Sunday, February 22, 2026

A Snowy Sunday Morning


8:04

8:54

It's later than usual as I start this, because I slept in until 8:00 — a miracle. When I came downstairs, I was surprised to find our front yard covered with an inch of snow. At the moment, it's 8:30, and a wet, light snow is falling on a 29° morning.

Ice Fishermen Returning With Their Sled

Saturday was a day of rest, especially for Evie, who embraced the leisure wholeheartedly. I tend to get antsy after a while and feel the need to do something. The day started as usual — up at 7:00, read, enjoyed a couple of cups of coffee, wrote the blog — all before Evie woke at 9:00. I then had my healthy breakfast while Evie had her coffee, finished reading the blog, and published it. Knowing she wanted to listen to Michael Smerconish on CNN, I put off the trip to the Transfer Station and, instead, strapped on my crampons and went for a walk in the woods and out on the lake. It was easy going at first, but the wet ground eventually caused my crampons to collect clods of dirt, making each step heavier and more awkward. I could usually knock them off and carry on, but it was annoying. I walked the last couple of hundred yards on the lake itself, where I ran into two fishermen who were just leaving with a few walleyes and mostly pan fish. The lake was largely frozen, though every so often I'd break through and sink five or six inches.


Melting Snow

Victoria

Woodlawn

Mostly Frozen Lake

When I returned home, Evie had already cleaned out the fridge and gathered the trash, so I brushed the snow off the Kia and drove to the Transfer Station. On a side note, the warning light for the air flaps is no longer coming on — I'm not sure whether the problem fixed itself or the light is simply failing. And so it goes. The Transfer Station was quiet, and I was in and out in five minutes. Back home, I was ready for lunch. Evie had put together some pasta, mushrooms, and sauce on Thursday, so that became my meal, eaten while watching another episode of Alex Rider.

I'm deep into my book, Paper Girl, and highly recommend it to anyone wanting to understand the divide and antipathy felt by many Americans — particularly the disdain that rural America and MAGA hold for liberals. It's eye-opening; I've been underlining one passage after another. A nap found its way into the afternoon as well, which was otherwise spent reading, watching TV, or sitting in the living room debating whether to turn on the Sirius radio and catch the news. Five o'clock finally arrived, and with it a glass or two of wine before dinner. Around 6:15, Evie made BLTs with bacon from Trader Joe's, and I feasted on a couple of sandwiches heavy with bacon, tomatoes, and mayo. Delicious. Since we've had little luck finding a new series to watch, we returned to an old favorite — Catastrophe. We watched three episodes and, even having seen it twice before, enjoyed every bit of it. Once Evie headed up to bed, I caught the last six minutes of the Duke/Michigan game, then finished the final episode of Alex Rider, before heading upstairs and returning to Paper Girl.


Saturday, February 21, 2026

Winter's Back?


8:03

9:10

It's later than usual as I start this — 8:40 — and the lake is still frozen, the ice fishermen are still out, it's 29°, and we got a dusting of snow overnight. I didn't get up until 7:50, though I was awake earlier and simply stayed in bed because it felt so good.

Saturday Morning

Huddled Off Long Point

Friday was a downer after the excitement of Thursday's visit to Euclid to celebrate my brother-in-law's birthday. He loves to cook, and one of the reasons we love visiting is his breakfasts. After writing the blog and getting packed, we sat down to a "big, beautiful breakfast" of scrambled eggs, home fries, bacon, sausage, toast, English muffins, fruit salad, and jam. Yum. We could hardly get up from the table to say our goodbyes and get in the car. It was a great 18-hour visit.

We left around 10:30 and, as usual, stopped at Trader Joe's on Chagrin Blvd., where we spent a couple of hundred dollars on goodies — a case of wine and other things we can't get in Chautauqua. We left with four bags and that case of wine, then drove to the Ohio border, stopping at Luv's for cheap gas and a root beer. We were lucky to have blue skies most of the way, and the rain stopped before we crossed into New York. We were surprised by how much snow had melted — our front yard was bare and green. After about 15 minutes unpacking and putting things away, we both collapsed: me upstairs on the bed, Evie in the TV room.

Neither of us did much for the rest of the afternoon. I finished my spy thriller, then started a much-talked-about book called Paper Girl, set in Urbana, Ohio. So far, so good. The writer returns to her hometown after forty years, and it's a portrait of what has happened to rural America as jobs flowed overseas, raising fortunes elsewhere while leaving communities here behind.

