M went out early and got three fat rainbow trout. Wow! There was a momentary difficulty when the assistant in the meat department had a little trouble wrapping them securely, but otherwise it was pretty easy. E then went and picked out a bunch of fruits and vegetables from the Co-op. So did we have deluxe fish dinner? No. The fish are marinating (drinking red wine) for tomorrow; we had leftover spinach lasagna and it was great.
E is not happy with the condition of her foot, but has agreed to accept the advice of a podiatrist, an MRI clinic, and an infectious disease specialist. Nobody knows for certain, but the MRI seems to indicate a bone infection in the great toe. The remedy is to undergo daily infusions of antibiotics for 4-6 weeks. Whew! With much trepidation, she had her first infusion today and was relieved to find it not nearly as bad as she had expected. A lot of her relief was due to the cheerful and caring nurses and the view from the window at the infusion center.
In other news, we have rearranged the living room and we don’t think we like it. Still, we were able to watch TV with the new arrangement. We learned that Melek’s real name is Mevre and that she apparently used to meet with Kerim Solmaz every Friday in the months before he was attacked. It certainly looks like they were lovers, but something tells us that eventually we will find that there is an innocent explanation for these meetings.
Tuesday, May 4 Deaths 2,508 (+6) New cases 748
Eve had her second infusion today, but before that we made a return to Rittner Creek Park. We took a picnic lunch and enjoyed seeing the place in a different season.
B and B came to dinner to help with the trout. It was good to catch up with them. They’re leaving tomorrow for a trip down to California to see family.
Wednesday, May 5 Deaths 2,509 (+1) New cases 808
E had her PICC insertion today, a long drawn-out affair as it happened. It took a long time because the first attempt was off target, so the procedure had to be redone. Ugh. Also, the computer in the treatment room was an in-patient specialist and got very grumpy when expected to deal with the fact that E was an out-patient. At that point another medical device in the room began flashing a ‘low battery’ warning, perhaps out of sympathy. E did survive, however, and is behaving normally–if you can call it that.
Thursday, May 6 Deaths 2,514 (+5) New cases 763
Another day, another infusion. The PICC, as unpleasant as it was to have fitted, is doing its job well. It makes the infusion process easier and E says it is amazingly comfortable all things considered. Scheduling the daily sessions remains an issue.
M spent the morning futzing with his Rube Goldberg irrigation system and then went out and bought some all terrain tires for the truck along with a roast chicken for dinner. No, it was not a chicken he ran over with his new tires, but one from the M.o.C. deli.
And somewhere along the way, we found a place to hang our Turkish oil painting. It had been on the floor leaning against a wall ever since the TV was mounted in the space where it used to hang. Its one of our favorite souvenirs, a moon so bright it’s blinding.
Friday, May 7 Deaths 2,522 (+8) New cases 844
E had a Zoom appointment with her doctor today, short and easy. The doctor said to carry on with the infusion treatments. It seems like there’s not much else she could say at this point. E then had to go to a real appointment to get the day’s infusion. M stayed home and set up his new HomePod so he can tell Siri to play things in stereo.
After her medical morning, E was well enough to go to the Patissier and get breakfast treats for tomorrow. Then the two of us took a load of things to the Humane Society Thrift Shop and got some lattes on the way home. Then it was time for travel plans. We now have tickets for our trip east next August. Whew. Dinner was falafel sandwiches with tahini sauce, cucumbers, tomato, and lettuce. Gin on the side.
For TV we watched more of 20 Minutes. We’re up to Episode 49 of 59 and things are moving a lot faster lately–not necessarily getting anywhere, but at least moving faster. For one thing, Kerim is out of his coma and is able to engage in communication of a frustratingly cryptic kind. For another, Melek’s husband Ali had sex with Raven, who has long been smitten with him. Ali had been resisting, but when he became convinced that Melek had been having an affair with Kerim, one thing led to another. And now Ali is really mad at Raven. How could she have done it, slept with a married man? Raven finds this a little peculiar. Don’t we all. And the next day when Raven was kidnapped by the bad guys and the Cat asked Ali to help rescue her, Ali refused. What a dud character he is. We in the audience, fortunately, are more on top of things than Ali. We know that Melek and Kerim share a terrible secret and that the secret is not that they were having an affair. They’re both acting like it’s much worse than that.
Saturday, May 8 Deaths 2,528 (+7) New cases 833
A quiet and uneventful day. Nice croissant breakfast, then after a bit E went for her infusion. While she sat there, a talkative nurse told her stories about goings on in the hospital during the COVID crisis. Apparently there was a certain amount of tension stemming from disagreements about the best ways of coping with the pandemic. Resignations ensued.
E also went shopping and came back with a couple of spring blouses with sleeves loose enough to go around the plumbing connection on her upper arm. M puttered, cleaning out a drawer and finishing a Jacqueline Winspear novel that E finished last week. In that novel, which is set in 1939, the murder weapon is a handgun called the Ruby. The Ruby was a real gun. It was based on an American model–the FN Browning 1905 Vest Pocket semi-automatic. Although real Vest Pockets were made in the U.S., several other versions were manufactured in Europe under license. These were given the name Ruby and were used by many European armies in both world wars. Winspear mentions that in England the Ruby was sometimes referred to as a “Browning” because it was a Browning design. All well and good. Winspear had done some research. But every time she mentions the Ruby, she calls it a revolver. The Ruby was/is not a revolver. We are not saying that Winspear had to call it an semi-automatic; she could have used a general word like pistol or handgun; but calling it a revolver is a terrible sin for the writer of a mystery novel. Where was her editor?! This novel had about ten references to a ‘Ruby revolver’ and by the seventh or eighth M was bordering on hysterical rage. (Nothing odd about that, eh?) You might wonder how M even knows anything about this. Well, as it happens, he has a minor interest in John Browning because Browning spent most of his life in Ogden, Utah. The FN Browning 1905 Vest Pocket was almost certainly designed in his workshop there, as were many of the most famous guns of the last century.
Sunday, May 9 Deaths 2,530 (+2) New cases 610
We went to up to Portland for Mothers Day. Andrea had invited us to brunch. (Andrea knows that E loves the whole idea of holiday celebration by means of a nice brunch.) We went to a place called The Hammond Kitchen and Craft Bar. They specialize in exotic cocktails and E had a creamy sweet one. She thinks it probably had a huge number of calories, but not too much alcohol, which was about right. The food was very fine. E had quinoa yam cakes with roasted red pepper sauce and vegetables, some deviled eggs, and for dessert a bit of shared rhubarb strawberry tart. Before we left E got to open several nice very gifts. From there, we all went down to sit by the river for a while. Beautiful weather. All in all, E was very pleased.
Busy morning. We did our shopping and met with a contractor about a bathroom remodel. Later, M looked at the photos from his trip into the forest on Sunday.
Tuesday, April 27 Deaths 2,488 (+2) New cases 740
Beautiful summery day. M worked in the yard for most of it. E had exercise class and a medical appointment. She is getting annoyed at all these appointments, but is working on solving the mystery of a foot problem that won’t go away. Later, in the TV world, we got big news about Melek! First of all, Melek isn’t her real name. The real Melek was her younger sister, who committed suicide. So what is our heroine’s actual name? We don’t know. We’re still in shock. Her family doesn’t know about this, but Özan and Raven have stumbled across it. But what does it all mean?
