Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Neighborhood Tidbits; Brandon







Last month, consumer prices rose at their fastest rate since 2023.

Tomatoes have become nearly 40 percent more expensive in a year. 

I'm glad that my tomato plants are doing very well.  

Maybe I should plant some more. 

Happily, as of yesterday, spuds AND three pumpkin seeds are in the ground. 

Every time something looks dire economically, I say to myself, "Better plant some more potatoes."

Well, I have this time. 




Brandon Clarke and his high school basketball coach after a ZAGS game at the Jenny Craig Center in 2019. 


It's a quick lesson, but it's been long lasting and more meaningful than ever after yesterday's shocking news about the death of ZAGS standout and Memphis Grizzlies basketball player Brandon Clarke. 

In 2019, Bill and I, and several others from this area, attended a ZAGS game in San Diego at the Jenny Craig Center. 

The ZAGS won, and since we were in no big hurry to get back to our motel, we stayed afterward and waited in the parking lot for the team to come out of the gym to board their bus. 

While waiting, we met a nice man who told us he had been Brandon Clarke's basketball coach in high school.  He had driven over from Phoenix to watch the game and was anxious to say hello to Brandon. 

We also met some young ladies from Japan who were super Rui fans.  They had brought a Japanese flag and had come to see Rui Hachimura. They even had  images of Rui in their nail polish. 

So, there was a lot of expectation among those of us waiting. I was anxious to take some photos.  

As the players started arriving in the parking lot, I started snapping photos but soon realized that I had never used my iPhone in that much darkness. 

Those first photos were all blurry. 

As I was about to take a picture of Brandon and his coach, the awareness of my ineptitude for taking photos in the dark with an iPhone became very clear as I complained while trying to get a decent picture. 

Before any more photo attempts, Brandon asked for my phone and showed me the technique. 

Happily, the resulting photo with him and his coach turned out okay as did several others. 

It was a quick interlude with one of my favorite ZAG players, but the moment and the camera lesson were lasting.  

A young star on the basketball court took time to teach an old lady fumbling with her iPhone how it's done in darkness. 

At that moment, Brandon's star turned brighter in my mind.  I was even more thrilled later when he joined the Memphis Grizzlies.

So, like everyone else who followed and admired Brandon Clarke, I was stunned to learn of his death. 

The ZAG Nation is grieving today. 

So sad. 

May this young man rest in peace. 




They often say, "This is not who we are." 

With the example below and with endless others, sadly, this is who we will be.


From the  President of the United States


 TRUMP: We have a ballroom that's under budget. It's going up right here. I've doubled the size of it because we obviously need that. 

 REPORTER: The price doubled. 

 TRUMP: I doubled the size of it, you dumb person. You are not a smart person.








I love hearing the sound down the lane in the shed when Bill is using his wood splitter. 

I think wood harvest and stacking will go a lot faster this year. 




Our neighbor Peter stopped as I was walking the road while retrieving the paper this morning. 

"Did you get a picture?" he asked. 

The question puzzled me for a moment until I realized that Peter follows the blog and recognizes many of the photos I take around the neighborhood. 

I had just taken a photo of a weed but it wasn't that successful because I had taken it quickly. 

So, yes, I got a picture:  Peter sitting in his pickup and visiting before going off to do some disking. 

"I have sausages cooking," I told him, "and they take eight minutes, so I have to go."

My morning walk to the paper box and down the road usually lasts long enough for those sausages to cook, so I like to stay on schedule. 

The air fryer let out a ping when I walked in the door, so the sausages were ready. 

After my sausage explanation, Peter wished me a nice day and told me to say hello to Bill. 

Nice neighborly moment along the road.

Happy Wednesday, and let's all practice being nice. 

The recipients of your goodwill feel much better.

After all, this IS who we are!  






Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Slowin' Down

 




It's been a social marathon for me, and today, with luck, all these comings and goings will slow down enough to allow me to plant my potatoes. 

Spuds and all, I wouldn't trade the past four days of enjoying my peeps for anything.

Friday night:  Ma and Pa Love and the Young Love's sat along one side of a table and watched three treasured family friends on the other side  get acquainted with each other. 

Saturday night:  Twas Luzianna crawfish, ready for a boil, shipped to Idaho which attracted a group of folks who mostly knew each other and did some catching up on life while standing around a decades' old weathered barn.  

Those previously unacquainted had connected and become friends by the time the table cloth splattered with crawfish parts and empty corncobs was emptied and put away for next year's gathering. 

Sunday:  Four Love's, four dogs along with thoughts and messages from the fifth Love, in an outdoor setting next to beautiful Boundary Creek we all love, made for a memorable and pleasant Mother's Day. 

