Monday, October 31, 2022

HAPPY HALLOWEEN

Autumn Drab

It’s a dark, dreary, chilly Halloween. It will likely be a night not fit for goblins, ghouls, or ghosts.

Our Silas, the "Stay Puft" marshmallow

After a stressful week in town, I welcomed Mike’s suggestion that we spend the weekend on the farm. Well, I did say that if he had suggested it sooner, I might have been better organized, but no matter. We had leftovers from several meals, and I remembered to bring a lemon for Mike’s tea. We got by.

We arrived at the farmhouse just prior to lunch on Friday, Oct. 28. It was 56 outside and 52 in the house. Mike lit a fire in the fireplace insert and I baked an apple pie. The house was warm soon enough.

We pursued a number of winter prep activities. We explored for pinecones, which we use as fire starters, and Mike found some at the edge of the north field which he subsequently picked up and stored in the woodshed. We haven’t seen so many this year, but we still have a stockpile from last year.

Strawberry bed before thinning

Halloween and then November are upon us. Regardless of what the weather brings, it’s time to say goodbye to the gardens. I thinned the strawberry bed, tossing a cartload of plants. It hurts to throw them away, but it’s for the good of the bed. It makes a big difference in the quality and production of the berries.

I also dug out the carrots – Burpee’s kaleidoscope blend, a crop that was reasonably abundant. I made glazed carrots for supper, and the big purple carrot acted like purple dye, turning all his brothers and sisters his same purple. They were good, though!

We’ll have our traditional chili and pumpkin pie for supper. I plan to finish the spider web afghan (lap throw) in the next day or two, and then move on to Thanksgiving / Christmas planning and projects. KW



Saturday, October 29, 2022

ONLINE BOMBARDMENT

We're enjoying a quiet weekend at the farm.

Sometimes I wonder how other sewists manage the constant barrage of retailer promotions for new projects, including challenges and sew-alongs.

·      “Join our block-of-the-month club,” says the quilt shop.

·      “Make this doll dress and post it on Pinterest before next Tuesday and win a $100 gift card,” says the purveyor of doll clothes patterns. (They make it sound like I will win for sure. It's not true!)

·      “Sew along with us over the next month and make this doll outfit (quilt, afghan, table runner, etc.)”

·      “Join us on live video tomorrow morning and learn to make this cuddly stuffed toy.”

·      “What new craft do you want to start today?”

Of course, for the retailer it’s all about encouraging the customer to buy their products. The plan is that you will buy the supplies to make a specific item and begin to work along with the online group to complete something fantastic. And some people do. But for some of us, it’s just one more mediocre item in the pile – or maybe just stuff for the storage shed.

I wonder how successful these promotions are. Of those who buy in, how many actually follow along and finish? I’d love to know some statistics on this.

I have my own agenda. I don’t need anyone to suggest something for me to do, though I love to see new ideas. And I’m especially good at starting projects that somehow don’t get finished. So, I try to close my mental door to these wonderful new things. How many wonderful things can can the average lifespan handle? 

It just seems like some people really thrive on it, or is that just what “they” want me to think? “If she feels left out, maybe we can get her to buy.” But I do belong to one Facebook sewing group, and several clever sewists post their creations frequently. How do they do it? I know I’m a slow worker, but I also don’t care about online “show and tell,” and I don’t like deadlines. The pressure to finish is a stress I try to keep out of my life, and maybe that’s another reason I don’t finish projects as well as I should.

But, you know – It’s not a lot of fun to constantly deprive myself of fabric, yarn, and a new project. I’m disappointed that I can’t seem to use what’s on hand so that I can have more. Doll outfits and little quilts dance in my head like sugar plums, but these days I’m careful about starting a new project.

Last week, though, I watched a tutorial on a zigzag tablerunner and felt the old familiar draw to try it. “No,” I said to myself, “you simply mustn’t.” But in the end, the desire to make that tablerunner won out. I had the necessary fabric on a Halloween theme, and the quilting guru said it was a quick, fun project. So, I did it – and here it is. Perfect it is not. Quick and fun it was. KW 

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

A NEW ROUTINE

 Now I must go and build the fire in Dad’s room and wash my late dinner dishes and do all the little things to make the evening comfortable. – Ina Dobson, 1936

Colder temps demand a return to the winter routine – warmer clothes, warmer bedding, making sure the electric blanket is turned on well before bedtime, fires in the little stove, a hot drink for morning break, jacket and gloves for walks. Like Ina, we do little things to make the evening comfortable.

