August
brought some unexpected events, right from the get-go.
On August
2, one of the residents of the mountain invited the Anarchist Mountain Fire
Department (AMFD) and its volunteers (including me) for a party to thank the
firefighters for their hard work. The
host happened to be a scout for the Tampa Bay Lightnings; and he was allowed to
bring the Stanley Cup home for a day.
Guess what was the feature attraction?!
In addition
to the cup, the host circulated a Stanley Cup Ring. The thing must have weighed ten pounds and
was a jewellery store in itself. The
guys wearing these do not need knuckle-busters.
This month
we shifted attention to our house. When
we moved in, the house and the garage had two entirely different stucco
finishes. The garage had a nicer texture
and colour, but the house no longer was satisfactory. Enter the stucco crew, which included 3
healthy young men. A week later, we had
a new house!
Before:
After:
During this
period, we also had roof repairs done and Carmine continued to work on the
steam room. At times the driveway looked
like a truck lot.
The fire
situation in the province remains grim.
Two new human-caused fires in our general area were added this month;
the province has experienced 1566 wildfires to date this year. (Apparently this year, about 70% of the fires
have been human caused. Yikes!)
A friend
and I hiked up a trail just across Highway 3 from us, and we could get a good
view of some of the burned area. In the
picture, the burned area just looks a little balder, but the striking note
comes from the bright gashes of new roads cleared for heavy firefighting
equipment. Where the equipment
travelled, the dry ground was literally pulverized into dust, and I got a great
picture of snake tracks in the powder, right down to the belly scales.
By the end
of the month, we were seeing much less smoke and could see sunsets again.
On August
20, we flew to Ottawa for Brian to have a reunion with his 3 siblings while they
interred their mother’s ashes. It is
very rare for the four of them to get together, so it was a good chance to
visit. We also caught up with some of
our Ottawa friends. While we were there
it was warm (30’s) and humid, which was a novelty to us desert people.
The US seem
to have more interesting names for their fires; the one of smoke above came
from the Chickadee Fire. Another one not
visible to us was called the Muckamuck Fire.
The insects
have made themselves known: we have had
a large number of praying mantis on the property.
Massive grasshoppers abound.
Mother
Dusky Grouse produced a nice clutch of youngsters. They were difficult to see in the grass, but
it was easy to get a picture of her surveying the domain while the chicks
hunkered below.
I keep
mentioning our Mexican Restaurant, Su Casa.
Denis, the proprietor, who is a character, built little matching picnic
tables for the chipmunks. They were obviously
a hit.
Temperatures
dropped dramatically August 31, and it is clearly fall here. We have settled back into a more normal
pattern after July’s thrills. And on the
31st, we capped off the month by having the septic tank pumped. Now that is living!
Thanks for visiting! We hope you are avoiding the Covid 19 delta variant and continue to be safe and healthy. Cheers!