Bread and Honey
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
The Reset to Start the Day
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Turned Around Tuesday Reflections
Now that's better! Yesterday's intentions, in the face of fatigue and discouragement, along with the gentle cheering of the Spirit (Ruth Anne, I know you can do this!), have helped reorient and stabilize my frame of mind toward a more grateful and reasonable disposition.
And the husband who shares this cottage with me said, "Amen!"
Two times around the island, one yesterday and one this morning, contributed enormously. That's 11 so far this season, so I'm feeling good about that.
Yesterday it was a gaggle of friends on the rocks at a place that was narrow enough I felt my Canadian instincts kicking in. With a slight cringe of the shoulders and lowering of the head, avoiding any hint of challenging body language whatsoever, I passed respectfully, with no incident.
This morning, I came so quietly out of one narrow space that I startled a beaver who in turn startled me. No picture for this one, but if I had been ready, it would have been a great close up! Those guys are huge, by the way; this one, enormous! His mighty kerthunk of tail on the water almost got me wet.
I was also able to settle down into meaningful work, get some satisfying things checked off the list, and have a validating conversation with a friend. And an extra bonus is a husband who can listen without trying to fix what I just need to say out loud. All good things to get a week off to a proper start.
So today's reflection is more about yellow lilies on the water, and the simple blessings of friends (forest and otherwise), long loves, and meaningful work. Pretty sweet for a Tuesday, I'd say.
Hope yours provides good things too, whatever that means for you.
Monday, July 6, 2026
Intentionality
If you take the hottest days of the season so far, some with record-breaking highs ("feels like" 46!)....
And you pack in a trip back to the city, which is a thing all by itself considering loading the boat and then the van in the heat (so grateful for AC in the vehicle!)...
Then add groceries, banking, laundry, supplies pick-up in prep for family time next week, and a haircut (which didn't turn out so well)...
Tuck in times to meet one new baby in KW, catch up with our kids, stop in at a friend's (every conversation a joy)...
Then add two nights of hot sleeping (really should have bought that extra fan), and a false alarm with our smoke detectors that happened just after I fell asleep and then had me on high-intensity for a little longer while after that (man, that's loud!)....
Then, next morning, reload the van, including a cooler that's going to have to do the trick for an extended period of time, be extra sure you've left the house in good order, which feels mentally harder to do given the poor sleep and continued heat (where's that list again?)...
Then stop in for two important connections in Toronto, one to meet yet another new baby (what a happy thing to celebrate!), that includes chatting with high school buddies not seen in decades (oh the stories!), and the other to briefly touch base with a family member facing impossible challenges with honesty and courage (so much more to say here, except there are no words)....
Arrive back to the cottage to still hot-enough-to-notice-while-loading-and-unloading-the boat temperatures, put away only what absolutely needs to be put away, collapse into bed where (yay!) blankets are actually needed because the heat wave broke...
Wake up to get ready for and then joyfully participate in leading the first service of Cognashene Community Church, right her on the Freddy Channel (always such a delight to open the season together!)....
Have a long and needed nap in the afternoon (Sunday afternoon naps are sacred) but still feeling very slow and low after...
And wind up the whole string of days with a perfect evening to calm and reorient myself by the water, being unfortunately and sadly overtaken by four-consecutive-hours of excessively loud music coming from neighbours on our little bay who seem to have forgotten the manners and restraint they've exercised fairly well in the last five years since we last had this persistent problem (and oh it's that dreadful here-we-go-again feeling).
By this morning, Monday morning, the morning of the week I usually find so positive and refreshing and shiny and new with so many wonderful possibilities ahead....Here I am trying to have grace with myself. since I'm up way too early, feeling unusually agitated, not quite yet able to settle into an intentional space of gratitude and joy.
The flow of these past "everything" days has pulled me in and out of really good and really not-good zones. When I lay it all out like I've just done here, I can see it. So I'm trying to only pick up the happy stuff, and then sort out what I need to do, if I can do anything, about the other stuff.
Good news is that residents of Georgian Bay Township do have a clear recourse in reporting noise complaints, the week ahead has us staying quietly put for the most part, the heat wave has broken for now with cooler nights, and hair grows.
And, of course, the abundance of life that is reflected in our events of the last few days is truly an amazing gift. I know that, and am grateful, truly.
Perhaps I'll get out for paddle number 10 today.