I have apparently hidden our bedspread from myself, but in the process of looking for it in the shop loft, Mike DID FIND the computer monitor he has been searching for. And we found an eyelet bedspread I thought I had donated, so I put that on our bed. At least we’re warm enough now.

I shredded the lone zucchini and all the green tomatoes from my fall garden. I was right about the zucchini – four cups, or enough for two batches of bread. I have three cups of shredded green tomatoes. I haven’t decided whether to make bread or mincemeat.

Mike read in the local paper that the blue aphids lay their eggs on the bark of ash trees. Well, we have a purple ash on the back of our town lot. I hadn’t noticed the infestation of aphids in previous years, but we see them this year! Mike said that he saw them last year.

We have friends who came down with Covid a couple of weeks ago. They aren’t really well yet. As soon as Mike heard they were sick, he went for the latest booster update. Yesterday (Tuesday) I got my booster and also a flu shot. I began to feel strange about 5:00, but I fixed supper (a tasty pheasant tortellini skillet meal), took my shower, and then as Mike was complimenting the meal, I promptly passed out. Mike dashed around the table to catch me. Today I stayed quiet. KW

Saturday, October 22, 2022

FINALLY COLD – WELL, CHILLY

You probably aren’t surprised that I can’t find the daffodils Mike and I trenched in at the town house in January. The plan was to dig them up this fall and transplant them to the farm, but I’ve only found a few. It's odd because we planted them in four straight trenches. Well, no harm done. They’ll just bloom again in the spring, and this time maybe I’ll be wise enough to mark where they are. Meanwhile, we naturalized the few bulbs I found in the orchard behind the farmhouse.

I called it quits on the raised beds. I tore out the worthless zucchini plant, and what do you know? Out came a medium-large zucchini, evidently hiding under the leaves. How do they do that anyway? I’m sure it will make two loaves of zucchini bread. And before we drove back to town yesterday (Oct. 21), I picked the green tomatoes and another cup of strawberries. I still see green berries and blooms, but surely they will cease to ripen soon.

Mike went for a bike ride after lunch on Wednesday, so I decided to walk down Stove Creek. I invited Bess along, but once we were at the pond, she decided to turn back. (Nellie she is not!) I continued my hike alone but didn’t walk far because it’s slow-going now that the ground has been worked. Later, I was upstairs sewing when I heard the kitchen door close and knew that Mike had returned. Immediately following, I heard “pawfalls” marching purposefully up the stairs and straight down the hall to the vintage sewing room where I was working. How did Bess know where to find me? “Mike is back,” she said, prancing around, “and it’s time for the afternoon walk. I won’t take ‘no’ for an answer.” Well, she missed her chance. She had to wait.

We’ve had such a warm October here. That is, the afternoons were in the 70s, or even 80 – until Thursday, when we watched as the skies became cloudy. By Friday afternoon, it was raining in earnest. It was 60 in the town house Friday morning and 51 outside. We set up our space heaters, and Mike cut kindling and started a fire in the stove. This morning I’m dressed in my fleecy winter uniform. KW

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

APPLESAUCE

Daughter Hallie recently received a windfall of 20 pounds of cosmic crisp apples, so she bought a food mill and made apple butter and sauce. Over the weekend, I also worked with cosmic crisp apples to make juice for jelly. Apple juice adds pectin and also moderates the strong flavor of the elderberries. And as I’ve said, I made the elderberry juice too thin this year, so I rightly surmised that apple juice would correct the jelly potion.

Anyway, Hallie and I discussed making applesauce. “Why do we think we have to peel the apples,” she asked, to which I responded: Yes, people cook apples with peels and cores, but my mother refused to do that. She said she could taste the peels. (She was sensitive to some flavors -- or maybe just stubbornly opinionated.) Her method was to peel and core the apples (she used yellow transparents) and chunk them into a pot. She added water, brought the pot to a boil, and then simmered it until the apples broke down, mashing it smooth as needed. At this point, she added the sugar – lots of sugar – and simmered the apples long enough for the sugar to melt. Mother’s applesauce was a sweet-tart confection. (Makes my jaw ache to think of it.)

I think Mother bought the yellow transparents from an orchard, and later she had her own tree. Besides the sauce, she made apple pies for the freezer. Yellow transparents are definitely cooking apples – one of the tartest varieties. I have never seen them in supermarkets. I haven't seen them in years -- period.

