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Wannaskan Almanac for Tuesday July 7, 2026 Farm Finds

While driving my usual 2000 mile summer trip I started to notice something.  It seems like every farm that we passed, and we passed a lot of them, has a slew of old, broken down farm machinery tucked away.  Some of them are right in the yard, others are out in the middle of a field, and some are scattered in forested areas.  I assume that the machinery is left where it either becomes unusable or breaks down. That is just one theory of how these relics end up all over the farm.  Another postulation is that they are decorations.  It is like the whole farm is a giant evergreen tree and each piece of slowly rusting machinery is a piece of garland or tinsel.   I do remember my Aunt and Uncle holding onto different pieces of machinery to use for spare parts.  This had a double benefit.  When you took off a piece of a parts unit you learned a little mare about how it worked and (hopefully) how to put it back together.  And it was much cheaper t...
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The One - Third Movement: Remembering - Song 16: Hunters - Segment I

               THIRD MOVEMENT REMEMBERING   SONG SIXTEEN HUNTERS   I Now that I am dying  and all things can be told I see myself sleeping there believing I was safe within  the rainbow coils     I felt quite self-satisfied for once again I had crossed over set my foot upon an unfamiliar path I had breached another border there would be no turning back At that time I thought  I had come home and closed the door. I assumed I had been delivered to the port of destination             when in fact I had only             just begun to see the more   I looked, then stopped, for the dark child-man I imagined he had crossed a deeper threshold returned to his dream-time fires in some unnamed long ship   As it was I was held close for some length of time in presumed safety of rainbow splend...

Sunday News

  Man Switches Back Joe McDonnell, 79 and residing in Palmville Twp, Minnesota, changed his phone number to a new device then changed it back to the old device all in the same month. "I was recently given a new phone by a friend," he tells reporters. "The battery on my old phone was dying and the new phone had more memory and a better camera. I called the phone company to move my number over. Switching your number to a new device is one of the few things you can't do yourself on the website because it's complicated. I then discovered I couldn't clear my friend's info off the new phone because I didn't have her password and could not get it because my friend had died and hadn't written down the password. The maker of the phone was no help, so after carrying around two phones for a while I switched back to my old phone." In a later communication, McDonnell says he's now looking for a portable battery power pack. "These power packs are ...

Happy 250th!

Hello and welcome to an Independence Day Saturday here at the Wannaskan Almanac. Today is July 4th. Happy 250th, America! Today's the big day: the celebration of 250 years as united states. I used to poo-poo birthdays, but then I turned 50 and realized that celebration of major milestones and life events is a good thing. So, let's throw the confetti, toot the kazoos and wave our banners. WAKWIR* 1.0 just phoned in from Philadelphia to report on his successful trip to see Big Boy , the world's largest operating steam locomotive he mentioned in his last blog post . "It's HUGE." (Emphasis on the capital letters.) "It's so interesting because usually you think of trains like a passenger or a freight train, but this was neither. It's a heritage train part of the Union Pacific heritage department. Its purpose is to celebrate the history of that specific train." The best part of seeing it with his own eyeballs was that it was REAL. "I've se...

Freedom

    Happy 250th Birthday America!      Is a 250th birthday more portentous for a country than a 200th? I was around for America's 200th birthday and I can say with authority that these fifty year increments zip by quickly. In 1976 Gerald Ford was doing his best as president, but the country was not happy. President Nixon had resigned two years earlier to avoid impeachment. Half the country believed he had been unjustly hounded from office and the other half had been delighted to see him go. There's been a vendetta atmosphere in the country ever since.   Are things better now in the US or worse? They were pretty good for me back in '76. I had a beautiful wife. We owned a house in Wannaska that we planned to move to as soon as I finished school. We had friends and supportive families. Life was good. Fifty years later it's even better. Most of our sorrows have come from witnessing the sorrows of our friends and family members. It bothers me that half the count...

Thursday July 2, 2026 Memories of Clair A. Baldner: An Iowa Road Trip

   My late brother-in-law, Clair Baldner, who is survived by his wife Ann Marie Reynolds Baldner, walked on in February this year. A Celebration of Life gathering is to be held on his 5th generation farmstead in Dallas County, Iowa; my daughter Bonny and her family, along with myself, will be attending. I wrote this memory of him, initially in a sympathy card to his family.   Clair and Ann Marie got married at The Stover Memorial Church of the Brethren in Des Moines in 1956, when I was five years old. Nonetheless, they pressed me into service as their familial ‘Ring Bearer’ who, as AI describes now is “... often a close relative ... who carries the wedding rings down the aisle on a pillow ...; whose role adds charm and sentimentality to the ceremony; (I nailed that.) Dress them in a mini version of the groomsman’s suit, or suspenders and a bow tie for a cute look; keep the walk short; help them feel special and behave well.”    Clair’s niece, Susan, was their ‘F...

Word-Wednesday for July 1, 2026

And here is the Wannaskan Almanac with Word-Wednesday for July 1, 2026, the twenty-sixth Wednesday of the year, the second Wednesday of summer, the first Wednesday of July, and the one-hundred eighty-second day of the year, with one-hundred eighty-three days remaining. Wannaska Phenology Update for July 1, 2026 Blue Jay Cyanocitta cristata —diindiisi in Anishinaabe—is a passerine bird in the family Corvidae , along with raven, crow, and magpie, making its presence known to Wannaskans everywhere. Diindiisi breeds in both deciduous and coniferous forests, and is common in residential areas. Blue jays feed mainly on seeds and nuts, such as acorns, which they may hide to eat later; soft fruits; arthropods; and occasionally small vertebrates. They typically glean food from trees, shrubs, and the ground, and sometimes hawks insects from the air. Blue jay parents build an open cup nest in the branches of a tree, and both sexes participate. The clutch may be two to seven eggs, which are bluis...