Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Retirement Saga – Step #1


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Originally uploaded by cageyj

I begin a series as I observe retiring. Maybe I’ll use this table for the long summer afternoons.

I never lived counting down the days to retirement. When asked I gave my standard line, "I will share my son’s Graduation Party from high school as my Retirement Party. I dutifully set money aside in a retirement account which accumulated along with my Public Employees Retirement Association of Minnesota (PERA) benefits
Of course beyond High School for my son was college. As most people, we didn't have that much money set aide, so work seemed to extend beyond age 66. The current financial melt-down means we have even less.


I attended my 45th high school reunion in the summer of 2006. I was 63 that summer and surprised at the large number of my former classmates who had retired. Only a few continued working. Never before this gathering had I really appreciated the number of folks retiring before the 'official' age.

My father retired early when his the place of employment the Universal Atlas Cement Plant closed its doors. He retired many months before he was eligible for Social Security. He got his pension, but waited for Social Security retirement benefits.

So I must prepare to go where my father had gone … retirement. The realization marked Step #1.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

The Heehn House


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Originally uploaded by cageyj
I sent this recommendation for my son-in-laws holiday light display: I like this display because of its location – a house on the hill – and there are not bright surrounding lights to detract. I also like the basic star-like color of these lights with the splashe3s of color around the edges”
The display is put together by Mark Heehn at 1915 Moorhead in Cloquet. “My Heehn resisted the temptation to throw in lots of kitsch. Good taste, good location, good Job” For those of you with global positioning systems, here’s the location: Latitude 46.6786, longitude, -92.4979

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Spring?

IMG_1308Spring delays!

Normally, the ice melts on the big lake near Ely about April 28.

I wait and worry. Spring delays! It's late this year - 1 to 2 weeks.

My brother and I plan a spring hike along the edge of the BWCA near Ely. We must canoe to the beginning point of this hike. We have an entry permit for Crab Lake on May 5thWolf Lake Road

He and I will explore some old logging road in the old portal zone between Lake Vermillion and Burntside. Logging occurred in areas of the wilderness in the years before 1978, the so-called portal zones. Some of the many logging roads out of Forest Center near Lake Isabella in the east became part of the Pow Wow Hiking Trail.

The logging roads accessed from the Wolf Lake Road were abandoned. The easements reverted back to private land. You can see a portion of the logging road on the map.

We wish to see what remains of these roads after 30 years.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

The Blizzard of 2008 ??

Duluth and Cloquet sit in the middle of a meteorological bull's eye. The Weather Service warns, image

"CARLTON/SOUTHERN ST. LOUIS-DOUGLAS-423 AM CDT THU APR 10 2008
...BLIZZARD WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 7 PM THIS EVENING TO 7 AM CDT SATURDAY...
NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTING TO 50 MPH...COMBINED WITH HEAVY SNOW...WILL RESULT IN A PROLONGED PERIOD OF HAZARDOUS WHITEOUT CONDITIONS FOR LOCATIONS NEAR LAKE SUPERIOR...INCLUDING THE TWIN PORTS...WEST TO FLOODWOOD...SOUTH TO AROUND BARNUM...AND EAST TO BENNETT WISCONSIN.
TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 11 TO 16 INCHES. LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE POSSIBLE. 
A BLIZZARD WARNING MEANS SEVERE WINTER WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. FALLING AND BLOWING SNOW WITH STRONG WINDS AND POOR VISIBILITIES ARE LIKELY. THIS WILL LEAD TO WHITEOUT CONDITIONS...MAKING TRAVEL EXTREMELY DANGEROUS. DO NOT TRAVEL."

 

 

This morning the Mayor of Duluth announced, 

From Mayor Don Ness:
To all employees:
The likelihood of a major snowstorm hitting the city during work hours on Friday prompts me to let you know the following:image
Our current plan is for City Hall to be open on Friday. Police, Fire and Public Works employees should plan on coming to work. Department directors should ensure that there is access to remote facilities.
Employees in other departments may elect to use either personal leave or vacation time if they are not able to reach work on Friday morning. All employees should listen to local media on Friday morning to learn if their facilities are closed to the public.
All employees are urged to monitor local media for any bulletins concerning city operations. We will update local media regularly throughout the storm situation, as required. Thank you for your consideration.
Don Ness
Mayor

Our last notable blizzard struck on March 1, 2007,

"Snowfall of over 20 inches and winds over 50 mph hit the northland last weekend (February 28-March 2). It was felt the hardest in Duluth where it will be remembered as the blizzard of 2007." 

