February Photos

Monday, February 2, 2026

Journal: Schoolhouse Blizzard of 1888, & Other Frosty Things

 


A friend recently told me that she’d just watched a podcast about the Schoolhouse Blizzard of 1888.  “Did you hear about that, growing up?” she asked.

I said I had, as it was in our Nebraska History book.  Also, we had an elementary teacher who read stories about it to us, and then showed us on weather instruments what had happened with cold fronts, temperatures, wind, atmospheric pressure, and so on.  

I would’ve found all this intriguing in any case, but it meant much more to me, because I had a great-grandfather, Charles A. Bacon, who was a schoolteacher in South Dakota in the late 1800s.  He got caught in that very blizzard, which occurred on January 12, 1888.  He’d let the children go home early, and they all made it safely; but he stayed a bit later to tidy up the classroom – and he had farther to go.  He didn’t beat the blizzard.

The horse brought him in the next morning, lying across the saddle, half frozen to death.

He lived, but was never strong again.  He acquired tuberculosis the following fall.

Charles and Joicie moved with their little girl Ethel, age one, back to southern Illinois to be with family, hoping that the milder weather would help him recover. 

He did not recover.  He died at the age of 28 in June of 1889, two months before my maternal grandmother, Lura Mabel [Bacon] Winings, was born, August 3, 1889. 

After Charles died, Joicie did tailoring and sewing for a living.  She was well-known in their town and nearby towns for making men’s suits.  She made her wedding dress in this picture entirely by hand, designing the pattern for it, too.

She later married George Reuss.  Ethel died when she was 20 and my grandma was 18.  Joicie and George Reuss had two boys, born in 1906 and 1907.  The younger son lived to be 100 years old.

Joicie’s mother was named Sarah [Rhodes] Adkins.  She died in 1872 at the age of 34.  Her youngest child, Mary, had died at the age of 5 months just two years earlier.  Sarah had four children by her first husband, but they all died in infancy.  The husband died, and she remarried.  She had five children by her second husband.  In addition to baby Mary, a son died in infancy, and another daughter died at age 11.  So of nine children, only my great-grandmother Joicie and her older sister Ida Mae lived to adulthood. 

Life sure had a lot of tragedies back then, didn’t it?

Joicie was a born again Christian by the time my father knew her in the mid-1930s; and Daddy always said that it was a good part of her influence that made him turn to God.

It’s so important that our lives bear testimony of what we profess to believe!  The effects are far-reaching, whether we ever know it or not.

Perhaps you’ll recall, we gave Arnold a set of interlocking dinosaurs for his birthday.  Victoria sent us an audio clip in which Arnold thanks us for the ‘dino horse’, as he pronounces it.  I wrote of this, and my friend Penny soon responded, saying she had a dinosaur for Arnold, too.

She told the story of how she acquired it:  “Where did I get a dinosaur?  Well, I was in the courthouse, doing this and that with a friend who was doing  this and that in the motor vehicle department, and a man there uses his 3D printer to make things, including dinosaurs.  He brought some out from the shelf so I could feel them, and then he gave me one.  I’ve owned it now for over a couple years; hence, I can give it to Arnold.  Next time I see him, he’ll have it.”

She was true to her word.

Soon after that, she wrote to me, “Check your DropBox.  Arnold is in it.”  😂

Sho’ ’nuff, there was an audio clip that Victoria had recorded of Arnold thanking Penny for the dinosaur.  Because Penny is a teacher in our school, the children call her ‘Miss Golden’.

Arnold launches in, speaking in the growliest voice he can manage (since he believes that’s how dinosaurs talk):  “Thank you for dino horse, G’bum,” he says, sounding growlier than usual on account of that bad cold from which he was still recovering. 

Victoria, not realizing ‘G’bum’ was Arnold’s rendition of ‘Golden’, coached, “Say ‘Thank you, Miss Golden’!”

“Thank you, Miss Goldbun,” parroted Arnold, making a good, solid effort.

“What did she give you?” asked Victoria.

“Dino horse!” growled Arnold.  “Dino horse, Bum-bun!”

That little sweetie tickles my funnybone.

