1. It's had been a week of dental work, concern about Copper, a dermatology exam, and getting the sprinkler system running and I decided I'd like some time to drive by myself to Montana.
So, once I finished my morning routine of medication for me and Copper, scooping the litter pan, putting cream on my feet, eating some breakfast, blogging, and doing five puzzles (!), I piled myself into the Camry and headed east.
As I came down Lookout Pass, coming out of a work zone, I misjudged the distance between the Camry and one of those looper tube traffic cones (picture below) as I came out of the work site and I clipped it. I didn't realize at first that I clipped it with the sideview mirror. I thought I'd done so with the bumper.
In Saltese, I stopped in at the Montana Bar and Grill and played my favorite of all gaming machines, Wolf Moon (not available in Pendleton, Spokane, or Worley, to the best of my knowledge), got crushed, shrugged, and enjoyed a burger, fries, and a bottle of Bud Zero.
2. I hit the road again and stopped in at Winki's Diner for a small ice cream cone, sat at a table outside, and noticed that the sideview mirror was collapsed, the cover was gone, and part of its workings was dangling below the mirror.
I'd viewed this scene before -- one day I clipped the entry into our garage and damaged the mirror in similar fashion.
I decided against continuing my Montana travels and I headed home. I tested the mirror -- I could adjust if from inside the car. The blinker light was working, but that blinking light was under the mirror, dangling.
I wanted to return to Kellogg without the dangling part of the mirror falling off and succeeded.
I stopped in at the local body shop to have it looked at, but it was closed.
I'll try again Monday.
I'm really glad the mirror and its operation are intact, but I want to get that dangling piece back in place and I want to replace the back cover that is now littering the roadside on the east side of Lookout Pass.
3. On this trip, until I left Winki's, I was able to use my phone and the car's bluetooth to listen to Jeff's April 17th Deadish program.
I don't know why the connection that worked from Kellogg to Saltese and Saltese to St. Regis quit working as I headed west, but I didn't sweat it. I would finish listening to the program at home in Kellogg.
Jeff replayed a program he had aired back in September of 2022 and for two and half hours he featured heavenly and fascinating music from the British Folk Rock Days, music recorded between about 1965 and 1970.
He played, among others, Davey Graham, Trees, Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span, Pentangle, The Incredible String Band, and more.
This combining of rock and British traditional folk and other sources of folk music strikes a very sweet spot in me and I loved it.
As a bonus, in his After Show, Jeff played a beautiful album I'd never heard before: Vashti Bunyan's Just Another Diamond Day.
I then did some easy digging into the World Wide Web to learn more about Vashti Bunyan and maybe figure out why I didn't know her name or her music.
Hers is a great story of wandering, disappointment, abandonment, discovery, appreciation, and revival.
After I fixed Debbie and me some baked sesame seed, lime/chili, garlic, salt, and pepper chicken drumsticks to enjoy with Debbie's superb bean salad, I opened up Saturday's NYTimes crossword online and listened to Jeff's April 24th Deadish program while working the puzzle.
The Grateful Dead played on April 24th in both 1971 and 1972 in Durham, NC and Dusseldorf, West Germany. In the first hour, Jeff played a couple of Peter Rowan songs performed by the Jerry Garcia Band and then played selections from the Durham show. In the following hour and a half, Jeff played Dusseldorf selections, including a wondrous "Dark Star" and when I heard the unmistakable sound of Keith Godchaux's piano playing I suddenly realized that at this time Pigpen and Keith and Donna Godchaux were all in the band at the same time.
How did I not know that?
It's because of such gaps in my knowledge of the band, and for other reasons, that while I've been listening to the Grateful Dead since I went to my first show on 12/31/1988 and attended about six more shows after that, I cannot accept the moniker of Deadhead.
I love the music, but in too many ways when it comes to the Grateful Dead, I'm just out of it.
And that's fine. I yam who I yam.
The Deadheads I know are not, when it comes to history, names of songs, song writers, knowledge about specific shows, and other things, I repeat, they are not out of it!
I am.
But I keep trying to be with it! 🌹🌹🧸🧸🧸💀💀💀🤣🤣🤣🤣
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As promised, here's the picture.
Until today, I didn't know these things were called looper tube traffic cones!