Blizzard of 2007 Storm Summary by NOAA.

Many of us remember the famous Halloween Storm of 1991:

Halloween Snow Storm, October 31 – November 2, 1991
A major early-season snowstorm struck northeastern Minnesota and northwestern Wisconsin from late on Halloween, 1991, into the early morning of November 2. The storm dumped 15 to 36 inches of snow, with the highest totals falling along the Wisconsin-Minnesota border. Snowfall rates occasionally ranged from 1 to 2 inches per hour. Strong northwest winds created 6 to 10 foot drifts. The storm closed schools, businesses, and transportation systems- some for several days.

I plan to remain at home tomorrow and experience the Thundersnow & Thundersleet which the Updraft Blog forecasts

The strong dynamics and forcing with this storm will mean thunderstorms may develop as well. Thundersleet or thundersnow is a possibility tonight as the strongest part of the storm draws near.

Stay safe.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Love Letters


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Originally uploaded by cageyj

Where are your love letters? Consider this question on Valentines Day. I recent email from a friend in Ely, MN related this story. During remodeling a local cafe discovered a package of letters. When tearing up the flooring, workers discovered the letter. Unacquainted with the recipient, they gave the letters to a local family with the same family name (Finish). They did not recognize the person. A quick glance revealed them to be Love Letters.

So they look to discover in they have an unknown family member. My friend asked me to check the Birth records of St. Louis County in which Ely is located. No luck! The search continues. My friend says she will get the letters from her cousin in the near future. Perhaps I will have more to add.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Ski Before the Cold

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I skied Saturday on the Magney-Snively cross country ski trail just before the weather turned frigidly cold. The photograph shows one of the few old trail markers which has served not only to mark the trail but also as bird hunters target.

A dusting of snow served as a vanguard to the Arctic front whichIMG_3267-1 passed over. As I skied, the wind began to rise and the ski lighten from its heavy overcast. As I finished, the sun broke through as the temperature began to drop as the high pressure moved in.

I believe the Magney-Snively Trail to be Duluth's finest. It ranges from moderate to difficult terrain winding through the hardwood forests typical of the North Shore ridge of Lake Superior.

After a beautiful ski, I am back to keeping my car in a mood to start by warming it up every 4 to 5 hours.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Arctic Bites Warm Weather

IMG_2305-1This week, on Tuesday, January 29 we experienced a huge temperature drops. We enjoyed 30's and 40's in the afternoon and -10's to -20's that night. The weather service described that an arctic air mass would take a huge bite out of the warm air mass poised over us.

I am dreaming of the summer scene in the first photo.IMG_0941-1

Preceding the low temperatures came moisture. The rain coated the crusty snow, roads, sidewalks. It did not, however, coat the car windshields or decks?

On Wednesday  after enduring a night of -20,my car failed to start for the second time this winter. I waited until later in the day. When the temperature warmed ( to -7) I connected my battery to the Buick via jumper cables and leaned on the starter until the engine caught. (I probably ground another year off the starter).

To assure my car started this morning (although the temperature dropped only to -11, I got up at 2:am and drove around the block to warm it up.

As the wind chill lessens and the temperature warms I can again brave Pine Valley and its cross country ski trails.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Mothball Sunday

Mothball Sunday fell in Epiphany-tide this year. At least, it might have fallen last Sunday here in Cloquet, Minnesota.

Mothball Sunday is a moveable feast. It might be celebrated in Advent, during December. This special Sunday might add to the Twelve Days of Christmas. Most likely it will fall during the season of Epiphany. Rarely do we celebrate this Sunday during Lent. Some few years, we do not have this Sunday at all.

The date of celebration varied from year to year and even place to place. I doubt the Bible Belt ever experienced this Sunday in their churches.

You  will not find Mothball Sunday determined by the Solar Calendar like Christmas. We don't calculate its place in our lives according to the Lunar Calendar like Easter. Meteorology governs the date of Mothball Sunday.

I considered it a big feast in the 1950's.  On this Sunday a different incense wafted through the congregation. This feast, however, has slipped from our awareness and consciousness.