“Sometime when you don’t have anything to do (haha!! snicker-snort!),” I said to Victoria, “I’d be pleased to see a picture of that ‘dino horse’ Penny gave Arnold.”

Victoria did one better:  she sent me a little video.  The dinosaur is jointed, and when she tilted it back and forth, it clackity-clacked quite satisfactorily.  It even glows in the dark.



Tuesday, I gathered together all the forms I needed, pulled up Turbo Tax, and went back to where I’d left off the previous week when I discovered I still needed form 1099-R.

As I worked, I sipped some Tropical Vibe Celsius... but that wasn’t feeling so good on my throat, so I made myself some Loyd’s Pineapple & Pear tea.  It’s sooo good.  I need to look for more Loyd’s Polish tea!  Well, maybe not until I use up the other teas I have.  How did I wind up with so many different kinds of tea?!  I like the Irish teas, too.

Around 4:00 p.m., a little box popped up on Turbo Tax, inquiring, “What have you enjoyed most about your experience with us so far?”

Last year I typed into that box, “The fact that there have been no popup boxes asking me to tell what I enjoyed most about my experience with you so far.  Until now.”

This year, I wrote, “My Loyd’s Pineapple & Pear tea.”

I don’t like interruptions.  But if I must be interrupted, I can at least be entertaining!

After a few calls to Larry to find out how many vehicles and trailers he had paid registration fees for last year, and what, exactly, he had done with various retirement funds, I finally finished our taxes.

I shouldn’t be grumpy about it, really, since, after all, we are getting a refund.

“I rewarded myself for completing the taxes with another cup of Loyd’s tea,” I emailed a friend who was also working on taxes.

“What did Loyd think of you sipping his tea?” she asked.

I was about to type, “I only did it when he wasn’t looking,” when I spotted gmail’s suggested reply, which was in a different format and a whole lot more wordy than it used to be:  “He’s fine with it.  He’s a tea man.”

I sent both replies – mine and Mr. Google’s – with the appropriate credits.

I have a clock/thermometer/humidity gauge that used to be Loren’s.  The time stays correct with Greenwich Meridian.  Well, that is, it’s radio-controlled and automatically syncs the time with the atomic clock in Boulder, Colorado, which is synchronized with the international time scale, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), which is the modern standard based on the Greenwich Meridian. 

This clock changes automatically from Daylight Saving Time to Standard Time, and the inside temperature gauge is right – but evidently I left the sensor for the outside temperature on Loren’s house somewhere.  Reckon our friends who bought the house would look at me funny if I went over there and started examining the exterior of their house?  😂

They have two little girls now.  It’s a sweet young family.  

Larry, evidently feeling sympathetic or appreciative or both, on account of me slaving over the taxes (let’s not tell him that Turbo Tax does the majority of the work, agreed?), offered to bring home food for supper during one of our phone conversations.  I chose runzas, which we had not had for a long time.  Larry likes the Italian version.  I prefer the original, so long as I have access to plenty of butter.  Mmmmmm... a little dab of butter before each bite is... just right.

He also brought French fries, onion rings, chili, and cinnamon rolls.  I don’t like French fries, and I rarely eat fried onion rings (I bake them, when I fix them at home); but they smelled good and I was hungry.  I ate my runza and three onion rings, and saved my chili and cinnamon roll for the next day.

Wednesday, I was happy to be back to scanning and editing old photos.  I was delighted to find not only this picture of Hester when she was less than a day old – and only 5 lbs. 2 oz. – all dressed and ready to go home, but the little dress, too!  



I made it from a doll pattern, and it fit her perfectly.  There’s a bonnet, too, but it was way too big for her.  Dolls apparently have bigger heads than babies do!  Why didn’t I know that?

Oh!! – I found the photos with the bonnet!  




I wrote to Hester, “I found the little dress you wore home from the hospital, and washed it, along with the matching bonnet (which was much too big for a while).  Do you want it?”

Of course she did. 

She was only a couple of months old here.  I look at the pictures of Hester as a baby, and so clearly remember how, just before she learned to laugh out loud, she’d smile all over, with her whole self, curling up in a cuddly little baby-ball, clasped hands at her mouth.  She was so tiny when she started doing that.  Sometimes she would kick a wee foot, clasp her hands together, and lift them to her face, breathing quickly, and we knew that at any moment, that bright-eyed baby was going to laugh. 

