February Photos

Monday, March 16, 2026

Journal: Blizzards, Tornadoes, & Earthquakes, Oh, My!

 


Last Tuesday morning at a quarter after ten, the temperature was 39°, on the way up to 56°, bright and sunny, and the front yard was full of robins.  I relayed this to a cousin who is in a nursing home, and she said, “I don’t see many robins; mostly black birds.”

Nursing homes should put up more bird feeders!  There were feeders at Prairie Meadows, where my brother Loren was, and also at Brookestone, where my sister Lura Kay was.  Most people enjoy watching the birds; and if squirrels come along, all the better!  😅

We have three kinds of black birds out here in the country:  Common grackles (above), European starlings, and Red-winged blackbirds.  In town, they have Brewer’s blackbirds, and sometimes crows.

I did a bit of housecleaning, refilled the bird feeders, paid the bills, and then headed upstairs to my quilting studio. 

Someone I know likes to chat with AI ‘characters’.  I asked her, “What happens if you tell it to do things it cannot do?  ‘Bring the car around, please.’  Or argue with it?  You know, such as informing it that it’s wrong about most anything it happens to say.” 

I’ve done that with Windows Copilot and its forerunner, Cortana.  Copilot just quietly subsides.  No fun at all.  Cortana used to say a variety of cheeky things.  “I’ll get right on that, and then I may or may not let you know what I find.”  To my car request, Cortana responded, “I’ll push it off the three-story car garage straight away.”

I suppose unhumorous consumers protested, and caused the programmers of Copilot to make it bland and boring, though it does have a lot more info at its figmental fingertips.

That day started a week of extreme weather across the United States.  At 4:30 p.m., I saw that one to two feet of snow was expected in the Cascades.  Tornado watches were issued for a good part of Illinois.  1.5” hail was expected in Abilene.

Fifteen minutes later, the storms in Illinois were towering at 50,000 feet tall!  Though this did not bode well, and I don’t want to see people hurt or their property ruined, I nevertheless like watching and listening to the weather.  It reminds me of standing in the open garage door under the front eave of our house with my father, holding his hand, watching big storm clouds rolling in.  I pulled up a live stream of Ryan Hall, Y’all on YouTube, and got on with the listening and watching.



Here’s a big, ugly, menacing, rotating cloud, directly in front of some storm chasers near Pontiac, Illinois.  Several of them were chasing the same storm – in fact, there were more than a hundred storm chasers on it, sometimes creating dangerous bottlenecks for each other.



That funnel cloud turned into a bad tornado that devastated Kankakee, Illinois.

Someone posted a picture of one of many destructive, spiky 5” hailstones that broke all previous records – and then that record was promptly shattered when someone found one that was even bigger:  A massive 6.14-inch-diameter hailstone was recovered in Kankakee, Illinois, on March 10, 2026, and is the new state record.  Found by the Denault family and verified by researchers from Northern Illinois University, it breaks the previous 4.75-inch record from 2015.  Unofficial reports suggested even larger stones, with some estimated at up to 8 inches in diameter.  At least two of the storm chasers had their windshields destroyed.



Around 7:10 p.m., a wedge tornado went through Kankakee, south of Chicago.  There were tornadoes all over the place, stretching all the way from Indiana clear down into Texas on the Mexico border.

While all this was happening, I went on sewing.  At 9:15 p.m., I trotted downstairs and got myself a cup of blueberry tea.  Back upstairs, I sipped tea, sewed, sipped tea, sewed...  When the tea was gone, I shut everything down and quit for the night.

Wednesday morning a little after nine, I walked into my laundry room, where the patio door leads onto the back deck, preparing to rehang the bird feeders – and discovered a couple of inches of snow out there.  It was 33°, heading up to 47°.  The sun was shining, and snow was melting off the roof; so I was dodging between drips as I went in and out the door.




Soon I was heading for my sewing room to see how much I could get done before our evening church service that night.

That afternoon, Victoria sent an ultrasound picture of Baby #5.  It’s amazing how detailed ultrasounds are these days, even when an unborn baby is only about 1 ½ pounds.

“Awww...” I wrote back, “a pretty little mouth shaped like Carolyn’s.”

“Yes!” exclaimed Victoria, “I thought so, too!”

I looked at that dear little face that we hope to greet in a few months, and thought how very horrible it is that so many people think nothing of murdering unborn babies.  Horrible, horrible!  What a way to bring down the wrath of God!  There’s not a soul alive who doesn’t know that’s absolutely wrong.  Anyone who says otherwise is just plain dishonest.

