The Burrow
"If you always do what interests you, at least one person is pleased." (Katherine Hepburn)
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Friday, February 13, 2026
Sharing The Love
This happened on Valentines weekend, 2012.
I remember it as if it were today.
Shockingly, G'ma was willing to forgo her post-prandial nap and accompany me to Target. I hustled her into the car before she could change her mind. We admired the clouds and she told me I was driving too fast and not stopping for the yellow lights and following too closely and she was my mother again, except for the clacking dentures. Be careful what you wish for, I guess.
There was an electric cart in the unloading area next to the handicapped parking space and it was calling her name. She's still got left and right implanted in her memory bank, so directionality wasn't an issue. She took a turn or two too closely, but the t-shirts didn't seem to mind the little bit of sway she put into their hangars. Humans managed to get out of her way, and her enjoyment of the scene washed away frowns before they could be formed. We chose Valentines Day cards and bought mini-packs of tissues for her purse and we giggled over but didn't purchase any of the soft pink socks with hearts that were tempting me at the register. Sorry, Little Cuter........Pie wasn't nearly enough lunch for me, so I suggested ice cream. "Drive faster!" was her reply, so I did. There's a new Dairy Queen in the neighbrohood and that's where we headed, $5.01 bringing us her sundae (all chocolate....did you really have to ask?) and my strawberry milkshake and more napkins than we needed.
Sitting there in the parking lot, sipping whipped cream and watching chocolate sauce melt into chocolate soft serve, feeling the warm breeze on my bare arms, I was 10 years old again, in the drive-thru with Mommy.
It felt really really good.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Lincoln and Washington and Their BIrthdays
Mary was not in labor on the third Monday of February. She produced her child on a specific day - the 22nd day of February. His birthday didn't move around with the vagaries of the federal holiday calendar.
Nancy Hanks Lincoln met her second son, Abraham, 217 years ago today. Like Mrs. Washington before her, she was not in labor on an indeterminate day sometime in the middle of the month. It occurred on a certain day, a day formerly commemorated by school children and mail carriers alike.
Alas and alack, these fine gentlemen have been conflated into Presidents and their birthdays combined into a generic celebration designed primarily to afford employees the opportunity for a 3-day weekend in the middle of the winter. What was wrong with the old system, I wonder? As an elementary school kid I looked forward to those random days off in the middle of the month. One day, breaking up the routine. One celebration for each president - pennies examined on the 12th, leadership and lying (not) on the 22nd.
There was no time for a weekend away (not that G'ma and Daddooooo could have afforded to take us anyplace anyhow) and there was no competition between students for who went the furthest and had the most fun. It was an opportunity to go sledding at Bethpage (the Black Course was used for many things in my youth; this was the best of them) or to meet friends at the bowling alley and then walk to Smiles (our precursor to a 5-and-dime) where we cruised the aisles until our parents picked us up.
It was grilled cheese sandwiches with bacon on the side, eaten on paper plates and accompanied by the admonition Don't Tell Daddy since the bacon was not exactly kosher and he cared a lot more than did G'ma. There were snow forts to be built, snowball fights to be fought, snow men to be built. The entire neighborhood roamed from front yard to front yard, creating and tumbling and finding warmth and drinks and the occasional bathroom in whichever house we happened to be in front of when the need arose.
And now? Now President's Day is always an event. It's a long weekend for which plans must be made. It has no intrinsic meaning, no relationship to George or Abe or any of their colleagues. Their faces are used to advertise white sales and car sales and furniture sales and The History Channel runs back to back episodes of The Presidents but that's about the size of the historical component. What began as tributes to great men has devolved into spending opportunities for the masses.
Am I bitter? You bet. A day off followed by another one 10 days later.... what better way to combat the winter doldrums than that? A random day, a day to cuddle under the blankets with your sweetie or to do all that laundry that interfered with your weekend plans and so still sits in the basket, mocking you. A day to explore the neighborhood and have lunch in that place you've driven by 100 times before..... a day just to be.
Sometimes, when I was a girl really was better.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Silly Names
I've always respected the work but I never gave much thought to the physical effort involved in being a teacher. But having spent eight hours over the last two days reading and gardening with the Prince scholars, I am a physical wreck.
