hydrangea blossoming

hydrangea blossoming
Hydrangea on the Edge of Blooming

Thursday, July 4, 2013

What Does P.R. Do on the July 4th Holiday?

Apparently, we eat; a lot.  The following photos were taken in the produce section at the International Marketplace last night around 9 pm.  Other areas were equally decimated of foodstuffs: crackers, cereal, bread.  No food for Point Roberts after the 4th, I guess, except for expensive oranges, I guess...





Monday, July 1, 2013

Foxgloves

They grow wild here but I have collected seed and have three or four colors around in the yard.  This is the source of digitalis, in case you have a weak heart. I don't know, I guess you could just chew the flowers or leaves.  But it was a spectacular crop this year...most were at least 6-feet tall and some in the 7-foot range.  And then, next year, they will be rarer because they bloom only every 2nd year and one has to make some effort to make sure seeds get planted two years in a row which I have done, but with varying results.

But, and this is sort of the point of this post, this is what we do here in Point Roberts when we have foxgloves, even if we are old people.



Is it possible that this is why they are called 'foxgloves'?

Here are some Google thoughts:

"Foxglove was used for working magic, for protection, and communicating with fairies, elves, and woodland spirits. It had many names; lion's mouth, fairy caps, folk's glove, and witches thimbles. In France, it is known as gant de notre dame, or our lady's glove."  Probably the "folk's glove" that is the key there, misheard as 'fox'.

Friday, June 28, 2013

What Cats Like

We bought Zoe the cat a new scratcher.  It's a kind of flat item made of glued together cardboard and said, when scratched by a cat, to feel like tree bark.  I've never seen that kind of thing, but it was inexpensive and she's so fussy about everything that I'm reluctant to invest in something major.

 This is her first attempt to figure it out.    The picture below, however, demonstrates her genuine enthusiasm for the new scratcher: it came in an absolutely super box that she spends lots of time in.

Note the box label, indicating that the scratcher is for a double-wide-cat, which she's getting to be, I'm afraid.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Incident at the Border

Update below.  2nd update below.

A couple who have lived for a long time in Point Roberts had an unusual experience at the Peace Arch border this past week.  Let's call them Bill and Mary.  They make a trip to Bellingham every month or so and customarily buy groceries of various sorts while there, usually from the Coop or Trader Joe's.  And when it's Trader Joe's, it usually includes wine and or beer in various quantities, never more than a case.  And there's usually some produce, and then the various other things that make up groceries.

This past week, they made such a trip and left the Trader's with a case of 2-Buck Chuck (which I think is now about 3-Buck Chuck), and a 6-pack of beer, some plums, some strawberries, some apples.  And the dairy products and cat and dog food, etcetera.  When they got to Peace Arch (going into Canada), they pulled out their Nexus cards and when the CBP guy in the booth asked what they had in the car, Bill replied, as he always does, "We've got a case of wine, a 6-pack of beer, and groceries from Trader Joe's, with a receipt."  Mr. CBP inquired as to how many bottles were in the case and how big the bottles were.  "Twelve 750 milliliter bottles."  Mr. CBP informed them that that was way too much alcohol to be bringing into Canada.  "And do you have any fruits or vegetables?"

So Bill and Mary explained that they did have some odds and ends of fruits, as well.  But, they went on, we live in Point Roberts and we are going straight through to Point Roberts, not stopping in Canada or leaving anything in Canada.
Alas, Mr. CBP didn't care about any of that and wrote them up a dreaded yellow slip violation for bringing prohibited fruit and excess alcohol while traveling in a Nexus lane, and sent them and their yellow slip Inside the Building.

There, an agent took the prohibited produce away from them, and sent them to another employee who eventually took to writing up a bill for the wine and beer tax, when Bill managed to get through to her that they weren't taking anything to Canada, but to Point Roberts which was the United States and that they lived there (as their Nexus card info clearly showed).  He asked if he could talk to a supervisor because it was our understanding up in Point Roberts that we could bring such goods straight through to the Point as long as we did not stop in B.C. on the way. She said she'd never heard of any such thing, but she'd ask her supervisor.

Off she went, and shortly appeared another uniformed officer who asked them where they lived and whether they had Washington State Driver Licenses with their Point Roberts' address on them.  Which Bill and Mary then produced.  And the supervisor returned the yellow slip to them and told them to be on their way and have a nice day, suggesting that with large quantities of alcohol, they had to make sure that the traveller actually did live in Point Roberts.

All that remained was to retrieve the produce from a giant bin which had been receiving a lot of forfeit produce.  Fortunately, theirs was plastic wrapped, distinguishable, and rescuable, but it could as easily have been a handful of berries, in the midst of squash and beans and lettuce, I guess, just part of a muck.