Wednesday, April 28 Deaths 2,490 (+2) New cases 888
E had another medical thing this morning while M had a long FaceTime meeting regarding editorial changes to the paper he is collaborating on. Satisfying the series editor is boring work. M’s next assignment is to write an abstract. Oh boy.
We watched a bit more of 20 Minutes, the show about Melek who isn’t really Melek. We were hoping to find out what it all means. We didn’t. E had a short nap halfway through.
Thursday, April 29 Deaths 2,491 (+1) New cases 928
In the morning, Eve had her exercise class. M worked on his article abstract. He ended up writing two different versions, one serious and one parody. This was necessary, he says, to prevent the universe from getting out of balance.
After lunch we made a trip out to Dancing Oaks Nursery in search of native plant starts. It wasn’t easy, but by golly we did find some. Dancing Oaks is tucked back in the foothills northwest of here in the general vicinity of Peedee, Oregon. Lovely spot at the end of two miles of narrow, high-crowned gravel road.
For dinner we tried out some Beyond Beef brand sausages that M prepared with grilled peppers and potatoes per request. The plant-based sausage was pretty tasty, and had a nice texture.
Friday, April 30 Deaths 2,495 (+4) New cases 990
It’s the 400th day of Pandemic Diary record keeping, time for another chart. Average deaths per day were slightly higher in the most recent ten-day period, but still relatively low as compared to the last six months.
Who were the idiots who went and bought all those ridiculous plants yesterday? Easy work, buying. But what about planting? We both spent much of the today in the yard, bending over with hot sun on our backs. What for? Because we have a vision! (A lot of troubles in this world have been caused by people with visions.)
Saturday, May 1 Deaths 2,498 (+3) New cases 794
A good day for a leisurely breakfast followed by a look through the local newspaper–which just barely manages to exist but which we still appreciate. After that, E went off to visit her friend S, who may or may not be going to move to back to the midwest to live near her sister and brother-in-law. Nothing is quite clear. E didn’t get to see Pepper, who is off visiting a dog sitter for a few days. M stayed home and put up a wall mount for our television. The instructions made sense and all went well, the only real glitch being that the kit included only three of the four big lag screws that the instruction sheet promised. Grumbling mightily, M had to go off and look through his fastener collection to see if he could find something suitable. He found a lot of really big lag screws, all of them far too big, but wait, there amongst them was an almost perfectly sized one. Where it came from, no one knows, but it sufficed. The next step is to rearrange the living room–or not–to take advantage of the TV on the wall.
After lunch, E walked to the store to get some pastries for Sunday breakfast and M went off in the truck to get a bag of pumice rock that E needed for her patio decor project. Dinner was Asian Fusion from Magenta and TV was The Vineyard on Prime. Nice change of pace, a bit faster than the 20 Minutes series.
In local COVID news, deaths may be down but confirmed cases are up, so the governor has reinstated the ban on in-restaurant dining in many areas, including all of the biggest cities in the state. Roughly a third of all Oregonians have been fully vaccinated and already demand is down. Corvallis is now running walk-in vaccination clinics for anyone sixteen and above.
A church in a nearby town is being sued by the parents of a church member who died of COVID. They say that their daughter contracted the disease at a church service where the congregants were packed closely together. Video shows that there was a lot of singing and that no one wore a mask, this despite the fact that there had been known positive cases among the membership. Sigh.
Sunday, May 2 Deaths 2,501 (+3) New cases 756
Not a whole lot of activity today, which is of course excellent. We did a little garden work, and E visited her friend P.
We have not been doing a very good job of identifying all these new plants, so we made some new, easy-to-read tabs.
There was a minor crisis in the front garden. We caught E’s new blue hen escaping through a gap in the fence. Luckily we noticed in time.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
M shopped at Safeway this morning so he could use his ten percent off coupon. The Safeway nearest us is a big store and it took him a long time to find everything. The store was a little eerie at 8:30 on a Monday, its long aisles mostly empty of customers, very quiet. It was nothing at all like the scene at a store called Kings Soopers in Boulder, Colorado just a few hours later. Ten people were killed there this afternoon. A suspect is in custody.
E also survived her trip to the Co-op, so we are once again supplied with foodstuffs. She then did Zoom yoga and some reading. It was raining early, but just before lunch the sun came out and M went out to attach the legs onto our new outdoor table. After lunch, he broke ground for his newest hardscape project. Oh boy. Elsewhere in the backyard, our forsythia are starting to bloom and there is even an early tulip on Hummock #1. In the front yard, two fully open hyacinths have been neatly bitten off two inches above the round. Fie on the front yard.
For dinner E made spinach and gorgonzola pasta and a green salad. M supplied a cheap French red from TJ’s. Budapest is almost finished. We have only the buildings left to add. Wonder how the original builders would feel about that?
Tuesday, March 23 Deaths 2,367 (+2) New cases 316
A beautiful sunny day, with temps in the fifties. Dog Pepper spent some time with us in the morning, a lot of it bouncing around the backyard. E noticed that Pepper has the herding dog’s attitude toward playing with a ball. If the ball is moving, he’s very interested. But once it stops, it no longer merits his attention. The concept of fetching is not a part of his world.
We returned Pepper to his owner just before noon. Shortly afterward, as we were driving along, we saw our old neighbor B out for a walk. We lived near B and his wife for 17 years out in the forest, before they moved into the Stonybrook area, where Pepper and his owner now also dwell. Had a nice talk. Good to see him out and around.
From there we proceeded immediately to the The Vietnamese Baguette for a couple of sandwiches. We ate them sitting on a bench in the sun beside the river. Then it was back home to change cars and give the Porsche some exercise. We did a loop down south that took us through farmland and forest on mostly empty roads. On the way home we stopped for coffee at Randy’s Main Street Cafe in Brownsville. They had a very inviting greeting painted on their window, “You don’t have to go home. You can stay here with us.” So we stayed. As we sat in the sun with our lattes, we noticed that they had an old cookstove as part of their outdoor décor. The stove is mostly metal but the oven door and a few other bits are white ceramic. In the middle of the oven door there is a gauge labelled “Heat Indicator.” Behind the indicator needle there is a cautionary note: Temperature of oven varies with quantity and kind of fuel, flue, and atmospheric conditions. Words to live by, we’d say, a metaphor for pretty much everything.
Randy’s Cafe is in the main part of town just across the street from a newish building that houses the Brownsville City Hall, the Brownsville Fire Department, and an art gallery. You don’t see that combination much. The photo below shows just the City Hall part.
Wednesday, March 24 Deaths 2,368 (+1) New cases 879
The rain is back and we’re staying mostly inside. E spent her day working on her SMART project. SMART’s in-school reading program has been cancelled for this year, but the program has asked for volunteers to make videos to fill the gap, reading a book aloud and turning the pages just as they would in person. E foolishly offered to do this and SMART sent her a book called Jabari Salta, a book about a young boy’s jumping and diving adventures. So today she did lots of practice reading and then enlisted M’s help in figuring out just how to video the performance. After a few failed attempts and much head scratching, we set up an ad hoc camera stand and finally made what we hope will be an acceptable video.