Keira did that, too, when she was teeny-tiny.  Keira started out at 2 lbs. 8 oz.

My mother, for whom Hester was named, gave that little jumper and blouse to Hester.  The jumper was corduroy, and very soft.  It fit Hester perfectly in early autumn.  The bonnet was too summery by then, but I had to at least get a picture of her wearing it.

Facebook informed me that on that day four years ago, I posted this photo of Hester, age 11, at Twin Rivers State Park, Nebraska, in June of 2000, holding a frog.  I promptly sent it to Hester (again).



“Keira will get a kick out of that!!” Hester wrote back.  “She’ll wonder what was wrong with me.  😂😂😂  She’s pretty anti-bugs and critters.”

I looked back at my journal, and then told Hester, “When I sent it to you four years ago, you showed it to Keira, and, after looking at it silently for a moment or two, she said, ‘Did your Mama let you do that?!!’  It’ll be fun to see what she says this time!”

Keira is 7 ½ now; she would’ve been 3 ½ when Hester showed her the photo the first time.

Hester texted again after Keira got out of school.  “She really likes the picture, but she did say, ‘I would NOT have done that.’ lol”  😄

Before I curled my hair that morning, I put on the bright rust-colored turtleneck I planned to wear to church that night.  It would demolish my hairdo if I put it on later.

I started curling my hair.

My back itched.  My right arm itched.  My left arm itched.  Aauugghh!

After a short while of that (fortunately, before I got my hair completely curled), I removed it (the sweater, not the hair), put on a soft, short-sleeved top, and then donned the turtleneck once again.  Looking at the ingredients (uh, whatsit? ...) – oh! Fabric composition!  Fiber content!  That’s it.  😅  Anyway, judging by the fabric composition, it shouldn’t be scratchy, but it is.

With the soft top under it, it was no longer scratchy, but the turtleneck was snug around the neck, which I don’t like, even if I do have a scrawny chicken neck.  Next time I wear that thing, it’ll be when I’m not going to have it on for a good part of the day!

I decided to eat the cinnamon roll Larry brought home from Runza for breakfast.  Good heavens, that thing was sugary.  “I am now sweetened for the day,” I told him when he came home for lunch, then changed it to, “No, I’m sweetened for the month.”  😅

Why did I do that?!  I never eat cinnamon rolls for breakfast!  😝😜  Especially not with a noose around my neck.  😛

My nephew Paul and his wife Teresa received a ‘smart bird feeder’ from his son and family.  I had not heard of such a thing before, until Paul, who’s a year and a half older than me, sent me some videos and pictures.  These feeders are equipped with solar panels and cameras to capture videos and photos of all the birds that frequent the feeder.  These can be viewed on a cellphone or laptop.

When I looked them up, I discovered there are even ‘smart hummingbird feeders’.  But most of them have only one feeding station.  The vicious little ruby-throats that migrate through here would stab each other to death with those long skinny swords they have on the fronts of their heads!

Here’s a screenshot from one of the videos Paul sent me – a male purple finch feeding a female purple finch.  Courtship amongst the feathered fowl has evidently already started, down in Texas!  There was a squirrel cavorting about in the background, too.



Next, he sent me this still shot, saying, “Then there’s this monster giving me the stink eye for not providing enough corn in the wild bird seed from Walmart.  What’s a person to do.  Can’t satisfy everyone.”  😅



Below is the smart hummingbird feeder I saw online.



I got the photos in 1 ½ albums edited before time for church that evening.

I took this photo a month before Christmas of 1997.  Victoria was 9 months old, and Keith was 17.



The next picture was taken a year later.



For supper that night, we had Panera Bread chicken noodle soup.  Good stuff!

I discovered snow on the back deck Thursday morning when I went out to hang the bird feeders.

By suppertime, one more album was scanned.

That evening, Victoria wrote, “I have a vague memory that Uncle John H. played the piano.  Did I just make that up? 😅

“He did!” I told her.  “I was totally astonished one time when I was, oh, about 10 years old or so, to hear some really pretty chords and runs and then a lively hymn on the piano.  I could recognize people’s playing – but this time it was someone I didn’t recognize.  I came running out of my bedroom – and there was John H. at the piano.  I remember him laughing at me; my face must’ve looked funny.”