But with a food mill, we can certainly make quick work of applesauce. In fact, it's really impractical to peel small apples for sauce. However, my food mill is a food foley, and I have not been impressed with its efficiency. In fact, it seems to leave black oily-looking traces in the sauce. So, I’m thinking of buying a food mill. Do you have one? What kind is it?

Mother also bought a box of yellow delicious apples every year which she kept at the foot of the basement stairs. The aroma of ripening apples filled the back door entry, called the “service porch.”

We have far more apple varieties in the grocery stores today than we did “back in the day.” I remember red and yellow delicious apples, and that’s about it. I was working in Boston in 1972 when a friend showed up munching a Granny Smith. Neither my roommate nor I had seen one prior to that. And I remember watching a talk show on television in the 1990s where an apple expert explained new varieties coming onto the market. He said that within a few years, the delicious apple would be replaced. KW

[Confidential to Chuck: The wheat is sprouting.]

Monday, October 17, 2022

ANOTHER BATTLE IN THE GREAT WAR

Evening light

Now we’re in town so that we can rest up from two days of hard work at the farm.

Friday morning, we loaded the bed of the old pickup with some of our lifetime supply of firewood stored in the barn. Mike tossed and I stacked.


Load of firewood

Next, we cleaned the closet under the stairs again. Earlier in the morning, my nose detected mouse activity in that closet. It was just a partially-built nest, but it still required a thorough cleaning of the closet, which entailed removing paint cans and boxes, searching out and clogging any points of mouse egress, and putting everything back. The work is difficult because a person can’t stand up in that closet. Mike crawled in and handed stuff out to me, and then vacuumed. I handed everything back in. Every time we clean this closet, we throw out some old paint. And of course, the good news is that the closet is clean once again. (And the mousetraps reset.)

Old maple at farm slowly changing to fall colors

I also transplanted a lavender from the town garden to the bank behind the house. I’m sure my grandparents never thought of developing a “high country” drought-tolerant garden here. They tried to have a lawn and a regular garden with peonies, roses, lilacs, and vegetables. Grandma Ina was proud of her clematis on the south side of the front porch.

I devoted Saturday to making jelly – two batches. The first was a combination of weak elderberry juice and leftover haw juice combined with apple juice made from cooked apples. It turned out well – a nice soft set. While the canning equipment was in place, I decided to use up the rest of the apple and weak elderberry juice and make a batch of elderberry apple jelly, which also turned out well.

Blue aphids fill the air (hard to see)

It was 64 in the house when we arrived in town at 10:00 Sunday morning. That’s the coolest the house has been this season. The days warm slowly now, but it did reach 79 for a while in the afternoon. We opened the slider to allow some warmth into the house.

The “October bugs” (blue aphids) are now dense in the town neighborhood. They are bad this year, making an afternoon walk most uncomfortable. I saw our neighbors start off to walk their dog yesterday, only to turn around and go back home. KW


Thursday, October 13, 2022

AND HERE WE ARE AGAIN – BACK AT THE FARM

These autumn days are lovely. Cool mornings gradually become warm afternoons. I wish I had made a fall planting of lettuce or spinach or something, but I talked myself out of it, and maybe it’s just as well.

We took our time packing the old pick-up for this stay at the farm. That’s really the best way. We’re much less apt to run off and forget something if we just don’t hurry. We didn’t leave town until 10:00.

The downside of this warm fall is the bugs. We have wasps and stinkbugs galore, and in town, we also have the annual infestation of “fall bugs,” or blue aphids, which make an afternoon walk unpleasant. I’ve seen a spider or two in the house this past week, and I always take that as a sign that cooler temps are on the way.

Okay, down to business. Some of you want to know if the fields were finally planted, and yes, they were. I wish I could have been here when they did it, but we weren’t, so that’s that. No more walking across the fields until next fall, though of course, we can walk the edges.

It hasn’t been a good jelly year. The haw jelly I made is too stiff, while the elderberry didn’t set up. I must be losing my touch. I was going to re-cook the elderberry jelly, but in reading recommendations, one blogger advised that I think about it before just snapping off the lids. Couldn’t I just use the syrup? So, I suggested to Mike that the syrup would add nice flavor to some sparkling water, and he was eager to try. He proceeded to mix a generous portion of syrup with some flavored sparkling water and pronounced it delicious – much better than his usual powdered drink, he says. I guess so! (The elderberry syrup will not last long.)

