Kaitlin sent these pictures:
Hopefully the worst is over, but cleanup will take a while. AccuwWeather says,
Cleanup and difficult travel from the blockbuster blizzard will persist into Wednesday.
Fingers crossed for them!
February 24, 2026
Kaitlin sent these pictures:
Hopefully the worst is over, but cleanup will take a while. AccuwWeather says,
Cleanup and difficult travel from the blockbuster blizzard will persist into Wednesday.
Fingers crossed for them!
February 24, 2026
Meteorologically speaking, of course.
Saturday Kaitlin sent me an email with this picture of the 30″ of snow they had.
And pictures of the pups looking at her lovingly after she had cleared their driveway and was eating lunch.
Now their weather report for today predicts a blizzard.
In contrast, Andy took these pictures up on the land Saturday:
And in case there is any doubt about spring coming, he took these pictures of the pussy willow yesterday:
Happy upcoming spring!
February 23, 2026
I can understand why it wasn’t clear to people who aren’t Shoe fans, but that day’s comic was aimed at the politician of the strip, Senator Belfry. (From the term “bats in the belfry”)
According to ChatGPT:
The long-running newspaper comic strip Shoe (created in 1977 by Jeff MacNelly) features a recurring politician character named Senator Batson D. Belfry.
He’s a pompous, often clueless, self-important bird-politician — basically a satire of Washington insiders. MacNelly, who was also a Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist, used Belfry to poke fun at political hypocrisy, spin, and ego.
Belfry was not modeled on one specific real-life politician; rather, he’s a composite caricature of the “career politician” type.
Years ago I was a Shoe follower, and I was recently surprised to see it at GoComics.com. According to Wikipedia:
Shoe is an American comic strip about a motley crew of newspapermen, all of whom are birds. It was written and drawn by its creator, cartoonist Jeff MacNelly, from September 13, 1977, until his death in 2000. MacNelly’s last strip was dated July 9, 2000;[3] it has since been continued by Chris Cassatt, Gary Brookins, Ben Lansing, and Susie MacNelly (Jeff’s widow).
I am once again a follower.
February 22, 2026
The balloon continues to lose helium.
And the bean plant looks about the same:
The weather is the thing that is changing. After so much sunshine most of this winter, we’ve been having overcast days with a lot of wind. It actually snowed some yesterday morning, but the sun came out in the afternoon.
Andy stayed down here Tuesday and Thursday, but he went up Wednesday and yesterday — mostly staying inside by the wood stove fire. The roads have been clear, but the wind was almost too much for him outside.
Anyway, it’s now supposed to be sunny and warmer for a while with very little wind, so he shouldn’t have any problems. Next Saturday is the last day of meteorological winter, so spring is on its way!
February 21, 2026
I love these comics because I know most of the words, and I don’t have to look up the ones I don’t know. (Click on the comics for higher resolution.)
I can identify with these:
As I’ve said, I don’t spend much time each day on Spanish, but I’m still learning a little bit more. I’m also honoring all the work I put into it the first couple of years.
February 19, 2026
In the modern world, it is easy to feel like a passenger: reacting to notifications, responding to demands, consuming whatever you happen to drive past on your screen.
But joy is found in being the driver. It’s the act of looking at the raw material of your circumstances — your time, your energy, your relationships, your skills — and seeing what you can make from it.
It is the act of creating the life you want (in big and small ways) that makes you feel alive and imbues life with extra meaning. The fact that you can hold a vision in your mind and then, however imperfectly, bend reality a few degrees in that direction.
—James Clear
Yes! That works for me. It doesn’t have to be much, and it doesn’t have to be perfect — small steps count.
But one size doesn’t fit all — I’m guessing it wouldn’t appeal to a lot of people. Does any of what he writes resonate with you?
February 18, 2026
Click on the comic for higher resolution:
This reminds me of Marlo Thomas’s Free to Be… You and Me album from 1972. One of the songs was based on the poem “Helping” by Shel Silverstein, and it ended with,
Some kind of help is the kind of help that helping’s all about.
And some kind of help is the kind of help we all can do without.
We’ve used those lines more than once over the years.
I also remember two more sentences from the album, again based on a
Shel Silverstein piece. This one was about a bossy little lady who always insisted on going first, including when a hungry tiger was choosing whom to eat. It ended with,
And so she was. And mighty tasty too.
That one doesn’t come up as often, but I still laugh every time I think of it.
Do you have any memories like that?
February 17, 2026
When I saw this comic I immediately thought of a quote I read almost 40 years ago:
I’ve never been lost, but I was mighty turned around for three days once.
–Daniel Boone
Why did I think of it so quickly after all these years? Has your memory every surprised and delighted you?
February 16, 2026
Both the bean plant
and the balloon
are still struggling. I’m amazed they haven’t given up yet.
I’m going to keep them until they do.
I can’t imagine why I identify with them so much. 😀
February 15, 2026