After church that evening, we picked up sandwiches from Subway.  Yummy!  It’s been quite a while since we had Subway sandwiches.

Thursday at midmorning, it was 40°, on the way up to 67° – and we were issued a high-wind warning that would take effect at 7:00 p.m. and last until 3:00 a.m. Friday, with winds up to 60 mph expected.  From noon ’til 9:00 p.m., there was a red-flag warning for fire danger.

After he got out of school, Hannah brought Levi to put a new bass string in my piano.  Unfortunately, the string he ordered was the wrong size; he’ll have to try again.

Did you know that a standard modern piano has 88 keys (52 white and 36 black) – but Bösendorfer grand pianos have 97 or even 108 keys?  

Despite the wrong string size, Hannah and I had a nice visit, complete with tea (Bentley’s blueberry for Hannah; Thompson’s black for me); while Levi had blueberry lemonade Celsius.

That evening, Hannah sent pictures from my niece Christine’s property, where she often goes with her dogs to take walks.  “There is a beaver in the lake, and a heron in the sky,” she wrote.



The structure on the right is the shelter where we have our Fourth-of-July picnics.

It was chilly Friday morning when I went out to rehang the bird feeders – just 36°.  Lately, the grackles and the red-winged blackbirds have been hitting the feeders in droves, going through black-oil sunflower seeds like it’s hot soup. 

I ate breakfast, cleaned up the kitchen, and headed back upstairs to my quilting studio.

That afternoon, a lady on Facebook told about seeing so many bluebirds in a fruit tree, the tree looked blue. 

We saw a bush like that once when I was about 13, traveling with my parents in Florida.  The bush seemed to be covered with blue blossoms, and they were all swaying in the wind – except there was no wind.  We stepped closer, the better to look at those flowers – and they all flew away, in a cloud of blue with a slight flash of purple!  That bush had been covered with Great purple hairstreak butterflies.  We had never seen them before.



That afternoon, I began hearing about wildfires in Nebraska.  The largest ones are to our west, while some smaller ones are to the north.  The governor declared an emergency and mobilized the National Guard.



For supper that evening, we had a chef salad, with eggs and chopped pork pieces and crackers, along with yogurt and cran-cherry juice.

At 7:30 p.m., a helicopter went over quite low, which is unusual here.  It had barely crossed over the house before I smelled the jet fuel.  Ugh, my whole quilting studio reeked with the odor!

The helicopter was probably checking on the prairie fires.



I finished the ninth Star Crossed block and got the tenth partly done before quitting for the night.


I sat down in my recliner, looked at the news – and saw that one of the prairie fires had crossed the canal near Gothenburg.  In the video, you can see a pivot putting water on a field, hopefully protecting it from the fire.

I posted this photo of American goldfinches on one of the nyjer seed feeders.



A lady asked, “American?  How do you know?”

“They showed me their passports,” I answered.

I intended to post a picture of a European goldfinch (below) to show her the difference, but I got distracted and forgot.  Fortunately, I have helpful friends who posted links to pages with various types of finches.  We have 17 different finches, here in North America.



Here’s a note someone posted on a YouTube weather channel:  Ugh!  After 22 hours my electricity just came back on because of wind!”

How ’bout that.  The wind caused the electricity to come back on!

Grammar, she is a dyin’ ember.

Or maybe I’m judging her wrongly, and her electricity is generated by a wind turbine that idled down to a standstill on account of 22 hours of windlessness, and then finally got enough wind to take off again. 😏

Nawww, she meant the wind took out electricity for 22 hours, and it is finally back on.

A friend told of seeing a nice-looking upright piano in a thrift store, and wondered if she should’ve bought it.  The next time she saw it, there was a ‘Sold’ sign on it.

My opinion:  Always assume Laurel and Hardy brought any used piano to a thrift shop, or that they were the direct cause of it actually being there.  For reference, see The Music Box.

Some rain and snow was expected in some of the areas where there are fires; but the trouble was, so were high winds up to 70 mph.  Winds downing power lines sparked the largest of the fires.  Another was from embers from a prescribed burn.  Foolish, to have a prescribed burn in bone-dry areas where the winds were expected to pick up like they did.  Some said the wind was ‘unexpected’, but that’s not true.  It was forecast in various weather apps and on the radio.