The plan for dinner was to eat Cirello’s pizza while watching a Zoom talk about dirt. The last talk we heard about dirt was really good, so we were excited. But no. Technical difficulties of some kind caused the dirt talk to be cancelled. The bright side is that we were able to give our full attention to the pizza.
The Budapest puzzle is finished–at least as far as we’re going to finish it. We’ve done everything except push the buildings down into their foundations. Here ‘tis:
Thursday, March 25 Deaths 2,370 (+2) New cases 422
FaceTime Tertulia this morning, then more work E’s video project. We had a good enough video, but we also had an idea for better sound and a little more efficiency in page turning. So we set up our studio again and produced an improved version..
Later on M went outside and occupied himself pulling cartloads of dirt from project to prairie and cartloads of gravel from prairie to project. An hour or so was enough of that.
After lunch we went for a forest walk in search of wildflowers. It’s early days yet, but yellow violets (yellows?) and early trilliums were making themselves available. It seems, in fact, to be a great year for trilliums; they’re popping up all over.
After the forest walk, we did some errands and rested a bit. Then we uploaded E’s video to Google Drive as instructed. Whew.
Then, fools that we are, we watched more of 20 Minutes. Is Melek still in prison? Yes. Is Ali trying frantically to get her out? Yes. Is he facing impossible odds? Well, this is Episode 22 and we know there are a total of 59. So his chances of finding a happy ending in the next 36 episodes are virtually nil. The worst thing that he faces right now is that he is beginning to doubt Melek’s innocence! Ouch. Also, the bad guys have bugged his house, he owes 13,000 Turkish Lira to a loan shark, his daughter Duru is keeping something from him, and Özgür has disappeared, having likely been abducted by the bad guys. Özgür, of course, was Melek’s assistant in her cake shop. He is a pleasant young man who became a family friend and he has been keeping Melek’s business going while she’s away. (Stop me if you know this already…)
Friday, March 26 Deaths 2,373 (+3) New cases 505
We learned recently from an alert reader that chef Didier, the patissier himself, is back in action! The shop is open three days a week: Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Today, by felicitous synchronicity, our favorite courier service also resumed operations. Eve returned from her early morning walk promptly at 8:12, carrying four croissants–two chocolate and two almond paste. The espresso was finished just a half a minute later. All was well. Soon, only two croissants remained, safely stored away for Sunday.
It was also a beautiful sunny day. M went outside to finish making his base stations for the Adirondack chairs. Eve went out again, by car this time, and brought home a pineapple and some Veggie Birdnests. These are frozen tempura things with soy dipping sauce. It seems we’ve been invited to supper on Sunday at J and B’s and we’re contributing bird nests. The plan is to eat outside in the folly. E then went downtown to obtain several other necessities, including a couple of books she’d ordered, a new silk jacket, and some bird food.
In the afternoon E did Zoom yoga and ran some errands to help her friend S. M took advantage of the dry conditions to mow the back lawn, certain parts of which seem to be growing with way too much enthusiasm these days.
Later we watched a bit of 20 Minutes. It was a busy episode, but the high point for us was a brief scene of Melek sleeping in her prison cell. She was nestled comfortably under a traditional Turkish style wool blanket, very similar to the one we dragged back with us from Turkey eleven years ago and which still smells of lanolin every time we use it. In fact, E suddenly remembered, hadn’t she taken ours to the cleaners almost two weeks ago? Probably time to go pick it up…
Melek’s prison cell, by the way, is pretty nice. It’s quite spacious, with a small table and three chairs plus two double tier beds. Melek has only two cellmates, so one of the bunks is unoccupied. The cell has its own attached private half bath. Plus, we can attest to the fact that those wool blankets are really warm. Presumably all Turkish prisons have these amenities; but we cannot confirm this as we were never imprisoned while we were there.
Saturday, March 27 Deaths 2,375 (+2) New cases 428
We meant to pick up that blanket today. Didn’t make it. Did take a walk, though, up Garryanna and down Rolling Green, the steepest walk in the neighborhood. Then M went out to work in the yard while E did chores of one kind or another. E got another call from S and made a quick trip to Bi-Mart to get her what she needed. After lunch we were both outside for a while. It was very sunny and warm. Dinner was take-out from Sky High Brewery. It was good, but they didn’t get our orders quite right. Eve ordered a Ceasar salad was especially looking forward to their homemade croutons. When we opened up the salad, what did we find? Croutons yok! Mafeesh! Arimasen! None! We nearly had a riot on our hands. When he opened his order, M found that they have given him a side salad instead of french fries. Now that’s a disappointment. M took it philosophically, however, saying that there was no way he actually needed a big pile of french fries at this particular point in time.
We had been thinking about Ba’s Vietnamese, but it seems they are closed for a couple of weeks making preparations for resuming inside dining and also adding an outdoor seating area. That sounds kind of exciting. The place was always on the small side.
Decided to skip 20 Minutes today. Instead we watched an episode of Tokyo Diner and then checked back in with 45 RPM to see what they were up to. Who are they, you ask? Robert is a Spanish rock and roll singer, very talented but also suffering from an incurable disease. Guillermo is the passionate maverick record producer who believes in Robert. Maribel is Guillermo’s bright young P.A. who is torn between a career in the music business and marriage to Diego, a handsome banker. Zabala is nominally Guillermo’s supervisor at the record company and is a man who despises rock and roll. His wife and Guillermo were once a couple. Clara is Rober’s twin sister, who has come to Madrid after their parents back in Alicante threw her out of the house for having become involved with a married man. Rober can’t bring himself to tell her that he is dying. But his first single has been released and appears to be a hit…
Sunday, March 28 Deaths 2,375 (+0) New cases 253
COVID deaths in Oregon have been low this week, a pattern that we hope will continue. One million people in Oregon have been either fully or partly vaccinated, including large numbers of older people who had vaccine priority. Since is it usually older people who die from COVID, it seems reasonable to expect fewer deaths even if overall case numbers remain high.
M was attacked by pollen allergies Saturday night and did not sleep well. In the morning E recommended a dose of chocolate croissant and coffee, which helped. He worked a little in the garden, then spent much of the day sleeping. (Just what is he doing out there in the yard? PD needs to investigate.)
E combined her morning walk with grocery shopping and came home with milk and other necessities. At four we got down to business and wrote out our weekly meal plan and our respective shopping lists for tomorrow. Then we prepared some food to take with us to B and J’s place where were we had been invited for a light supper out in the folly.
We arrived at 5:30, just as the weather turned really nasty with blustery winds and showers. But there was a fire in the pizza oven and the folly had its winter siding up to protect us from the wind. It turned out to be a Trader’s Joe’s feast, as J had heated up a TJ’s vegetarian pizza and E had heated up some TJ’s vegetarian Bird Nests. This latter dish, we have to say, wasn’t very good. For dessert, M had carved up a TJ’s organic pineapple to which E had added some sliced strawberries. Those were better.
