole has formed by the next day 🙂
I remember my older cousins on their dairy farm chipping chunks off the cows’ salt lick for all of use to lick – memories.
Now that is reminding me where I may have seen a salt lick. We have a wildlife area not far away, the Yellow River Game Ranch. It has a lot of deer there. Maybe it could be there that I saw one, but I think it was when I was much younger.
I pick the Gamecocks to beat Ga. Bulldogs next Sat. 24-21
Be thinking about it. I am going to challenge everyone, starting tomorrow,, to tell us something you are thankful for. at least one, each day.
It can be repeated/duplicated. i.e. I suspect most of you agree with my thankfulness to God about my salvation, born in USA, etc.
But you may have something unique. i.e. I am thankful that Bobby Murray talked me into joining the AF with him.
I’ve been having technical issues all weekend–particularly with Zoom–but Mr. Tech has come in and I’ve got a Zoom meeting scheduled for tomorrow, Monday November 23 at 4 pm, California time.
I’m sorry, DJ and Roscuro. All you people on the East Coast need to tell me how late you can join us!
There was a story several years ago about moose in Maine dying unnatural deaths from dehydration. For some reason, they were being “targeted” by mosquitoes–or they were unusually bad that year–and were dying from all the mosquito bites.
I read it in the NYTimes. It must have been true. 🙂
I remember the show, but didn’t watch it. Probably something on another channel one of us preferred? Those were the days it was not so easy to tape record. Not so many channels either.
I am glad that my husband can still remove the snow. I will not be able to until my shoulder heals. Raking was no problem, but shoveling is different. Even contemplating getting the turkey ready makes my shoulder hurt. That is when it is so nice to have two of us. Team work! I would not mind if we had someone hired to do it, though. Less concern for the future in some ways.
When we were in Colorado our friends took us to Rocky Mountain National Park. We saw both elk and moose. They said in all their trips there they had never seen moose. Awesome sight. Maybe I’ll send AJ a few of the photos.
I remember that show and may have watched it once or twice but not recalling details of the show. It has been windy and cold around here and I have been feeling a bit “off” physically. Headache, dizzy and tingly sinus. No fever or aches but just off. Could be the front coming in…I always feel the effects of the drop in barometric pressure, plus I awakened at 2 this morning…it’s been a long day!
I’ve seen a lot of moose, elk and deer in my life, along with bears (black and grizzly), wolves, coyotes, foxes and lynx. Oh and antelope…and bison. I have been very blessed to live in some of the most beautiful places in the world.
My brother told me that there were salt licks on our grandparent’s farm. He also said some people use salt licks in deer hunting to attract deer to an area. He also said some people plant clover or rye for that purpose. Then he said his garden could be used that way since he often finds deer munching on his garden plants.
Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, Finding Your Roots, and now a Hallmark Christmas movie are making for a pleasant evening. Just a few more posts to get to 100.
L.A. County suspends outdoor dining at restaurants as coronavirus surges
(from LA Times): In a devastating blow to Los Angeles’ struggling restaurant and hospitality industry, L.A. County public health officials on Sunday announced they will suspend outdoor dining at restaurants amid a surge of new coronavirus cases.
Few segments of Southern California’s economy have been hit harder by the pandemic than the once-booming dining world, with many landmark establishments closing in recent months and many more on the brink. After they were forced to shut indoor dining rooms in the spring, many eateries got a lifeline when officials allowed them to serve outdoors, often in patios and makeshift dining halls set up in parking lots, sidewalks and streets.
The new rule takes effect at 10 p.m. Wednesday and restricts restaurants — along with breweries, wineries and bars — to takeout and delivery only for the first time since May. It will remain in place for at least three weeks, officials said. Wineries and breweries can continue retail operations.
“The persistent high number of cases requires additional safety measures that limit mixing in settings where people are not wearing masks,” Barbara Ferrer, the Los Angeles County health director, said in a statement.
Thanks for the comics PeterL. I saw more about Hunter Biden in them than anywhere else. Not even FoxNews tells us about the illegal skullduggery Hunter Biden is having with China. I’m certain that Hunter will escape with no penalty.
Our country is headed into the wrong direction. I keep telling myself that at age 90, it is none of my business. I willl not see the effect. But it really bothers me to see what is hapening to us.