I had planned that we would pick some country plums this year. The first time Mike checked the trees, the plums weren’t ripe. The next time he looked, he saw no fruit. How does that happen. Do the deer climb into the trees? Do they shake the trees?



I picked enough strawberries for another shortcake, and I see more green berries and blossoms. Imagine! It’s mid-October and I’m picking strawberries! I tell myself that this can’t go on forever. I also picked two tomatoes. They have tough skins but otherwise, they are tasty. KW


Tuesday, October 11, 2022

A GRAND FINISH

More than ten years ago, I bought a themed quilt kit, “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” I was inspired to make it, but the pattern proved difficult, and what’s more, I didn’t like it. So, I bought a different Grinch quilt kit and also extra Grinch-themed fabrics – you know, just in case. Then, after all that time and thought – not to mention money – I couldn’t think of anyone in my family who would appreciate that quilt. So, I bundled it all away. “Maybe someday. . .,” I said, but it was way down on the bucket list.

Then came Silas – just one year ago today – and the Grinch quilt suddenly came to life in my imagination. “Perfect!” I exclaimed, and I pulled the bundle from the cupboard, assessed the patterns, and set to work.

“What are you doing today,” asked Hallie (Silas’ mom) as I staycated in August. “I’m working on the Grinch quilt,” I replied. “FUN!” she said. Fun? Hmmm.  It seemed tedious. A skilled quilter I am not. But it was meant to be a fun, wacky holiday quilt, and I resolved to have fun making it.

The quilt slowly progressed, and I realized by mid-September that if I could finish it in a matter of weeks, I could send it to Silas for his first birthday so that he could enjoy it during the holidays. It was a daunting thought. I wondered if I could finish it at all, let alone before October 11, but I resolved to try. “Steady. Focus. Focus,” I silently advised myself.

This quilt could have become a “buffalo” (again) at any point, but I pressed on. Oh, I had my troubles. It took me all day one Sunday to assemble the quilt sandwich, and I finally opted to leave out the batting. Backed with flannel, it will be warm enough for two or three people cuddled together as they re-tell the famous story with the help of the quilt pictures. It will also roll up nicely for storage, and perhaps best of all, it can easily be laundered.

Unfortunately, I suffered a setback when I measured the binding incorrectly. (My math skills have slipped a bit over time.) But remember – I have all that extra fabric, and it was an easy fix. I even made it better! I used the “blunt end” method instead of mitering the corners. And I stitched the binding in place by machine instead of by hand (the preferred method). I make no apologies. It was time to get on with it.

Last Thursday, Oct. 7, the quilt was finished. I brought it to town Friday morning. I washed it – essential since I had drug it on the floor more than once – and dried it. It didn’t come apart, so I bundled it into a mailer and sent it off to Silas. Today (Oct. 11) is his first birthday, and we watched by FaceTime as his mom helped him open the quilt. I met the deadline!

P.S. Silas also got a copy of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” though I think his mother can recite it by heart. KW

Saturday, October 8, 2022

Thompson Falls (part 2)

Yaak Falls
Lake Kookanusa

Anticipating the rain I had encased my saddle in a plastic bag so at least it was dry. We departed about 8:00 and as it wasn’t raining I didn’t don my rain gear. I will add that Rob, one of our younger and most experienced and skillful riders, acted as our tour guide and unofficial leader. He did a fantastic job as usual in guiding us along while encouraging us to make the decisions when there were route choices. We reversed directions and headed west on Hwy 200 past the Noxon and Cabinet Gorge reservoirs before turning northwest on Hwy 56. Cloudy but no appreciable rain yet. We continued north to Hwy 2 before turning north past Troy and along the Kootenai River. All of this was scenic riding in forested country. We eventually turned northeast on Hwy 508 along the Yaak River. We had great riding as 508 turned east near the Canadian border still along the Yaak River and East Fork of the river. 

Libby Dam

The road eventually turned southeast and back on the main fork of the Yaak River where we encountered the most fantastic riding of the whole trip. The narrow twisting road was shrouded in forest with absolutely no traffic or even lines on the road. I believe this road became NF road 92 as it turned south along the west shore of beautiful Lake Koocanusa. When we came to the Kootnai bridge across the lake we split into two groups.