(Bu hafta, türkce versiyonu yok. Türkce versiyon yazarımız sinirli bir çiğdem tarafından saldırıya uğradı ve klavye kullanamıyor. Rahatsızlıktan dolayı özür deleriz.)
Monday, March 15 Deaths 2,324 (+2) New cases 178
For obvious reasons, the search for the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus has taken a back seat to the search for effective vaccines and treatments. But how the virus came to be is a matter of interest and it is being addressed. At this point, three possibilities have been discussed. Some have suggested that it was deliberately released by the Chinese in order to weaken or destroy their enemies. Although not impossible, this theory doesn’t make very much sense. What exactly did they expect to gain? Why would they have released it in that particular way? It’s a stretch. Another possibility is that a virus that was present in animals became dangerous to humans via natural mutation. There is no direct evidence for this, but we know that it has happened before with other diseases. We also know that there is a disease that affects bats which is caused by a virus that is in some ways similar to the SARS-CoV-2 virus. But there are a few technical factors that have muddied the waters concerning a natural origin in this particular case. The final possibility is that the SARS-CoV-2 virus was created in a lab–possibly as a potential weapon but more likely as part of legitimate medical research aimed at preventing epidemics–and that at some point it escaped from that lab due to an accident. Listed below are some information sources.
An open letter from scientists that notes the many limitations of the World Health Organization investigation and describes what a full investigation would look like.
A recent Politico story by Josh Rogin. The article details some of the reasons why the accidental escape theory is so compelling. Rogin also points out the barriers that stand in the way of a full investigation.
An article by Nicholson Baker in New York Magazine. I have linked to this before. It is a long piece, but take my word for it, the history of virus research in the last decade has been really fascinating. Baker makes it clear that the case for the accidental release of an engineered virus is all circumstantial; but what a set of circumstances they are!
Tuesday, March 16 Deaths 2,346 (+22) New cases 267
E did her exercise class and listened to a Zoom talk on how to talk to Alzheimer’s patients, which had a number of very good suggestions. E has the slides if anyone is interested. Otherwise we spent the morning packing for another trip to Bend. We got on the road by 1:30. Before we left, though, we had a visitor out front.
In Bend we stayed at a Marriot Residence Inn in a room with a small kitchen. Quite a come-down from those deluxe view condos that we stayed in previously, but nice. Did you know that in a Marriot you’re not supposed to hang anything from the ceiling sprinklers? When we first noticed it, we could see the ‘no hanger’ symbol easily, but it was almost impossible to make out the text without a ladder. There should be another sticker next to the first: Caution: Do Not Stand on Bed to Read This.
We had take-out dinner from Joolz: seared haloumi with capers, sun dried tomatoes, arugula, and red onions; dukka with bread; and Moroccan Forbidden Black Rice Chicken. All wonderful. Nothing like this back home.
For TV, we watched National Velvet on TCM. This film, of course, features Elizabeth Taylor when she was twelve, young enough that Mickey Rooney was noticeably taller than she was.
Wednesday, March 17 Deaths 2,349 (+3) New cases 239
We went back to Dutchman’s Flat for skiing. It was a nice sunny day. Spring on the mountain means that the days are warm enough in the afternoon that the snow starts to melt. It the night it freezes again. We got our skis on and started out at 10:30 in the morning. The surface was quite icy, which was not bad on level ground, so we zipped right along. But even slight inclines were tricky, either in the up direction or the down. At 11:30, we came to a long downhill section of the trail that would have been great fun on a normal day, but was just plain crazy on the ice, especially for oldsters. We solved this by going off piste and zigzagging across the main slope. That was fun too, but required lots of calculation and concentration. Surviving that, we reached our destination, a thing called The Water Tower, and had lunch there. The temperature was steadily rising and by the time we sat down to eat, it was relatively balmy. On the way back we found that the surface had softened and was well into the melting phase. Much easier for us to deal with.
In the evening we had dinner from Bethlyn’s Asian Fusion and watched a 1965 movie about the Irish playwright Sean O’Casey, screened in honor of St. Patrick’s day. It was called Young Cassidy, and featured Rod Taylor as well as two young up and coming actresses: Julie Christie and Maggie Smith.
Thursday, March 18 Deaths 2,353 (+4) New cases 393
Just a few minutes from the Residence Inn, there’s a shop called Ginger’s Kitchenware. We stopped there in search of small sauté pan. Found just the right thing. Nice. Corvallis lacks a really good kitchen shop. Ginger also stocks something we’d never seen before: a large bulk section of infused olive oils and infused vinegars. There were only about ten olive oil infusions on display, but there were lots of vinegars. We were very tempted to get all ten of the olive oils and about fourteen vinegars. That way we could have had a different vinegar and oil combination every single night for almost five months! Wow. But then we thought, naw, that’d be a lot of trouble.
Instead we went back home to Corvallis and unpacked. For dinner, M set out some leftover dukka and made a shrimp cocktail. After dinner, we worked on our puzzle. The first layer of 4D Budapest is now finished, which takes us up to 1884. At that time, the city is just a narrow band along the river; the rest of the area was farmland.
Friday, March 19 Deaths 2,357 (+4) New cases 381
Back here in valley, we had wind and rain in the morning. Not very pleasant. But eventually the day improved–less wind, less rain, a patch of sun here and there. M worked in the garden while E managed correspondence. In the afternoon E went back to the football stadium to get her second shot of the Pfizer vaccine. Again everything went well. And again it was a little cold out there.
In the evening we started the second level of the Budapest puzzle, then watched an episode of 20 Minutes. Melek’s husband Ali has a plan to break her out of prison. He’s getting advice from a crafty ex-con named The Cat, and also a bit of help from Cat’s grown daughter, Raven, who is played by Turkish actor Müjde Uzman. Ali has managed to get himself hired as a cleaner in the staff housing wing of the prison. But the prison blueprints that he and The Cat used in their planning are out of date, and Ali finds a wall where he expected a door! Rats. Now, he’ll have to improvise. Tension!
Saturday, March 20 Deaths 2,362 (+5) New cases 339
Our old outdoor table is gone, the one that Eve got while she lived on Estaview Circle almost 30 years ago. It was a rustic, wooden thing that had served us well. We had tightened its bolts two or three times over the years and restained it often. It was still solid but the top pieces were warped a little and it was too big for the spot under the apple tree where a table is needed these days. So today we put it out by the curb along with two old flower pots and a ‘Free’ sign. Within hours, only the sign remained.
E felt pretty lousy for much of the day, probably as a reaction to yesterday’s shot, but was still very active. She went downtown for a hair appointment and then went around town picking up a few things she’s been needing. For dinner we got tacos and virgin margaritas from Tacovore and matched them with our own taco sauce and tequila. After dinner we worked more on Budapest.
Sunday, March 21 Deaths 2,363 (+1) New cases 224
Today is the 360th day of Pandemic Diary record-keeping. Time for another chart of the Oregon death toll. In the period ending March 21st, the average death rate was less than five per day. As you see, this is a steep decline from the previous period. The rate of positive tests in the last ten days has been under 2.5%.