And this so-called virus shutdown is making a bad thing worse.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Sorry to start the day with such a negative comment. I thought about it at the last minute, but clicked anyhow.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good Morning. What a week! I won’t bug you with the details. I’m just glad it is Saturday.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Good morning! We are looking for a cool down this weekend, and maybe some snow. I am looking forward to thinking of something other than COVID and school.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Finally got to see Second today. She is still tired, and, as she says, grief always comes and goes. But I think it helps that she has the needs of the little ones to attend to. Tiny was present while we talked, and while she gave me a very long hug, in other respects, she was her usual funny self.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Good morning! I just received an email from a church member who is offering to deliver Thanksgiving meals to our WMU ladies who may be staying home and not seeing family for Thanksgiving. Such a kind gesture that warms my heart. And yesterday another church friend brought two giant bags of clothes for me to look through before she donates to charity. Her taste in clothing is so similar to mine. I need to do a big purge of clothes since I basically have two wardrobes, one for office attire and the other casual. I think at this stage I need to delete the office attire.
I have considered after seeing our Governor speak on the news this a.m. what an awkward situation he is in since he was our former Secretary of State. He basically was put into the position of having to chide the man who got his former position. Awkward to the max!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Rkessler, so thankful that you are getting that well deserved break. You amaze me with what all you are involved with as do others here do, too. So many productive lives here who are helping others in a myriad of ways. Blessings to you and your family and I give thanks to God for you♡
But saying that, it is not to make light of what those of us who are more in the role of homebodies now. We have more time to devote to prayer and though the total results are never fully recognized by our human senses, it is a priceless work of love for others. I add my thanks to those who spend time daily lifting up prayer needs. Only God recognizes the full value of that work. We should not discount ourselves and the assignments God has given to each of us.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Saturday. It’s dreary today, with possible rain and 40s, after a week of sunshine and 60s. Oh, well. It’s November, which can be the autumn version of February, except for Thanksgiving.
LikeLiked by 2 people
It will be a beautiful day here, sunny with highs around 70°. I wish I could share it with others . . . but considering the turmoil in this state right now, we need this cheerful weather to lighten the burdens.
LikeLike
I will be planting bulbs a church member shared with me and digging some bulbs for her. Perfect day for doing that!
LikeLike
Looks icy outside. Chas, I agree with you, a tough time
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lots of challenges with electronics today. Have given up on the Ipad, and have shifted here to share this.
After finishing Amos, I’ve moved over to Jeremiah (why not? Just in time for the holidays!), and read this wise comment: “False gods are always abusive.”
Isn’t that the truth?
Then why don’t we see it when we get caught in their sticky traps? Shouldn’t that be the first clue we are not worshipping/spending time/obeying the one true God who loves us and wants only the best?
LikeLiked by 2 people
Good morning. I am about two thirds through Jeremiah now. In fact, this morning, as I was curled up in my nice warm bed, I told God I was not interested in getting up today and hearing more of Jeremiah. He reminded me that daughter and son in law are on that road and I needed to get up and going.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I read the second chapter of 1 Peter this morning. It reminds that ” . . . The stone that the builders rejected ‐‐‐ this one has become the cornerstone . . .” referring back to Psalm 118:22. It is wonderful to see Jesus in the Old and the New Testaments, but also sad to consider how so many have continued to reject Him through the ages.
LikeLike
Michelle, you had asked for me to let you know what I thought of The Promised Land by Elizabeth Musser after reading it. Wow! It is a wonderful book on many levels. It has great character development, several different storylines moving along and weaving together in first person narratives. It has a very satisfying ending without loose threads. As one who enjoys travel, I think you’d enjoy its charming descriptions of places along the Camino.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I was reading Galatians 5, which we all know as ending with the fruit of the Spirit. But before that there is such a list of sinful attitudes and actions. A much longer list and very convicting.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Michelle, I loved Code Name Verity! Thanks for the suggestion.
We are buried deep in Leviticus right now. It’s quite a hard book to read every day, but there always seems to be something to ponder over. Imagine that!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I’m reading through the Pauline epistles and I read three or four of the shorter ones yesterday (ending with 2 Thessalonians) over several sittings, including 1 and 2 Thessalonians straight through together–a real blessing to read Christ’s words through Paul.
