Pandemic Diary — April 19 to 25, 2021

Monday, April 19   Deaths  2,460 (+0)   New cases  473

This is the second day in a row of zero reported COVID deaths in Oregon. We will be making a new chart tomorrow. We’re expecting that it will show an improvement over the previous one. But the positive test ratio is creeping up lately. After having been fairly steady at around 3% for a long time, it has been over 5% three times in the past week. 

Not too much grocery shopping today as we are planning to be away for a few days. But some worrisome medical news is casting a pall on things. The radiologist says that the MRI of E’s foot has raised an issue. So we’ll have to deal with that as soon as we get back, perhaps returning a day early. 

The weather is very nice today. M watered the blueberries. It seems very early in the year to be doing that. 

Tuesday, April 20   Deaths  2,460 (+0)   New cases  580

Eve talked to her doctor and was reassured to learn that the issue is not as urgent as she had feared. She gets to take a week off from medical work.

Our plan is to spend three nights in Bandon, on Oregon’s south central coast. We’ve booked a kitchenette room and plan to cook one supper there. We also plan to go to Alloro’s wine bar for a meal. (Hopefully it’s still there. We haven’t actually checked.) This morning we packed up the Mazda and left home at 11:00 or so. Our first stop was the Vietnamese Baguette to get a couple of sandwiches for the road. Then we headed down 99 to Monroe, took the old Applegate Trail route to Cheshire, and then followed 36 and 126 to the coast. We stopped for a picnic lunch at the boat ramp in Triangle Lake. Nice weather for it. We got into our motel room around 4:00. 

When we thought about cooking our dinner…oops, kuçuk problem varda. Strange kitchen. There was a stove and a fridge; and there were two saucepans, four settings of really cheap flatware, four plates, four bowls and a spatula. But that was all. Tava yoktu. Paring knife yoktu. Cutting board yoktu. And no cups or glassware either. We’d kind been counting on having those things. It turns out that the motel’s response to COVID had been to remove most–but not all–of the kitchen utensils from the kitchen units so as to “minimize touch points”. An odd choice, it seemed to us, and very annoying of them not to have mentioned it on their booking site.

While pondering all this, we happened to check to see if Alloro still existed. Indeed they did and were open that very day. Also, they were not open on Wednesday. Hm. Off we went to get take-out from Alloro. We could always cook our own stuff tomorrow. We got Cacciuco fish stew for E and flat noodle Bolognese for M. They were both really, really good. 

Today is the 390th day of Pandemic Diary record keeping, and thus time for another chart. Over the last ten days, the Oregon COVID death rate was just two per day, down from almost six in the previous period.

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Wednesday, April 21  Deaths  2,466 (+6)   New cases  989

Got the free grab and go motel breakfast: granola bar, Otis Spunkmeyer banana muffin, orange juice, small yoplait, and a fruit cup thingy. We made our own espresso. After breakfast, M made sandwiches for our lunch and then we headed back north up 101. We were aiming for the southern arm of Coos Bay, which is known locally as the South Slough. The South Slough Reserve is one of 29 areas in the National Estuarine Research Reserve System. 

We started at the interpretive center, which was closed, and hiked down the North Creek Trail, a beautiful walk which descends 300 feet through very steep coastal rain forest. 

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Along the North Creek Trail
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Despite the very rugged terrain, the hillside was logged long ago. It appears that this stump fell sideways down the hill some years after it was cut. 
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Mature Sikta spruce growing from a nurse log. 
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It’s skunk cabbage time in Oregon

Down at sea level you can see what the Estuarine Reserve is all about. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, hundreds of estuary salt marshes were converted to agricultural use by building dikes to wall them off from the sea. This area was farmland for about 100 years. Fortunately, dikes can be breached, and natural habitat can be restored. In the South Slough Reserve, restoration work began in 1975.

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A restored salt marsh. This is a view inland, away from the ocean.
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This is a view of the estuary facing in the opposite direction from the previous photo. The water in the distance is the south arm of Coos Bay.

The two photos above and the video below were taken from a trail that leads across an old dike. The photographer was on a bridge that spans a fifty-foot long breach in the dike, which was created as part of the restoration project. The video below begins with the view inland and then pans around to show the view toward the sea. In the middle of the video you can see how the trail goes across the top of the remaining part of the dike.