Today we needed to get some fish for dinner and a few other things at the grocery store. We decided to walk so as to get some exercise and took along M’s cheapo backpack to carry stuff. It was a very dull day, cool and overcast. But it was mostly rainless, so walking was pleasant enough.
We’re excited to be making travel plans, thinking about a trip to New York in August. At this point, brother J is helping us to possibly find a place to stay at Lake George.
We’ve been doing some more work on the modern map of Budapest, which fits over the top of the 1884 one. Now it looks like this.
The pandemic continues to take its toll in Oregon with an average of more than 10 deaths per day during the period of March 2-11. This is roughly the same level as in the previous thirty days. New case numbers and test positive rates continue to be relatively low.
Monday is shopping day and we spent money like water this morning, E at the Co-op and M at Mother of Markets and Trader Joe’s. In return we have obtained a cornucopia of wonders: organic grapefruit juice, cheapish wine, even cheaper black tea, dried apricots, crusty bread, ridiculously expensive frozen prawns…the list goes on and on, all the way to the pièce de résistance: a big box of Frosted Mini-Wheats. Eve did her shopping in-person for the first time in a while. She says she bought a lot more that way because, you know, what you see is what you buy, especially if you haven’t seen for a while.
After shopping M made heroic efforts to clean up from his great project and manage the great volume of gravel remaining in the driveway. A neighbor wants to take some and that’s excellent. The rest needs to be stored somewhere else, perhaps for use in future projects. But let’s not think about that now.
In the late afternoon M got his first COVID shot. Unlike Eve, who got her first shot at a large scale administration run by the public health authorities, M went to Safeway. The two venues could not have been more different. Eve’s was outside, in a large covered area built into the east side of the OSU football stadium. Parking was down the road a ways, and as soon as Eve entered the lot, she and her friend was asked if they needed or wanted a golf cart ride to inoculation area. There were lots of people coming and going and lots of volunteers to assist them. Eve’s friend took the cart while E said she’d walk. In the main area everyone had to go through a series of three checkpoints to confirm their identity and answer questions about their current condition. At the third of these Eve got a purple sticker to put on her jacket lapel and she was directed to one of the inoculation stations. There were two separate inoculation areas, each with at least eight stations. E’s section was for first Pfizer shots; the other was for second Modernas. When she got her shot, she got another sticker, a white one on which was written the exact time of her shot. She was then directed to a waiting area with chairs spaced six feet apart. A staff person monitored this area, checking how much time had elapsed since each person’s shot. At this point E was again accompanying her friend, who, as it happens, had gotten her shot two minutes before E had gotten hers. When it came time for the friend to go, the staffer assisted her to stand up, telling her to move very slowly. The staffer then looked at E and asked her to stand as well, even though technically E still had a minute and a half to go. But the staffer said that was okay and off they went to the next checkpoint. There, another staffer gave their vaccination cards. Also at that station everyone was scheduled for their second appointments. After that, they were directed to the exit where another volunteer offered them a ride in the golf cart back to the parking lot, saying that she was having trouble keeping the cart drivers busy. Both E and her friend graciously accepted. E said later that the cart was kind of fun.
So it was all very organized and ran very smoothly. Because it was all outside, E said she was feeling pretty cold toward the end. But it appeared that hundreds of people per hour were going through the process. As has been reported in other U.S. locations, volunteers had the possibility of receiving vaccinations as a reward for their help.
E’s experience included one small snafu. After it was all over, when she and her friend were both safely home, she discovered that she had been given her friend’s vaccination card and that her friend had gotten hers.
No such errors occurred at Safeway. But nor were there any golf carts or any signage of any kind. M had to just wander in and find his way to the pharmacy area. There he found someone talking to a cashier and paying for a prescription. There was no other sign of life except for another fellow roughly M’s age who appeared to also be looking around for some sign that there might be a vaccination clinic somewhere. When the prescription customer was done, this other fellow spoke to the cashier and was told to go to the prescription drop-off window at the other end of the counter. There was no one there, but the cashier quickly left her register area and went over to check him in for a shot. M too moved in that direction and he was in turn checked in by the rather brusque cashier, who also directed him to a fully enclosed waiting room at the other end of the pharmacy area. This was not a large room, but was easily large enough to maintain eight or twelve feet of distance, given there were never more than two people seated in the room. After a short time, a pharmacist came in and beckoned the first fellow into a smaller room where she gave the shots. Then it was M’s turn. After the shot, she filled out his vaccination record, gave him an information sheet and told him to go back to the waiting room and stay for twenty minutes. She then hurried back to her work, presumably in the prescription prep room. M dutifully waited for twenty minutes and then left.
The Safeway system could process only four vaccinations per hour. It did not make use of volunteers and did not require any paid staff beyond the cashier and pharmacist who were normally on duty. When he looked at his vaccination record, M saw that it wasn’t nearly as neat and official looking as E’s. On the other hand, it was accompanied by a coupon for 10% off on his next grocery purchase. Considering how much he had spent that day at those other stores, that sounded pretty good.
Tuesday, March 9 Deaths 2,303 (+5) New cases 517
M went out early and finished clearing gravel off the driveway, then came in and worked on his article. E had her Better Bones and Balance class. At 10:00 we went off into the world, ending up at a garden center where we bought a pot of tulips, some violets, and a table and chair set. We were so excited by the latter that we rushed home, set it up in the back yard and had a cup of coffee. Aah. Beautiful.
We then went to the OSU forest for a quick hike up to the lake and back. We were home by 12:30 in time to get ready for yet another celebration of E’s birthday, this time at her friend H’s house, she of the covered back patio. That do started at 1:00 and involved take-out Vietnamese food and house-made cardamom tea. More importantly, there were two kinds of cake.
Later, back at home, hilarity ensued when E mistakenly prepared our dinner, even though it was M’s night to cook. After dinner we watched a bit more of 20 Minutes.
Wednesday, March 10 Deaths 2,305 (+2) New cases 306
Another coolish day with occasional light showers and periods of warm sun. M worked on his article for a couple of hours and then went outside to spread bark rock here and there. E did her correspondence chores–paper and electronic–and then went out to visit Pepper and his owner.
After some nice TLT sandwiches for supper, we watched episode 11 of 20 Minutes. Nothing of any great significance occurred, but it was all very dramatic. So far our heroine Melek has been found guilty of assault rather than murder because the man she was accused of attacking has been lingering in a coma. But soon, it seems, he is going to die. If he does, her sentence will be changed from 20 years to life. But what does that even matter, given that the dying man’s father–the evil and powerful Mayor–has sworn to have Melek and her whole family slaughtered within the next ten years. Meanwhile, the one police detective who suspects that Melek is innocent is in trouble with his boss and is being ostracized by his colleagues–including the guy who delivers the tea–because he has tried to reopen her case. Inside the prison Melek has befriended another prisoner, a young pregnant woman who is serving time because her husband made her work as as drug mule. Melek is doing this because Melek is nice. How could she not be? The word melek in Turkish means angel.