My husband and I had someone else do our shopping for us this week, and we had him get us a fresh (not frozen) turkey from San’s Club. I figured that would make it easier to get the neck and giblets out (my least favorite part of cooking a turkey) and it’s supposed to be better meat. We haven’t gone out to eat since February, and if it costs a little more, it costs a little more. The per-pound price is hardly exorbitant anyway ($1.19 here). My husband had read reviews from one or two who said the bird is actually partially frozen. Well, yesterday I took off the wrap, and it definitely wasn’t ready to eat, so we put it back in the fridge until today. Today it still isn’t, so now it’s back in the fridge till Monday. But I’m making the mashed potatoes and baked sweet potatoes today.
LikeLike
I’m dealing with some sore/pulled muscles today in my upper left leg — and the house really needs picking up and cleaning. You’d think I’d taken up playing hockey with all these muscle/knee issues I’ve had since summer, sheesh.
Is the election over yet? I think we need the election to be over so we can just move on.
But yes, the pandemic uptick has been a discouragement for everyone, too, right now, especially as the holidays are here. But a neighbor said to me last night “How do we really know it’s really increasing — or if they’re just saying that?” There is so much distrust right now. It’s good to question, but I’m afraid many are falling into questioning things based on very few, if any, real facts.
Every many doing (or in this case believing with little basis in fact) what is right in their own eyes.
And on it goes. It’s wearying.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We’re back to long lines outside stores and empty shelves here where the hoarding and panic again is taking hold — on top of the regular mass shopping for stay-at-home Thanksgivings, of course. I guess it was a madhouse at Costco the other night. I haven’t been to a store in a week now, but will have to pick up a few things at some point. Or go back to delivery and pay more.
LikeLiked by 1 person
If we do anything for Thanksgiving, it will probably involve somebody taking a trip out to the turkey run. No lines.
LikeLiked by 3 people
DJ, I know it’s really increasing because people in healthcare are saying it and because I know a lot of people who have it right now, or have had it in the last month. That’s anecdotal (I can’t prove it to someone else), but it’s enough for me personally to know it. And the numbers are going way up in Indiana, and in other states too. (Though that is the part “subject to manipulation,” put those two together and yes, the numbers are going up.)
LikeLiked by 1 person
Also we are hearing of numbers going up around the world, and that is in line with the expectations of cooler weather. What I’m not hearing is large numbers of deaths, but I can’t say I’m actually tracking it in detail.
LikeLiked by 2 people
That’s what I told my neighbor’s wife, who has the same doubts that rising cases are actually occurring. It’s occurring in other countries so thinking it’s a political ploy somehow to control an election or for other nefarious purposes in the U.S. doesn’t fit that scenario — although, that said, I agree we need to beware of any political move to make even some of these restrictions extend beyond when they’re needed. But for now, I’m simply not seeing that.
We all hate this, it’s been a long year already, and it was hoped that the holidays could be a bit more ‘normal’ (assuming more stabilized case numbers). But here we are. News of the vaccines helps, but that’s still a number of months away for the general population (although here’s hoping our front-line medical workers and nursing home patients will be able to get those first, either late this year or early next).
I was thinking back to a year ago and how none of us then had even a notion about what was just around the corner. We wouldn’t have believed it if someone told us.
LikeLiked by 2 people
LikeLiked by 1 person
Daughter’s in health care in Idaho are definitely concerned with the increase. Entire families being hospitalized. Deaths but I don’t think they have suggested that has increased.
LikeLiked by 1 person
People. Just can’t seem to stop.
LikeLiked by 1 person
For Bible reading, I am making my way through Acts, again, inspired by the recent city church series in that book. You know, it is only this time I realized that the Agabus mentioned as predicting a famine, triggering the Antioch church to send relief to the Jerusalem church was the same Agabus that took Paul’s girdle and tied himself up in it, predicting that the owner of the girdle would be bound in the same way in Jerusalem. It got me thinking of the other prophets, such as Philip’s daughters, and how Acts is a direct and literal fulfillment of Joel’s prophecy of the last days, a prophecy that Peter quotes from in the opening sermon of Acts at Pentecost (Acts 2:17-21).
