I’ve looked through, what appears to be, all my Wannaskawriter and Wannaskan Almanac posts of the past eight years 2018-2026 looking for a story I thought I wrote about my white German Shepherd, Jake. I must have written it in THE RAVEN: Northwest Minnesota’s Original Art, History, & Humor Journal 1994-2018, but I’ll not go looking for it there. No point, because although this is a true story about my dog, the reason I’m publishing it in this form is purely for its penmanship; a craft I once did in profusion, that I can no longer do due to the atheosis of my right hand. Some days I can write as well as I ever did, but other days it’s barely-readable script. I went to an inner-city trades/technical high school in Des Moines, Iowa, back in the sixties thinkin' I was going to become a veterinarian. Instead, I let mathematics intimidate me; (if you saw my math scores, you'd understand.) Mid-stream, I decided I might as well do something that...
And here is the Wannaskan Almanac with Word-Wednesday for April 8, 2026, the fourteenth Wednesday of the year, the third Wednesday of spring, the second Wednesday of April, and the ninety-eighth day of the year, with two-hundred sixty-seven days remaining. Wannaska Phenology Update for April 8, 2026 Cowbird Molothrus armenti — asiginaak, in Anishinaabe — returns to Wannaska, one of our stranger migrants. The genus name combines the Ancient Greek mōlos , meaning "struggle" or "battle", with thrōskō , meaning "to sire" or "to impregnate"; the English name "cowbird", first recorded in 1839, refers to this species often being seen near cattle. Both monikers relate to different features of cowbird strangeness. First, cowbirds reproduce by laying their eggs in other birds' nests. Female cowbirds observe a potential host bird laying its eggs, and when the nest is left momentarily unattended, the cowbird lays its own egg in it. The female ...