That evening, it was reported that someone in the little town of Arthur had been killed trying to flee the Morrill Fire.  Today, they released her identity:  Rose Mary White, age 86.  She was a mother of four, a grandmother of six, and a great-grandmother of 12.  Such sad news.

When I stopped sewing that evening, I had 11 blocks done.  Five more to go, and then I’ll begin the sashing.

Sunday morning as I blow-dried and curled my hair, getting ready for church, I sipped Gingerbread/Vanilla/Red Velvet cold-brew coffee and listened to the wind howling.  It was 29° at 7:00 a.m., with a windchill of -6°.  It would continue to get colder until Monday morning.  The wind was blowing at 42 mph, and would get up to 60 mph in the afternoon.  We got a bit of ice and snow, too.  There were snow squall warnings here and there.

What would my nicely coiffed hair look like by the time I got to church?!

More hairspray, please.

A friend was trying to transfer her phone number and data to her new Galaxy Z Fold7 and have it added to her son’s account.  The staff at the phone company didn’t seem to know how to do it.  The son eventually explained the process, and the task was accomplished successfully.

The story brought back memories of when I couldn’t get Loren’s phone lines set up properly for him, first because he was not an ‘authorized user’ (and they wouldn’t tell me who the authorized user was, and neither Norma’s nor Janice’s credentials worked, and emailing them both women’s death certificates, as requested, had no effect whatsoever); and second, because I was not an ‘authorized user’.  Then they couldn’t get it through their thick heads that I, as his Power of Attorney, had the authority to close his Verizon account, in order to add his phone to our plan, seemingly the only workable option.  They demanded that we bring him in and have him sign the papers.  They were not amused when I asked if they ran into troubles when they had to exhume people in order to close accounts.

After speaking with a variety of ‘upper management’ who refused to be helpful, Larry took Loren in and had him sign the papers.  

I told one of the managers I talked to on the phone, “You could get in quite a lot of trouble, forcing a person with known dementia to sign papers.  Verizon employees need to take some informative classes to learn what ‘Power of Attorney’ means.”    

What I said was so... mild, in comparison to how I felt.  I wanted to tie his ears behind his head.  In a Constrictor Knot.

I should’ve created a Big Stink about it, in order to help all those who come after and run into the same brick wall.  But I had too much to do, and was soooo sick and tired of their baloney. 

Once upon a time when I was wee little, my father came home from somewhere or other, announcing that he had ‘run into a brick wall’.  I’ll bet my eyes were as big as saucers.  I thought Daddy was a good driver!  When I thought nobody was looking [though I don’t imagine my mother missed a cue], I sneaked over to the garage door, opened it quietly, and peered out at our nice car.  ???  It didn’t look like it had been run into a brick wall!  ???

When the snow stopped yesterday evening, I suppose we had about a quarter to half an inch of snow on top of a dab of ice.  Hard to tell, with a 60-mph wind blowing it all into Texas. 

As we headed to our evening church service at 6:15 p.m. last night, it was 22° and felt like -14°.  After the service, we picked up groceries from Walmart.  By then it was 15°, and still very windy.  I felt like a drunken sailor, trying to carry groceries in from the Mercedes.

At 10:30 p.m., it was 11° and felt like -32°, what with the wind blowing at 44 mph.  Weather.com said the wind was Force: 6 – a ‘Strong Breeze’.

A couple of weeks ago, Caleb and Maria’s Great Pyrenees, Marley, somehow found his way out the front door of the garage, avoiding the underground perimeter that works with his collar.  He made his way a couple of blocks to the west – and got hit and killed on the road.

Eva, who hardly ever cries, cried.  Caleb decided they’d better get those little girls of his a puppy – so they got an Anatolian shepherd puppy from Teddy and Amy.



I looked at the weather at a quarter ’til eleven this morning – and saw that there hadn’t been a letup of bad weather.  There were tornadoes in Maryland and Vermont right that minute.  The fires continue in Nebraska despite the snow, which was too scant, with the winds making them all the worse.

The temperature had made it up to 14° from a low of 7°.  The windchill was ‘only’ 2° below 0, since the wind had ‘calmed down’ to 28 mph.  That’s Force: 5 (Fresh Breeze).  🙄

My friend who got the new Fold7 smartphone sent me a text:

“I’m typing from my new smarter-than-me phone with every available ‘correction’ option turned on.  I may have to turn some off.  I apparently can’t string three words together in a manner that satisfies Mr. Fold.  It took me 27 minutes to type this message, including the time I spent debating with the phone just how I would say what I wished to say.  I won; but the phone’s not happy.”