For book reading, out loud, I am reading ‘Agnes Grey’, by Anne Bronte, to my mother, and ‘The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe’ to Tiny. I am always reading snatches of books personally, but most of the books I own, I have already read. So, with my birthday gift money, I did buy a brand new book to me, one by the author whose interview with World I linked to a week or so ago, Michael O’Brien. The book I got is his first, ‘Father Elijah’, an end times thriller with a difference – his mission is to convert the man suspected to be the Anti-Christ. I am about halfway through it. He is a good writer, no doubt, but perhaps a little too Catholic to please a wider audience.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is the hospitalizations more than the deaths that have always been the concern. We cannot change the rate of death for a virus, but hospitals that are full of COVID patients cannot treat the accident or assault victims, the cancer patients, or those who suffered a life threatening emergency such as a diabetic coma, or an aneurysm, or an anaphylactic attack. Less people will survive all those everyday occurences if the hospitals cannot respond because they are full. And that makes for an uneasy, restless population. The average person does not realize how much good healthcare helps keep law and order.
LikeLiked by 2 people
And people seem to be fearful of going to the hospital or clinic for things that could be life threatening if not treated because they fear either getting exposed to covid or that the hospital is not accepting anybody but covid.
LikeLike
I thought of getting that book! But then forgot about it.
LikeLike
DJ,
I can top that. 🙂
———–
LikeLiked by 2 people
We are having lots of cases of Covid right now. I know quite a few people who have it and quite a few who have died of it. Many have it with few symptoms, too.
I am reminded (by reading some of your posts) that I need to take my turkey out of the freezer. Thanks. 😉
LikeLiked by 3 people
AJ is the only one who had confidence in Indiana in the football pool. My husband watched the whole game, me just minutes. (I don’t understand football and don’t want to understand football.) But in spite of some errors, they managed to finish just seven points behind in a high-scoring game where IU was the visiting team. My husband said that Ohio’s quarterback acted like he had just lost his best friend, as though they had actually lost the game; it was technically a win for Ohio State, but barely. (The betting had OSU winning by 21 points, and in a much lower scoring game. No one expected IU to have 35 points and only lose by 7 points.)
LikeLike
I only have frozen waffles, 2 blackened salmon steaks and a bag of frozen hashbrowns in the freezer. — Single girl
LikeLiked by 2 people
Seems like that is teaching the moose how to become a hood ornament.
LikeLike
Well, not the waffles in the freezer….
LikeLiked by 1 person
DJ – No frozen vegetables?
LikeLike
Waffles with chicken and gravy sounds good for Thanksgiving breakfast. California Dreaming ♡
LikeLike
I gave up keeping up with Covid a while back. My brother told me one day this week that my neighborhood was named on the radio as a current hotspot. I think that could have related to the Covid test site in my church’s parking lot.
LikeLike
No frozen veggies for now, though I usually have some. I have a too-small freezer to begin with. Oh, I also have a couple ice packs for any injuries 🙂
There was a big outdoor display of poinsettias at the market today, so beautiful!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Has anyone read the book, On Reading Well, by Karen Swallow Prior? I think it is a good one for English majors.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I did have a big salad for dinner, with a chicken breast on top — chopped lettuce, cabbage, cut up radishes, tomatoes, some vinegar dressing. Mmmm.
LikeLiked by 2 people
LOL, I texted Wesley to see if he had read that book since it reminded me of him. He said he assigns the Introduction to the book for his students to read.
LikeLiked by 3 people
I have ‘On Reading Well’. Eldest gave it to me as Christmas gift a few years ago, just as she gave me two other of Karen Swallow Prior’s books, the autobiographical ‘Booked’, and the biography of Hannah More, ‘Fierce Convictions’. I have read them all.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Questions?
1. Why would a moose want to lick my car?
2. If a moose should decide to lick my car, what can I do to prevent it? Except drive away.
3. Good morning anyhow. Sunny/cold in Greensboro this morning.
I was reading John 20 this morning. It occurred to me for the first time ever, to wonder. It was eight days between the time Jesus revealed himself to the disciples and the appearance to Thomas. Wonder how they passed those eight days. They knew Jesus had risen, but nothing happened for a full week.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Chas:
1. A moose would want to lick your car for the salt on it. Cars in the winter get coated with the salt that is put on the roads to melt the snow. Wild animals are always seeking out salt, which they need to help regulate their metabolisms, and will go to great lengths to find it.