We ate our lunch on an observation deck overlooking the main body of the South Slough. The hike back up to our car included a one-third mile section called the Tunnel Trail.

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For dinner we cooked and ate our things brought from home. The front desk was able to provide us with a skillet (tava), which was our most pressing need. So we managed. The biggest challenge was slicing the tomato without a paring knife. E managed that part, even though it was M’s night to cook. 

Thursday, April 22   Deaths  2,467 (+1)   New cases  993

We went out to the Bandon North Jetty this morning, which was fairly complicated since the town of Bandon is on the south side of the Coquille River and the North Jetty is not. There is a U.S. 101 bridge over the Coquille, but it’s several miles from town, so it’s a long roundabout trip. Anyway, the north jetty is pretty awesome. There was a cold wind, of course, as there so often is here, but otherwise the day was fine. The surf was noisy and there were several sorts of birds to be watched. 

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The far end of the north jetty
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At the near end, someone has thrown some sand and a few sticks up onto the jetty.

After hiking around a bit, we went back to our little room for a lunch of whatever we could find in the fridge or in our food box. That included a little bit of leftover Cacciuco. Was it still good? Oh yeah.

In the afternoon we visited the Ni-les’tun Marsh Restoration area. It is quite near Bandon, on the east side of U.S. Highway 101, just upstream from the mouth of the Coquille river. In the photo below, the river runs along the far end of the marsh just in front of the forested hill. In the upper right, you may be able to distinguish the 101 bridge, with its two old towers for raising the drawbridge section. Much of the marsh is inundated twice a day at high tide and all of the marsh is inundated during spring tides, which occur twice per lunar month. This is only a portion of the marsh; there is more off to the left for a total size is 400 acres.  

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For most of the twentieth century there was a large dairy operation down on the level area just beyond the trees in the center of the photo. Restoration of the marsh began in 2009 and involved removing one and a quarter miles of dike and filling in fourteen miles of drainage ditches. Why is this important, you may ask. For one thing, the estuary is vital habitat for salmon and other sea creatures. Turns out salmon need an estuary to make the transition from fresh water, where they hatch, to salt water, where they will spend the adult phase of their lives. In the hundreds or thousands of years before the diking and draining began, there were 5,000 acres of marshland in the Coquille basin. Today, there are about 500 acres. The remainder is still in agricultural use, mainly as pasture.

Dinner this day was at another notable Bandon eatery: Pablo’s Corner. It’s difficult to describe just what Pablo’s Corner is like. This was our first visit. If we live long enough, we will surely go back. 

Friday, April 23   Deaths  2,476 (+9)   New cases  1,020

Time to head for home. We were on the road by ten, heading not up the coast on 101, but rather going roughly east,  to meet up with I-5 at Roseburg. Remember that 4,500 acres of unrestored marsh that are still in use as pasture? We saw a good portion of it this morning as we drove through the Coquille basin.

You might say we were taking the back way home. (You know, that’s when home is 200 miles due north and you start your day by driving 40 miles southeast.) But it was worth it because I-5, once you get there, has its advantages. It’s a lot faster and straighter than 101, plus it goes directly to the hamlet of Rice Hill. It is possible that some people don’t understand the significance of Rice Hill, perhaps because they have never been there, or perhaps because they have no interest in ice cream. For the rest of us, Rice Hill means a stop at the K & R Drive In for some Umpqua ice cream. With E at the wheel, we found the place easily, just in time for lunch.

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We got back to Corvallis at around 3:30 and got a start at unpacking and sorting through the junk mail. After a simple supper, we took a walk around the neighborhood and felt a few tiny drops of rain, the beginnings, we hoped, of more serious moisture to come.

Saturday, April 24   Deaths  2,484 (+8)   New cases  830

Some rain last night and today, which should be good for the new plantings. We visited our friend H today. She’s rearranging things around her house to prepare for some changes ahead. It seems that her soon to be unemployed deadbeat daughter plans to move back home. Okay, okay. I guess we have to add that the daughter is actually a very successful pediatrician who is getting ready to retire, so the phrase “unemployed deadbeat” may not be strictly accurate in the technical sense. It was fun to type, though. In any case, H needs to make room by getting rid of a few pieces of furniture. First we helped her dismantle a bed and move the pieces to the garage. Then we helped her move a large sectional couch out of her TV room and onto the patio. The patio will make a good transfer point for the people who will haul it away.