Then I told her, “Your Grandma Swiney played the piano, too.  But I only heard her play a time or two, in my entire life.”

“Too busy?” asked Victoria.

“More probably, she didn’t think she was ‘good enough’,” I said.

She had no idea (or maybe she did) that her pretty chords and scales made me like them, and taught me how important it was to learn those.  Helen (John H.’s sister) then got me some books with nothing but chords and scales, and those taught me how to combine chords and go smoothly from one to the other.

Here are Lydia and Caleb in the hightop Suburban we had 27 years ago.  It had three full bench seats, and we installed a smaller Jeep seat behind the third seat so there was plenty of room for everyone.  This was taken on one of our countryside excursions, March 28, 1999.



I sent this picture to Dorcas.  I made this dress for her for Christmas of 1998.  The bodice was brocade; the sleeves were taffeta, and the skirt was something silky with sequins all over it.  I made enough dresses with V-shaped waists, cuffs, etc., that Y-seams in quilts has never seemed too troublesome at all!



“That’s funny you found this one,” Dorcas responded.  “I was trying to tell Todd and the kids about this dress not long ago.  I loved it; it made me feel like a princess.  Brooklyn’s all into princess dresses and was asking me if I had one growing up so I was trying to explain this one. 😊

Those sequins on the skirt made things tricky – well, sticky, to be precise!  I had to keep a bottle of rubbing alcohol and a cotton ball beside me as I sewed to wipe down the needle periodically so the poor machine could keep sewing.  The glue on the sequins kept gumming things up.  Now and then I had to remove the bobbin and clean it out with a Q-tip dipped in rubbing alcohol, then oil it good and proper, run a line of stitching on a scrap so as not to get oil on the dress, and then launch in again.

Next, I sent these pictures to Victoria, writing, “Here you are in your flowergirl dress (for Hannah’s wedding) after I cut it shorter so you could wear it to church.”




Victoria soon answered, “Look what I’m wearing” – and sent a picture of the necklace she had on right that moment:  it was the very same necklace as the one she has on with the flowergirl dress.  Hannah got it for her.

“I wear it all the time,” she commented. 

I should pull that dress out and take better pictures of the pearls on the bodice.  Hannah sewed them on in the same design that was on her wedding dress, such a beautiful job.  All of my pictures of the dress are ‘blow-outs’ – i.e., too bright.

Here’s Caleb’s wife Maria when she was little.  Wasn’t she cute?



Friday, I was pleased to turn a page and find these pictures.  Recognize this place?  It was October, and it was snowing in the Park.  It was fun walking around the steaming geysers and bubbling pots with sparkling snowflakes falling from a blue sky with only a few low, puffy clouds, needing only a sweater on account of the thermal heat.





At 2:30 p.m., I looked out the window and saw that it was all hazy, especially to the east.  I checked the weather, and was surprised that the temperature had dropped to 12°, with a windchill of 13 below.  The wind was blowing at 25 mph, kicking up the dust that was making it so hazy.

It was so warm here in early January, my irises were confused, and started sending leaves up. 

I sent this photo to Hannah.  It was taken on Easter Sunday, April 4, 1999.



She wrote back, “I told Nathanael, ‘This is when I had a ton of hair.’  He looked me over and assured me that I still have a good amount. 😄  I’d curled it overnight with those cushiony satin curlers.”

“Not too reassuring to hear from someone who will go bald,” remarked Levi, “but I guess it’s better than nothing.”  haha

Here are Lydia and Victoria, from the same day.  Victoria’s dress is made from pieces of leftover satin from the bridesmaids’ dresses a friend had made for her wedding.



The front of Lydia’s bodice, between the two pieces of lace and tiny embroidered flowers, had ¼” tucks from top to bottom – and I twisted them so they aimed upwards on one side and downwards on the other, with the twist creating a diagonal line from right shoulder to left side of the waist.  The cummerbund was covered with little silk flowers and loops of pearls.

Someone asked how I keep all my pictures organized.  I have a separate folder that corresponds by number with each of my albums, and I’ve numbered the photos so that they’re in nearly the same order that the printed pictures in the albums are in.