Get Out The Lawnmower

At 5:00, we had our wine as flurries started falling and melting on contact. Dinner was easy: I got out the wok and made Kung Pao Chicken and Veggies, a frozen Trader Joe's package, served over rice. It was so tasty we'd definitely buy it again. We watched another episode of The Pitt and then a Colbert before Evie headed up to bed. I looked for something else to watch, but ended up back on Alex Rider on Prime.






Friday, February 20, 2026

Happy Birthday Doc




Lake Erie

Lake Erie



Happy Birthday 87th Birthday To My Brother In Law

Thursday, February 19, 2026

24 Hours Of Fog


7:10

7:46

It's early, 7:00, of course. Breakfast is at 8:00 in Bemus and yoga at 10:00 in Lakewood, so I'd better get busy and finish the blog before heading to Bemus Point. It's foggy out, like yesterday, and 36°. I had a rough night — waking at 2:00, reading for a while, before finally drifting back to sleep around 3:15, according to my Apple Watch.

Long Point Snow And Ice

Trail Of Hemlocks

Yesterday, Wednesday, was a miserable day weather-wise. Up at 7:00, I wasn't sure what to do with myself beyond reading, listening to a podcast, writing the blog, and having breakfast. After getting a few things done, I decided to try hiking out to Long Point and back — a short, manageable trail. I drove over to the park and found mine was the only car in the marina lot. Fortunately, Evie had reminded me to bring my crampons in case it was icy. It was — and then some. The trails were snow-covered with occasional drifts a foot high. I took my time, poles in hand, and navigated without much fear of falling. At the tip, I came across a couple of Amish men fishing beside their tents. On the way back, I was surprised to see a young girl jogging in shorts on the snowy trail, while I was bundled in three layers with my hood up. I assumed she was a cross-country runner from Maple Grove, the local girls' cross-country powerhouse.

Shorts And Running Shoes

Renovation Of The Seldom Used Bathhouse

Bemus Bay From Long Point

When I got home, Evie was putting the finishing touches on the dinner we're bringing to my sister's — we'll be spending the night in Euclid. For lunch, I had lentil soup and a toasted cheese sandwich with Wegman's all-fruit jam, then watched another episode of  Alex Rider.

Neither of us did much the rest of the afternoon, as usual. I was happy to be inside with my book while fog and drizzle filled the air. We had our wine at 5:00 and dinner at 6:30 — leftover Shenandoah chicken and a salad. We watched another documentary, then started a new Netflix series called How to Get Rich From Belfast. It's as wild as its title suggests, but we may give it another episode. After Evie went to bed, I was watching TV when I kept hearing strange noises outside. I checked outside twice before realizing it was thunder and lightning. There's something genuinely strange about sitting in the middle of winter, listening to thunder while rain pours and lightning flashes outside. 


On February 13 and 14, President Donald J. Trump’s representatives filed three applications with the United States Patent and Trademark Office to trademark his name for future use on an airport. As trademark lawyer Josh Gerben of Gerben IP noted, the application also covers merchandise branded “President Donald J. Trump International Airport,” “Donald J. Trump International Airport,” and “DJT,” including “clothing, handbags, luggage, jewelry, watches, and tie clips.”

After a Florida state lawmaker proposed putting Trump’s name on the Palm Beach International Airport, Jason Garcia of Seeking Rents today reported that the Florida legislature is currently pushing through measures to change the name of that airport to the “Donald J. Trump International Airport.” The amount of money proposed in Florida’s budget to make the change is $2,750,000, but Garcia notes this is likely a placeholder: the budget request is for $5.5 million.







Wednesday, February 18, 2026

A Rainy Day In February

7:04

8:14

I’ve been sitting here for the past hour, listening to the rain. The snow is melting, and our green lawn is beginning to reemerge on this almost-toasty 39º morning. In other words, it’s an ugly winter day. I am wondering where to go for a walk today because of the rain, melting snow, and ice. 

Tuesday felt a little different because Evie’s kindergarten was on break for the week. No children for her, but I still had yoga at 9:30. Fortunately, I’d had a decent night’s sleep, so I woke at 6:00 with some energy. Three quiet hours gave me time to read the newspapers, write the blog, and eat breakfast before Evie got up at 9:00. Ten of us showed up for a rigorous class, and Courtney congratulated us on our hard work. On the way home, I stopped at Wegmans to pick up a prescription—something we seem to do a couple of times a week. 