Dinner was take-out from Tacovore. TV was the first episode of The Vineyard, a Spanish series set in the late 1800’s. The first episode was somewhat disjointed, but it looks promising. We are letting poor Melek languish for a while. We’ve watched 36 of her 59 episodes and we need a break. This afternoon it happened that both E and M had on fairly nice sweaters. Our house looked like a Turkish prison.

Sunday, April 25   Deaths  2,485 (+1)   New cases  780

It was cloudy and cool this morning, with a bit of rain in the afternoon. M went off in the truck to explore the upper reaches of the Luckiamute River. He went onto gravel at Hoskins and got back onto pavement in Falls City. That wasn’t exactly where he intended to come out, but hey, there are a surprising number of unmarked roads out there in the forest and he was using a forty-year-old map. While he was out, he stopped at a self-service yard décor depot for some bits of wood and stone. With no staff available to help him, he was limited to items small enough for him to lift. More on that once the items are installed.

TV tonight was more of The Vineyard and more also of Atlantic Crossing. In the former, Soledad and Mauro still haven’t met, but certain wheels are in motion. In the latter, Princess Martha is busy making enemies in the White House, but FDR is not among them.

Pandemic Diary — April 12 to 18, 2021

Monday, April 12   Deaths  2,441 (+1)   New cases  294

Another grocery shopping day. E walked to the Co-op (4,500 steps!) and then called M to come and pick her up. E did Yoga later, and also got some new socks via Fedex. E’s feet are very particular about socks. These socks appear to be just right. They came from Walmart online and turned out to be made in Turkey. Güzel! 

For TV we watched an episode of 20 Minutes (Yermi Dakika). A startling development! It’s about Raven and no, it’s not her new white leather coat. Her dad, Cat the burglar, has given her a car, and not just any car, a vintage Mustang convertible! It’s shiny red and has dual exhausts. The top is a little ragged but otherwise it looks good. And either it still sounds really great or else the producers cared enough to find a great soundtrack for it. 

Tuesday, April 13   Deaths  2,446 (+5)   New cases  567

Speaking of red vehicles, M got his truck today. We went up to the CarMax Superstore in Salem and there it was, looking very pretty, all freshly detailed in the bright sunshine. M took a long look, figuring it looked better today than it ever would again. And sure enough, when he got it home, there were bug splatters all over the windshield and the front grill. CarMax has a seven-day free return policy, so he was thinking maybe he should take this one back and demand a truck that will stay clean. 

CarMax also has a 30-day money-back guarantee, which would seem to make the seven-day return policy somewhat redundant, but never mind. They also give a fix-it-for-free warranty for 90 days or 4,000 miles. But the factory warranty from Nissan is good until September of 2022, so never mind that either. Anyway, it took a long time to go through all this stuff, so M had to spend about an hour at the superstore even though he had already chosen the vehicle and agreed to the no-haggle price. E went on the test drive with him, but later drove off to get us some lunch from a Thai restaurant whilst M dealt with the paperwork. 

So what do we think of the CarMax buying experience? The whole process was pleasant and painless. Having a good Thai place nearby was a plus.

How was the price? M’s research suggests that the no-haggle prices charged by CarMax, Vroom and Carvana are generally lower than the asking prices at traditional dealerships. But traditional dealerships are often willing to come down from their asking prices and a good negotiator will be able to match the price of the no-haggle stores. But who wants to spend time negotiating? Not M. Knowledge is power and in the old days car dealers had extensive knowledge and buyers had very little. Nowadays the balance of information is roughly equal. Besides, says E, the CarMax Superstore had a really nice restroom with a special foot pedal attached to the door for no-touch opening.

Why didn’t M get a Toyota Tacoma instead of a Nissan Frontier? Don’t Toyotas have a better reputation? Yes they do. And the result is that used Tacomas cost many thousands of dollars more that comparable Frontiers. A Nissan will suffice for M. 

