8B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD Insensitive question leaves grieving mother speechless DEAR ABBY: My started with daughter unex- announcing to DEAR ABBY pectedly died very me that I was recently. A “friend” adopted and called today asking progressed to how I was doing (quarantine, food, pet saying in front of me, “Let’s have a food, etc). Then she asked me the most family reunion” and not inviting me. unnerving question: “Do you have When our father died, she was ‘June’ with you?” I was fl oored. So his executor. She showed the will to many thoughts came rushing at me at my sisters, but would not allow me once. June was disabled since birth. to see it. Yes, I was in the will as an She went to live in a group home nine equal. She told the attorney I was a years ago. The friend knew I brought granddaughter, which I caught and her home for weekends. corrected. After I didn’t speak for several min- When I told my oldest sister my feel- utes, she asked in an annoyed tone, ings were hurt, she accused me of be- “Well, did you go get her ashes or not?” ing jealous and blocked me on social (As if having her ashes with me was a media. It’s hard to disengage because comfort? It isn’t!) Abby, I didn’t know I have no other family, but I keep busy what to say. Her question slammed in other social circles. I was unable to me against the wall. I mumbled a re- have kids, and the one child I adopted sponse, said I had to go and hung up. is busy working in another state, so it’s I’m trying to make myself believe just my husband and me now. she meant nothing but concern, but I I tried for years to be nice and to can’t seem to make myself believe that contribute as much as possible. I know the words she used weren’t purposely I have done nothing wrong. I have cruel. My warm feelings for her have searched my soul to see why I deserve changed to something ugly. I’m still this treatment. I don’t! Should I just gasping. Your thoughts? let go of my family since at least two — GRIEVING MOTHER of my three sisters seem to want to let go of me? DEAR GRIEVING MOTHER: — LEFT OUT IN FLORIDA Let’s give the woman a perfect 10 on the insensitivity meter. She was DEAR LEFT OUT: Yes, you should. tactless, but she may not have meant Disengaging from the emotionally to be unkind. My thought is that you abusive sisters who treat you cruelly handled the situation as well as you would be healthy for you. Maintain a could since her question left you un- relationship with the one who is open derstandably fl at-footed. However, I to it. would have answered her differently. I have advised more than once in I would have responded, “Why do you this column that sometimes it’s neces- ask?” and let her explain herself. sary to create a family of one’s own if circumstances prevent a normal DEAR ABBY: My older sister bul- relationship with a person’s birth lied me from the time our parents family. You and your husband should divorced. I was in elementary school, continue branching out socially. I and she was in middle school. We predict that once you move in that are now adults and retired. Her form direction, you will be far happier than of bullying now is to exclude me. It you are today. COFFEE BREAK SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 2020 DETOURED Continued from Page 2B Fremont Powerhouse We stopped next at the Fremont Powerhouse, one of the best preserved pieces of the region’s mining legacy. The stone structure, about 5 miles from Granite, was built in 1908 to power the Red Boy Mine, less than a mile to the east. Eastern Oregon Power and Light acquired the powerhouse in 1911 and operated it until 1940. Beaver Meadows near Granite. California-Pacifi c Utilities Co. then ran the Fremont until 1967, when it spat out its fi nal kilowatt. The company donated the prop- erty to the U.S. Forest Service. A heavy burden of rain-soaked snow collapsed the Fremont’s roof in 1993, but a crew of National Guard members, supervised by Joe Batty, restored the 2,300-square-foot structure during the summer of 1999. The Fremont is closed due to the coronavirus pandemic. Normally it is open during the summer, and four cabins on the property are available to rent. Beaver Meadows Rather than drive straight back to Granite and Sumpter — an option that was, however, en- thusiastically endorsed from the back seat — I veered south onto Forest Road 13, which follows Clear Creek toward its headwa- ters in the Greenhorn Mountains. We parked at the junction with Road 19, the Beaver Meadows Road. I hadn’t been here for probably a decade and a half, and so I had forgotten how lovely the mead- ows are through which Beaver Creek fl ows. It is an unusual stream. Meadows and streams tend to go together, of course. But I can’t offhand think of another creek in that general vicinity that has such an extent of meadows — several miles — along its course. We walked the road for 45 min- utes or so before turning around. Lisa Britton / For the EO Media Group Lisa Britton / For the EO Media Group Beaver dams have created a series of ponds at Sumpter Valley Dredge State Heritage Area. On the way back we were halted for a couple of minutes to let a caravan of motorcycles, four- wheelers and side-by-sides roll past. The group, all from Walla Walla, Washington, one rider told us, had started at Sumpter and was headed to Granite. Three people, each in a different vehicle, posed to us a similar version of the same query — “Is this the way to Granite, and how far is it?” — that suggested they were ready to take a break from bouncing along. We saw them, all parked together, in Granite on our way back to Sumpter. Sumpter Dredge We procured our lunch as planned from the Nugget and then drove to the Sumpter Val- ley Dredge State Heritage Area to eat at a picnic table beneath a towering cottonwood. Afterward we strolled over to the dredge, which was open for self-guided tours. We also hiked some of the trails through the piles of gravel and boulders that are the detri- tus of the 1,250-ton dredge that churned through the Sumpter Valley between 1913 and 1954, plying its deposits of placer gold. There is perhaps no better place in Baker County to see the handiwork of beavers — better, certainly, than Beaver Creek, where I didn’t see any evidence of the industrious rodents. Beaver colonies have built dams among the dredge tailing piles, creating a series of ponds.