Canadia-Cabina


While only five centimeters in length, it lived over half-a-billion years ago. Now extinct, the remains of this segmented worm were found in 1911, within Canada’s Burgess Shale deposits. While the actual fossil, etched in stone is black and white, the iridescent blue setae or bristles have been modeled, because its hair-like structures were thought to act as diffraction gratings.
Meanwhile, fast-forwarding to the present. What was supposed to take only three hours to dry, finally dried by day three. We’re talking powder-post beetle spray here. It had dried well on the unfinished surfaces by soaking in like it is supposed to, but on any finished surface that is relatively impermeable the liquid had beaded up into now tacky droplets. This includes the floors, treated walls, furniture and electrical outlets. We have only surveyed about half the cabin at this point, because when not actively cleaning, we retreat to the kitchen porch, as much because of the cold as the bug spraying. Cleaning consists of wet mopping the floor, parts of which have been done three times by now but still show the exterminator’s footprints. Furniture and outlets are being cleaned with wet paper towels. Frankly, it feels like cleaning up an oil spill, like with the Exxon Valdez, complete with oil glycol-soaked birds. We made the mistake of leaving out Bubs’ whirly-birds, but we can probably hose those off when the time comes. Moved on to using Mop & Glo, which didn’t do squat with either the footprints or the tackiness.
Cleanup on Aisle 5
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Candle in the Wind
Pictured is a statue of Marilyn Monroe modeled after her iconic pose from the 1955 film The Seven-Year Itch. The statue depicts the actress in a white cocktail dress designed by William Travilla. The original scene was filmed on a windy subway grating in New York City. Marilyn Monroe was a prominent American actress but died way too young. Yesterday, June 1, 2026, marks her 100th birthday. That would have made her more than a year older than Harry, who won’t turn a hundred until a year from this coming August.
Prehistoric Scorpion
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Das Gift Haus

Bob the bug guy showed up. Two hours late, but at least he came. He claimed car problems as his excuse. Anne earned kudos from him for doing such an amazing prep job. Bob said that he would be able to get the spraying done faster because of her effort. He also told us not to return until four, so that the poison can dry. We immediately decamped to the laundromat. It was so much warmer in town than at the cabin, which was lucky for me because all of my warm clothes went into the washer. After laundry we went next to Penney’s Kitchen for a late lunch. With still plenty of time to kill before we could return to the cabin, after lunch we went down to the locks to look for some boats. There was plenty of boat traffic at the locks. So much so that we lost track of the time and were walking back to the car just as the meter maid slipped a ticket under our windshield wiper. Returning to the cabin, we found puddles of poison everywhere. You couldn’t walk across the floors without tracking it everywhere. Bob had left plenty of his own wet footprints. It is all over the windows too and who knows where else. I’m glad that Anne put tarps over the furniture before we left. There is a souvenir store in the Soo called The Gift Haus. It has an old-world German vibe, but in German the Gift Haus means the poison house. Strangely appropriate today. What a mess!