If a used vehicle spent its first years of life as a rental vehicle, does that affect its current price? Oh yeah. If the vehicle is a Nissan Frontier, it seems to knock off between $5,000 and $8,000 of value. Is it easy to find out if a vehicle was once a rental? Yes! Or if it has ever been in an accident? Yes, that too! And it’s very easy to find out how much  other dealers are asking for a virtually identical vehicles. M says this is a golden age for car buying.

Wednesday, April 14   Deaths  2,449 (+3)   New cases  816

The CDC has announced a “pause” in the approval of the Johnson and Johnson one-dose COVID vaccine. The reason for the pause is that after 6.8 million J&J shots, blood clots have been found in six women, one of whom died. Fine, you say, they’re being careful. Okay, but it’s still a little strange. If they applied this standard to other medicines, we wouldn’t have very many medicines left. Birth control pills, for example, are associated with blood clots in one out of every thousand users, making birth control pills 1,000 times more dangerous than J&J’s vaccine. Will we be seeing a pause there? Probably not. 

Thursday, April 15   Deaths  2,455 (+6)   New cases  733

Tertulia today, again live and in person! J and R are almost ready for their trip to St. George, Utah. Andrea and Andy have already bought their tickets for the East coast in August. J is on her way to New York City next week to see her daughter who is about to have a baby. Life goes on.

M got a long needed haircut today and then took the truck out for a spin in the Coast Range, going out Highway 20 and returning via Siletz, Logdsen, and Summit. Part of the route parallels the old railroad line that runs between Corvallis and the coast.

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Just west of Summit

Friday, April 16   Deaths  2,457 (+2   New cases  704

We took E to Salem for an MRI of her foot this morning. She survived the experience but she does not recommend it. In the middle of the day we had lunch on the patio and did a little watering. M also took some pictures.

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E’s phlox are doing fine this year, as are M’s tulips. Irises are mustering on the hill. 
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The new bed is sparse so far. The flowering current, snowberry bushes and the mallow are all natives, as is the little cascara tree way in the back. The ceanothus and the little red maple are invaders from far distant planets…
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The rhubarb patch as it looked just moments before E went out and harvested a pie’s worth.

 

Later she turned around and baked a pie. Soon after that, M went to the store to get ice cream and then turned around and microwaved two Amy’s frozen dinners. And the party began. The pie was very good, but E was not satisfied. Our garden rhubarb, she believes, is just not up to snuff.

On TV we watched Episode 13 of 45 RPM. Good ending. Next we’ll have to get back to Melek. 

Saturday, April 17  Deaths  2,460 (+3)   New cases  888

Albert Bourla, the CEO of Pfizer, said today that people will “likely” need a third dose of their vaccine within twelve months. After that, it might possibly be required every year. In recent weeks it has become clear that a sizable percentage of Americans do not intend to get vaccinated. We might think that would be bad news for Pfizer, since this will lower demand for vaccines. But that would be simplistic thinking. There is no scenario in which Pfizer does not come out golden.

Around here it was hot today, somewhere in the eighties. M started up one segment of sprinklers and found two big leaks in the feed line. (We don’t much like watering in April. Should be raining more.) Apparently, someone has been messing around poking shovels and sticks and things into the ground and puncturing things. Does M think he knows who that someone was? Of course he does. It was him. Making the repairs required a visit to Home Depot for fittings. Man, was it crowded. While M was there experiencing a Home Depot Saturday in all its glory, E was at Stonybrook visiting her friend S and dog Pepper. After lunch she had a visit with her seamstress to pick up some alterations. A young woman was there trying on a wedding dress, which E says was very lovely with pearls everywhere. Also very low necked and with a slit up one side almost as high as Denver. 

Dinner was take-out from Ba’s followed by rhubarb pie. Delicious. TV was two episodes of 20 Minutes. Lovesick Ozan has told Melek that Ali is having an affair with Raven. He showed her a picture of the two of them lying on a bed. They were fully clothed in winter jackets and not touching, but still. Melek is worried sick. The prison break is scheduled for nine days from now.

Sunday, April 18   Deaths  2,460 (0)   New cases  628

For breakfast M made Fanny Farmer biscuits and E produced a treasured jar of maple butter. A wonderful beginning to another hot day. In the morning M worked in the yard while E went for a walk on campus and said hello to the horses at the Vet School pasture. In the afternoon we made plans for a trip to the coast next week. We’re getting a kitchenette unit at the Best Western in Bandon and planning a hike to some falls on the Illinois River.  Yes, the Illinois River is in Oregon. One wonders if Illinois has an Oregon River?