It’s 10:45 p.m. now, and I just checked on the Nebraska fires at the Western Fire Chiefs Association live webpage.  {These numbers have not been updated since afternoon, so they are low, as the fires have grown since then.}  The size of the Morrill Fire northwest of Lake McConaughy (‘Big Mac’) is 572,084 acres, and it’s 18% contained.  The size of the Cottonwood Fire between North Platte and Lexington is 131,259 acres, and it’s 40% contained.  The size of the Road 203 Fire near Halsey (Nebraska National Forest) is 35,386 acres, and it’s 36% contained.  The size of the Anderson Bridge Fire west of Valentine is 17,400 acres, and it’s 60% contained.  That makes a total of 756,129 acres that have burned.




The majority of fire personnel in rural Nebraska are volunteer.  Crews have come from Colorado, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming to help.  The Utah crews were stymied for hours on account of blizzard conditions shutting down the roads in Wyoming.



Here’s a video of an airplane helping fight the fires.

The photo below was taken one mile south of the Ponderosa Wildlife Management Area near Crawford.  The fire crossed the road like it wasn’t even there.​



I was so engrossed in weather and fire, it was 4:30 p.m. before I finally remembered to start a load of clothes. 

Oh, and earthquakes!  There was another earthquake to our south.  This one was smaller than the one a couple of weeks earlier.  The U.S. Geological Survey reported a 2.5 magnitude earthquake at 7:15 a.m. on Thursday, March 12, located about three miles east-southeast of Cowles in Webster County.

This makes the fourth earthquake to strike the area in the last month.  The largest was an M4.1 quake that hit on March 1 at 12:59 p.m.  A notable M2.6 aftershock followed around 2:30 p.m., with a third M2.6 tremor around 8:45 p.m. that evening.

Residents near the quake reported the shaking was noticeable, though damage was minor, with nothing more serious than pictures being knocked off the wall.

When I walked into the laundry room, I saw over a dozen male red-winged blackbirds at the feeders on the deck.

All the clothes are done now, folded and put away.  Time for bed!

 

 

P.S.:  One more thing:  The Upper Peninsula of Michigan got nearly three feet of snow.





,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn          ,,,>^..^<,,,




Monday, March 9, 2026

Journal: Home Again, Home Again, Jiggety-Jig

 


Last Tuesday was an overcast day.  I couldn’t have seen the lunar eclipse that morning, even if I had’ve tried.  But here’s a photo from NASA.

I continued working on the Star Crossed quilt that day, preparing the newsprint papers I’d printed for paper-piecing.

Meanwhile, I saw that Larry had put ‘Take Me Home’ into his GPS, which always gets my hopes up, even though he’s done it before, and my hopes have soon been dashed when he instead requested to be routed to Napa or O’Reilly Auto Parts.  🫤  He was listening to Sweeter As the Days Go By by the Old Fashioned Revival Hour at the moment; so I figured he hadn’t crashed down a mountainside.

A friend, having successfully gotten her front-yard security camera up and running, sent me a video clip from the previous evening.  She lives some distance to the south, and insects have come out of diapause (if they ever went into the state of dormancy in the first place), and luna moths have emerged from their cocoons.

I wrote to her, “Wow, there’s a huge moth!  It went swinging on your wooden porch swing, admired itself in your car’s side-view mirror, grinned at the camera, curtsied, and then exited Stage Left.”



(Photo from National Geographic Kids.)

We were once camping at Ponca State Park in the northeast corner of the state alongside the Missouri River.  That night, as we were roasting marshmallows around a big campfire, a large luna moth landed right atop Joseph’s cap.  Victoria, who would’ve been about 3 or 4, laughed so hard she sat right down on the ground, ker-plunk.  We all got struck funny at her, more so than at the moth on Joseph’s head.  I have no idea why she thought that was so all-fired funny; but her sense of humor has not changed much in the ensuing years.

That morning, FedEx delivered two 40-lb. bags of black oil sunflower seeds.  Soon the insect population will start picking up, and the birds won’t be going through sunflower seeds and nyjer seeds like hot soup.

I spent the day working on the Star Crossed quilt.  As suspected, my printer had indeed spit out extra pages – enough for four extra blocks.  So I’m debating... shall I or shan’t I make four decorative pillows?  (Or two large shams, alternatively.)

