Friday, July 3, 2026

The Bear Trash Can (aka my recycling bin)

 This post might get a little long, there's a story to tell.  Bear with me.  (Ha ha, you'll get the pun if you read all the way through.)

This is my "recycling bin".  It is what I've put my recyclables into for over 20 years.  We do not have curbside recycling out in the country where this little place here is located.  We have to provide our own collection container and drive our recyclables to a transfer station or other recycling location (depending on what we are trying to recycle).  As mentioned in this recent post.

Prior to being my recycling bin, it was our trash can.  Around the time we finished building the house and moved into this little place here, most of the trash companies were getting out of bag pick-up and going to wheeled trash bins that they provided their customers.  So my trash can became my recycling bin in the early 2000's.

About ten years prior to that; in 1991, DH and I purchased it (most likely from Pamida or Kmart, as those were the two housewares shopping options where we lived) when we moved to the U.P. (Upper Peninsula for you non-Michiganders and non-Sconnies).  We kept it in our enclosed, but unheated, back porch in the first rental we lived in while DH was in college at the engineering college there.  The second rental we lived in, his final year of college, did not have an enclosed porch.  So we kept this trash can on the back deck of our mobile home which was situated on a corner of the landlord's farm, with woods about 50' from our back door.

The close proximity to the woods is important here.  Because it's how the recycling bin got to be known as the Bear Trash Can in our family.

There were (and still are) black bears in that part of Michigan.  Occasionally we'd see a bear on one of the dirt roads we drove on going to or from work (me) or classes (DH). Including the dirt road we lived on. More consistently, they could be spotted near the dumpsters behind the grocery store in town.

One night, in very early April 1993 (we remember the time frame because DS2 was born the second week of March that year, and he was not yet a month old), DH and I both were woken up from a sound sleep (remember, we had a newborn, so if we were actually asleep it was a pass out from exhaustion kind of sleep!) by what sounded like footsteps and heavy breathing in our living room.

He looked at me, and I looked at him, both wide-eyed in the darkness, and he said "Did you hear that?" To which I replied with a question and a request "Is somebody in the house?  You get up and go check!"

With hearts hammering, I checked on DS2 asleep in basinette right next to the bed, and DH grabbed a baseball bat (why it was in our bedroom, I have no clue). He quietly slipped out of the bedroom, through the utility/laundry room that joined our added-on master bedroom to the rest of the mobile home, and peeked around the corner where the kithen was to his left and the living room to his right.  Turning on lights as he went, he searched the living room, hallway, bathroom, DS1's little bedroom (where he was thankfully still asleep), then the kitchen last.  He found no person in our home, even though he checked behind the shower curtain in the bathroom; we were both that sure we'd heard the breath and heavy footsteps of a human.

Sure now that there was no one in the home, DH stepped out onto the back porch and shone a flashlight around toward the driveway, looking for a person or a car.  Seeing nothing but our own vehicles, he went back to bed where we rehashed what we'd heard.  Eventually we both calmed down enough to get back to sleep, although I'm pretty sure there was a diaper change and feeding for DS2 first.

The next morning, DH went outside for something (I don't remember what, very possibly to drive to the college and go to class), but that's when he noticed our trash can was missing.  It had been on the back deck the night before, and now was not there.  In the daylight he could see much further than he had with the flashlight the night before, and he thought he could see a bit of blue out in the woods behind the house.  So he walked out to investigate, and found our trash can.

As you can see in the picture at the beginning of this story, it has handles that latch down to hold the lid on.  When DH found it, the lid was not on it anymore, and our trash was scattered around.  That was odd.  

Finding the lid, he picked it up to place it back on the trash can (he had gathered up all the trash that he could and put it in the can).  That's when he noticed two punctures near one of the handles.  Weird, but whatever.

(Ignore the flyspecks.  Ugh.  Apparently I need to wash my recycling bin.)

It wasn't until the following weekend, when we took our trash to the township collection site (they were open twice a month for residents to bring in their trash; no pick-up service available in that rural spot in the 1990s) that one of the men working there commented on our trash can lid.

"Looks like you had a bear, eh?" he said.

 And suddenly it all made sense.  Those footsteps and the heavy breathing that had woken us up that one night?  That wasn't a human intruder in our living room.  That was a hungry bear on our back deck (the other side of the living room wall) snuffling around and absconding with our trash can.  Those punctures in the lid?  Bear tooth marks, where it had bit the lid while prying it off to get to the trash inside.

So that's why, even though we haven't needed a trash can for trash in over two decades, we didn't get rid of it.  We kept it and repurposed it for holding recyclables.  That trash can is a part of our history, with a great story of its own, and neither DH nor I will ever willingly part from it.  Its the Bear Trash Can.



Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Books Read in 2026: June

 A Murder for the Books by Victoria Gilbert.  I picked this one off the library shelf because the cover looked interesting.  The blurb sounded like it might be good.  And then I got it home, looked at the cover some more and thought "I think I've read this before".  But, rereading the blurb, I wasn't sure if I had or if the storyline was just similar to a few others I've read in recent years.  However, by Chapter Two I was predicting what would happen next, what 'new' character was about to come into the story--right down to their name, and I knew that yep, I have read this book.  Well, into the DNF pile it went (although, technically if I read it all the way through in the past [covid times???] is it truly a Did Not Finish?)  Like movies and TV shows, if I've read a book before it gets stored in some corner of my brain and then when I try to read/watch it again my brain goes "here, this is what's going to happen now and now and now, the end, let's think about something else shall we?"  In other words, my concentration and enjoyment go out the window.  Been there, done that, next!


The Secret History of Audrey James by Heather Marshall. I picked this one up at the spring book swap based on the blurb on the back of the book.  Sounded like it could be interesting, depending on how it was done.  It was alternately interesting, horrifying, somewhat frustrating (as in sometimes I felt the author was putting too many twists--character lifestyle wise--into the time period in question), a bit stale and trite, and I set it down, took a break, and picked it up again several times. I did finish it; about 2/3 the way through I thought I knew how it would end, what would be revealed in the final third, and so I did read it completely.  Yes, I had figured it out.  Overall, I think I did like the book and may possibly look up more from this author.

Eleanor Oliphant is completely fine by Gail Honeyman.  Not sure where I first saw this book mentioned, but I ordered it from my local library. It sucked me in.  What's that trite movie review quote?  "I laughed.  I cried."  Very apt for this book.  Entertaining and thought provoking (at least for me) at the same time. Two thumbs up.


Murder Unshelved by Vannetta Chapman.  This is an author that I have read for years, mostly liking her murder mysteries more than her Amish fiction.  This is her latest mystery (maybe the beginning of a new series?)  If I may be blunt here, it was awful.  Started out good, got a little questionable (Was it written by AI?  By a high schooler? Was it editedn for content at all?) about a third of the way through and just past halfway I was so sick of the ever weakening writing that if it wasn't a short book I would have just set it down as a DNF.  Instead I forged on to the end.  But I don't think I will read another book by this author ever again.

How To Ride The Horse You Thought You Bought by Anne Buchanan.  Another book I saw somewhere online and decided to see if I could borrow it from the library.  While my local county library system didn't have it, I was able to get it via the statewide library interloan.  So far, I've only read the first few chapters, which are very basic.  Not to say they are lacking, but rather that after 40+ years with horses there wasn't anything in them I haven't known for a long long time.  Hoping that further into the book there will be clear to understand descriptions of much more technical and difficult stuff (ie. perhaps new or stated in a new way to me)  Everything so far has been written in an easy to understand format and with helpful illustrations.