Musings

Perpetual tension of This vs That

Chips and dip of manistique

Manistique bears its contradictions without apology—or perhaps simply without awareness.

Its Ben Franklin sells a wide variety of non-grocery items and has this loverly offering, which I hesitated to attempt to date based on the packaging, preferring to let it remain a mystery (against my archaeological instincts). And behind it, with a sample just visible on the wall, is an extensive section of quilting calicos, some of which are exquisite.

Just this summer, Jack’s, a grocery store, moved to a new building, from in-town one block off the main drag to the east margin of town. The new building demonstrates the epitome of contemporary grocery-ology. The deli section is huge, and you can get more than thin-sliced ham and potato salad dosed with glop in a dreadful shade of pale yellow. I tasted a delicious apple-raisin dessert, and saw many tasty-looking dishes (but no sushi; this is the UP after all). Over in the wine section, I noted a few bottles that were upwards of $30 along with a range priced below that; I cannot imagine such a selection in the UP of a decade ago, except perhaps tucked in a dusty corner in Marquette (a college town after all).

I suspect the bankers financing this new-Jack’s are holding their breath, as it was just announced that the city’s largest employer (I’m pretty sure), the paper mill, will be closing soon. On the other hand, perhaps the real customer for this upscale merchandise comes almost exclusively from the outside, that is, seasonal visitors with credit cards linked to distant zip codes.

Perhaps, though, my concept of the UP’s economics are dated, and Manistique’s new Jack’s is the current status quo for the eastern UP.

Back to this immediate area….

I seem to be unable to resist commenting on the weather many days. Today, it’s well worth some attention. About 4:30 in the afternoon, as we were returning from Curtis and rounding the east end of the lake, we transitioned from dry roads into a gusting rain in about a hundred meters. The cell tossed aloft leaves ripped from the trees, and, in another quarter mile, dumped sleet (oops) hail with the hard rain. Ice nodules banging on a vehicle’s metal skin take me back to a sleet hail storm in the Mixteca Alta that left us sitting in our seats as the sun that followed illuminated a sparkly, white, slippery landscape, easily seen from our position trapped at the bottom of a clay-slicked dip between moderate hills. After several hours, and with three guys nudging the Land Cruiser when it threatened to slide off the road in the process of moving forward and upward, we did make it out; I did not look forward to sleeping in the vehicle.

We took refuge beneath a tree on a side road, gambling that our arboreal shield would stand as it protected us from the brunt of the potentially metal-denting sleet hail. After about ten minutes the worst was past and we turned around and forged on. As we came down our road, we only had to steer around one downed tree, and the gravel bore many leaves and small dead branches, reminding me that the Prius is not an off-road vehicle.

When we got back to the house, of course the power was out. I say “of course” because, as our neighbor noted the other day, “It seems whenever we have a zephyr, the power goes out.” Our real dilemma, beyond the freezer and how much water was in the pipes, was that we’re garden-sitting for that same observant neighbor, and his corn is ripe, and the raccoons will be camped out by the electric fence, and would probably check it to make sure it was live, each and every night after dark. So, we discussed just how unpleasant and possibly necessary it might be to camp out in the garden, even in the rain, to fend off the varmints.

Fortunately, we called in the outage (as near as I can tell no one else did), and in less that an hour a power truck arrived from Newberry. We spoke with the fix-it duo, and they checked down the road for the problem. Perhaps a quarter hour later the power came back on, and we headed out to check the garden’s power, and met the truck returning to make sure we had electricity. They told us that apparently lightning had struck a transformer just up the road. I figure maybe eight customers were affected, and no one else had called, perhaps thinking the outage widespread, or, equally likely—we were the only ones present to notices. So, we were very glad we had called.

The power was out just over two hours, I discovered when I reset the bedside clock. Contemplating a night of outdoor vigilance, it sure seemed longer.

I am reminded that I do not like to awaken to a bat flying about my bedroom. Not that I harbored doubts. The valiant John trapped our latest nocturnal visitor behind the glass when it flew to the screen of an open window. The disconcerting part is that we can no longer find it trapped between the glass and screen. More research needed.

Progress is often very local

Sunflower unopened silh against sky

We finally bit the bullet, the one that involved figuring out how the mice were getting into the cabinet under the sink. That wouldn’t be so bad, but the cabinet maker (aka The Botanist, who has never much enjoyed involved indoor projects) elected to make the space continuous from there to the major portion of the under-counter space around the corner.

As to the fixing, carefully cut pieces of window screen, paired with a big swath of 1/4″ hardware cloth, all stapled with abandon, and ingress opportunities are…zip-zero-zip.

JCB got the space cleaned, and I will work on swabbing down the rest of the contents tomorrow morning….

Giants among us

Beetle of the giant sort

I do not know what this insect is named or anything about it.

I found this critter right here, on the upside edge of the window screen portion of the back door, and never saw her/him arrive or leave. Sometimes s/he’d lift her/his head and I’d see something red beneath. Probably not a tongue, though.

This is a later post than intended. It got windy mid-day and the power went out. Oh, yippee.

Are bees industrious?

Bee butt with pollen on hibiscus UP

I love that the camera captured the pollen dotting this bumblebee’s butt.

Sit and watch the world go by

Red chairs looking across lake

Everything around here feels like the epitome of mid-summer—in the mid-continent’s temperate Midwestern climate. My soul is pretty darned still, and I am amazed. The stock market is a distant, nebulous concept.

And now the sun is out

Potentilla with raindrops

Early mid-morning I noticed a light rain falling, with no wind, so I kept the windows open.

The Forager-Horticulturalist’s garden is, I’m sure, soaking it up.

Surprise find

Deer skull at base of ancient apple tree

Great morning ground fog, with quiet, both of sound and activity. Except for the deer I scared up while stalking images with the Canon. This is the remains of another that I found just like this, nestled up against the base of an old apple tree.

R&R, whew!

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We’re very much enjoying the view as cocktail hour drifts our way.

Cooler, outside and in

Butterfly on butterfly weed I think

I’m having one of those blogging moments when pithiness is a fading dream. Meanwhile, look at those colors along the trailing edge of the lower wing!

* Sorry, KW; this makes two days in a row of these insects….

Butterfly chaperone

Butterfly comes to visit on hat

For the first time since we got here, we visited the flower garden near the assisted living place. Mom picked up a new friend, which spent some time on her foot (a Keen accoutrement), and then moved up to her hat. We worried that when we tried to enter the building, s/he would come with us, but evasive maneuvers worked.