For supper that evening, I had broccoli, applesauce, cottage cheese, and apple peach juice, with mint chocolate chunk ice cream for dessert.

The Sandhill cranes are arriving in the Platte River Valley west of Grand Island.  I want to go see them!   About 1.25 million cranes migrate through the Valley.



(Photo from the Iain Nicolson Audubon Center at Rowe Sanctuary.)

Here’s the Crane Camera, streaming live.

I texted Hannah, and after a short delay, she responded, “I lost my phone, so I searched all over the main floor.  Finally I saw it in Levi’s hands, thanks to Aaron saying, ‘Isn’t that what Levi has?’”

She had gone to Urgent Care that morning, because she was having trouble breathing.  She had some trouble in Los Angeles, too, as their hotel room was in a building that had opened in 2025, and had some odd smell about it.

I have no trouble breathing, but I do have extremely sensitive olfactory senses, and I know it’s distressing when someplace where you’re trying to stay smells bad or odd.  So much worse for Hannah with her asthma and sinus disease.

This time of year, an odor of fumes sometimes fills our house.  It burns my eyes, nose, throat, and makes lymph nodes in my neck swell.  It’s probably diesel fumes from trucks on the highway.  The newer trucks bother me a lot – it’s the DEF additive in the fuel.

Wednesday I thought, Thank goodness I’ll be going to church and get away from this smell — and then the church smelled quite similar, only from train diesel fumes!  Aarrgghh.

Larry sent me a picture Tuesday night, writing,  “My rig is just as long as the truck next to me.”



He was not making good time, since anytime he got above 40 mph, the trailer began swaying alarmingly.  The picture cut off the tail end of the container, so I suggested he turn his camera to the landscape position in order to show the entire thing.  (I have severely cropped this shot; it originally had lots of black sky at the top and even more parking lot at the bottom.)

“No wonder the thing is swaying,” I remarked.  “I see what you mean about the axles being too far to the front.”

He was in Seligman, Arizona, and it was chilly.  He was planning to sleep in the container he was hauling, as it actually has a room built into one end with planks for bunkbeds.  He had a travel mattress, a sleeping bag, and quilts, so he would stay warm.

“The altitude there is 5,243′,” I told him, then asked, “Have you noticed you’re smack-dab in the middle of a big tourist trap?” 

He had not.  I sent a few pictures.




Seligman, Arizona, is famous as the “Birthplace of Historic Route 66.”

Since he was hungry and hoping to find a place to eat before he slept, I sent a shot of the Roadkill Café.  There’s a sign out front with their slogan:  “You kill it, we grill it!”



“Did you want me to bring you a meal from there?  😋” he asked.

“They supposedly have good food,” I answered, “but by the time you’d get it here, it would be so old it would be petrified.”

Wednesday morning, I showered and curled my hair.

I do that every morning, even when I don’t expect to see anybody – well, except for the house finches, English sparrows, goldfinches, blue jays, Eurasian collared doves, cardinals, juncos, red-winged blackbirds, grackles, starlings, and robins.  The cardinals in particular can be quite judgmental.

On Wednesday mornings, I take a little extra time, since I’ll be going to church that evening.

It was a foggy, mysterious morning, and 42°.

The red-winged blackbirds are practically tame this spring.  They perch just 10-15 feet away while I rehang the bird feeders, tipping their heads to see if I’ve got each one straight, and making little metallic ‘hurry up, please’ squeaks and squawks.

My piano sounds sooo beautiful since Levi tuned it Saturday, I can hardly stop playing it and get on with anything else.  That boy has talent.  He also has perfect pitch.  If I say, “I like I Know Whom I Have Believed best in the key of E, four sharps,” he promptly starts humming it in four sharps.

According to Larry’s Google Activity around 10:00 a.m., he was looking for equipment and/or tool rentals in Flagstaff.  😶  I wonder what that meant?

I don’t often call him when he’s traveling, because one of two things might very likely be happening: 1) he’s driving in heavy traffic/unknown, perilous territory, or 2) he’s taking a much-needed nap.  So I prefer that he call me.

Someone posted a video on Facebook of hundreds of thousands of snow geese on Lake Babcock, 8 ½ miles to our east.  What a sight, and what a sound!



Greeting a couple of my very tall great-nephews after church that night reminded me of the time I was in the public library, trotting through the aisles at a rapid clip.  I came dashing around a corner — and barely got stopped in time to keep from bashing my nose against a gigantic, ornate, silver and gold and jewel-bedecked belt buckle.