2. There is not much you can do except avoid areas where moose are likely to be. The signs were in Banff Alberta, where the highway runs through a national park. People often stop their cars to take pictures of the wildlife, giving opportunities for moose to come out of the forest and lick their cars. In other words, when stopping to take pictures, do not let the wildlife get close to your car – if you see them approaching, get back in your car and drive away before they get anywhere near. Once a moose has got near enough to start licking your car, you are going to be stuck there until the moose has got enough salt. Road salt is not the cleanest salt, so it is not good for the moose, and, like feeding geese or squirrels in a park, moose that regard cars as salt sources are going to be major nuisances.
LikeLiked by 3 people
I was going to reply to Chas before seeing Roscuro’s post that it had to be because of salt. But I did not know all about it like Roscuro. I just remembered that sometimes people put out salt blocks or licks for animals.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Morning…we have an occasional Moose in the area but I have never seen one in the 34 years of living here. I did however see one in Estes Park when on a retreat with the Pregnancy Center volunteers….he had our door blocked and we couldn’t get out so we had to retreat to the downstairs and meet there until he left! We affectionately called him “Bullwinkle”
LikeLiked by 3 people
Adding to what Roscurio said- a wet tongue on cold metal sticks sometimes. Would you want a moose’s tongue stuck to your car?
LikeLiked by 2 people
I thought I had lost my phone but found it under the bed. Thank goodness the sound of a notification beep alerted me as to where to look.
LikeLike
It is not just wild animals that need the salt, of course. When we had goats and a horse, we always had to keep salt blocks for them to lick. It was as much a necessity as a water bucket and a feed trough.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Peter 😆
A moose can stand over 10 feet and weigh over a thousand pounds. You do not want one stuck to your car.
LikeLiked by 3 people
It’s funny that I even remember a salt block, but it is in my memory from way back. Maybe I saw them at my grandparent’s farm where they had cattle?
LikeLike
Janice, probably. They were often tan coloured, though I remember a blue one once, and about the size of half a cement block of the kind used for house foundations.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Seems strange that an item so critical to survival would not be readily available for consumption in nature.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We have moose around too, but I have not seen one around here yet. Someday probably unless I die first or Jesus comes first. Then I won’t care anyway.
However, we no longer have elk in Minnesota except in Amy Klobuchar’s faulty memory.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Chas, it is available. There are many natural salt licks out there where the animals congregate. But why walk to the salt lick when the people dump it along the road? It is a big problem as it brings the big animals to the roadside where they often get hit.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Chas, there are natural salt licks where animals have dug out natural salt deposits that were close to the surface. But, in the winter, animals have to constantly dig down through ice and snow to access the salt and predators know the salt lick locations – while a full grown moose can fend off a wolf pack, it is still a hard fight for it. A car would be a much more easily accessible source and while wild animals are able to survive without easily accessible source, they will take the easy way if available – see also bird feeders.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We have moose around here and have seen them a few times. One of my children got treed by a moose when he was out elk hunting. The same one as got dive bombed by an eagle while wearing a rabbit skin hat.
LikeLiked by 4 people
We had salt blocks for our cattle
LikeLiked by 1 person
You never get too old to learn.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Fun with nature at mumsee’s.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I tried our salt block when I was little. It was quite tasty. Probably why I like salt and vinegar chips to this day.
LikeLiked by 2 people
One of the difficult things you learn as you mature.
You can’t do the things you used to do.
It’s embarrassing to watch a kid cut my grass.
I pay hin $20.00, butit sstill makes me feel useless.
Actually, its an easy 20 bucks. But I don’t think kids these days don’t worry about money the way I used to when I was that age.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Chas, that’s not useless to employ someone else who could use the money while you watch over your beloved.
We chose a condo rather than a house largely to free my husband from most yard work. We don’t directly pay the men who mow our lawn, blow our leaves, and snowblow our walks, but we pay fees as a community that hires it done. It’s a blessing to the men who are making an honest living, and it’s a blessing to us to free us from chores that my husband no longer has stamina to do without completely wearing him out. And I don’t have to add it to my own chore list since I have higher priority tasks.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Think we have it bad in lesser or greater levels of being isolated?
