An Excerpt from 'Hot Coffee & Cold Beer: a Journal July 2, 1983 Last night I was out for my run after being lazy for about a week -- it's easy to get that way and ennui ( weariness and boredom resulting from inactivity or lack of interest) is easy to contract in this weather. I came running up the lane dodging the water-filled ruts along the way and turned north onto the county road. West of the schoolhouse in the nearing distance came an old Chevy pickup, a blue rusty vision with round cylindrical on-the-fender-turn signals and its front bumper hanging from one corner with wire. I walked on, occasionally turning to see who it was and ready to motion him on if he slowed 'to help me.' The bed of the truck was filled with greasy oil cans, chicken wire, broken glass and rocks. The man driving it never looked at me as he tried to force it into low gear but instead looked determined -- "raw concentration to the duty at hand,"-- etched in dirty wri...
And here is the Wannaskan Almanac with Word-Wednesday for June 17, 2026, the twenty-fourth Wednesday of the year, the thirteenth Wednesday of spring, the third Wednesday of June, and the one-hundred sixty-eighth day of the year, with one-hundred ninety-seven days remaining. Wannaska Phenology Update for June 17, 2026 Wild Roses Rosa blanda — oginiiminagaawanzh — in Anishinaabe, also known as smooth rose, meadow/wild rose, or prairie rose, is a species native to Wannaska. A colony-forming shrub growing up to three feet high, wild rose can be found in prairies and meadows and forests, oh my! Among roses, oginiiminagaawanzh is the closest we come to a "thornless" rose. The flowers are perfect, by definition: /PÉ™R-fÉ™k(t)/ adj., BOTANY, (of a flower) having both stamens and carpels present and functional, i.e., bisexual. Blooming in early summer, the flowers are borne singly or in corymbs [KÄR-im(b)/ n., a flower cluster whose lower stalks are proportionally longer so that the ...