Vicki Lane's Blog, page 22
April 19, 2025
Easter Greetings!
April 18, 2025
Bluebells and Ramps
April 17, 2025
Getting Ready
It's upon us once more. The Easter Party has us scurrying to get ready. When I say us, it's mainly Justin and Claui and John. I did a bit of shopping and will be doing some cooking, but actually, I'm really enjoying the passed baton
It's not like the old days when our community turned out three or four or more new quilts every year. Last year I borrowed lots of quilts. So many that I've run out of folks to ask. This year I'll go with my own collection
I think the first Easter party was in 1979. We missed two years because of covid. So that makes this the 43rd, if my math is correct
Not bad.
April 16, 2025
Mostly Green
After the greys and browns of winter, the bright yellows and purples of spring bulbs were a delight. But the tidal wave of green that surrounds us now is balm to the soul.
Azalea
Dent d' Lion
Lemon Balm
Siberian Iris
April 15, 2025
Disappeared
Dear Sen./Rep. _________,
I write in astonishment, that the GOP appears to back their president's flouting of the law as well as his apparent determination to exercise his unchallenged power to arrest and send non-citizens and, indeed, potentially citizens, to foreign incarceration in order to claim they can't be recovered.
This 'disappearing' of any persons the regime perceives as enemies, has long been a hallmark of corrupt dictatorships around the world. Now the USA joins this shameful cohort.
What are you prepared to do to get the unlawfully deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia returned to his family?
In disgust,
Your constituent
April 14, 2025
Tax Day--But Not in NC
I was delighted to learn that all of NE, because of Helene, does not have to send in taxes till May 1. I'd been prepared to make a last minute dash to our tax preparer, but when I called, was given the good news.
It felt like being given a holiday. The taxes are ready to send, but I don't have them in hand yet. Now. there's no hurry.
I feel a little guilty, not having , as who should say, suffered due to Helene. Inconvienced, yes. We no longer have a post office in Marshall as the building was flooded and there seem to be no hurry to replace it. I can travel to Mars Hill or Weaverville if I want to mail a package--which isn't terrible but still . . .
An old and continuing annoyance re the mail is that, due to "efficiency and cost cutting" measures, our mail is no longer sorted locally but is sent to South Carolina for sorting.
Imagine! A birthday card to a nearby friend would go from our mailbox, where I leave it to be picked up by the mail carrier, then to Weaverville in the next county (where the Marshall operations have moved) and thence to Greenville, South Carolina to be returned, eventually, to the addressee --a few miles from our house.
One would almost think that DOGE was at work.
April 13, 2025
Pollinators!
The Businessman and the Broom
I've been asked if I've ever received any responses to my letters to my congressmen. Yes, all fairly generic. Rep. Chuck Edwards responded recently to one of my complaints about the tariffs:
Our president’s background as a seasoned businessman has provided him with the expertise necessary to skillfully negotiate new trade agreements to advance American interests, and I am fully supportive of his efforts to put America’s economy first. These actions have already proven effective: over 70 countries have reached out to the White House to express interest in facilitating trade negotiations.
While we may have different viewpoints on this matter, your thoughts, passion, and conviction with which you have articulated your stance is noted and respected. Through such open and honest exchanges, we should be able to work toward a more informed and balanced understanding of the issues that affect us all.
Oh, Chuck. A seasoned businessman, is he? With multiple bankruptcies and a history of stiffing creditors, he may be seasoned but is he moral? Is he making decisions for the good of the country or to line his own pockets and those of his friends and family?
I'm reminded of a business man on our rural community who ran a little country store during the Depression, giving credit to local folk in need of staples. He did so well out of his business that he ended up acquiring multiple properties in the little settlement from customers who couldn't settle their bills.
Many years later, his son bragged on his daddy's business acumen. "Daddy always had a new broom leaning against the counter and when folks came to reckon up what they were buying on credit, Daddy always counted the broom in the reckoning. Sometimes the customers caught it, but mostly they didn't. Daddy must of sold that same broom hundreds of times. He was a sharp dealer, Daddy was."
A seasoned businessman, no doubt.