I was home by 11:30 to find Evie busy in the kitchen, making lentil soup, my granola, and dinner. The counters were covered, and the kitchen was a mess. I jumped in to help tidy up before heating my lunch—leftover Salisbury steak and mashed potatoes. I finished my series, Unfamiliar, and began searching for something new to watch. The rest of the afternoon slipped by as it usually does: a brief nap, some reading, and a little television.  We were lucky because of the blue skies most of the day, perhaps the last we will have in a week.

Wow

A Long Point Afternoon

Amish Husband And Wife

At 5:00, Evie had a Zoom call with her sisters while dinner—my mom’s Shenandoah chicken with apples and tomato sauce—baked in the oven. After the call, we relaxed with a glass of wine, admiring the deepening blue of the evening sky. I even took a photo, though it didn’t quite capture the moment.

6:13

The Shenandoah chicken and spaghetti were delicious, and we have enough left for tonight. We’re struggling to find a new show and sampled Tehran on Apple TV+, though I’m not sure we’ll stick with it. We watched a bit of the Olympics before Evie went to bed. I then started a new series—somewhat juvenile-sounding—Alex Rider, based on the young adult novels by Anthony Horowitz. It follows a fourteen-year-old who is recruited by MI6 after his uncle, also a spy, is murdered. I’ve watched a couple of episodes, and it’s not bad, so I’ll continue. By 10:00, I was back in bed with my spy novel, The Seventh Floor.


Last night, in a deep expose of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and her advisor Corey Lewandowski, Wall Street Journal reporters Michelle Hackman, Josh Dawsey, and Tarini Parti described a department in chaos. Noem and Lewandowski—who the authors say are having an affair and essentially run the department together—are using DHS for their own aggrandizement with an eye to elevating Noem to the presidency. The reporters detailed the focus on image, the decimation of ICE by firing or demoting 80% of the career field leadership that was in place when they arrived, the apparent steering of contracts to allies, and Noem and Lewandowski's excessive demands, including “a luxury 737 MAX jet, with a private cabin in back, for their travel around the country.” DHS is currently leasing the $70 million plane but is in the process of buying it.

When Trump was asked about this relationship, he responded: 'I don't know about that. I mean, I haven't heard that,' Trump answered. 'I'll find out about it. But I have not heard that.' 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Morning Fog


7:01

Fog At 8:04

It's 7:36, 39º, the fog having moved in and obscured the fishermen on the lake. I woke at 5:59 on the dot, lingered in bed for fifteen minutes, and was up making coffee by 6:15.

Monday turned out to be a decent day, temperatures climbing into the 40s as the snow began to melt. After my bad night and early rising, I had the blog written and the newspapers read by 8:00 — and found myself at a loss for what to do next. Before the snow and the frozen lake put an end to it, I'd have been out kayaking, but that wasn't an option. 

So I read and had breakfast, passing the time until 10:15, when I drove to the Chautauqua Institution for a walk. The roads were mostly clear with some icy patches, so I wore my crampons. I was out for 45 minutes, and the grounds were bustling — trucks parked along the streets, workers everywhere, renovation well underway. It was like an early sign of spring, except that instead of flowers, it was construction workers who had suddenly appeared in the warmer weather.

Thunder Bridge

Construction Workers Trucks

Bestor Plaza And Library

After my walk, I drove to Mayville to catch the demolition of the ice castle, likely taken down for safety reasons. Being Presidents' Day, families were out in force — watching the demolition or venturing out onto the still-frozen lake. It was a fine day for an outing: low 40s, blue skies, and sunshine.

Demolishing The Ice Castle

Not Much Left

A Busy Lake

I was home by noon for lunch — the leftover burrito from Saturday night and a bowl of navy bean and ham soup. Evie left for a pulmonologist appointment at 1:00, and I headed upstairs to read, settling in for a potential nap around 1:30. I woke at 3:00 — a full hour and a half later. Not surprising, given that I'd had less than five hours of sleep the night before. I woke disoriented, half-wondering if it was morning. When I came downstairs, Evie returned from her appointment and a stop at Wegmans.

We put away the groceries, and then Kia called. They still can't determine what's wrong with my Sportage and have requested a specially qualified technician be dispatched to fix the problem, which will take a week or two to arrange. In the meantime, they wanted the loaner back. So I drove to the dealer, swapped cars, and was heading home by 4:30. I asked about one of the familiar faces who usually worked the desk and learned he'd been let go. In fact, nearly all the salespeople I'd dealt with over the past couple of years are gone. It's no surprise because it was one of the least professional dealerships I've ever worked with.