We checked in again with Melek and Ali. Seems to be lots of confusion going around. Trust no one! Ali has shot a would be blackmailer, but not in any vital spot. The prison doctor who has been helping Melek has been taken in for interrogation. The prison break has been moved up to tomorrow. From Melek in Turkey we passed on to Princess Martha of Norway in Atlantic Crossing. Today was the episode in which she completes the eponymous journey, arriving in New York and then going off to stay for a while in the White House at the invitation of FDR. Missy LeHand does not seem pleased with this arrangement.

Pandemic Diary — April 5 to 11, 2021

Monday, April 5   Deaths  2,394 (+2)   New cases  248

A beautiful morning to go touring around Winco. There were some other humans there, not enough to make the aisles crowded, but sufficient to overload the two open check-out lines. Several people were buying truly vast quantities of stuff. Are the end times closer than we thought?

E went out and brought Pepper home for a while, just to give S a break. The three of us went for a walk up to the neighborhood natural area, where Pepper found much of interest. Then it was time for M to bop over to Safeway for his second COVID shot. He came back home vaccinated and also carrying a Pepperidge Farm Coconut Cake and a pair of limes. E took Pepper home before preparing our Monday repast. 

Tuesday, April 6   Deaths  2427 (+33)   New cases  544

Yikes. Thirty-three COVID-related deaths reported in Oregon today. Positive test rates are also up a little to 3.93%, the highest since March 9th.

M’s reaction to yesterday’s second shot is extreme tiredness. Other than that he feels okay. He did a few errands today, but he also did a lot of lying down, which he says is quite wonderful.

For the last two nights we’ve been watching a Ken Burns series on PBS, the one about Ernest Hemingway. It’s absorbing and follows more the less the line of who was the myth and who was the man. Hemingway makes for an interesting subject. However, the tone is so very earnest (sorry, but that’s exactly the word) and the pace is so very, very slow. We defy anyone to watch two hours of this without glancing at the clock at least twice, wondering when it will ever end.

Wednesday, April 7   Deaths  2,434 (+7)   New cases  470

M woke up feeling more or less normal and joined E for a walk around the neighborhood. Later he worked on making a garden map and list of plant names so as not to lose track of what they all are. E had a medical appointment in Salem in the afternoon. This being her night to cook, she prepared her bread and cheese bake before she left and stuck it in the fridge for later baking. M put his newest plant in the ground (salal, a native!) and then watched two episodes of Dickinson on AppleTV+. It’s a comedy series about a young Emily Dickinson. It’s set in 19th century Amherst, Massachusetts, just before the Civil War, but it is enlivened by a generous sprinkling of 21st century attitudes, language, and music. It is not very earnest and is sometimes just silly, but it is young and alive.

After dinner we finally checked up on poor Melek, locked in a room with a psycho woman that the other inmates have nicknamed Scorpion. We saw Scorpion move swiftly to the attack when she thought Melek was sleeping. But Melek was expecting just such a move and managed to wrest away the deadly shiv despite having one of her arms handcuffed to an iron bedstead. But then the corrupt guards came in and took the shiv away from Melek and secretly gave Scorpion another weapon. So this long night isn’t over. Outside the prison Ali discovers strong evidence that Melek was having a passionate affair with her supposed victim in the weeks before he died. Now his world is really falling apart. Desperate for any way out of this horror, Ali violently accosts a man that he knows to have been a friend of the victim and demands the truth. And the truth is…that the new evidence is totally bogus! This is good news, but poor Ali, to be buffeted hither and yon in such a way. And what is even worse for him, a key member of the viewing audience, someone right here in our own house, has called him a dud character. You light the fuse, you hear that hissing sound and then after a pause there’s this little smoosh and then…listen as you might…it’s only crickets. Ooh that’s harsh.

