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| 7:01 |
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| 7:01 |
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| 7:52 |
It's 7:52, and a heavy fog has descended on the lake — so dense I cannot see Long Point. I've been up for an hour, avoiding the news from the Middle East. It's too much: too many opinions, too many lies. Truth doesn't seem to matter much anymore. The temperature is sitting at 39°, but a major thaw is on the way, with highs in the 50s and 60s forecast for the next week and a peak of 70° a week from today.
Tuesdays follow a familiar rhythm — both of us up at 7:00, reading, writing, editing the blog, choosing photos, and having breakfast. Evie usually showers since she has school. Before heading out, I remembered to marinate the chicken thighs in a spicy yogurt marinade I'd put together the night before. I left at 9:10 for yoga, which starts at 9:30. Tuesday's class was, as usual, rigorous and distinct from the typical sessions — most people love it for exactly that reason. Afterward, I stopped at Ryder's Cup and sat with a couple of friends, John and Neal, for a good half hour. Both are good company: one a retired art teacher, the other a businessman. I then stopped at Walmart and, for the first time, actually wandered the food aisles — and was surprised by how extensive the section is, more Costco than Wegmans. I was so overwhelmed that I left without buying a thing.
I was home by noon and had an easy lunch — the leftover Reuben from last night's dinner at 2 Gingers Inn. I've been watching Hit and Run, an Israeli series I watched a few years ago but find it well worth revisiting. After lunch, I read for a while and napped for a good half hour. When I came downstairs, Evie was back from school and having some lunch. I read through most of the afternoon until 4:30, when I started dinner: onions and potatoes spread in a Dutch oven, topped with the marinated chicken thighs, and roasted for an hour. While it baked, Evie joined a Zoom call with her sisters and I watched TV. At 5:30, I removed the lid and let the chicken brown for another half hour. Evie made a salad, and we sat down to a perfectly fine meal — though I'm not sure I'll make it again. It wasn't special, even if there's enough left for Thursday's dinner.
Afterward, we watched a Hometown episode and then, finally, the much-recommended Landman on Paramount+ — plagued, unfortunately, by commercials, some stretching to 90 seconds. We're still not sure how we feel about the series. We don't love it, but we like it enough to keep watching.
Below is a part of Trump's speech honoring three Medal of Honor winners: Stick with it to the end; you won't believe it...and this is who we elected to be our President!
“Please join me in thanking every American service member who bravely is standing in harm’s way. They really are incredible. And I just want to thank you. We have a lot of them right here. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you everybody. We have a lot of great service members here with us too in this beautiful building, isn’t it beautiful? We’re adding on to the building a little bit. We’re improving the building. See that nice drape when that comes down, right now, you see a very, very deep hole, but in about a year and a half from now, you’re going to see a very, very beautiful building. And there’s your entrance to it right there. In fact, it looks so nice. I don’t think I’ll even -- I think I’ll save money on the doors because it can’t get more beautiful than that. I picked those drapes in my first term. I always like gold. But I think we can save a lot of money. I just saved -- I just saved curtains. But, uh, and it will be -- it’ll be spectacular, be the most beautiful ballroom. I believe it’s because I built many a ballroom. I believe it’s going to be the most beautiful ballroom anywhere in the world. And when you hear all that hammering out there, you know why the First Lady is not thrilled exactly. She said will the pile drivers ever stop? You know they go from six in the morning till 1130 in the evening. Can you imagine? Hear? You know what, to me that’s a beautiful sound, she doesn’t like it. I love it. You know what to me other than here because we’re donating it not a penny to the taxpayer. It’ll be under budget, ahead of schedule. It’ll be $400 million or less. Most people say $400 million or more. No, it’ll be less. But, uh, when I hear that sound, that beautiful sound behind me, it means money so I like it, but my wife isn’t thrilled. She said this is getting crazy. I said, don’t worry about it. We’ll be all finished up in a few months.”














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