Thursday, March 11 Deaths 2,316 (+11) New cases 367
A beautiful day and a busy one. We had tertulia early with J and R, who helped M figure out just how he had managed to order so much gravel. His difficulty had to do with something that is apparently called “arithmetic.” So that mystery is cleared up; it will take a little longer to clear up the extra gravel. After tertulia, E had Zoom yoga and M went to the dentist.
At 10:30, M did FaceTime with colleague D to wrap up the article. He came out of the meeting to find E busy in the front yard. She was doing some spring cleaning work on her mini-garden out by the road. This inspired M to go outside also. He spread a few cartloads of bark rock. Bark rock, he reports, is approximately 1,000 times lighter than gravel. Given his level of arithmetic skills, he is almost certainly wrong.
In the late afternoon E had Laughter Yoga while M prepared his ingredients for a stir-fry.
Friday, March 12 Deaths 2,319 (+2) New cases 402
Cloudless skies and overnight temperature in the thirties made for a cold morning, but things warmed up nicely as the day went on. Around midday we took a long forest walk followed by a picnic lunch at the lake. E. had Zoom yoga at 1:30 and later had a long phone call with her brother. M did desk work and dropped off some things at the post office. At four we had a conference call with R and G and talked about a date for getting together at their house for dinner. What a strange idea! In the evening we skipped TV and started a 4D jigsaw puzzle of Budapest.
Saturday, March 13 Deaths 2,322 (+3) New cases 365
Spring cleaning day for our rather crowded back door closet. It was a bright and sunny day, so we took all our winter coats and hats and yoga stuff out to bake in the sun. Once the space was empty, E scrubbed and vacuumed.
Later in the day E had a little outdoor party with her friends J and C. The menu featured dolmas, spinach pastries, crackers, brie and possibly some wine. For once it was warm enough, mostly, to be comfortable sitting outside. M started doing our taxes, then dined on a Burgerville sandwich and fries washed down by a glass of Origon, a Catalan red, cheap but tasty.
Then we went back to work on building Budapest. We’re still plugging away at the 1884 map. So far we’ve only finished the Danube.
We also watched a little of 20 Minutes. The young woman whom Melek befriended has been coerced into betraying her. Wouldn’t you know it.
Sunday, March 14 Deaths 2,322 (+0) New cases 234
For breakfast we had chocolate croissants–not, alas, from the Patissier, which remains closed, but from Trader Joe’s. They came frozen and as instructed we set them out on parchment paper and let them thaw and rise all night, then cooked them in the morning. They were very good. M noticed that they had too much chocolate; E did not. After breakfast we finished up our income tax returns and sent them off across the internet.
After lunch Eve went walking on the west side of the OSU campus, which has long been the home grounds of the College of Agriculture. There’s a multi-use path that begins on what she still calls Pig Farm Road. These days the road still provides access to the Swine Center, but also to the OSU Dairy, the Animal Nutrition Center, and the Precision Agricultural Systems Center. We’re not sure if we want to know what goes on in the Precision Agricultural Systems Center. The building itself gives no clue.
But anyway, beyond all that, the road continues as a walking/biking route that leads through the fields in the direction of the Benton County Fairgrounds. Fifty years ago someone rescued an old covered bridge that was being replaced somewhere else in the county and moved it to where the path crosses Oak Creek. We remember walking there once or twice in the old days when we both worked on campus. Today, E says, it was cold and windy.
Pandemi Günlüğü, 8-14 Mart, 2021
Pazaretesi, 8 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,298 (+2) Yeni vakalar: 234
Salgın Oregon’da devan ediyor. 2 Mart’tan 11 Mart’a kadar günde ondan fazla ölüme neden oldu.
Pazartesi bakkal alışveriş günü ve bugün çok para harcadık. E bir mağazaya, M iki mağazaya daha gitti. Eve birçok harika şey getirdik: Kaliforniya’dan organik greyfurt suyu, İspanya’dan ucuz şarap, Türkiye’den kuru kayısı, Oregon’dan ekmek ve the pièce de résistance–buyuk bir kutu Frosted Mini Wheats. Vay!
Öğleden sonra M, bir Safeway süpermarkette ilk COVID atışını yaptı. Süreç sorunsuz ve kolaydı. Ama Eve’in aşı yaptırdığı zamandan çok farklıydı. E bir futbol stadyumuna gitti. Çok sayıda personel ve çok sayıda gönüllü asistan vardı. Saatte yüzlerce doz aşı yaptılar. Safeway’de her zaman eczane bölümünde çalışan sadece iki personel vardı. Saatte dört aşı yaptılar. Hangisi daha iyiydi? Hmm. Peki, M Safeway için yüzde son indirim kuponu aldı. E bir futbol maçı için yüzde on indirim aldı mı? Hayır.
Sali, 9 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,2303 (+5) Yeni vakalar: 517
Biraz bahçe işi ve E’nin egzersiz dersinden sonra, büyük dünyaya gittik. Bir bahçe merkezine gittik ve bir lale, biraz menekşe ve bir dış mekan masa ve sandalye seti aldık. Masa ve sandalyeyi eve geri götürdük ve bahçemize koyduk. Sonra bir fincan kahve ile rahatladık. Ah … güzel.
Daha sonra hızlı bir orman yürüyüşüne çıktık ve saat 1: 00’de öğle yemeği için H’nin evine gittik. Vietnam yemekleri ve doğum günü pastası yedik. Akşam 20 Dakikalık bir bölüm daha izledik.
Çarşamba, 10 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,305 (+2) Yeni vakalar: 306
Biraz yağmur ve biraz güneşle başka bir gün. M makalesi üzerinde çalışırken, E yazışmalar yaptı ve Pepper and Pepper’ın sahibini ziyarete gitti. Akşam 20 Dakika daha izledik. Zavallı Melek! 20 yıl hapis yatıyor. Belki ömür boyu hapiste. Ama zaman önemli değil çünkü kötü Belediye Başkanı Solmaz onun ölmesini istiyor. Onu hapishane duş odasında öldürmek için bir plan yaptı. Melek’in masum olabileceğini düşünen bir polis dedektifi var. Ama başı dertte. Patronu kızgın ve kimse onunla konuşmayacak, çaycı bile. Melek cezaevinde başka bir mahkuma yardım ediyor. Bunu nazik olduğu için yapıyor. O tam bir melek.
Perşembe, 11 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,316 (+11) Yeni vakalar: 367
Güzel ve yoğun bir gün. FaceTime’da J ve R ile konuştuk. M’nin neden bu kadar çakıl taşıdığını anlamasına yardımcı oldular. Zorluk, ‘aritmetik’ denen bir şeydi. Sonra E Zoom yoga yaptı ve M dişçıye gitti. Bundan sonra M başka bir FaceTime toplantısı yaptı ve E ön bahçede çalıştı. M ayrıca dışarı çıktı ve ağaç kabuğu yaymaya çalıştı. Kabuğun çakıldan 1000 kat daha hafif olduğunu söylüyor. Matematik becerilerinin seviyesi düşünüldüğünde, muhtemelen çok yanılıyor. Öğleden sonra arkadaşlarımızla telefonla konuştuk. Şimdi hepimiz aşı oluyoruz, bu yüzden bir veya iki hafta içinde onların evinde akşam yemeği yiyeceğiz. Ne tuhaf bir fikir!