I was home by 4:50 and spent a good half hour on the phone with my daughter Beth, who lives in Dallas. There's exciting news — her son Mitchell is getting married in March, right there in Dallas. After the call, Evie and I shared a glass of wine as the sky darkened. By 6:45, we were settled in the TV room with breaded pork chops and baked potatoes, watching a couple more episodes of DOC. After Evie went to bed, I caught some of the Iowa State/Houston basketball game, then an episode of Unfamiliar, before heading up around 10:00.


In Rubio's speech to the Munich Security Conference, he focused on “mass migration,” which he claimed “threatens the cohesion of our societies, the continuity of our culture, and the future of our people.” He called for Europe to join with the U.S. in rejecting the tenets of the post–World War II vision, claiming that “[w]e are part of one civilization—Western civilization. We are bound to one another by the deepest bonds that nations could share, forged by centuries of shared history, Christian faith, culture, heritage, language, ancestry, and the sacrifices our forefathers made together for the common civilization to which we have fallen heir.”

Some have argued that Officials in the Trump administration and their media allies have embraced the Great Replacement theory that says Brown and Black migration to Europe and the U.S. is destroying “Western civilization.” Such migration must be stopped, they argue, and Brown and Black people purged from the U.S. and Europe. The end of equal rights for migrants will enable white Christian men to dominate society and pass laws that reinforce traditional religious and patriarchal hierarchies.




Monday, February 16, 2026

Gray On Gray And 35º


7:00

8:00

It Takes A Village

It's 7:42, and I've been up since 6:00—awake since 5:00, worrying about things. I've been reading selected articles from both newspapers and Heather Cox Richardson's essay concerning the Trump Administration's attempts to save Western Civilization, meaning a White and Christian US. It's worth reading; both Vance and Rubio have hinted at this vision in their recent speeches in Europe. Despite the warm weather, a group is out fishing on the frozen lake.

Sunday was perhaps the last of our blue-sky, sunny winter days. This week promises much higher temperatures and rain—we're 33 days from spring. I was up early Sunday, of course, and had a good three hours before Evie came down for her coffee. By then, I'd done enough reading, written the blog, had breakfast, and was ready to do something. Unfortunately, my heel had been bothering me on my last hike, so I decided to take a day off, hoping that would help. Evie and I made a list for Wegmans, and I was off by 9:45, stopping at Ryder's Cup first. A couple of friends were there, sitting around talking, so I joined them for twenty minutes to catch up on the latest hockey news from their grandsons, which included a trip to Boston. Sound familiar, hockey parents?

I had to wait at Wegmans for a prescription, so I took my time shopping. When I went back to pick it up, they'd only filled half my prescriptions—I'll have to go back tomorrow. I was home by 11:30 and felt depressed about missing a walk on such a beautiful day. For lunch, I had Evie's leftovers from our Mexican dinner and watched the end of The Lincoln Lawyer. It's difficult to understand why it's so popular—the script is cheesy, the acting overly dramatic. Since I was up so early, I napped, then happily returned to my spy thriller for the rest of the afternoon.

We had our glass of wine or two at 5:00 before Evie put together dinner in 15 minutes: Salisbury steak, mushrooms, gravy, mashed potatoes, and a salad. It tasted good—I had two helpings. We watched a couple more episodes of DOC on Hulu, then some Olympics until Evie went up to bed. I then watched Unfamiliar, a German Cold War spy thriller on Netflix. It's worth watching. 

May be an image of the Oval Office and text that says 'Rep.MelanieStansbury Rep. Melanie Stansbury @Rep Rep_Stansbury Admin Officials in the Epstein Files: Donald J. Trump (President) Melania Trump (1st Lady) Howard Lutnick (Sec. Commerce) John Phelan (Sec. Navy) Paolo Zampolli (Kennedy Center) RFK Jr. (Sec. HHS) Kevin Warsh (Fed Nominee) Mehmet Oz (Admin. for CMS) Elon Musk (Fmr DOGE Appointee) Steve Bannon (Fmr Senior Advisor) Alex Acosta (Fmr Sec. Labor) Bill Barr (Fmr AG) Brett Ratner (Film Director "Melania")'



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