Monday:  high school classmates met at 11:30 a.m. or whenever they wanted to show up (some were there more than half an hour early this time) and gathered at our table at DiLuna's Restaurant.  

As usual sweet Amy took care of us and saw that we all got fed and watered while we caught up on the latest month's events and shared some rich local history. 

I love these lunch gatherings. 

I could not have asked for any better blend of extended weekend fun, and now my mind is filled with happy memories.  

Those memories and the smiles that go along with them will keep my mind occupied as I rake up the dirt along the west side of the barn and put those potato parts with their eyes in the ground. 

It will be a hot day in May today, and tomorrow it's supposed to rain, so it's the perfect day for spud planting. 

And, when I'm not cutting spuds or burying spuds, I'll be mowing down some fast-growing tall grass. Maybe the dandelions will give up this time around and allow me some extra days in between mowing. 

Meanwhile, horses will be enjoying their two slots of time grazing in the front pasture, and Bill will probably be doing some work in his woods. 

Should be a great day ahead.  

We've enjoyed the pleasant sunshine and warmth of late, but it is time for a break and some pitter patter.  

Two worries for the weeks ahead:  will we get enough rain to sustain the pastures and will there be enough moisture to curb forest fire worries. 

Seems like those two worries are an annual affair, and then, of course, comes the concern that too much rain will play havoc with the hay harvest. 

Life is filled with these stressors, and somehow we get through them or we adjust to deal with their consequences. 

For now, happily, no big needs for adjustments appear in the near future, and I hope it stays that way at least for a day.  

Happy Tuesday. 





We sure do have fun at our classmate lunch gatherings, and we'll always be happy to see more classmates join us.  

Next lunch get together:  June 8, DiLuna's at 11:30 a.m.  Mark your calendar. 

Seated:  Sharon Clark Bayless, Mike Rosenberger.  Standing:  Ruthann Kiebert Nordgaarden, Susan Stark Tate, Marianne Brown Love, Judy Chronic Dabrowski and Karen Martin Rolf. 




When ya get this old, ya start scratching your head and wondering about what you want to leave behind and who's gonna get to enjoy it. 












I loved the latest mannequin theme in front of DiLuna's.
  


I read this piece last week on X and found it fascinating. 

by Anish Moonka

Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up. 

 He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour.

 Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands.

 Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself. 

 Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there.

 Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it. 

 Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. 

Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows. 

 Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. 

For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result.

 Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. 

Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. 

No room left for the mental chewing. 

 The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. 

Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.






Monday, May 11, 2026

Mothers' Day Album

 





Lovely flowers on the deck, sent by Annie. 


This photo was a while back when Annie and I spent time together in New Zealand where she was on a college exchange. 



We've had a family joke among the Love's since I turned 75 in Stoneyford, Ireland. 

We were there because I had seen a concert announcement about a band called "Blessed (one syllable pronunciation) Ireland). 

The band would be playing at Malzard's Pub on June 25, 2022, the same day I would be turning 75.  

So, with Blessed Ireland in mind, we planned the trip around being at Malzard's that day. 

The day came as did concert time.  One of my first observations:  I was probably the oldest person, by far, in the crowd. 

When the band came to the stage, a few announcements were made, and it was obvious that this band was not set up to play for the geriatic generation. 

Nonetheless, we actually had a blast, especially after the realization that it might not have been best that I invited the leader of the band to consider coming to The Festival at Sandpoint. 

They are very good, but most likely for a different audience than what I had anticipated. 

Anyway, because of that experience the kids like to tease me any time they see the word "Blessed." 

Annie had a sighting in Seattle just a couple of days ago and shared it with us. 

With that on my mind, I realized that when thinking of the band, I truly am blessed with those kids who like to tease me. 

Mothers' Day reminds us moms how blessed we are with our kids. 

Of course, when I think about that, I can't help but chuckle to myself about "Blessed Ireland" and the zany memory that connects us all. 

  The word works both ways:  in some cases triggering a smile about a band; in another, touching the heart with thoughts of our beloveds. 

Of course, I think I have the best kids in the world, including our daughter-in-law Debbie Love, and I love them all very much. 

So, thank you, Annie, Willie, Debbie and, of course, Bill and the doggies for a wonderful Mother's Day. 

I am blessed.  





In this photo, taken by Debbie yesterday,  Willie and I are keeping track of dogs and admiring the view of Porthill across Boundary Creek from where we enjoyed Willie's cooking and once again, had the picnic area all to ourselves 







As we drove the road along Boundary Creek yesterday, we were treated to some neat sightings:  a herd of elk and a yellow-headed blackbird.