Thursday, April 8   Deaths  2,439 (+5)   New cases  667

Our regular Thursday tertulia with J and R had a major change of venue today as we cast FaceTime aside and officially resumed in person meetings. We sat under a heat lamp in the big white tent at Coffee Culture on King’s Blvd. We had botanero rolls and coffee cake just like the old days. We had to hurry home though because E had her Zoom exercise class at 9:00. M went to the store to get fresh pizza dough. Later in the morning E walked to a medical appointment at the Corvallis Clinic and when she was done called M to come and fetch her and take her to lunch. 

In the afternoon E went to BiMart to pick up a prescription that wasn’t ready, which was quite annoying except that while she was there she found a shelf full of low sugar recipe pectin, a product that mysteriously disappeared when the pandemic began and which she sorely missed last summer. Then she went to her Zoom laughter yoga class where the idea is to laugh at things whether they are funny or not because even fake laughing is good for you. One thing that sounds sort of funny is that one of the participants had a hard time unmuting herself so no one heard what she was saying during the first half hour or so. M spent the afternoon writing a memoir of his time in Czechoslovakia in the mid seventies. Here’s something he heard while he was there. Q: Why do security police go around in groups of three? A: There has to be one who can read, one who can write, and one to keep an eye on the two dangerous intellectuals.

After a home-made pizza dinner (made by M, rated 5 stars by E), we watched an episode of 45 Revolutions. No dud characters here; everyone is hissing and popping and throwing sparks all over. Robert plays a concert in his hometown of Alicante and is confronted by his estranged father who only drops by remind him how truly disgusting it is that he has chosen to be a rock star when he could be working in the kitchen of the family restaurant where he belongs. Robert says he is sorry to be such a disappointment, but hey, hard cheese, and walks away. He’s so upset by this encounter, however, that he has a big fight with the beautiful and venal movie star that the studios have been making him pretend to be in love with and walks away from her too. As soon as he tells this to Maribel, she gives him a thousand watt smile and they start pulling each other’s clothes off. One thing to be said for this show, it’s not slow.

Friday, April 9   Deaths  2,440 (+1)   New cases  570

M did garden work today, something involving compost. E went flower hunting in the forest. M says that his new compost is beautiful, but he has not provided any evidence of that. E, on the other hand, says that wildflowers are extraordinarily profuse this year and has brought back photos.

Around here these are called stream violets.
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Fawn lillies
Calypso bulbosa fairy slipper
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Trillium

We watched a bit of 20 Minutes and can happily report that Melek has survived the latest attempt on her life and has been returned to her regular cell at the prison. AND she is wearing yet another gorgeous new sweater, this one a brilliant deep red cable knit. We had already admired the same sweater in blue that she wore in the last episode. Melek and her cellmates have been wearing a succession of lovely and expensive looking sweaters. As mentioned, we’ve never visited any Turkish prisons, so we’re not sure if this is completely realistic. But would TV producers lie to us? Ali and his mentor The Cat also get to have nice sweaters, though they get more subdued colors and patterns, with a lot of those off-white tones of undyed natural fabrics. Cat’s daughter, Raven, and her buddy, the now suspended Detective Ozan, are rarely seen in sweaters, but they do get to wear lots of black leather outfits, which are also quite nice in their way. The costumes in this show partly–but only partly–make up for the fact that the cars are mostly crap.   

Saturday, April 10   Deaths  2,440 (+0)   New cases  761

E again delivered chocolate croissants, slipping off to Le Patissier early in the morning in a light rain, while M stayed home and made coffee. The croissants were awfully good. Some might think we only like them because they’re chocolate, but connoisseurs know that the flavorings or fillings of a croissant–beautiful as they may be–are essentially superfluous. It is the pastry that matters. Let us enjoy it while we still live.

And speaking of death, today is the 380th day of Pandemic Diary record keeping. Time for another chart. The last ten days have not been as good as we might have hoped. After having fallen to 2 per day in the last part of March, deaths per day in the first part of April averaged 5.7.

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Sunday, April 11   Deaths  2,440 (+0)   New cases  499

A quiet day of not doing much. Take-and-bake bread for breakfast, a little yard work and in the afternoon a walk in an older Corvallis neighborhood across town where many of the houses date from before WW2. There are a few large homes, but also lots of cottages, close together and close to the street, with no driveways or garages. The houses are well maintained and many have beautiful front gardens, so it’s a pleasant place to walk around on a brisk spring day.