After I had viewed the weather radar I thought the rain was most likely to be on the east side of the lake. It did look that way, so Clint and I decided to take the west side down Forest Road 228 along with Joe, Leslie and Smitty.  Rob, Carl, Ron and Roy took the east side up to Eureka and back down. This was a new road for me anyway. However, in spite of my opinion about the rain it soon began raining hard enough for me to stop and put on my rain suit. This was a fun road and the rain wasn’t too bad. This road took us back down to Hwy 2 where we jogged west and back down Hwy 56 to Hwy 200 where by now it had begun to rain in earnest. I stayed fairly dry except for my helmet shield in spite of treating it with rain deflector. Too late I discovered that moving my adjustable windshield to the top position took care of the problem. We stopped along the way, I believe in Trout Creek, for some delicious ice cream. I think it was about 5:00 when we got back to the Lodge shortly followed by the other group. We had a great time at dinner in the Lodge restaurant that evening.

Avery Break
Continental Divide

We got an early start the next morning with Rob and Carl heading west (I suggested over to Okanogan) and the rest of us east on Hwy 200 and over to Hwy 135 south down to St. Regis. From there we took the gravel road up to the Continental Divide and down the great scenic and twisting road on the Idaho side to the St. Joe River Rd. Joe, Smitty and I had tried this route the previous year only to find the road at the Divide closed due to a slide and we had to return back to the Interstate and make the freezing trip back to Rose Lake. We had a nice break at Avery and after passing through St. Maries took the White Pine Drive down Hwy 6. Before reaching Potlatch we took Hwy 9 over to Deary and then Hwy 8 down to Troy. We turned west toward Moscow and took Old Hwy 95 to Genesee where we parted with Smitty, Joe and Leslie. Clint and I had a final fun ride down the Spiral Hwy and by the time we reached my place in Clarkston we lacked two miles having traveled 800 for the trip. In spite of the rain part of one day it was a fun and memorable trip. M/W

Friday, October 7, 2022

Thompson Falls Annual Memorial Ride

I belong to a motorcycle riders group called Mac’s Beemers Bunch. It’s composed of mostly older riders that meet the first Saturday morning of the month at Mac’s Cycle in Clarkston, WA. I joined the group about ten years ago I think. Before I joined, the group began doing an annual fall 3 day ride to the area around Thompson Falls, MT. At that time it was called the “Charlie Curry Memorial Ride” after a popular departed member who initiated that ride. Charlie was before my time, but since I joined several members have passed away (none in motorcycle crashes so far) so I’ll just call it what you see as this blog title.

Last year was my first time on the ride because it always interfered with bird hunting. There were about 8 or 9 riders and I really enjoyed it in spite of encountering some cold riding conditions. This year's ride was moved from October to September which suited me much better, weather-wise and hunting-wise. Unfortunately my frequent riding partner, Sam, couldn’t make it this year due to conflicts, but happily my son Clint could.

The Snake Pit

We met at Mac’s Wednesday, the 28th at 9:30 on a beautiful autumn day. There were nine of us and eight bikes (Joe had his wife Leslie with him). I was the oldest and Clint was the youngest with the rest in between. We rode through Lewiston on Hwy 12 before turning north, going through Kendrick, Deary, Bovill and St. Maries. Shortly after leaving St. Maries, we hit road construction with several long waits and a detour. The detour was rough with lots of big trucks on it. I’m sure we lost at least an hour. I should have checked the Idaho 511 road reports. Checking after the fact I found that was the only road construction in north Idaho. When we reached Interstate 90 a few turned east on it and the rest of us took the less traveled old highway paralleling the Interstate on the north side. We met at our lunch destination, the Snake Pit, advertised as the oldest restaurant in Idaho. It’s located in Enidville just outside of Kingston. They have fantastic food. I had a pulled pork barbeque sandwich and Clint had a reuben. Because of the delay it was after 2:00 before we ate. Clint and I were so full we skipped dinner.

Old Murray Post Office

Downtown Murray

From the Snake Pit we took the Couer d’Alene River Rd north and east eventually turning due east on Prichard Creek Rd to the semi ghost town of Murray. We stopped there and took some pictures. We continued east over the Thompson Pass, across the continental divide and onto Hwy 471 in Montana. Hwy 471 eventually merges into Hwy 200 a short distance from our day’s destination at the Rimrock Lodge nestled alongside the Clark Fork River a few miles west of Thompson Falls.

