Mature Life Features

Cecil Scaglione, Editor

Posts Tagged ‘#pets

Things Change . . .

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. . . and so do times.

Taking a glance back in your memories through

Flashbacks has been moved to 3:30 pm. Saturday

in the 2nd floor theater followed

at 4 p.m. by Travel with Sheldon.

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(An earlier piece about strange pets we had led to this one about…)

Pets That Left Us

We didn’t have a cat or dog around the railroad shack I spent much of my pre-school life in but we did have a pet crow.

On his way home from the railroad section house a five-minute walk down the tracks, my father stumbled onto a nest that had fallen out of a tree. Squawking under it were five scrawny chicks. He brought them home and, to appease his foreman, gave a couple to his daughters. Those chicks died within days so dad gave them another two chicks. He kept one for me.

It grew rapidly and soon claimed its perch on our clothes line, which gained my mother’s attention immediately, because it used to crap all over her clean laundry when she pinned it to the line. Mother would swing and swat at the bird that would hophophop down the line and back up again to avoid the broom and caw-caw-caw at her for trying to knock it off its perch. Somehow, mother managed to keep the laundry a lot cleaner than the dialogue she had with that bird.

As fall grew, the bird disappeared. We moved that winter to a larger house down the road a piece and, when spring arrived, the only person who saw that crow again was my father. It would fly to meet him when he got off work at 5 p.m. and then fly off in the direction of our former household. The only time I saw it again was one day when I went to meet dad as he quit work.

On another occasion during one of his regular tours to check his rabbit snares in the nearby bush, my father heard a small animal scrunching through under the brush. He chased it down and found a squirrel, It was a flying squirrel with one of its “webs” ripped. That stopped it from gliding from tree to tree on its scavenging nut hunts. Dad brought the animal home and quickly fashioned a small house for it so it could be protected from other animals while it recuperated.

We fed it peanuts and let it out periodically to walk around the clothesline stand so it could regain its strength and get used to us and its surroundings. One day it scratched its way up the clothesline post and tried leaping out to a nearby bench but fell short. We picked it up and placed it back in its little house. It stayed with us until late summer when it scuttled off to a nearby tree, climbed up high and launched its body to another nearby tree.  It spread out its legs and the webbing on both sides of its body held up. That was the last we ever saw of it. It never came back to say good bye.

The only other “pets” I had as a kid in the country were garter snakes. They were good looking and not too big and easy for us kids to catch them. Once you got one, all you had to do was put it in your pocket and it would curl up and stay warm. We had to let them go before we got home so we wouldn’t get swatted for keeping such dangerous beasts in our pockets.

I almost had a chipmunk for a pet during my teens. I was staying with a buddy and his family at their lakefront cottage when we spotted the little critter as we were preparing to get our canoe ready for a water ride. We chased it through the brush for a good 15 minutes. I got it but didn’t want to squeeze it to hard so John pulled of his T-shirt to form a sack bag we could keep it in. As I handed it to him, the chipmunk bit into his finger, making him lose his grasp and my vision of having a chipmunk for a pet vanished in the underbrush.

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Written by Cecil Scaglione

March 31, 2023 at 8:39 pm

Posted in Memories & Milestones

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Take Your Pets . . .

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. . .to the 2nd floor theater

at 2 p.m. Monday for

peticures and doggone good service

by a team of professional petcare-ist groomers .

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Seniors Straining Economic Support

The globe is heading toward a challenging population problem that could develop into a calamity. We’re aging.

There were slightly more than 900 million people – about 12 percent — around the world aged 60 years and older in 2015. This number is expected to increase to 1.4 billion by 2030. By 2050, one out of five people – 2.1 billion scattered all over the globe — will be 60 or older.

Almost 90 percent of the Japanese believe this is a problem. Only one out of four Americans think this way.

Since most of these oldsters will be out of the work force, they will have to have fashioned their own retirement plans or be supported by somebody. Most people in most countries think the government should take care of its elderly. This socialism brush could be wider than anticipated and affect how the nations of the world are governed.

This rapidly aging population is creating a mounting set of unprecedented issues, including a rapidly spreading and more diverse set of diseases, increased spending of time and money on health and long-term care, labor shortages, and steadily rising inflation chewing away at old-age income.

Adding calluses to the problem is the fact that the $2.9 trillion in Social Security reserves reported in 2020 is expected to be depleted by 2034. When that happens, benefits payments could be slashed by as much as 25 percent. This is happening because fewer workers are supporting a growing number of Social Security recipients.

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Written by Cecil Scaglione

March 12, 2023 at 8:06 pm

Posted in Finance, News / Events

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