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Friday, October 7, 2016

IT'S APPLEFEST TIME AGAIN

...AND THE MIDWAY IS UP...

DITTO
Friday, 9:00 AM.  61 degrees F at the ferry dock, 38 on the back porch.  Wind W, gusty at times.  The sky is overcast and it is misting.  The humidity is 89% and the barometer is rising, now at 29.96".  It is much cooler now, and will stay so for a few days, a rather inauspicious forecast for Applefest, which is a weekend later than it was  last year.
   Bayfield's annual Applefest starts today; street vendors, food, carnival midway...and everything apples.  The massed high school bands marching down Rittenhouse Avenue on Sunday afternoon playing On Wisconsin will send a chill down your spine, even if you are from Minnesota.
   I have two apple pies ordered; I can hardly wait!


VOTE REPUBLICAN TO MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN

Thursday, October 6, 2016

A SPIN DOWN MEMORY LANE IN UNCLE OLLIE'S PACARD

1947 PACKARD 8
Thursday, 9:45 AM.  Wind variable and calm, the sky partly cloudy and the humidity a low 56%.  The barometer has begun to fall, now at 30.08", predicting rain by early tomorrow morning.
   Driving through Washburn yesterday afternoon I was transported back in time via a classic car on a trailer parked on the side of the road. There it was, my Uncle Ollie's '47 Packard! Only it was blue, not hearse black.  But it had whitewalls and fender skirts; close enough.  
  "Go around the block," I shouted to Joan, who was driving.  She was in Washburn, Wisconsin, and it was October,  2016; but I was already in Long Beach, California, and it was December, 1948.  It was warm and sunny, a light breeze soughing through the palm trees.  Roses were blooming, and I was floating dreamily in my Uncle Ollie's  8 cylinder Packard sedan, on our way to the Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena.  
    We had taken a month's vacation that year, my Mom and Dad and I, one of the only real family vacations we were ever to take.  Looking back on it now, I imagine the money for the trip was some saved from years of my father working in the defense plants during the war. At twelve years of age I wasn't going to ask any questions, and was happy school had let me off (including Christmas) with the admonition that I learn from the trip and keep up with my lessons (fat chance).  We had ridden the stream liner train The City of Los Angeles from Chicago, a journey of thirty some hours.  I had traveled across farm fields and prairies,  across the desert and the mountains and had eaten in the dining car. When in the men's room I had watched the men sitting on the floor, shooting craps and drinking from bottles wrapped in paper bags.  It was as if  were in the movies.
   That Packard was indeed a dream machine, and it had two more cylinders than Dad's '36 Chevy.  The only similarity between the two automobiles was the color, but the Packard's  black was deep as ink in an ink well, the Chevy's black like that of a cheap wool suit.  And the seats in Uncle Ollie's car were plush and comfortable. The engine actually purred,  and was it fast! I loved to watch the speedometer needle reach 70, then hope it would climb to 80. I could have lyricised about it forever.
   Uncle Ollie was the family success story. He was rumored to be a millionaire.  He had ridden the rails to California after the Great War, seeking his fortune, and somehow got into the business of cleaning the yachts of movie stars.  Relatives said he actually knew Edward G. Robinson and Peter Laurie.  My Aunt Agnes even had a mink coat she wore the few times they ever came back to wintry Wisconsin. I didn't give a hoot about the mink coat, but I sure loved that Packard.
   Once around the block, I got out and looked the big blue Packard over.  It must have weighed six thousand pounds.  It had some dings and evidence of body work with Bondo, and a couple of cracked windows as well, but it still was a beautiful memory machine. 
   "Joan, they only want $3,850 dollars for this beauty!"
   "What would you do with it? you can't drive that thing with a broken arm. It has no power steering."
   "My arm will get better, and I'll keep it in the barn."
   "We don't have a barn."
   "I'll build one."
   "You've got a broken arm."
   "Details, details!"
   "No!"
   Well, that was the end of that.  But I did take Uncle Ollie's Packard for quite a spin down memory lane. 


Wednesday, October 5, 2016

A GOOD COLOR TRIP TO DULUTH


SUMAC ARE PARTICULARLY COLORFUL THIS YEAR...

...COLOR IS JUST BEGINNING IN SOME PLACES...

...AND FULL-BLOWN IN OTHERS...

...WHILE ASPEN AND BIRCH ARE SPECTACULAR, WITH GOLDEN LEAVES AND STARK WHITE TRUNKS
Wednesday, 9:00 AM.  62 degrees F at the ferry dock, 58 on the back porch.  Wind variable with an occasional  whisper of wind.  The sky is overcast and it is sprinkling lightly, the humidity 86%. The barometer is rising, now at 29.66".  Temperatures will be cooler with less chance of rain in the next week.
   We were pleasantly surprised by the quality and quantity of fall color on Hwy 2 yesterday between Ashland and Duluth.  Sumacs are particularly beautiful this year, and sugar and red maples are coloring nicely.  Aspen and birch are spectacular in places, but red oak leaves are mostly turning bronze or even brown.  
   The nuances of weather create subtle or even dramatic variations in fall leaf color year to year, rendering some falls vibrant, some muted, or even occasionally drab.  It's always interesting to watch.
VOTE FOR GROWTH, PROSPERITY, SAFETY, STRENGTH


Tuesday, October 4, 2016

SNOWBERRY

SNOW BERRY: UNUSUAL BLUE-GREEN LEAF COLOR...