Bill and Mary had been told (as I have been told) that the proper procedure if our goods are questioned at Peace Arch is to ask to speak to a supervisor.  I hadn't expected it would be quite so difficult to make that happen as Bill and Mary found.  But, it appears to be good advice.  For them, the incident cost an extra 30 or so minutes of being in various lines and required an unexpected persistence.  At the end, Mary asked the Supervisor, "This isn't going to be some kind of mark against us on our Nexus Card, is it?"  "No," he said, "because there was no violation."

I'm hoping somebody tells that to the guy in the booth.

Several commenters have written that Bill and Mary should never have tried to bring such purchases through the Nexus Lane.  On June 26, I received the following message from Arthur Reber, the Chair of the Point Roberts Community Advisory Committee, and I reprint it here with his permission:

"At the last meeting of the ad hoc border committee the Canadian supervisor assured us that their policy was that all legal purchases made in Washington by residents of Point Roberts could be brought 'in transit' through Canada. The guard who first issued the Nexus violation was in error and the supervisor made the correct decision.

Arthur (S. Reber)
Chair, PRCAC"


2nd Update:  Reber further notes that 'legal purchases' would not include plants, seeds, and guns.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Last Week in June

Not a lot of sun, not a lot of heat, but enough to bring the first of the lilies into bloom.  Even if there were a lot of sun, I'm in the trees, so my lilies have to really work to get themselves going.  These are about 4 feet tall, and each stalk has about ten buds.


The top two are different plants but the same kind: Graffity.  The bottom one might be called Mambo.  (I put plastic tags on each plant with the name written in permanent marker, but all the names disappeared anyway over the winter.)

I buy lily bulbs from a place in Port Townsend, WA, B&D Lilies (http://www.bdlilies.com/lilybulbs.html) and they're kind of pricey ($3-$5/each), but they are real producers.  Different kinds of lilies bloom in different months; there are tall ones and shorter ones; some are scented, others not; many colors and shading.  If you've got 6 hours a day of sun and soil that is reasonably well-drained, they'll be winners.  And they make great cut flowers, too.  So, are you persuaded?  I don't really care whether you have lilies in your garden or not.  I just am awfully pleased with mine so need to talk about them.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Saturday Market Tries Another Season

The Saturday Market first tried to get off the ground about three years ago, I think, but it has been and continues to be a struggle.  The first year, there was this 'big dream' about it being like the Salt Spring market, which caused people to try to reject anything but original/local crafts and fresh produce.  But we don't have enough local artists/artisans willing to populate a regular summer market.  So the second season, they tried to corral the resale types, which also didn't work very well.  Further, the availability of fresh produce dropped dramatically.  Then, last year, it disappeared almost entirely, except for very occasional offerings.  And the artisans fell to a small number, as well.

This year, we might hope for something better, although I don't know why since I don't sense any significant organized effort being made to make it better.  One of the things I have learned from library fundraising is that it requires a constant effort to keep the community even marginally engaged in any community project.  It just won't work to send out a few emails and hope for the best.

Nevertheless, Point Roberts-style, that is what this fourth year is primarily based upon.  I've been at the market all three years.  With Ed, the first two years: he was selling his Point Roberts postcards while I sold off our too-large CD collection; and then last year raising money for the library.  It's always a pleasure, even for someone who is not particularly extroverted, to talk with people in a public setting like this where the primary activity can only be talking to people.  We may be buying or selling something, but talking is the medium of the day and so the rules of talking to strangers are very clear: it is expected.

So, if you have something that can take up a tablespace and interest strangers, try it out.  Or if you are a potential buyer (and talker), come and see us all.  We won't show up in your back yard to talk, after all, or at least not most of us, so this would be your only chance to talk to us.  The quilters will do at least one weekend this summer, so if you are a fabric type, keep an eye out for the weekend they're coming.  And I expect there will be some plants regularly.  And Heidi Baxter is soliciting fresh produce for a table of herbs and greens and flowers (currently, anyway) that will benefit the library: she's hoping to do this most Saturdays.  Some local crafts will be available.  If more people come, I expect more will be available.

This Saturday, from 10-1, is the first scheduled market.  If it's raining, it's not happening, but at the moment, the weather wizards say Not rain on Saturday.  And remember also that if you come to the Friends of the P.R. Library table, you can donate your $20 to the library at the Market, get a button, get your name recorded in the Donation Book, get a free raffle ticket on the quilt pictured at left (drawing the end of August), and Be Among Friends.  Also, you can fly a "Piece of the Library" Peace Flag.  There's lots to do here so come and do it.

Monday, June 17, 2013

The Post Office Makes a Big Change

Observant readers may already have taken this in, but I went to the post office on Saturday about 12:30 to get a letter in the mail (the deadline is 1:15), only to find that the deadline for hitting the mail is no longer 1:15.  The deadline for mail going out every day, Monday through Saturday, is now 12:00.  That's the noontime 12 o'clock.  No longer 3:15 during the week; no longer 1:15 on the weekend: 12 noon.  Be advised.