Dinner was leftover pizza provided by M and a green salad with mandaquats provided by E. For TV we watched another episode of Atlantic Crossing, taking a break from those voluble Mediterranean countries and testing the colder waters of the north. Kyle MacLachlan is doing a great job playing FDR, who has just sent a ship to Finland to rescue Martha and her children.

Finally, it is with great sadness that we announce the untimely death of a chocolate Easter Bunny due to a motorcycle accident.

Pandemic Diary — March 29 to April 4, 2021

Monday, March 29   Deaths  2,375 (+0)   New cases  217

Another busy Monday. We both did our respective grocery shopping; then M worked in the yard a little while E did Zoom yoga. E then went out for errands and came back with copier paper, map pins, some rather beautiful Year of the Ox postage stamps, and one very clean Turkish blanket. As a reward, she got a treat in the mail: date bread from the China Ranch Date Farm. China Ranch is just a few miles outside of Tecopa, CA. We have fond memories of some date bread that we got the last (and only) time we were in Tecopa, a town which is within striking distance of the middle of nowhere, down around Death Valley. We’ll cut into this loaf for breakfast tomorrow. Meanwhile, here are some photos of the Tecopa area.

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Artistic Tecopa

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Entrepreneurial Tecopa

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Hiking near the date farm

Putting date farms and date bread aside for the moment, what is this talk of map pins? What are map pins and why did E buy them? All will be revealed in time. 

Tuesday, March 30   Deaths  2,381 (+6)   New cases  415

As planned, we had China Ranch date bread for breakfast. Wonderful stuff. After that, E did a Zoom exercise class and then walked to her dentist’s office where the exact contours of her mouth and throat were measured and recorded by some kind of digital imaging device. It was not painful, but neither was it pleasant. She walked back home and arrived just at noon. After a lavish luncheon of salad and half a piece of bread, she went out to the back yard. She had been assigned to find an answer to the question of just what M does when he goes out to “work in the yard.” As soon as she arrived, it all became clear. 

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Eventually M woke up and it was determined that E needed a reward for undergoing such an ordeal at the dentist. We put ourselves into the little blue car and headed downtown in search of those special mini-cupcakes that the dentist used to provide (another casualty of the Pandemic). We were hoping that we could find them at Tried and True and sure enough, there they were. We got a couple of decaf cortados to go with them and went down to the river where we could park in the sun.

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This treat, along with the fact that Tuesday is not her night to cook, brightened Eve’s mood considerably. 

In the evening it was back to 20 Dakika. Ali, who is working as a cleaner in the staff wing of the prison, has worked out a way to communicate with Melek. This depends on the fact that the boiler room of the staff wing is quite near the laundry room of the prison. So Ali can get into a room that is directly under the prison laundry. And of course there are some disused plastic pipes that extend from the boiler room up into the laundry room and he has broken a hole into one of them, using his trusty hammer which he carries in a green canvas shoulder bag. At the appointed time he starts talking into the hole in the pipe calling Melek’s name. Turns out she’s late because she’s having a crisis of conscience about something or other. In fact, she decides not to come. But then, twenty minutes later, she changes her mind and rushes down to the laundry room by means of a not very clever ruse and a plunge down a laundry chute. Once in the laundry area she finds the pipes, but doesn’t know what to do next. She calls Ali’s name, but he can’t hear her. Thinking quickly, she grabs a large crescent wrench, which is a standard feature of all Turkish prison laundry rooms, and breaks a hole in exactly the right pipe. At last, they can talk. What an emotional moment! Especially when she confesses that in fact she was acquainted with the murder victim long before the day of the incident, something which she has previously denied. Poor Ali can only stare dumbly into the jagged hole in his part of the pipe. How could she have lied to him? We just don’t know. 

Wednesday, March 31  Deaths  2,383 (+2)   New cases  441

During the most recent ten-day period, the COVID death toll in Oregon was just two per day. This rate is lower than it has been since the beginning of July. It is comparable to the levels of the early months of the pandemic. 

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The table below shows the data from which the chart was derived. The numbers in the left column are the average deaths per day in each ten-day period. The dates in the right column are the end dates of each period. The colors show what could be seen as three phases of seriousness during the first year of the pandemic in Oregon.