So I said in my most intelligent tones, “Oops!”

And then I looked up... up... up... and more up, into the face of a black man (a grinning black man) who was taller than anyone I’ve ever seen, before or since.  He was taller than my great-nephew Joshua, who is 7 feet tall.  There was another tall black man with him, though not as tall as the first.  He, too, was wearing a giant, shiny, sparkly belt buckle.  

They looked like basketball players, judging from the logos on buckles and caps.  And weightlifters, too.

Anyway, I grinned back and went on my way, trying to hush small fry scampering along behind me who would insist on hissing loudly as soon as we got into the next aisle, “Those guys are TALLLLLLLL!!!!!” with the smallest fry (that was Hester, back then) inquiring in great curiosity and wonderment, “Whyyyy are they so tall??!!!  Are they ((...gasp...)) giants??!!!!!!”

Small fry assume sound waves travel only to the ears for which they were intended, and never, ever pass through or go over the top of bookshelves.

I said right her ear, ”They can hear you.”

Wow, her hazel eyes opened WIDE, at that news.

Here’s a pair of blue-winged teal on Standing Bear Lake, a photo I took two years ago after visiting Loren.



Larry spent the day in Flagstaff, moving the double dual axles under his flatbed farther back so his load would stop swaying so badly.  In so doing, he discovered that they had actually been moved forward by the previous owner, probably in order to better balance the backhoe they hauled on it.  He had to rent a welder from a Home Depot, and then he put those axles back where they were originally intended.

While there, another customer, a man in his mid-40s, saw what Larry was renting, along with a few supplies he also purchased, learned what he was doing – and proceeded to spend the day helping Larry do the job!  He drove twice to his house, ten miles away, and got welding helmets, creeper or mat for Larry to lie on under the flatbed, and some DeWalt chargers for some of Larry’s tools, as he’d forgotten his chargers at home.

He let Larry fill his pickup with fuel as payment, but when he took Larry to a nearby Cracker Barrel for supper that night, he wouldn’t let Larry pay for it. Larry wouldn’t let him pay for his meal; so they each paid for their own food.

In our many travels, we sure have run into a lot of lovely, helpful people.  We try to be helpful to others when we can; but I think we’re going to have to up our game, if we want to come out even!

I spent a totally sleepless night Wednesday night/Thursday morning, which was odd, since I was tired when I went to bed a little after one.  I almost fell asleep, not quite... and finally gave up and got up at a quarter after 5, showered, and got in gear.  That’s waaay too long to be miserably tossing and turning.  There are better things to do.

It was another morning with dense fog, and just 32°.  It would get up to 59° that afternoon, with a few raindrops falling.

Larry would be heading toward home as soon as he could return the rented welder after Home Depot opened.  I hoped his pickup and trailer would be a whole bunch safer now.

That day, I continued piecing the Star Crossed quilt.  I’d gotten the fabric cut for all the blocks the day before, and started the piecing.  I’ll cut the sashing and borders when the blocks are done.

At 7:30 a.m. I texted Larry:  “You’re in a wind advisory, with winds up to 45 mph.”

From my kitchen window, I watched a robin tugging a worm up out of the ground – but before he had it quite extracted from the earth, another robin that had been perched in a nearby Blue spruce, watching with a combination of malice and anticipation, divebombed him!  Robin #1 nearly tipped over, fluttered and hopped a few feet to the side – and the divebombing opportunist scampered right to the half-tugged-up worm, jerked it the rest of the way out of the ground, and gobbled it up.



Haven’t seen that happen before.

When I got sleepy at 12:30 p.m., I took a nap.  That lasted just an hour before I abruptly awoke; but I felt better, and it kept me going until bedtime that night.

As I sewed, I watched (and listened to) a video of someone taking an Amtrak journey across the country.  As they waited in a depot for their train to arrive, they gave a running commentary. 

“Here’s a lady who’s probably never been on a train before, looking nervous and pulling two large rolling suitcases, with a big duffle bag slung over each shoulder.  She’s probably packed for a two-week vacation with enough stuff to last her an entire summer.”  And, “Now here’s a man jauntily strolling along, a small carrying case in one hand.  He’ll probably make whatever’s in there last him a month.”  Pause.  Then, “Along comes somebody carrying an entire toddler.”

Hee hee  It would be easier if toddlers could be split into sections, like those colorful big plastic pop beads.  Here’s Hannah at about age two, playing with said beads.