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
God Keep Our Land
Monday, June 29, 2026
It's Monday, Summer's A-Comin'
With this being the view from my workstation, who can complain about a Monday morning? Actually, Mondays are one of my favourite days in any work-week situation (I'm weird like that, but I'm also a morning person, so there's that). But this....plus my little friends? I mean, come on. Inspiration and quiet productivity are just built into the deal.
I've also been able to capture a picture of the other bird who's built a nest under our eves off to the side a little.
The ap on my phone identifies this as a phoebe, further confirmed by the characteristic 'pumping of the tail.' Oh so much more cautious! It's taken me a long time to be able to even get any photo at all, let alone one that could identify her. But I think she's figuring out how to take care of her brood with me here on the deck. Of interest, I'm noticing that I can tell which bird has recently landed nearby just by the sound of their wings. It's different for the blue jay, jenny wren, and phoebe. Of course, should the blue heron drop by there's no doubt who's making that falomp-falomp of an entrance!
Of course I have to mention my chipmunk friends as well. I've counted as many as five on the deck at the same time. Make that six. Another one just showed up. Word's gotten out.
Okay, enough visiting over breakfast. Time to get at it. Working from home was never so good. I've got a satisfying list before me, all fresh and unchecked and waiting. Later my accompanist (guitar) for the children's story/song on Sunday is coming by for a mini rehearsal. Should be fun.
And later, yes, it sounds like summer might show up after all. We have the fans ready, and lots of ice in the freezer. Of course, it's always a little cooler here by the water, and the famous Georgian Bay breezes are so welcome on the hot days.
Stay cool and delighted everyone. Hope you have AC if you need it. Hope you have sweet friends to keep you company. Hope the week starts off in a way that's all ready for summer!
Saturday, June 27, 2026
The Boat that Came Back
This will be a simple story of faith in humankind.
Opening weekend at the cottage - this year for us it was a May 22 to 25 extended weekend - has many tasks. That's why we conscript the strong backs of family members to come along and help make it happen.
One of the tasks that got done that weekend was carrying our small runabout boat out from the boathouse and onto the dock. Next step would be to put on the motor and put it in the water, as seen here in a picture from last year. But we didn't get to it. No worries. It was up safely on the black dock and would be fine until we came back to stay in two weeks.
That's what we thought.
After our return, it took us a few days to even notice it was missing. We're used to seeing the dock empty as well as with a boat parked on top. And the flurry of opening can be distracting. So it's understandable. But that week, after a heavy rain when Ken felt he should go over to bail it out....it wasn't there.
The boat itself isn't any great thing. It was purchased by Ken's Grandmother in 1955, he thinks, so it's rocking 70 years old. It's of standard design, well-made, been painted more times than we can remember, and has had the seats replaced a few times too. Last year we purchased a new motor for this boat, with the hopes that this year we could begin some decent lessons for the younger ones. So, no great thing, but pretty special to us.
There's an unspoken Cognashene code up here. Nobody bothers your property. Call it a throw back to simpler times when decent honest living and the trust that arises from that was a real thing. But honestly, any reports of stolen items or break and enters are largely unheard of up here.
I will say that we did have an antique cedar canoe get lifted from the old boathouse that year we couldn't put the door on the large front opening properly, and you could see in. We figured it was too much of a temptation for some eager collector with an apparently underdeveloped conscience. But other than that, no problem.
We considered whether or not we should notify the police. We also considered whether it actually just blew off the dock -- no one could remember tying it down -- and floated along the channel somehow. We did a quick cruise back and forth but didn't see anything. Then we had to come back to the city, and decided to pick things up when we got back.
Except when we got back....
...there she was, in all her glory. Someone had taken the time and the effort not just to bring our boat back to our dock, but to drag it right up onto the rocks and tie it up properly, which is what we should have done in the first place.
So cedar canoes notwithstanding, perhaps there is no throw back. Maybe it's all still happening now. Maybe, obviously, common decency and human goodness is still very much a thing.
Of course it is.
And of course we all have a part in making it so.
So a big, big thank you to the kind person who returned out boat. I'm hoping to spread the word around here to see if we can discover who it was so as to say a proper thank you. Might even make a big sign and just attach it to the boat, hoping whoever it was drives by and knows how much we appreciate it.
Here's to kids' boating lessons this summer!
Here's to securing your boat properly!
Here's to the basic decency in human hearts that makes the world so much of a better place!
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Rationing the Chia Seeds