Friday, August 28, 2009




We found Monarch butterfly caterpillars eating our "Butterfly weed" - a kind of milkweed. Pretty blossoms, and very munchable for our winged friends. The caterpillars look pretty keen!
Otherwise, pretty blah in the garden. I really need to weed, but there are bigger things happening in our life...more info later.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Luna Moths


In past years, we have occasionally seen a Luna Moth. They lay their eggs on Black Walnut trees or sweetgums, both of which we have in our "yard". Yesterday, we had one on the kitchen window. Leaving for work, I showed Debbie that the moth was now on the porch. She then showed me a second, also on the porch. Going around the corner to feed our cat, we found a third, then a fourth! They are beautiful...

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Another health care letter to the editor of the Chillicothe Gazette:
The AP had a story on Friday, July 17, with a headline of “House Bill Would Make Health Care a Right”. Many in this community may believe health care is a “right”. Health care is important, even critical in some situations. An acquaintance of mine tells a story about “Kevin” who suffered permanent heart damage because he was worried about the cost of health care and did not go to the hospital emergency room until it was almost too late.

That is my worry about making health care a “right”. By the time we realize all of the problems the proposed legislation in front of the Congress causes to our economy, the damage to our country may very well be permanent and irreversible. Look at the state of Ohio’s budget (or California…). Medicare and Medicaid are eating up so much of the budget that libraries (isn’t knowledge a right?), education (a right in our state constitution guaranteed to all children), transportation, public safety and various other programs are being cut to feed the “health care monster”. Governors, in both parties, oppose this legislation

The administration assures us this will solve our health care problems and insure the “50 million uninsured”. Isn’t this the same administration that assured us, if the Congress passed the stimulus program (emergency – do it right away or it will be a “catastrophe”!) that unemployment wouldn’t go above 8%? The same administration that said, months ago, that the stimulus program was “already working”? The administration that claims, if we don’t spend billions or trillions of dollars, right away, that climate change will end life as we know it? Haven’t we heard this song before? Why is everything always an emergency such that no one gets to read the bills before Congress passes them?

By the way, of that “50 million uninsured”, how many are citizens? I have a Christian desire to help the downtrodden, no matter where they live or to whom they pledge allegiance, but, as a US citizen, I really don’t want to cover any and all persons here illegally with my tax dollars. In addition, how many are young folks who could pay but choose not to? How many are temporarily without insurance because they are unemployed?

Food is a basic human need, as is shelter and clean water. The government, however, does not guarantee everyone the same food, shelter or water. They make services available to the poor (WIC, food stamps, section 8 housing, vouchers for heating assistance), but do not mandate that everyone eat the same food, live in the same kind of house, or pay the same bill for water.

What if we all had to pay a tax so that everyone could have a car? After all, in today’s society, you HAVE to have a car to get a job. It’s a necessity, so why shouldn’t everyone be given one by the government? The dream is that everyone would get a new Cadillac. The reality, however, is that we would all be driving used Yugos after a while. It’s just economics…

Let’s improve health care access for the deserving poor, the unemployed, the family beset by unexpected emergencies. Let’s not cripple the economy, though, by putting into law that health care is a “right” and forcing every man and woman into a system that takes away freedom and incentive, and replaces it with government mandates and rationing. Call your Senators and your Representative and STOP this dramatic restructuring of health care before the damage is permanent and crippling our economy.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Bees and Blooms











Should I send these images to the magazine "Birds and Blooms"? If it was called "Bees and Blooms", I might be a winner...

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Sitting on the Porch


Having walked around a bit this morning, I again glory in the creation that God has given us. The daylilies, coneflowers, herbs, hostas, and black-eyed Susans glory in the coolness of morning. My dog is enjoying his breakfast (as well as polishing off the remnants of the cat's), the barn swallows are swooping for theirs, and various other winged creatures are calling to each other from the safety of the woods. I did plant two lobelia last night, and I really need to apply Roundup to the driveway. It will wait, as the light drizzle continues to gently fall and I post on my laptop...

Sunday, June 21, 2009




Father's Day 2009. A special day for many. We went to Lowe's, and I bought some hybrid of Black-Eyed Susans that have a white center and a white and yellow petal. Really spiffy. Planted it behind the garage. Also bought more herbs for the herb garden, and planted some Monarda out in the island. I had some young men spread some mulch for me yesterday, and, as only teenagers can do - it was done! (not well, but inexpensively).

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The herb garden - planted


Planted sage, thyme, rosemary, parsley, borage, fennel, dill, tarragon, marjoram, bee balm, jacob's ladder, salvia, lamb's ear, and maybe something else. Pictures to follow someday relatively soon. Off to West Virginia in the morning for a regional meeting...