Two cups of robust English Breakfast tea provided the fuel; I didn't yawn all day. But when the pre-K teacher asked her student to go back to the classroom and tell Mr. S that nap time was over, then smiled at me and said, sotto voce, So I don't have to get up off the floor, I completely understood her situation. I was pretty comfortable on the tiny chair beside her; the walk to my next class was a distant 10 feet away.
So, denizens, forgive me if my only original thought is why do female skiers have silly first names?
Okay, a Google search revealed only the two I already knew, but I think the question's still valid.
Breezy? Who names their kid Breezy? Apparently, the Johnsons.
Picabo Street's parents called her Baby Girl before she needed a passport and thus a real name. Picabo was a neighboring town in Idaho. It was also Baby Girl's favorite game - Peek a Boo. Still.......
Feel free to ruminate on this bit of insignificant trivia. It's all my brain can handle right now.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Love of Reading Week
Monday, February 9, 2026
Tucson in the News, Again
The FBI is ringing doorbells, asking for any video surveillance of the street and permission to search your yard.
There are news crews trying to find something to report.
The sheriff admits that releasing the house back to the family before the FBI arrived with its forensic magic might not have been a great idea.
There are tearful pleas for information and contact, heartbreaking in their honesty.
Friends and relatives and relatives of friends have reached out to be sure I'm okay. TBG was anxious about my Saturday foray to Grandma's Garden; being alone, even behind a gate I'd be sure to lock behind me, just didn't seem safe to him.
Ransom. Kidnapping.
It's a hell of a world, denizens.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Television - A Snippet
Paladin was on H&I, until it wasn't. Now it's on in the afternoon, on something called INSP.
I laughed as my brain went to INSP Gadget, one of The Cuters' favorite tv shows. TBG brought me back to reality; it seems to be shorthand for inspiration.
I couldn't tell you the numbers to press to bring it up. I couldn't tell you how to get NBC or PBS or anything but 576, Turner Classic Movies. For the rest, I talk into the remote.
Finding Netflix or Apple+ requires my husband's presence. Apparently, they are apps and have their own special section of the guide.... I think. Left to my own devices, I'd rarely turn the thing on. I really don't care.
But there is YouTubeTV and other services that promise to give me freedom and free services, or at least less expensive services than I have right now... if only I could figure out if I have a Smart TV or if it's connected to Bluetooth or any of the myriad factors I need to consider.
TBG loves all his channels. He has no problem navigating the system. I'm sitting here wondering why I'm worrying about this at all.
Something tells me I need a break. If this is all my brain could churn out for you, it's sending me a message. I'm off to have dinner and a Simon Toyne novel. I'll try to do better on Monday.
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Unleash The Hounds
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Senorita in the Garden
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
418/419
If you live in the Tucson metropolitan area you have no doubt seen the sighs urging you to VOTE YES ON 418/419. The signs tell you that you can fix our roads without raising taxes.
That's not really true. I know this because I am the person who reads every page of every Sample Ballot and Publicity Pamphlet that comes my way, in this case all 132 pages (the English version; the 280 pages include the whole thing in Spanish, too..... don't get me started on English as our common language).
It is true that our taxes won't go up. They will also not go down. The same half cent sales tax (a totally regressive measure) instituted when the first RTA plan was passed in 2006 (the year we moved here) will remain in place if the voters vote yes on 419, the funding package.
We were thrilled that there was a regional plan back in 2006. Single lane roads with unimproved shoulders suddenly became 4 paved lanes with cut outs for left turns and buses. Some even had bike lanes, although only a few with curbs separating the cyclist from the motorist. Tucson prides itself as being a biking community; protecting those on two wheels was obviously not that important to the planners.
Railroad crossings were made safer with overpasses and underpasses. More of that is planned in the next 20 years, along with widening arterial roads to facilitate speeding through the city. The 2006 major crosstown road reconstruction project (Grant Road) has been going on for a long long long long time and is still nowhere near complete. Neither are several other projects from that election.
There is some money reserved from the revenues collected to cover some of those costs, but some is not all. The RTA pamphlet uses COVID and 2008 to explain this failure of revenues not keeping up with expenses. I'll grant them that. But there were cost overruns and miscalculations too.