IMG_0369I noticed, when I was young, that Mothball Sunday fell after the first large sub-zero, arctic blast when the temperature plunged to -20 or -25 or even -30 or more.

People would get out their rarely-used, really heavy, warm winter garments. When I was young these garments were very often made of wool. Taken from storage, they smelled of the mothballs used to protect them from the insects that feasted on wool. Church on Mothball Sunday smelled of mothballs. By the next week, if folks still needed these really warm clothes the smell disappeared as the heavy coat, wool pants or sweater aired.

For some years, I served as an altar boy. As we moved from one kneeling person to another at communion time, I would catch the whiff of  Mothballs. Mostly the old people smelled (who who were then the age that I am now.) I thought of these woolen garments as quaint and old fashioned like the people who wore them.

People who were then the age I am now: Yes! I have my favorite cherished woolen garment. The 'long pants' I pack when outfitting  myself for a canoe trip. Long pants is that garment warn on a cold, windy, damp day. I wear long pants when the evening chill has replaced the warm day and mosquitoes swam. I wear old army surplus woolen dress pants. Wood sheds water, seems warm even when wet, dries quicker than blue jeans, fends off the wind - especially when they have not been washed for a couple of seasons. When properly 'seasoned' - unwashed -  a pair of woolen pants seems to keep mosquitoes at bay.

I know people on the trail smile at the old-fashioned quaintness of my outdoor gear. However, I don't smell - of mothballs at least.

New  synthetic winter fabrics and hi-tech textiles and  have driven most wool from our wardrobes, so Mothball Sunday has disappeared. Maybe folks today are more conscious of how they smell, and air out their clothes (10 minutes in the clothes drier) before they wear them. After all, when I was 8 we only bathed once a week. We usually bathed on Saturday before going to church. (Until a teenager, I though the maxim "cleanliness is next to Godliness" referred  to the Saturday Evening bath before we when to Church on Sunday.

Last Sunday should have been Mothball Sunday in Church, but the air smelled clean like Irish Spring or Life Boy.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Winter Morning Sunrise


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Originally uploaded by cageyj
I snowshoed for a time on the golf course near my house for an hour this evening. A quarter moon filtered light through thin clouds and the light from town reflected off this same cloud filter.

Combined I had just enough light to see where I must tread carefully but not enough clearly see the contours of the trails. I avoided trails and walked atop the hard crusted snow. In night snowshoe-light, daylight trails ambush a walker.

Turning southeast toward home, the light wind blew the 18 degree air enough to cause my eyes to water. I drew my parka close and pull my hat closer to my head.

Certainly this was a beautiful night.

Snowman with sunken eyes.


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Originally uploaded by cageyj
Frigid weather threatens!

For Friday and Saturday night the weather service predicts about 25 below Fahrenheit. People wonder if Lake Superior will experience a a total freeze. The lake freezes over completely about every 20 years.
In the last years the Lake reached these milestones:
2003 90 percent
1996 96 percent
1994 95 percent
1979 100 percent.



As more of the lake surface freezes, we have less lake effect snow along its shores.



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Originally uploaded by cageyj

This morning I replace the covers on our baseboard hot water radiators. The exposed heating pipes caused a system imbalance which funneled heat into the with the uncovered piped away from the controlling thermostat. Another result of our remodeling. I think I have the system back in balance before the real cold weather.

Certainly the snowman appreciates the cold He may keep his eyes a bit longer.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Wild Back Yard


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Originally uploaded by cageyj
I decided on a tentative date for retirement this week - March 1 2009. My 65th birthday falls this year on February 22. I will reach 66 - the Social Security retirement age in 2009. I signed up for Medicare, Part A, this week.

I mentioned the date to my boss (unofficially, of course) to help as he contemplate budgets and staffing levels over the next months. The time could be advanced if I found something interesting to do part time.

These decisions and activities move me from considering retirement as an abstract concept to something that will really happen.

This 'wild forest' stands in the lot right next to my yard. I captured this photo during a warm day of our January thaw.

Friday, January 04, 2008

January Thaw


January Thaw
Originally uploaded by cageyj
We will move from a cold week to a warm weekend with melting snow.

I could rejoice, however, the melt might wreak the cross country skiing.

Winter passes much better when you can engage in good winter sports.