At 4:40 p.m. Larry texted, “I just galloped into Gallup, New Mexico.  It was definitely worth moving the axles back two feet.  I had the cruise set at 58 mph.  When the trucks pass by, it still pulls me toward them a little bit, but it corrects itself without me having to touch the brakes.  👍

“That’s good,” I answered, then told him, “You have 950 miles to go.”

“Yeah, and around 100 miles before I turn north and head with the wind, if it doesn’t change direction,” he said.

Gallup, New Mexico, from years gone by


At 7:00 p.m., I sent him a weather forecast from Live Storm Chasers for our area, where he would be by the next afternoon:

“SIGNIFICANT SEVERE WEATHER EXPECTED FRIDAY:  Storms may produce STRONG TORNADOES 🌪️, Baseball ⚾️ size hail 🧊 (up to 3 inches), and Severe damaging winds 💨 greater than 60 mph.

“Forecast conditions appear favorable for supercell thunderstorms, which are capable of producing strong tornadoes, large to very large hail, and severe wind gusts Friday afternoon through Friday night across parts of the central and southern Plains into the Missouri Valley.”

From the predictive radar maps, it appeared that if he cut across the states from New Mexico toward Columbus in as straight a diagonal line as possible, he might miss the severe weather to the east and be ahead of the snowstorm to the west.

I baked an apple crumb pie that evening, and had a slice for dessert when it was still too hot and runny to actually be a slice, putting a big scoop of extra-creamy cool whip on it.  Mmmmm, yummy.  (Those ‘Let it cool an hour’ instructions are suggestions only, you know.)

At a quarter ’til ten, Larry wrote, “I am going to sleep for 4 hours and then start driving again.  Maybe I will be home before the bad weather hits.  I am just a few minutes from Santa Fe.”  That meant he had 800 miles to go.

I somewhat made up for my lack of sleep the previous night by getting 8 ½ hours of sleep, only waking up twice during that time.  That’s an hour or so more than usual.

It was foggy again Friday morning, quite windy, and the temperature had been on a downward trend ever since it hit the day’s high of 52° at 4:00 a.m.  There were some rainstorms with lightning during the night, and it was raining again at 10:00 a.m.  The weatherman said it would change to either ice or snow or both as it dropped below freezing that evening.

I spent the day continuing to put blocks together for the Star Crossed quilt.  The quilt is scrappy, in blues, browns, tans, and creams.  Sometimes, especially when first starting, scrappy quilts look all unbalanced to me, and I’m unhappy with them.  But as I continue, the colors usually balance out.  Let’s hope this quilt does the same!

By 4:00 p.m., the wind was gusting up to 30 mph., howling and rattling around the eaves.

An hour later, I texted Larry, “There are tornadoes in Oklahoma and in Michigan, and a snow-and-ice storm approaching us from the west.”

He answered, “I’m heading north on 83 and just went thru Rexford.”

That’s Rexford, Kansas, 260 miles from home.  Population 197.

Two hours later, at 7:00 p.m., he wrote, “I am in Alma, Nebraska, putting in some fuel. The wind is holding me at 50-55 mph.”

“It’s upended trucks in Oklahoma and Kansas,” I told him.  “I just heard a warning about 2” hail south of Seward.  Snow will be starting here in 40 minutes, and there will be ice on the roads.  There have been bad tornadoes in Michigan today, and going on right now in Oklahoma.”

“I am ready to hit the road again,” he responded a few minutes later.

“It is now hailing and raining hard, and thundering and lightninging,” I said.

He had 160 miles to go.

As I sewed, I listened to the weather.  There were reports of homes being wiped off the earth, right down to the foundation, and mobile homes rolled.

By the time the storms subsided that night, six people would lose their lives, adding to the mother and daughter who were hit by a tornado north of Tulsa as they drove in their car the previous night.  Others were trapped in ruined homes, with rescuers having a hard time getting to them, not just because of debris, but also because of downed, but still live, power lines.

At 10:00 p.m., Larry texted, “I made it to Grand Island, but I am going to take a little nap.  Too tired to drive on Hwy 30.”

He would finally get home, after being gone for 8 days, at 1:00 a.m.  He had a scary moment just 20 miles from home when he hit ice on a bridge.  His pickup started sliding, and he knew that if that flatbed trailer with the big container on it got to swerving, he’d land in the ditch, and probably not upright, either.  He let off the accelerator immediately, and then, knowing he had the brakes on the trailer adjusted as high as they would go, he applied the brakes.  It straightened him out like magic.  Whew.