Tucson's pot hole infestation has spread alarmingly in the 20 years we've been here. The plan allots 6.6% of the project's expenses to Pavement Rehabilitation. Orange Grove Road, recently widened and repaved, is going to be widened again. I drive across the area in question most days, at high traffic and low traffic times. In 20 years I've never been in what I'd call a traffic jam.
Sure, the road now has 4 lanes then 2 lanes then 3 lanes then 5 lanes but the cars flow smoothly and I rarely miss the lights because of traffic. The same can be said for Ina Road and Prince Road, both of which are in line for moderniz(ing) existing roadway including bicycle, pedestrian, and associated intersection and drainage improvements. Notice that there is no mention of resurfacing, or pot hole filling, or fixing the damn roads themselves for crying out loud.
We just spent $4000 replacing TBG's engine mounts and oil pan, victims of the potholes (and our excessive heat... but that, they said, was less of an issue). Driving up to Dr K and Not-Kathy's house is an adventure in off-roading... only we're on the (supposedly) paved surface. Where there used to be holes in the asphalt, now there are mounds. It's a toss up which feels better when you're over them.
Counting on the RTA to make smart decisions is put to the test when considering what's been going on since 2006. Grant Road is home to my hairdresser. In order to return to my house, I need to make a left turn and drive west. From the salon to the nearest available left turn is now a nearly 3 mile drive.... which brings us to air quality and environmental safety.
The Vote No Arguments in the pamphlet are peppered with bicycle, pedestrian, and transit advocates, all of whom wonder about the air we breath. They wonder why transit related projects comprise only 27.1% of the expenditures. Expanding the highly successful Streetcar to serve more of the city is nowhere to be found. With Tucson's COVID era free bus service and the concomitant rise in unhoused and unruly passengers, riding the buses has become less safe for both passengers and drivers. Yet only 1.9% ( $51,000) is allocated.
There are broader concerns about the structure of the RTA, the dissolution of the citizens' advisory committee, the disproportionate allocation of funds to the outer rim rather than Tucson itself. The Yes arguments are from developers and realtors and builders and elected officials (although Mayor Romero's argument is signed by her, without her title). The No arguments are from pedestrians and cyclists and health care advocates, Democrats and Republicans and Libertarians.
I read it all. I've thought about it for a while. My favorite argument is this one, which I will quote in its entirety.
I live in unincorporated Pima County. Like most of us, I spend too much time in my car. Everywhere I need to go is far away from me. I had the same problem when I lived in the city. New roadwork won't solve that problem
Pima County's best regional transportation plan, the updated version of our 2045 Regional Mobility and Accessibility Plan, looks at average daily travel times under "build" and "no-build" scenarios. Under a "build" scenario, the average person saves 36 seconds of daily travel time.
The projects funded by Prop 419 will cost $2.67 billion. There are about 430,000 households in Pima County. That's $6,200 per family. There are better ways to save 36 seconds a day.
I'm leaning towards a no vote.
Monday, February 2, 2026
You Must Listen
Friday, January 30, 2026
A Blast From The Past
The librarian left bright red papers in our mailboxes. What was your favorite book as a child?
I loved my illustrated copy of Washington Irving's tales, even though most of them scared me silly. The Headless Horseman's cape flying behind him as his horse raced through the darkness was only tolerable because I was surrounded by my stuffed animals. Why I thought it was a good idea to read myself to sleep that way remains a mystery to this day.
I loved Nancy Drew, and the little blue bound biographies at school, and A. A. Milne's poems and Pooh. If pressed, I can recite Disobedience, another terrifying tale. Again, a lost mother is not the best notion to take to bed.
But this one,
The Pink Motel, a 1960 Weekly Reader Book Club selection, was the hands down winner.Miss P. DeGree, who owned poodles. Miss Ferry, the artist. Marvello, the magician. I read and reread that mystery, taking the characters and the plot with me into adulthood.
All my blogonyms? Miss P. DeGree started me off. Mysteries? My go-to genre. And Miss Ferry's notion that meals should start with dessert is the reason FlapJilly remembers the breakfast we ate the day her brother was born. Who could forget whipped cream and sprinkles?
So I Googled the author's name - Carol Ryrie Brink - and filled in the librarian's form, and I've spent the day walking in the sand on the Florida beach in front of that pink motel.