Here’s a family that spent more than 40 years hiding out in Siberia not seeing anyone outside their own family. (One woman born into this family after they fled to escape persecution has continued to live there past the death of all her family and is now in her seventies, but it was forty years before the family saw a human being outside their family.)
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-russian-family-that-cut-itself-off-from-civilization-for-more-than-40-years
Youtube has videos about them too.
LikeLiked by 3 people
I am oh so thankful I can still mow our little plot of ground. It is perfect exercise for this sixty+ year old body. But a while back I did not feel like mowing so it is a gauge for me to know how I am feeling. We have to pay about $40 to get any little thing done around here. So I am well paid when I get my exercise!😀
LikeLike
Moving closer to 100 now. Who is going to get it? I got it by accident recently. I hope someone else will get it later today.
LikeLike
So?J Peter.
For the most important news of this busy weekend.
Who won the football pickis?
LikeLiked by 2 people
What Cheryl said (12:43)
I love my gardeners, they’re fast, efficient, and usually can do extra tasks for me such as install my new water heater. I also had them clean the roof and gutters of leaves and debris last time, a chore they did in a jiffy — didn’t even need a ladder, Alberto leaped up into the large ficus tree next to the patio and, just like that, he was up on the roof with his handy leaf-blower, done in 15 minutes). Youth, strength and flexibility — and a willingness to work.
I have other work to do every day, for my own pay, and I’m more than happy to pass some of that money on to them for what they do every month.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I love the wildlife conversation today! With a husband that is a game warden (park warden) I have so many wildlife stories, but I love reading others. Husband has also worked in Jasper Nat. Park and we have traveled that highway often.
There is a salt lick on the gravel road that I travel to work (when I’m working) and the whitetail deer lick it right down into a pot hole. The grader comes by and smooths it all out and the deer are back digging it out again and a pot hole has formed by the next day 🙂
I remember my older cousins on their dairy farm chipping chunks off the cows’ salt lick for all of use to lick – memories.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Now that is reminding me where I may have seen a salt lick. We have a wildlife area not far away, the Yellow River Game Ranch. It has a lot of deer there. Maybe it could be there that I saw one, but I think it was when I was much younger.
LikeLike
I pick the Gamecocks to beat Ga. Bulldogs next Sat. 24-21
Be thinking about it. I am going to challenge everyone, starting tomorrow,, to tell us something you are thankful for. at least one, each day.
It can be repeated/duplicated. i.e. I suspect most of you agree with my thankfulness to God about my salvation, born in USA, etc.
But you may have something unique. i.e. I am thankful that Bobby Murray talked me into joining the AF with him.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I’ve been having technical issues all weekend–particularly with Zoom–but Mr. Tech has come in and I’ve got a Zoom meeting scheduled for tomorrow, Monday November 23 at 4 pm, California time.
I’m sorry, DJ and Roscuro. All you people on the East Coast need to tell me how late you can join us!
Contact me if you don’t get your invitation.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh, look! I get #75!
To see who won the Pigskin Picks, click here.
LikeLike
I Michelle beat me to 75. Oh, well. I have a consolation prize.
LikeLike
Michelle, that would be 7.00 p.m. EST. But zooming is beyond my technological ability. So? I won’t be there. But enjoy.
LikeLike
That was me.
Chas
LikeLike
I think that would be 6pm my time. hmm. I’ll have to double check that.
LikeLike
I’ve never seen a moose except in the opening credits to the TV show Northern Exposure. 🙂 Anyone see that show back in the early 90s?
LikeLiked by 1 person
There was a story several years ago about moose in Maine dying unnatural deaths from dehydration. For some reason, they were being “targeted” by mosquitoes–or they were unusually bad that year–and were dying from all the mosquito bites.
I read it in the NYTimes. It must have been true. 🙂
LikeLike
I hadn’t even thought of this, but today is the anniversary of the JFK assassination
LikeLiked by 1 person
We’re getting some coastal fog here this afternoon, I drove over the harbor and the new bridge was shrouded, as were the tops of all the cranes.