Better believe, he drove the rest of the way in four-wheel-drive!

It was a good thing I stayed up until he got home, as the front storm door handle was iced over and frozen, and he couldn’t get in.

It was warmer than expected Saturday – 40° by 11:00 a.m., on the way up to 55° – and not a cloud in the sky.  I went on working on the Star Crossed quilt, getting the fourth block done and part of the fifth.  The finished size of the blocks will be 16”.  I paused and counted the pieces in one block:  65.  Maybe that’s why they each take so long!  😄  Paper-piecing takes a little longer than regular piecing; but it’s more accurate, and an absolute must when my designs wind up with oddball sizes for each and every piece.

It was Andrew’s birthday that day; he’s 39 years old.  We gave him a Gerber multi-tool, and I tucked this eagle placemat into his bag, too.



In the middle of the afternoon, I went downstairs to get a refill of cold brew.  That emptied the jug, so I made a fresh gallon of it.  I keep a bottle of Starbucks or Dunkin cold brew in the refrigerator in case I want more while the next gallon is brewing.  Since I don’t like it nearly as well as the stuff I make myself, I also keep a bottle of Coffeemate creamer on hand to make it a little more palatable.

Victoria sent this picture of the table runner I gave her for her birthday, saying, “This was the perfect centerpiece for a baby shower I hosted today!”



I took a little time to sew the hanging sleeve back on a quilt I made for Jeremy a few years ago, then continued with the piecing.  Below are the blocks I have completed for the Star Crossed quilt.



At 7:30 a.m. yesterday, it was 35°; but it would get up to 73° in the afternoon.  I got myself a tall mug of cold brew to sip as I curled my hair, getting ready for church.  This recent cold-brew coffee conglomeration is Gingerbread and Cupid’s Kiss (vanilla and red velvet cake flavors), and it’s mmmm, good.  When I need to combine bean flavors in order to have enough for a gallon of cold brew, I go by the aroma of the beans to decide if they go together.  It’s a surefire way of deciding. 

Motto: Trust Ze Ol’ Schnozz.

Did you know there are seven verses to Amazing Grace?  We sometimes sing them all.  Everybody else must love those verses as much as I do, because boy, oh boy, do they ever sing, when we do that!  Here they are:

 

Verse 1

Amazing grace! How sweet the sound

That saved a wretch like me!

I once was lost, but now am found,

Was blind, but now I see.

 

Verse 2

’Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,

And grace my fears relieved;

How precious did that grace appear

The hour I first believed!

 

Verse 3

Through many dangers, toils, and snares,

I have already come;

’Tis grace that brought me safe this far,

And grace will lead me home.

 

Verse 4

The Lord has promised good to me,

His word my hope secures;

He will my shield and portion be,

As long as life endures.

 

Verse 5

Yea, when this flesh and heart shall fail,

And mortal life shall cease,

I shall possess, within the veil,

A life of joy and peace.

 

Verse 6

The earth shall soon dissolve like snow,

The sun forbear to shine;

But God who called me here below,

Will be forever mine.

 

Verse 7

When we’ve been there ten thousand years,

Bright shining as the sun,

We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise

Than when we first begun.

 


I was glad to have Larry with me at church yesterday.  Without him, I feel as King David described:  “I am like a pelican of the wilderness:  I am like an owl of the desert... I am as a sparrow alone upon the house top.”  ~ Psalm 102: 6-7.

After the evening service, we took Jeremy his quilt, then picked up groceries at Walmart.

We had ham and Swiss cheese lettuce salad, along with Sweet Hawaiian club crackers and mozzarella cheese, for supper when we got home.

Andrew had sent us home from church with angelfood cake and breakfast muffins that Hester had made; Larry had his piece of angelfood cake for dessert while I had a piece of apple crumb pie.   I had the breakfast muffin for – what else – breakfast this morning.

We have a pretty, sunshiny day today, 59° on the way up to 71°.  

Someone with a phone number from Omaha (supposedly) just called.  I said “Hello?”, and after a loooong pause, a mush-mouthed man said, “Hello, is garble-garble-garble available?” (I think he said, ‘My man Goofball,’ but I could be mistaken.)

I considered handing the phone to Larry...

The pizza is done! 



,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn          ,,,>^..^<,,,