Thursday, June 25, 2026

I Love Mushrooms

Click on any image to enlarge.
 

If I seem a bit more forgetful than usual lately, I’m blaming it on the mushrooms. Early this morning, I headed for the garage to open the doors and let in the fresh, cool air. But walking through the kitchen, I was distracted by the spore print on the counter—a simple grade-school project I somehow missed until now. The intricate detail amazed me, and a tiny mushroom face smiled up at me. By the time I returned to the garage doors, warm sunlight was already pouring in. 



Lately, mushrooms have been stopping me in my tracks. I’m intrigued by their beauty, and I can barely walk a dozen feet in the yard without tripping over one. But I’m not the only one here who enjoys them. Squirrels and chipmunks feast on them, apparently unaffected by toxins, while turtles, turkeys, and deer also include mushrooms in their diets. Often, I see discarded stems, like when you eat the middle of an Oreo cookie and leave the rest behind.





Mushrooms fascinate me: fresh from the ground with perfect baby skin...



pushing leaves and sticks aside...



or elephant-skinned with life scars and lots of character. 



Some, tiny as peas, catch the eye with neon colors...



while others show off their gills and stripes.

I love mushrooms, but more than that, far more, I love the One who made them, who also made the stars… and us. 
Through Jesus, He calls us into a relationship with Him: He invites us to call Him Father.


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Thistles and Silverlinings


It’s funny what you can find when you’re looking for something else.

Nearly three years ago, a fierce August windstorm leveled many trees here, ours included. Though devastating at first, we quickly enlisted a logger and a dozer operator to clear the property around the house. Since then, we have had more grass and fewer trees, but subtler changes have only recently become evident. For example, the pond is less shaded now, and the increased sunlight has led to rampant growth.




In the past weeks, I monitored musk thistle’s progress on the pond bank from afar—a tall, beautiful but extremely thorny, non-native invasive plant. The Missouri Department of Conservation says a single plant can produce 11,000 seeds, spread by silky parachutes. In fact, they feel so strongly about it that they require landowners to control it, with a fine as an added incentive. 

I planned to dig up the two or three plants I saw before their flowers went to seed, but the ground was dry, the days were busy, and I looked forward to the task about as much as, say, trimming a bobcat’s claws. It’s easy to postpone something like that. Then, a soaking rain left me with no excuse. On a recent morning, I suited up in Don’s Vietnam-era flight suit, sprayed with permethrin, pulled on rubber boots, donned heavy fireplace gloves, and waded into the weeds, ready to deal with thistles, ticks, chiggers, snakes, and cougars. The two or three plants I thought were there turned out to be two dozen plants. Unfortunately, while I was procrastinating, two of the flowers had already headed out, but that morning they were still wet with dew, and I was able to bag most of the seeds. When the few remaining seeds lifted on the breeze, I leaped for them in my ungainly flight-suit and rubber-boot ballet, grateful not to have an audience. But I didn’t like to contemplate the numbers. Say 20 seeds got away. If only half of them mature, the next generation could produce 110,000 seeds because of my delay. When will I ever learn?
Despite this, my Saturday excursion had a silver lining. The tall thistles advertised their location, and a new blackberry patch was hidden beside them. Our last berries vanished 30 years ago, so it’s sweet to see them again. They are small, hard, and glossy red now, and if all goes well in the next few weeks, I'll help them find their way into a pie. I owe it to the thistles.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Expectations




My dog, Gus, is pouting tonight. After the stretch of snow and frigid weather, when we had a fire in the fireplace every evening, he’s come to expect it, like kids who get s'mores at every campfire. His head in my lap, he stares into my eyes with his mournful ones. I eliminated the other possible causes—did he have to go outside? We went. Did he want a treat? Always, and I gave him one. Finally, disgruntled, he crept into the living room and lay down in front of a cold fireplace. But hey, it was 55 degrees out today.



Gus isn’t the only one around here with expectations. The nuthatch counts on finding dried mealworms on the kitchen windowsill every morning. It snatches one in its scissor-like beak and flies away. The male bluebird assumes there’ll be fresh water in the birdbath before he goes to battle with his adversary, his reflection in the bedroom window. And most of the frequent-flier songbirds anticipate black oil sunflower seeds in the bird feeder. But my buddy, Gus, thinks he deserves a few more perks than the birds, and he’s probably right.


Gus reveled in the snow. At first light, he was out the door like a released rocket, running in broad circles and diving face-first in mid-stride to scoop up a bite of the closest thing he’ll get to ice cream. 



Then he’d survey his kingdom and patrol the pond. As cold as it’s been, he didn’t last long, but would come inside and park in his favorite spot. The fireplace.

As warm as it was today, I started feeling chilly this evening. So, now, there’s a fire in the fireplace, and both of us are happy. Pass the marshmallows, please.


Wednesday, December 24, 2025


Every December, I retrieve a worn box from the basement containing a creche with clay figures Tava brought from Mexico. As I arrange them, I play my favorite Christmas music—James Taylor at Christmas—and reflect on the story set in a humble manger: the miracle of Mary’s baby, fully human and fully God, and the wide-eyed shepherds who came to worship. In this nativity set, the shepherds are absent, but they have left their little lamb to hold their place. 

The wise men appear with their gifts, though in the Gospel account, they visited Mary and Joseph later at home (see Matthew 2). An ox and a ram rest nearby, and though the scripture doesn’t specify animals, we can easily see them fitting into the manger scene. But then, there are the whimsical figures—a giraffe peering over Joseph’s shoulder and a baby elephant at the infant King’s feet—as if they belonged there. 
At first, it’s easy to dismiss the elephant and giraffe as not part of the historical account. But viewed allegorically, we might see ourselves in those out-of-place creatures—for who of us is worthy to stand before the God of Heaven? We are more out of place in God’s throne room than a giraffe in a manger. Yet because Jesus was born and offered His life as a sacrifice, we are invited into a relationship with an open door to God. 
Scripture describes this access: “...in Jesus Christ our Lord and through faith in Him, we may approach God with freedom and confidence” (Ephesians 3:11-12).
With that access in mind, the question naturally arises: how should we respond to Him? The last stanza of the old Christmas Carol “In the Bleak Midwinter” answers that question simply for me: 
If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb. 
If I were a wise man, I would know my part. 
What then can I give Him? 
I must give my heart.

My favorite version of that song is by James Taylor. You can hear it here.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

At the Top of the Pillar

At the top of our front porch pillar is a colorful nest where five baby phoebes peer down silently as I pass. They stack together like spices in a pantry, and with their insatiable appetites, both parents work in tandem to provide a steady stream of food.


Early in the morning, I hear the male phoebe's song from across the yard. Perched on a bare yucca stem, he scans the ground for a fat bug to feed his nestlings. He swoops down, flying low like a crop duster, and pivots to catch his plump prey. After admiring his kill for a moment, he flies up to deliver a meal to the hungry chicks. Following him, the female wrestles with a butterfly to provide dinner for the voracious nestlings. Not all of their prey submit willingly. 



By this afternoon, three of the nestlings had climbed out of the nest and onto the pillar ledge, creating some breathing room in their stifling quarters. They won't be here much longer. At least then, the butterflies will be able to breathe a little easier.