We spend time every summer in
Montana’s Flathead Valley; the same lake the same cabin. We love the warm weather – warmer than what we
get north of the border. And don’t even think about bringing an
umbrella. You won’t need one. Rain happens in the spring - only. We like that it is close enough to drive, no
flights to arrange and no connections to miss. We love fresh cherries at roadside stands. We love picking huckleberries
right off the bush. We love the lakes, beautiful Glacier Park. We love it all – well - most of it.
"Throw away all the bedding and the pillows!

Because of poor cell phone reception you have to take calls outside - but if you are outside the wasps will eat you! (Orin has 15 wasp bites to prove it.) The only option is wasp/hornet spray or a phonebooth!
What we don’t love is that we often end up sharing our holiday with uninvited guests.
One summer it was an annoying
woodpecker. No one saw him but we heard him every day, early in the morning,
and that is when we realized he was pecking away at our roof and not a tree.
One year we could not decide
whether we had bed bugs or tiny invisible poisonous spiders. Everyone developed red spots on their chests and stomachs - everyone itched. Especially the people that
slept in the bunkroom. People became cranky and began to
think of solutions.
"Throw away all the bedding and the pillows!
Burn the mattresses! Rip out all the carpeting
!"
We did throw out the pillows
and then I put my foot down!
“I am not throwing away one more
thing until we find evidence.”
But that was just the thing. There is no evidence for tiny, invisible, poisonous spiders – they are too tiny and too invisible. And we never found any bed bugs
either - just red spots and lots of itching.
Then one day we met some folks at the grocery store. They were itching and scratching just like us - with the same red spots. Turns out . . . . . they had
swimmer’s itch! And that is how we learned that our problem had nothing to do with
invisible spiders, bed bugs, or the bunkroom. It had to do with duck poop in
warm water.
This year we had some other
visitors. In fact, the whole state of Montana got to spend time with
these guys. Can you figure out who?

Because of poor cell phone reception you have to take calls outside - but if you are outside the wasps will eat you! (Orin has 15 wasp bites to prove it.) The only option is wasp/hornet spray or a phonebooth!


Orin is looking like a much younger version of himself. I loved this blog. So funny Val. We have had trouble with wasps too - four nests of them - two were in the walls of our hot tub. Bob has been on bug patrol all summer with these beasties. Well written Val. You go girl.
ReplyDeleteWe went to Lake Powell and I kept getting bitten even though there aren't supposed to be mosquitoes down there... But I think EVERYTHING was biting me... flies, spiders, anything tiny with wings...
ReplyDelete