The digital photos are kept in chronological order, with dated folders for separate days.

Every picture is labeled (or, if they’re all, for instance, scenery from a specific location, then I only label the folder, and just number the photos).  I can pretty much put a finger on any particular picture when I want it, even though I have over a third of a million pictures.

Here’s Hester, on that same Easter Sunday.  I sent her the photo, and she remarked on how she liked that daffodil fabric, because the flowers were flocked (soft and fuzzy).



Now if only the maid would go organize the cupboard/pantry in the back hallway!

Here is Joseph with Keith’s cat.



Dorcas sent some pictures of the rolls and potato soup she was making.  “It’s snowing again,” she wrote, “so we need a warm supper!”

They don’t get snow all that often, living just north of Knoxville.  Here’s Todd giving Trevor a boost down the hill on his sled.



By 4:00 p.m., the skies were sunny again, but the temperature had dropped a couple of degrees to 10°.  With a 20-mph wind, the windchill was -19°.

Fact of the Day:  Great Value’s Peach/Mango green tea is not Crystal Lite’s Peach/Mango green tea.  I needed some peaches and mangos to put in it!

That evening, I scanned this photo from early October, 1994.  I think the caption should be as follows: 



Me:  “This.is.your.lamb.” 

Caleb:  “I.don’t.think.so.”  😂

Victoria sent a video of Carolyn, 8, practicing her violin.  She’s doing so well.  Her notes are right on tune, or if one isn’t quite right, she carefully readjusts until it is.



I got about a third of the next album scanned, and stopped to eat some supper – Panera Bread chicken noodle soup, applesauce, and rice pudding.  I had some Breyers pistachio/almond ice cream for dessert.  It’s bitter cold outside; therefore I eat ice cream.

By 9:00 p.m., it was 2°, on the way down to -5° by 4:00 a.m.  The windchill was -11°.

Saturday morning at 11:30 a.m., it was 10°.  I finally finished playing my way through my very large Christmas notebook – some 400 +/- songs.  Last day of January; last of the Christmas songs.  And the last of the Gingerbread cold-brewed coffee.  My thermal mug was barely past half full.  Time to make some new cold brew!

I made a gallon of Peppermint Mocha cold brew, but I wouldn’t have any until Sunday morning.  It’s best when it steeps for 18-24 hours.  So when I needed a refill, I had Starbucks Dark Chocolate Hazelnut cold brew.  I don’t like it, much.  Homemade cold-brewed coffee is sooo much better.  But I put Italian Sweet Crème CoffeeMate in it, which improved it considerably.

Victoria sent me a link to a reel of some Brazilian men playing a beautiful rendition of Walking with Jesus on a variety of instruments, including trombone, clarinet, accordion, tuba, and violin. 

I accidentally bumped the scroller on my mouse before the song was done, and wound up watching an AI squirrel doing some kind of ridiculous jig to an obnoxious ‘tune’ of some sort. 

Now, I understand about ‘algorithms’ based on what my ‘watching habits’ are; but I definitely am not in the habit of watching squirrels jigging to obnoxious ‘music’, much less AI squirrels.

I scrolled back up and listened to the rest of the song by the Brazilian musicians, then reported on the matter to Victoria, just for the fun of it.  She always has something funny to say.

“What in the world 😂 ,” said she.  “But yes, the reels are random.  You kind of build an algorithm based on what you like to watch, but if you never watch anything you’re stuck with trending nonsense.”

I do watch things:  car/plane/train/truck crashes, people sliding on the ice, fainting goats, and Kodiak bears catching salmon in Katmai National Park’s Brooks Falls.  Important stuff like that.  Well, now and then I also watch somebody renovating a chateau in France.  That’s important, too, in case I ever decide to buy a tumbledown chateau somewhere, right?  Right.

“Okay,” I replied to Victoria, “I’m going to remember that phrase, ‘I was stuck with trending nonsense,’ next time I need to defend myself when something objectionable pops up in my feed on any platform.”  😅

I noticed on my weather app that Miami was issued a ‘Cold Weather Warning’, as the windchill was liable to go down to 25°.  