Akşam televizyonu izlemedik. Bunun yerine 4D testere bulmacası başlattık.
Cuma, 12 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,319 (+3) Yeni vakalar: 402
Bulutsuz gökkynüzü ve soğuk bir sabah. Ormanda uzun bir yürüyüşe çıktık ve göl kenarında piknik yaptık. E 1: 30’da Zoom yoga yaptı ve daha sonra erkek kardeşi ile telefonda konuştu. Saat 4: 00’te arkadaşlarımız R ve G ile konuştuk. Yakında evlerinde akşam yemeği yemeyi planlıyoruz. Bu yeni bir fikir! Akşam televizyon izlemedik. Budapeşte’nin 4D yapbozunu başlattık.
Cumartesi, 13 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,322 (+3) Yeni vakalar: 365
Bahar temizliği günü, en az bir dolap için. Sıcak güneşli bir gündü, bu yüzden kışlık paltolarımızı, şapkalarımızı ve eşyalarımızı dışarı çıkardık. E dolabı temizledi ve süpürdü. Günün ilerleyen saatlerinde E arkadaşları J ve C ile küçük bir açık hava partisi yaptı. Dolmalar, ıspanaklı hamur işleri, brie ve kraker vardı. Çok soğuk değildi. E arkadaşlarıyla oynarken M vergilerimizi yaptı. Akşam yemeğinde hamburger, patates kızartması ve şarap yedi. Şarap Katalunya’dandı. Ucuz ama güzel.
Sonra Budapeşte’de çalıştık ve biraz 20 Dakika izledik. Melek’in yardım ettiği genç kadın ona ihanet etti. Sürpriz değil.
Pazar, 14 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,322 (+0) Yeni vakalar: 234
Kahvaltıda Trader Joes’dan çikolatalı kruvasan yedik. M çok fazla çikolataları olduğunu söyledi. E fark etmedi.
Öğle yemeğinden sonra Eve, OSU kampüsünün batı tarafında yürüyüşe çıktı. Ziraat Koleji’nin evi. Domuz Merkezi, OSU Mandıra, Hayvan Besleme Merkezi ve Hassas Tarım Sistemleri Merkezi’nden geçti. Hassas Tarım Sistemleri Merkezi nedir? Bilmek istemiyoruz. Bina uğursuz görünüyor.
Oregon’s first COVID diagnosis was made on March 1, 2020. The Pandemic Diary database began tracking deaths on March 27. As can be seen below, the death toll for the first four months was relatively low in Oregon, averaging around two deaths per day. In July, things got a little worse; in late November they got a lot worse. These days, during the most recent ten-day period, the death rate has fallen to early November levels. New case numbers and test positive percentages have also been low. So…lot’s of good signs.
In our town today we had warm spring weather. E busied herself with plant care, garage organizing, Zoom yoga, and grocery ordering; then she relaxed with a long and joyful phone talk with an old friend. The only dark spot was that it was her night to cook. She got through it somehow.
M saw an eye doctor today, a process that required two separate visits to the office. On the first visit the receptionist refused to allow him to see the doctor! This on the flimsiest of pretexts, something about how he had arrived an hour early. Incredible. Of course M persevered. He went to AutoZone and got some windshield washer fluid and filled up the tank on the Mazda, which made the yellow warning light go off. Ha! Then he went back to the eye doctor. In the afternoon he went out and worked on his paving project.
Tuesday, March 2 Deaths 2,225 (+13) New cases 269
More beautiful weather. M went shopping early at Mother of Markets. Except for the usual wincing at the check-out counter when the total was announced, it was a pleasant experience. E went to see her friend S and came back with Pepper, who requested a visit to the Chambeck day spa. In response to an overwhelming number of requests (one), we are posting another photo of this charismatic canine.
M worked outside until completely exhausted–which didn’t take all that long–and then had lunch. After a repast of chips, salsa and leftover steelhead, he went into the study to install our new cable modem. That process was fraught with peril, as it requires surviving for a certain amount of time WITH NO INTERNET WHATSOEVER. And what if the new modem didn’t work? And then what if the old modem–understandably bitter over being cast aside–refused to work either? Land sakes alive! Fortunately the process was not as terrible as it might have been. Whew.
Wednesday, March 3 Deaths 2,252 (+27) New cases 276
We woke up to thick fog this morning. M went out to do an errand and reports that traffic was slow and conditions eerie. By 11:00 or so the fog had mostly burned off, after which it was another fine day. E did Zoom yoga and later went to fetch her grocery order from the Co-op. There have been some communication issues and E is thinking it’s time to go back to doing her Co-op shopping the old fashioned way. M worked on his paver project and did some lawn mowing. In late afternoon E went to the plant nursery and bought some native tufted grasses. We plan to put a couple in the front and a couple in the back.
Thursday, March 4 Deaths 2,284 (+32) New cases 392
Quite a high number of Oregon COVID deaths in the last three days, averaging over twenty per day. But the daily tolls have always varied a lot, so we can’t make too much of this yet.
FaceTime tertulia with J and R. They have found out that their grandkids will be going back to school soon, one of them as soon as Monday, others by the beginning of April. The district plan is for each child to have just two days a week of in-class instruction, presumably for the rest of this school year. Also on the education front, the Univ. of Oregon in Eugene has announced that they will be returning to normal course delivery starting Fall term. Also on the virus front, M has a vaccine appointment for next Monday.
Another pretty nice day, cloudy and warm in the morning, some light rain coming on around 3:00 in the afternoon. We were both laboring for hours in the garden, planting the new tuft grass and ornamental thyme that E got yesterday, as well as taking two roses out of their big pots and placing them into big holes. We are slowly gaining ground in the effort to fill all the bare space that we created by last year’s various lawn removals.
Friday, February 5 Deaths 2,293 (+9) New cases 251
We did more garden work today, despite the fact that it was raining. M, being a complete fool, has ordered himself nine cubic feet of gravel, which was delivered at noon. He was tired of never having enough. Now he’s got way too much. Despite his work today, a lot of it is still sitting in the driveway. Much progress has been made on the paving project, but it is fiendishly complex and still far from finished. Like many infrastructure projects, it has suffered from ongoing design changes and cost overruns. There is also dissension among the project staff. The designer has maligned the competence of the entire crew, while the construction supervisor claims that the initial design was “incoherent.” Fewer difficulties have occurred in the front yard where E today planted two new primroses and an aster.
In the afternoon, E had another meeting of her HEPAJ group. They all met outside at H’s place to share tea, coffee, and snacks. We suppose there was also some conversation. It was E’s turn to provide the snacks. The weather was rainy and cool but H does have a covered back patio. E came home dry but chilled. It took her a couple of hours and a hot shower to warm up. All of the HEPAJ members are getting vaccinations now, so it won’t be long–we hope–till the group can meet indoors.
