
JNW’s Halloween Challenge Day 5: Witch
I’m having another go this year at JNW’s Halloween Challenge, which involves a post a day through October of assigned Halloween themes. The month begins with “pumpkin.”
giant gorgeous gourd
pumpkin puree on the path
a smashing success

trapped in my own pane
cut me loose before I crack
waiting for a break


My stained glass project waits for my return.
The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: Waiting
That answer does not
dignify any question.
Your next answer, please.

The Daily Post daily one-word prompt: Dignify
It’s a sunny summer Saturday, and I’m sitting on my back deck enjoying the morning coolness before the day heats up.
Technically, I have only three quarters of a deck right now. It seems that after 50 years, the wooden planks have decided to disintegrate. Not totally surprising… after 50 years my body began the same process.
I’ve been trying to cajole the deck into surviving another three to four years so I wouldn’t have to address the situation (and pay for a solution) any time soon. But I noticed a couple of spots that were getting downright spongy, so I had to do something.
Not to worry. I had a plan. I grabbed a rusted can of coagulating red paint from the garage and figured I’d go out and mark the soft spots so people would know where to avoid stepping. The more I inspected the deck, the redder it got. I wondered if I was going to run out of paint before I ran out of rotted areas to mark.

Then I decided to give the deck a more definitive safety check, the pitchfork test. Very few people realize that the pitchfork is a well-tuned, precision measuring tool. And I just happened to have one in the back yard. The test involves positioning the pitchfork over a suspect crack in a deck plank and plunging the tines into the wood to see how far they sink in.
The deck failed that safety check most resoundingly, as about half the length of the tines disappeared into the board. The toughest part of the test comes with trying to pull the pitchfork back out of the board, but I managed with some effort.

Okay, so the three to four year timeline on repairs would need adjusting. Significant adjusting. I decided to rip up the worst part of the deck, inclusive of the skewered test board, and figured by the time that was accomplished, inspiration would have struck and I would have a plan for resolving this matter. Apparently I worked too efficiently; by the time I got the planks off there were still no inspirations in sight.
The planks had been attached to some humongous creosote-laden beams that looked like railroad ties on steroids. That was promising. Maybe I could just buy a few boards to replace the worst of the bunch, hide the remaining red stripes and call it good.
But then I noticed some interesting splintering on one of the beams. Time once again for the pitchfork test. Aaand…

another stupendous fail. By the time I got done establishing the extent of rot to the beam, I had pitchforked my way clear through it.

So, yeah. It’s time to regroup here and figure out Plan B. Or C or D. In the meantime, I just won’t be playing with a full deck. Not something all that uncommon for me anyway.
Oh, I almost forgot. How do I know the deck is at least 50 years old? A lovely woman named Ruth stopped by my house the other day with an envelope of photos of the property from 1967 or thereabouts. She and her husband had owned the home at that time. One photo shows the deck, which at that time appeared to have no red paint whatsoever.

Anyway, it’s getting too warm out here on the partial deck, so I guess I’ll head inside and see what the rest of Saturday has in store for me.
I wish you a happy weekend, and I hope nothing rotten happens to you.

a mighty hunter, hear my call
stalking prey through grasses tall
a stealthy panther, fangs and all
disguised as house cat, tame and small

lithe and sleek, I crouch and crawl
elusive prey my quest may stall
but read the writing on the wall
eventually that bug will fall



It’s challenging when you have a one-track mind trying to switch between several trains of thought whilst going full steam. (Yes, I railroaded that sentence to be engineered for maximum punnage.)
With the improved weather, I’ve begun working on some landscaping projects in my back yard. I go outside and putter around during the cool mornings. Then when it gets too warm for yard work, I come indoors and putter around with my DIY home impairment projects.
In the back of my mind, though, perched between “do the dishes” and “give the pets their monthly flea prevention treatments,” is the niggling thought that I should write a post for this blog.
Should. Want to. Wish I could. Would if only… Will once I get the dishes done and the pets treated. Definitely will when I can stop and focus.
Ay, therein lies the rub (as Hamlet is misquoted to have said): focus.
Speaking of which (Hamlet being the “which” in this instance), it’s past my bedtime and so I must go “[t]o sleep perchance to dream.” Maybe I will be better able to focus in the morning and then I can finish this post about —
um… what was I writing about? Trains? Putters? Shakespeare?
Oh, well. It’ll come to me. Right now I think I’d better conduct my caboose off to bed.
The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: Focus

objects in mirror
are
closer than they appear
especially once you’ve finished
reading all the mirror
The Daily Post daily one-word prompt: Distant