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Now, as for those map pins. A while back Andrea gave us a map of the world that was specially made to track which countries a person has visited. The idea was simple, just stick a pin in every country we’d been to. The kit came with pins, but not very many. And when we ran out, we put the project aside. After a time, maybe a year or two, E was on her way to Office Depot to get printer paper and we had the idea of getting more map pins. The project is now more or less finished. Here’s a part of it. There are pins in Canada, Mexico, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Chile.

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We decided to use two pins for Canada because, you know, Canada is a big country. And at this point we have lots of map pins.

Thursday, April 1   Deaths  2,385 (+2)   New cases  521

Had the usual FaceTime tertulia with J and R this morning. We told them about taking B and B out to Ankeny, where there were coots and wood ducks on the water and hundreds of Canada geese in the air. J and R, fully vaccinated, are planning a trip to southern Utah in May when their son is participating in the St. George Ironman.

E had a busy day, what with tertulia at 8:00, exercise class at 9:00, a visit to S and Pepper at 11:00, a meeting with her seamstress in the afternoon, and a Laughter Yoga session at the end of the day. M spent an hour or so in the yard and then spent several hours searching online for a pickup truck, something he has been doing quite a bit of lately. Finally, at about 3:00 in the afternoon–after E had seen the photos and approved of the color and general appearance of the truck–he bought one. Or to be more accurate, he has entered into an agreement to buy a 2019 Nissan Frontier from CarMax, a fixed price seller whose business is mostly online. 

The truck is in Renton, Washington, near Seattle, so the next part of the process is to ship it to Oregon for final approval. CarMax is charging $99 to get it down here, which should take about a week. At that point M can look it over and test drive it. If he decides not buy at that point, he can just walk away; but the $99 is non-refundable. 

Friday, April 2   Deaths  2,385 (+0)   New cases  499

We visited the plant store this morning, succumbing to a combination of good weather and a $20 coupon. We ended up with a rather heterogenous group of plants. We got as many natives and near natives as we could, but then we grabbed a few other plants just because they seemed like they might fit in where we need things. Did we then rush home and put them all in the ground? Surely you jest. We were exhausted and hungry. 

For M lunch was humus, flatbread, pickles and cheese. For E it was a small, house-made sandwich of tomato, cucumber and peanut butter along with a piece of Co-op falafel. After lunch we planted an aster, two checker mallows and a flowering currant, at which point E had to go in and do her yoga class and M was tired. Nine pots remain to be dealt with tomorrow.

Saturday, April 3   Deaths  2,391 (+6)   New cases  476

More planting today. In the back yard, M stayed mostly in line with our native plant agenda, adding a mahonia (Oregon grape), a snowball bush, and a penstemon. Alas, M has a hard time maintaining his focus. So we also have three plugs of black mondo grass, which is not really grass and is definitely not native. 

In the front E put in a bellflower fuschia and pulled out a ton of weeds, mostly unwanted grass. She then determined that since her desired natives were unavailable she would have to go traditional, at least a little. Off we went to Bi-Mart for alyssum and pansies. 

In the evening we got take-out Korean food from Koriander. Did we then tune in to Istanbul to check on Melek, who is locked in a room with a pyscho who has been hired to kill her? Or did we instead check on Maribel in Madrid, who seems to gotten pregnant from her impulsive romp with Diego? Neither one. We skipped TV and just let them suffer. We ourselves did not suffer; we had Magnum ice cream. 

Sunday, April 4   Deaths  2,392 (+1)   New cases 404

In the morning, more garden work. All the new plants are planted and a few old ones moved from one spot to another. Maybe now we can have a break from this garden mania, at least for a while. At 4:00 we had a Zoom meeting with brothers J and J, during which E got a FaceTime call from Andrea. Resourceful as always, E held her phone up to the camera on our computer and the Andees were able to join in. Nice. 

After a semi-special Easter supper overlooking the garden, we watched some TV. First we looked in on 45 Revolutions, where it turns out that Maribel, while nauseous and two weeks late, is not pregnant at all. Whew, saved by the writers again. Then we watched Episode 1 of Atlantic Crossing on PBS, which is a WW2 drama, this one a focusing on Crown Princess Martha of Norway, who fled to Sweden and then to the U.S. after the Nazis invaded her country in 1940. What a contrast between these two shows, both in subject matter and in cultural milieu.