LikeLike
I never watched Northern Exposure, but remember it was quite popular
LikeLike
I remember the show, but didn’t watch it. Probably something on another channel one of us preferred? Those were the days it was not so easy to tape record. Not so many channels either.
I am glad that my husband can still remove the snow. I will not be able to until my shoulder heals. Raking was no problem, but shoveling is different. Even contemplating getting the turkey ready makes my shoulder hurt. That is when it is so nice to have two of us. Team work! I would not mind if we had someone hired to do it, though. Less concern for the future in some ways.
LikeLike
When we were in Colorado our friends took us to Rocky Mountain National Park. We saw both elk and moose. They said in all their trips there they had never seen moose. Awesome sight. Maybe I’ll send AJ a few of the photos.
LikeLike
I remember that show and may have watched it once or twice but not recalling details of the show. It has been windy and cold around here and I have been feeling a bit “off” physically. Headache, dizzy and tingly sinus. No fever or aches but just off. Could be the front coming in…I always feel the effects of the drop in barometric pressure, plus I awakened at 2 this morning…it’s been a long day!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Also the anniversary of the death of C. S. Lewis. I remember that they died on the same day.
LikeLiked by 2 people
We watched some of the episodes of Northern Exposure. A different kind of program as I recall. Did anyone watch Twin Peaks?
LikeLike
I’ve seen a lot of moose, elk and deer in my life, along with bears (black and grizzly), wolves, coyotes, foxes and lynx. Oh and antelope…and bison. I have been very blessed to live in some of the most beautiful places in the world.
LikeLiked by 5 people
My brother told me that there were salt licks on our grandparent’s farm. He also said some people use salt licks in deer hunting to attract deer to an area. He also said some people plant clover or rye for that purpose. Then he said his garden could be used that way since he often finds deer munching on his garden plants.
LikeLike
Oh, right, Twin Peak, I never saw that, either, but know it was very popular
LikeLike
Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, Finding Your Roots, and now a Hallmark Christmas movie are making for a pleasant evening. Just a few more posts to get to 100.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Kare – I have often said that my grandson should grow up to be. . .Ranger Forrest, Forest Ranger. 😀
LikeLiked by 2 people
Nice weather.
LikeLike
Oh, no, I see I have competition.
LikeLike
I had this cleverly spaced out sentence that would take me from 96-100, but Mumsee jumped in with the weather report.
LikeLiked by 1 person
My post didn’t show up. What number is this?
LikeLike
It keeps saying 97 when I refresh.
100?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Algebra on the Pigskin Picks thread and 100 over here!
You OK, Mumsee? Where did she go?
LikeLiked by 1 person
6 Arrows- Look under the piano.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh, oops.
Here, let me help lift that piano up a bit…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ow….was I feeding the goats when a meteor struck??
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hallmark Christmas Movie, I think I’m watching that, too.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Congrats, Peter, on the Pigskin Picks. And a Jolly Good Time Was Had By All!
LikeLike
Mumsee, 11:00 pm: Ow….was I feeding the goats when a meteor struck??
A meteor might be right.
A meteorright.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good night. See some of you tomorrow? 🙂
LikeLike
Bad news for our area announced this evening:
L.A. County suspends outdoor dining at restaurants as coronavirus surges
(from LA Times): In a devastating blow to Los Angeles’ struggling restaurant and hospitality industry, L.A. County public health officials on Sunday announced they will suspend outdoor dining at restaurants amid a surge of new coronavirus cases.
Few segments of Southern California’s economy have been hit harder by the pandemic than the once-booming dining world, with many landmark establishments closing in recent months and many more on the brink. After they were forced to shut indoor dining rooms in the spring, many eateries got a lifeline when officials allowed them to serve outdoors, often in patios and makeshift dining halls set up in parking lots, sidewalks and streets.
The new rule takes effect at 10 p.m. Wednesday and restricts restaurants — along with breweries, wineries and bars — to takeout and delivery only for the first time since May. It will remain in place for at least three weeks, officials said. Wineries and breweries can continue retail operations.
“The persistent high number of cases requires additional safety measures that limit mixing in settings where people are not wearing masks,” Barbara Ferrer, the Los Angeles County health director, said in a statement.
LikeLike
Qod, (I’ll repeat when today’s comes up_
How many intend to live by the Conovirus guidelines your governor proclaims??
LikeLike