“Bitter cold is coming!” the weathermen were warning. 😮

How will they survive?!  Floridian children own neither parka nor mukluk!  (Do they?)

Meanwhile in Omaha, the police department was requesting medics for a female who had her tongue stuck to a pole.  Maybe she was from Florida? 

I went on scanning photos that day.  Here’s an outtake:



“I wonder what happened here?” I said to Hannah, sending her the photo.

I think it was bugs,” she replied.  “Joseph was complaining, and the brothers were probably going to shoo them away.”

She’s probably right.  Pirate bugs are notorious at that time of year. 

I had gotten a wide-angle 35mm camera for these pictures.  The concept was nifty... but the camera was a cheapie – at least, in comparison to my Minolta, it was.  I was not happy with the quality of the pictures, and soon gave it to ... ?  Keith, I think.

Larry was glad when I found these pictures in an album from 2001.  We’d gone to Elkhart, Indiana, in the six-door pickup Larry built, pulling a slant-bed trailer with a club cab pickup on it, and that pickup was also pulling a slant-bed trailer.  We were picking up a couple of loads of enclosed trailers, and we had the six younger children with us.  Once we arrived at the enclosed-trailer dealership, we backed the club cab off the slant-bed and loaded three enclosed trailers on the longer slant trailer hitched to the club cab, and two on the shorter slant-bed hitched to the six-door, then hitched an enclosed trailer behind that slant-bed.  (Did you get all that?  There will be a quiz.)





We headed home, with me driving the six-door (sometimes sharing the driving with Teddy) and Larry driving the club cab, which belonged to his uncle – and the uncle didn’t want anybody but Larry driving it (never mind who had the better driving record, heh!).



In order to keep the extended frame under that six-door pickup from sagging (have you ever seen a saggy limo? looks baaaad), he wedged the slightly narrower frame of a Chevy pickup into the wider frame of the Ford.  It was quite the project!  He put a Cummins engine in it.  That thing would GO.  And it drove excellently.

That six-door pickup made people stare.  And then they really got bug-eyed when I popped out of the driver’s seat – and their eyes fell clear out of their heads when one kid after another jumped out.  We often had all nine with us, for at least a couple of years after Larry built that thing, up until Keith got married.  😄

Here’s another view of the truck.  Larry was sad to sell it a few years later.  We once drove it in our town’s Jr. Fire Patrol parade, which was especially for fifth-graders.



The new ‘Professional Series’ (ha!) coffee bean grinder is not nearly as tough and efficient as the old one, and I seriously doubt if it’s going to be as durable, either.  It takes longer to get the beans ground up (partly because the blade is closer to the bottom of the cup), and the cup doesn’t hold as much as the Krups did.  By the time I had ground four cups of beans for the cold brew jug (one more than I had to grind with the old grinder), the motor was smelling hot.  Actually, I noticed it smelling hot by the time I’d ground the second cupful.  I started pulsing it, so it wouldn’t get so hot.

At 5:30 p.m., I happened to look out the window.  It was snowing like ever’thang!

For supper that evening, Larry cooked some of his backstrap venison, fast-baking it in the oven at 500°, while I fixed broccoli, cauliflower, and carrots.  We had apple-peach juice with it.  

Backstrap is the most tender part of venison.  Larry marinates it overnight, and then with that fast-baking method, turns it into melt-in-your-mouth meat.

After supper, he hurried off to help a friend fix a snowplow on the front of his pickup, as he needed to use it.  There was about 3” of snow on the ground.

It was 16° at 7:45 a.m. Sunday morning, on the way up to 48° that afternoon.

I filled my mug with Peppermint Mocha cold brew coffee.

Note to self: Do not get Peppermint Mocha again.  😝 

Here’s our front yard that morning, not long after sunrise.  There are rabbit, squirrel, cat, raccoon, big and little birds, and man’s boot tracks out there.  That’s Autumn Joy sedum, with the cute little snow caps.




Larry went out to scoop the walk and front porch, and to make sure the Mercedes would start.

It would not.  He hooked up his chargers, and eventually it started; but we were late to church.  We didn’t arrive until they were singing the second song.  Ugh, I don’t like to be late.

I posted this picture of a Nebraska sunset on my Facebook page and inadvertently labeled it ‘October 28, 1992’.