...LARGE BUNCHES BUNCHES OF TERMINAL WHITE BERRIES
Tuesday, 8:30 AM.  60 degrees F both thermometers.  Wind variable and calm, the sky clearing.  The humidity is 69%, the barometer 29.99" and falling.  The chance of a thunderstorm is still predicted for this afternoon.
   Joan and I are going to Duluth today for a visit to her eye doctor.  I will have to drive back, the first trip of any distance since I hurt my arm.  We will have a chance to see the developing fall color along the lake.
   Snow berry, Symphocarpus albus, in the Honeysuckle Family, is a shrub native to the northern half of  North America, in cool, damp, acidic habitats such as rock outcroppings.  It has rather insignificant pink flowers, but its blue green leaves and white berries in fall make it an attractive landscape plant.  It spreads readily by stolons and is useful in restoration projects.  The berries are an important wild life food but you would not like their taste, which is extremely bitter.

BE SURE TO WATCH THE VICE PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES TONIGHT!

Monday, October 3, 2016

PROBABLY AS RELIABLE AS COUNTING WOOLY BEAR CATERPILLARS.

A MOUNTAIN OF FIREWOOD ON HWY. I3, WAITING FOR WINTER
 Monday, 9:00 AM.  51 degrees F at the ferry dock, 49 on the back porch.  Wind variable and calm, sky cloudy and foggy.  Humidity 97%, barometer 30.12" and continuing its descent, predicting rainy weather by midweek.
   Late yesterday afternoon we decided to drive west on Hwy.13 to Cornucopia and have dinner at the Village Inn.   My plan was to let Joan drive while I took some fall color photos, as fall is reluctantly starting to appear.
   My plan was put into disarray by the setting sun, so bright it nearly blinded us  all the way, making  both driving and photography nearly impossible.  I did get a partial shot of an enormous mountain of logs waiting to be sawed into stove lengths by the biggest purveyor of firewood in the area.  This may not be a scientific prediction of the severity of the coming winter, but it's probably as reliable as counting wooly bear caterpillars.
DON'T BE SIDETRACKED BY CLEVER DIVERSIONS FROM THE REAL ISSUES:VOTE THE PRO CHILD, PRO FAMILY, PRO WORKER TICKET

Sunday, October 2, 2016

FOG


MORNING FOG

FOG OFF MOUTH OF SIOUX RIVER...

...DITTO...

FOG BANK
Sunday, 9:00 AM.  51 degrees F at the ferry dock, 48 on the back porch.  Wind variable and calm, humidity still very high at 93%.  Barometer more or less steady at 30.15", predicting rainy weather midweek.
   Yesterday started out foggy in the early morning, and the fog rolled in and out during the  day, invading all the rivers and creeks and low spots, even when the sun shone brightly.  Ghost ships plied the bays, and fog horns sounded mournfully throughout the day.
   Buddy found something super stinky to roll in at the beach and he is still rather fragrant after a bath, and spraying with Fabreeze.
   Of course, the more we tell him to go away, the more he wants to be a lap dog.
VOTE THE PRO CHILD, PRO FAMILY, PRO WORKER TICKET

Saturday, October 1, 2016

WINTERBERRY

GROUPING OF 'RED SPRITE' WINTERBERRY...


BEAUTIFUL RED BERRIES OF FEMALE PLANTS...


...'RED SPRITE' LOADED WITH FRUIT...

FRUITLESS 'JIM DANDY' MALE POLLlINATOR
Saturday, 9:00 AM.  55 degrees F at the ferrybdock, 54 0n the back porch.  Wind E, calm with occasional light gusts.  Sky overcast but clearing,with fog over the channel.  Humidity 97%, barometer 30.23" and descending, predicting rainy weather again by midweek.
   Buddy and I walked the new Salmo Trail through Pikes Creek Marsh yesterday evening looking for trout and salmon swimming upstream, but saw none.  Still too early, I think.
   Winterberry, Ilex verticilata, is a native northern holly.  It is deciduous, but the female plants are loaded with bright red winter fruit.  The selection 'Red Sprite' is a compact, 3'-4' tall variety that bears heavily.  It needs a male pollinator, the compact 'Jim Dandy', that of course does not bear fruit.  These are spectacular shrubs for the northern winter landscape.  The male and female flowers are, however, insignificant.
  There are other, larger cultivars of the native shrub, or this large native species of northern swamps and rivers can itself make an attractive landscape plant.  It grows in good bottom land, in wet soil, but will also do well in drier locations.  I have seen it growing along the Wisconsin River and elsewhere in northern and central Wisconsin.  The berries are not poisonous, and are good winter wildlife food but are inedible for humans.
DON'T BE DISTRACTED FROM THE REAL ISSUES; VOTE THE PRO CHILD, PRO FAMILY, PRO WORKER MOVEMENT1