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Sunday, June 14, 2026

Where to Begin?


69°f/20.5°C, humid, mostly cloudy. Storms in the evening started a cooling trend. Color me happy!


It has been one of those weekends, pretty much nonstop, but all good things.

We started Friday with a trip to the VA in Huntington (WV), for Larry to see a dermatologist.  She confirmed that he has a good bit of skin cancer on his face, neck and arms. He has been told for years to wear sunscreen and to cover up when outdoors, but did he listen? Of course not. She treated him and gave him medications to use, and he is now covering up as directed. Too little too late, but the treatments will help if he continues to follow the instructions.  



On the way home we stopped at Hillbilly Hotdogs, which has been featured on a few traveling cooking/restaurant shows, including Jamie Oliver. It's a kitschy place, just corny and fun, and it was very, very busy. We just wanted ice cream. I had one of mt favorites, black cherry. So good on that hot day (92°!).




We came home to care for our critters, then left again for Spencer,  where my friend  David O'Dell
was playing at a nice little outdoor stage. David is a Spencer native, a true Renaissance man: he plays guitar, banjo, bass, mandolin, and lap dulcimer, teaches physics at Glenville State University,  and for years farmed with his Dad, using draft horses to put up hay and do other farm work, and he restores old Gravely tractors! Not to mention he is also well read and funny.  He was the recipient of the prestigious Vandalia award this year from the WV Division of Culture and History.


It was a good show, with an open mic segment in which a young man visiting from California took part. He was born in WV, moved to California with his mother, and now is back, briefly, to take his ailing father back to California to care for him. What a good young man, and a fun singer too.


Jesse Cottrill on stage

Afterward we went to Folklore Pizza for a late supper. That is the coolest place, and was quite busy that evening.

Saturday afternoon Larry stayed here to work on the patio project while I dropped in on the WV Writers Conference at the Cedar Lakes Conference Center, located just outside our county seat of Ripley. I didn't attend any of the sessions, but paid my membership and visited with friends I had not seen in a couple years. It was especially good to see Cheryl Miller, a fine poet and one of our Porch Poets group, who has had a hard fight with cancer this past year. She is on the mend, I am glad to say. 
She is originally from Ontario, Canada but has lived here in WV for many years. Our gain!

Then later, bonfire time!


The evening featured an open mic reading session by the bonfire. What a treat to hear works in progress and completed works of poetry, fiction and nonfiction. Suzette Bradshaw, from near Boone, NC, whose poetry book will be published soon, ran a tight ship ---one poem, or one prose piece no longer than 3 minutes!

Afterward everyone who was able (some were worn out and went to bed!) drifted to a patio referred to as "the porch" for late-night talk and beverages. It was wonderful to reconnect with everyone. I left at the witching hour, and had to call Security to be let out of the park grounds. I was careful driving home, as that afternoon a car ran over the hill on the US route to my road, trying to avoid a deer. The herd seems to be rebounding quickly after last year's bout with the killing EHD disease.

Today we went out to breakfast, then met with Suzy, who will be emcee at the next open mic. I have by default had to start organizing it, for at least a few months. Bit unexpected  but no one else was willing and I would hate to see it end. Here's the poster Shari made for this week's show. 



Now I am looking for more people to fill upcoming featured artist slots. Ah me.  How do I get into these things?

By the time we got home, the storms had arrived, so we enjoyed watching the rain soak our gardens. Needed and appreciated!


Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Friday, June 12, 2026

Seasonal

Summer knocks
with thunderous raps,
flashing eyes, 
her hot breath steaming 
Spring's clear windows.
"Let me in!"
She bellows,
rattles the latch,
but gentle Spring
whispers only,
"Not yet,
       not yet,
             not yet."


Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Power-Less

75°f/23.8°C, humid, breezy, mix of sun and clouds. 

The electric went off at 10am, and there went most of our plans for today. We had outdoor work to do, but we won't be doing that until the power comes back on because it is so humid, and already 85° as I write. Outside work would require a shower as soon as we came inside, and since we have a well, therefore a pump, there's no running water right now. (We do have water for drinking and flushing, though--we stayed prepared usually because you never know when someone might hit a pole, drop a tree, or whatever). 

So, a few little projects kept me busy for a while.
Like this Jack Daniel's lamp, which needed a little glue on the label, and a shade. Getting the shade to fit though? Major headache! I think I have it fixed, but we shall see if it decides to start wobbling again.

Yeah, that's a pile of projects behind the chair, which is also a project. Mostly mirrors, and I think a small shelf. I have three of these small orojects in progress right now, but don't really want to paint or wax without water to clean up.

The lamp below needed to be rewired, as someone had, for whatever reason, cut off the power cord. An easy fix, just takes a little time. We remove cords from non-functioning lamps before scrapping them, so I usually have a good cord on hand. We keep other parts too, and they often come in handy. 

See my stack of small projects behind the lamp? 

I had put this crock bowl in the freezer, so today I got to work removing the large nasty candle inside it. I picked this up for a quarter, so it was worth the work.


And work it was! Usually freezing a dish with a candle in it makes the candle come out easily, but not this time. This was the yuckiest, stickies wax I have ever seen. I think maybe the scent oil they used or something might have affected the wax. And it smelled so bad! Whatever that scent was supposed to be, in my book it was awful.


A lot of what we do is cleaning up behind people--repairing, sanding out scratches, painting, fixing broken drawers, scrubbing dirty stuff, getting out stains...all the reasons why stuff ends up at the thrift, in the trash or in an auction. It is satisfying to return things to usefulness again,  although there are times when we wonder if a piece is worth saving! There have been times when we give up, but we often save hardware or good wood for use on some other project.

Saving things, though, can create its own problems! We end up with too much, so then it means a sorting out: what to keep, what to donate, what to burn (if wood) or put in the scrap pile. Periodically Larry takes a load to the metal recycling place; he used to give it to our late friend Ernie, but now just hauls it himself. 

A call from the power company just now updated the restore time to this evening, so I guess I'll price stuff for the booths. Larry said he's going to cut grass. At least he can stay somewhat cool with his big hat and long sleeves. On to Plan C!

Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.
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