Saturday, March 6 Deaths 2,296 (+3) New cases 202
A nice Spring day with lots of sun and lots of showers, each type of weather very politely taking it’s turn throughout the day. E brought Pepper for another visit and M worked on the great paving project. Thankfully, this project has at last been abandoned! completed!
In other news, E’s amaryllis has bloomed. She is especially pleased because this is the second year that it has flowered for her, thus rewarding the care she gave it over the last twelve months.
It was a big TV night for us. First we watched another episode of 20 Minutes (20 Dakika), a Turkish series about a woman imprisoned for a grisly murder that she–probably–did not commit. It stars Tuba Büyüküştün, whom we are very fond of, despite or maybe because of her crooked front tooth. She also starred in Black Money Love, where her character was also imprisoned for a grisly murder that she did not commit. She’s good at this sort of role, though we expect that after doing it a couple of times, she might be getting tired of it. Anyway, we basically hate this show–it is so sappy–and yet we are inexorably drawn to it–probably due to mental deficiency.
After that, we watched the first episode of 45 RPM (45 Revoluciones), a Spanish drama series set in Madrid in the early to mid 1960s. It’s all about the recording industry and advent of the rock and roll era. E first went to Spain the 1968, so it’s fun for her to see how the series tries to recreate the sights and sounds of that era. Episode 1 of the series features a recreation of a performance by a group called Los Pekenikes. This is a real group whose name E thinks she recalls. Apparently the group was formed in Spain in 1959 and once opened for the Beatles when they came to Madrid. So far the series seems to have interesting characters and plenty of drama. Has anyone else seen this show? Is it worth following?
Sunday, March 7 Deaths 2,296 (+0) New cases 211
Bad news for E in the front garden. Someone, either a gentle deer or a feral human, has pulled out one of her newly planted primroses and eaten all its flowers. She put the plant back in the ground and thinks it will probably be okay.
One part of the front yard that we haven’t messed with is the daffodil and rhodie section created by the previous owners.
Pandemi Günlüğü — 1-7 Mart, 2021
Pazartesi, 1 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,212 (+4) Yeni vakalar: 197
Oregon’da ilk COVID teşhisi 1 Mart 2020’de geldi. Aşağıdaki grafikte görebileceğiniz gibi ilk dört ay çok kötü geçmedi. Temmuz ayında pandemik daha da kötüleşti. Kasım sonunda durum çok daha kötüye gitti. Bu günler içinde ölüm oranı Kasım ayı başlarındaki seviyelere düştü. Yani bu oldukça iyi bir haber.
Bugün kasabamızda ılk bahar havası yaşadık. E biraz bitki bakımı yaptı. Sonra Zoom yoga dersi aldı ve Kooperatif’ten yemek siparişi etti. Sonra eski bir arkadaşıyla uzun ve neşeli bir telefon konuşması yaptı. M’nin sabah bir göz doktoru randevusu vardı. Öğleden sonra finişer projesi üzerinde çalıştı.
Sali, 2 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,225 (+13) Yeni vakalar: 269
Daha güzel hava. M, Pazar Ana’ya erken alışverişe gitti. Sonunda toplamı görmesi dışında hoştu. E Pepper’ı kısa bir ziyaret için evimize getirdi. İstek üzerine, işte bu karizmatik köpeğin bir fotoğrafı.
M, öğle yemeğinden önce dışarıda çalıştı. Öğle yemeğinden sonra yeni bir kablo modem bağladı. Yeni modem ile indirme hızı 275’ten 465 Mbs’ye yükseldi. Harika!
Çarşamba, 3 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,252 (+27) Yeni vakalar: 276
Bu sabah uyandığımızda yoğun bir sis bulduk. 11: 00’de sis yandı ve çok güzel bir gündü. E, Zoom yoga yaptı ve Kooperatif’ten yiyecek almaya gitti. Bu süreçte sorunlar var. E, bunu durduracağını düşünüyor. Öğleden sonra bahçe merkezine gitti ve daha fazla bitki satın aldı.
Perşembe, 4 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,225 (+13) Yeni vakalar: 269
FaceTime’da J ve R ile konuştuk. Torunları yakında okula dönüyor. Ama haftada sadece iki gün gidecekler. Oregon’un en büyük üniversiteleri, sonbaharda normal olarak açılacağını söylüyor.
Güzel bir gün daha. Bahçede saatlerce çalıştık. Yeni bitkileri toprağa koyduk ve bazı eski bitkileri de taşıdık.
Cuma, 5 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,296 (+3) Yeni vakalar: 202
Bugün yağmura rağmen bahçede çalıştık. M’ın çakıl yükü öğlen teslim edildi. İlk önce hiç yetmedi. Şimdi çok fazla şeye sahip. Aptalca ama normal. Çok ilerleme sağlandı. Ancak çok daha fazla iş kaldı. Ayrıca işçiler arasında anlaşmazlık var. Tasarımcı, işçilerin tembel ve vasıfsız olduğunu söylüyor. İşçiler ilk tasarımın “tutarsız” olduğunu söylüyor.
Evin önünde daha az sorun var. Bugün E iki çuha çiçeği dikti ve bir aster dikti. Öğleden sonra HEPAJ grubuyla ziyarete gitti. E çok hoşuna gitti, ama toplantı dışarıdaydı ve oldukça soğuktu. İyi haber şu ki, grubun tüm üyeleri aşı oluyor. Yakında içeride olabilecekler.
Cumartesi, 6 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,225 (+13) Yeni vakalar: 269
Bol güneş ve bol yağmurlu güzel bir bahar günü. E, başka bir ziyaret için Pepper’ı ele geçirdi. M, Büyük Proje’de çalıştı. Neyse ki bu proje artık terk edildi tamamlandı.
Diğer haber ise E’nin nergis zambağı çiçek açmış. E mutlu çünkü bu çiçek açtığı ikinci yıl.
Bu gece çok televizyon izledik. Önce 20 Dakika‘nın bir bölüm izledik. Bu dizide bir kadın cinayetle suçlanarak hapse giriyor. Oyuncu Tuba Büyüküstün’dır. Çarpık dişi olmasına rağmen biz onu çok seviyoruz. Onu başka bir dizide gördük–Kara Para Aşk. O dizide o da hapishanede masum bir kadındı. Bu oyuncu hapishanede çok zaman geçiriyor. Aslında bu yeni diziden nefret ediyoruz. Ama uzak kalamayız. Bu bizim kaderimiz.
Sonra 45 RPM’in ilk bölümü izledik. Bu dizi 1960’larda Madrid’de geçiyor. E okumak için ilk olarak 1968’de Madrid’e gitti. Dizinin o dönemi nasıl gösterdiğini görmek istiyor. Hikaye pop müzik hakkındadır. İlginç görünüyor.
Pazar, 7 Mart Oregon’daki ölümler: 2,225 (+13) Yeni vakalar: 269
Bahçedeki Eve için kötü haber. Bir hayvan, belki bir geyik, yeni çuha çiçeği bitkilerinden birini çekip çiçekleri yedi. E onu yere geri koydu. Sorun olmayacağını düşünüyor. Bahçenin nergis ve ormangülü bölümleri iyi gidiyor.