After checking in, Clint accompanied me through Thompson Falls after some geocaches. We found one and didn’t find another on the east side of Thompson Falls. The one we found was in a park south of the highway and the one we didn’t find was nearby. From there we went back to town and made our way uphill to the north. We got into the same area where I had been the year before. The roads were no longer paved and we were in a large wooded area. We parked on the east side and hiked a ways on a trail out in the woods to find the cache. It was dark by the time we got back to the Lodge. I slept reasonably well that night in spite of Clint’s occasional snoring. (To be continued) M/W

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

LOVELY AUTUMN DAYS

Mike and I arrived at the farm yesterday afternoon (Tues., Oct. 4), and I worked in the yard the rest of the day. I picked three tomatoes. I expected more to be ripe. Someone told me that tomatoes don’t ripen well this time of year, and I guess she was right. Three are still pale orange, and the green tomatoes are still green. Before we leave, I will pick all the tomatoes and call it quits.

Hazy in the canyon to the south

That sorry zucchini just sits there taking up space. It did not earn its keep this year. Whatever happened to prolific zucchini?

But the strawberries have been wonderful, especially these last two months. I picked two cups of berries yesterday, and we had shortcake for supper again. Mike also put a few in his protein shake. AND – there are more berries and even blooms! This will come to an end with the first freeze, but apparently we have several more weeks before that happens.

We can see Teakean Butte now.

I have to think, though, that in Grandma Ina’s day, or even my dad’s day, the vegetable garden would have been cleared out by now. It seems to me that the first frost occurred in September, and it might even happen in August. They didn’t dare plant before mid-May, so the growing season at altitude was fairly short, and some years were more successful than others. They were disappointed if the fruit trees or the vegetable garden didn’t bear. They depended on the produce to see them through the winter.

Back in the day, the growing season wasn’t long enough to grow squash. Too bad. I could try, but I don’t have a lot of protected space. The deer love squash plants.

Singing a siren song to Mike

The elderberries are calling Mike’s name. We found a couple of bushes behind the house – those that we often picked during our “Elderberry Fest” – that look sincere. We’ll start with those.

I’m at the point of binding the Grinch quilt, and I’d rather do that than yardwork, but duty calls. This quilt project might have become a “buffalo” at any point during the last month, but I pressed on. “Steady. Steady,” I’d tell myself. “It’s just for fun. Silas doesn’t care if it’s not perfect. Just finish it.”

And no, Chuck, they haven’t planted the fields yet. KW


Taken from the western rim of the property


Monday, October 3, 2022

“UPGRADING” THE DISH RECEIVER

We just can’t quite give up our summer garb. I heard this morning that this week’s high temps will continue ten degrees above normal (in the 80s) with no precipitation in sight. The house stays fairly warm, so we had to go back to summer pajamas, though Mike’s knees are cold by morning. We pull up a blanket, and then I’m too warm. I will welcome more seasonable temps.

Nevertheless, we can turn on the oven now and do some serious autumn baking. I started with blueberry apple crostata and zucchini bread.

We spent much of September working with our new Dish receiver, the Hopper Duo, which was installed on Labor Day. Touted as so easy to use, we haven’t found this to be the case. I hear you thinking, “Poor Kathy and Mike. Senior citizens struggle to learn new things; they just can’t keep up,” but I submit to you that this receiver is not user friendly. With the previous unit, we could easily navigate to the guide, the list of our DVR recordings, or a concise listing of sports programs or movies. Not so now. We have to find the correct tab, which takes us to pictures rather than listings. And the listings are convoluted because they want us to watch programs through “Dish on Demand.” We prefer to record so that we bypass commercials. These are our issues in a nutshell.

“No-no, that’s the wrong screen,” I say to Mike. “Go back!”

“What do you mean, ‘go back,’” demands Mike. “Go back to what?” And I don’t mean to imply that I understand something that Mike doesn’t. He has been highly motivated to learn to use the new equipment.

We would love to have stayed with the old receiver. In fact, some months back, the installer allowed us to keep it, though he did say the time would come when we’d have to accept the new model. The change was forced when Mike ordered the sports package, as he does every September. Dish refused to allow the programming until the new receiver was in place.

Well, this is only part of the story because Mike was gone when the new receiver was installed, and I allowed the installer to sell me a new sound bar on a 30-day trial. It was not better or easier to use than our sound bar, and Mike wanted it gone. It IS gone now, but it was not easily arranged.

So – yeah – that’s what we did in September. It was tedious and time-consuming, and we’re stuck with a system we don’t like. KW