Hello and welcome to a graduation Saturday here at the Wannaskan Almanac by way of St. Paul. Today is May 23rd. It's graduation season! While everyone's partying and celebrating in Wannaska, we're in the Twin Cities celebrating College Kid 2.0's who is graduating from the University of St. Thomas. I'm up to my elbows in assembling a potato salad before I get all dolled up for commencement, so I've prepared a poem for your enjoyment. To the Graduates A poem by Kim Hruba, with AI-assistance The grand clock goes tick! And the grand clock goes tock! You find yourself standing right here on the dock. Graduation has found you, it’s arrived at your door, And it does quite a lot—yes, two things, or more! First, it checks your height and says, "Look how you’ve grown! Look at all of the wonderful things that you've known!" It throws up confetti and dances a jig, To celebrate you for becoming so big. But second—oh second!—it checks out the time, Which marches...
I went to a scattering of ashes last Sunday. Our friend Catherine had died on March 18, 2026 and her ashes were scattered or rather poured out of an urn at the base of the tree she had selected. The ceremony could have been sooner but some of the seven people present had been unable to be there until Sunday. Even so, it was an expeditious scattering of ashes compared with my parent's ashes. My father died on December 17, 2009 and my mother on March 24, 2012. At least half their ashes and maybe more are at my sister Mary-Jo's house. My sister says, "They always liked being here". My father said he wanted his ashes left on a sandbar just off the point of land near his home in Hull, MA. He planned for the rising tide to wash his ashes out to sea. That would have been a simple job. The difficulty as with Catherine's ashes was getting the family together. A year later we had a family get-together at my brother's place in Maine...