Saturday, June 20, 2026
AI Truck? [Chef's Kiss]
Anything Fun?
My sister came over yesterday so she could print some stuff for her teaching job, and afterward we chatted for a bit. We got to talking, of course, about the fact that most of my family is in Island Park at scout camp, finishing up staff week and preparing for scouts to come in a few weeks.
That talk included her asking what I'd been up to, and I went through the ordinary litany of weekend chores, which this weekend included fixing a leak in the sprinkler system, trimming and burning branches from a few trees, and weeding the raspberries.
She asked the question: So, are you doing anything for you, for fun?
Honestly, I didn't have an answer.
I realized I've turned into Dad. The chores were actually pretty entertaining.
As of now, I've got most of the raspberries done -- I'm running the sprinklers for an hour to give them some water and to soften the ground up where I've got a patch of thistles growing.
I can run the water because I fixed the sprinkler system leak -- it feeds a spigot we use in the garden for watering.
And while I don't have all the tree branches trimmed, I have cut up and torched all of the branches I've felled along with all the old raspberry canes Michelle yoinked out of the garden a few weeks ago.
I have been taking breaks, intermittently working on a lesson for Sunday School tomorrow, and watching a little YouTube and playing a few games. Altogether, a relaxing and productive weekend, which is always good.
Yes, it's work. But it's work I want to do, and work I regard as valuable, So it's relaxing and important to see it done.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
A University of Idaho Connection in Idaho Falls
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Greener Pastries
It pays to self-edit fast in our family group chat, because if you don't, they'll jump on ya.
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Aw Shucks, Part 2
Monday, June 15, 2026
Aw, Shucks . . .
I'll bet if I posted this on social media, I'd get some attention from certain folks:
We might be the wealthiest nation that ever existed, we might dominate the world in lots of things and because we are richer than all our neighbors or that anybody else, that dont necessarily mean that we are happier or really better off. The difference between our rich and poor grows greater every year. Our distribution of wealth is getting more uneven all the time. We are always reading "How many men paid over a million dollar income tax," but we never read about "how many there are that are not eating regular."
I'm certain I'd be told by some that I'm some sort of commie or libtard or whatever other junk epithets fly around today.
Except this was said by Will Rogers, likely sometime in the 1920s when he was at the apex of his fame. And shucks and by golly how much his home-spun common sense wisdom we need today, except of course for this commie crapola.
Because he'd be chased off social media these days. Maybe he was scorned back then; I think our ability to scorn people whose thoughts and attitudes that differ from ours aren't any different now than they were a hundred years ago, except that every stupid opinion is amplified online.
Anyway, have fun cherry-picking. That's all we're good at these days.
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Eight-Legged Elephants
I got a peek today of what adult Sunday School might be like come September when our teaching time is cut to 25 minutes -- and it came because I substituted in Primary.
Twenty-five minutes is not a lot of time to teach one of our Come Follow Me lessons. I knew that going in, but figured this audience -- a bunch of nine-year-olds -- deserved a good lesson without any fluff.
We discussed the major points of the lesson: God allowing Israel to have a king to maybe convince them through poor kingmanship that God was the better leader; our callings being from God; and God looking not on the outward appearance, but on the heart, in that twenty-five minutes.
The spirit was strong in that room, and I know the kids felt it. They participated. They asked questions and made meaningful comments. They got a buzz from the object lesson of optical illusions as a fill-in for God looking on the heart and couldn't believe this elephant had eight legs.
They paid attention, even the kid I'd pegged as being the one most likely to be distracted.
It's gonna work, folks. Because God is in charge.