Some unknown man named ‘Wayne’ (neither John nor Newton) promptly commented, “It says 1994 on the photo in the lower right corner.”

Since I was at church, I was not johnny-on-the-spot to respond and address the issue.

A lady in my friends’ list tried to come to my defense:  who cares its beautiful” [sic, sic, sic, and sic]

‘Wayne’ (not John, and not Newton), though he was quite the ol’ eagle-eye when it came to a date typo, apparently did not notice that that woman was not me, and retorted, “It makes your information questionable right off the bat.”

Okay, that’s insulting, to think that other woman was me, never mind whether or not she’s nice (which she probably is) – because I don’t write without apostrophes and punctuation!

Kidding, kidding.  (Sorta.)

Next nice lady:  “calm down, it’s probably just a typo.”

‘Wayne’ (neither John nor Newton) snapped back, “You’ve seen her reply, right?” – which is what tells me he thought Nice Lady #1 was me.

A very good friend entered the fracas:  “I’m sure it’s a typo.  She’s the busiest woman I know, so sometimes things slip by – she’ll fix it if she sees your comment.  Nothing questionable about Sarah Lynn.”

See, it’s worth getting flak, when it winds up garnering such nice compliments as that!

She then added an aside to me:  (BTW, Wayne Denison would like you to correct the date on your post to match your photo. )”

That made me laugh.  “Thank you!” I answered, then remarked, “A photo with the wrong date in the caption is one of my more minor blunders.  I once said to Keith, our oldest, in a good, firm voice, ‘Aleutia!  Don’t do that!’  Aleutia was the Siberian husky.  The kids burst out laughing, and even Aleutia herself said, ‘OOOoooAARrrrrrrooOOOOO!’ (as only huskies can do).  It’s really hard to work up one’s steam properly again, after one gets one’s sails that thoroughly deflated.”

I fixed the date on my post, then answered Wayne Whozit directly:  “Thanks for letting me know!  I fixed it.  You nearly started World War III – on an old photo, newly scanned, of a Nebraska sunset!  😂  Everybody behave, now.”

That was nice enough, don’t you think, and funny, too, right?

Lil Wayne evidently didn’t think so.

“Yeah, was that an innocent mistake, or was it intentional?” he wrote.

!

Be he a-wantin’ a fight?!

“Intentional, of course,” I told him.  “I was trying to bring the world as we know it to an end.”

No answer.  Not one word!  Hmmph.

Anyway, funny that a person with no profile picture and no profile and no original posts on his sparse feed would call me ‘questionable’.  His last post was June 11, 2022, and it’s nothing more than the results of one of those Facebook ‘click-to-play’ so-called games, this one with the ‘purpose’ of ‘revealing how you intimidate people’.  Huh.

Am I intimidated yet?

>>... checking my temperature... blood pressure... attitude... <<  Nope.  Not yet.  (I’d block him, but we might be able to extract a little more fun out of him first.  >>evil sniggle<< )

After church last night, we picked up an order of groceries.  Then we came home, put away the groceries, and ate a late supper of venison backstrap, broccoli, and yogurt.

It was 31° at 11:30 a.m. this morning, on the way up to 42° this afternoon.  Evidently enough snow has melted (the sun is making it feel like 41°) that the little birds are able to find seeds elsewhere, because not as many as usual were visiting the feeders.

European starling


I shined up the bathroom, blow-dried and curled my hair, and gave the kitchen a cleaning.  Sometimes I think it would be nice to have a maid wash the dishes; but the hot water does feel good on arthritic hands.  I like to turn on a YouTube video of something nice to listen to and look at periodically as I do the dishes, such as a pictorial walk through an old Italian village, or a drive through the Rockies or the Alps.

My breakfast was half of a cinnamon raisin bagel, with honey pecan cream cheese on it. And a big glass of milk. Yum, it was good.

This evening, Hannah sent photos of the icy Loup River.  The river is rarely that full.



When Larry came home tonight, the cold he’d been getting had worsened, a lot.  This is the third time he’s had a bad cold since Thanksgiving.

He drank some TheraFlu and took Mucinex, and that helped.  Hopefully a good night’s sleep will do him good.  If not, he needs to see the doctor.



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