COFFEE BREAK 6B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD SATURDAY, MAY 22, 2021 Sibling wrestles with lingering effects of abuse DEAR ABBY: I had a horrible childhood with a mean mother who berated and took her issues out on me. I also had an older brother who enjoyed making fun of me and embarrassed me in front of others to get his kicks. He still never misses an opportunity to pull a “gotcha.” I was raised at a time when child abuse was considered making a kid tough. What it did to me was break me down emotionally. Does PTSD ever go away, or do I have to live with it to the end? DEAR ABBY go away on its own, and you do not have to “live with it.” Distance your- self as much as possible from your bully brother. You can fi nd the help you need by asking your physician or insurance company to refer you to a licensed psychotherapist who specializes in patients with PTSD. You won’t be the fi rst person to do “couch time” after an abusive child- — JUST GETTING BY IN hood. Trust me on that. NEW YORK DEAR ABBY: My father-in-law DEAR JUST GETTING BY: I’m has spent every Friday night with sorry for the abuse to which you my husband and me for two years, were subjected. PTSD does not ever since my mother-in-law passed BOUNDARY away. My husband spends every Tuesday evening with him at his house. My sister-in-law is building a room onto her house for him to live in (he is selling his house). My husband and sister-in-law call him two or three times a day. Abby, my father-in-law is healthy and still drives. He never pays for any food — my husband and sister-in-law buy all his food. He’s a wealthy man, but stingy. I think my husband and his sister are obsessed. What do you think? I’m so tired of this. I don’t want him staying at my house. I need privacy! Help! and his sister appear to be devoted to their father. Either that, or they may anticipate a big payday once their wealthy parent expires. More than privacy, you may need a break. Arrange to spend some of those Friday nights with women friends, and perhaps his presence will be less onerous. A notable example is the border between Baker and Grant counties. For more than 30 miles the western boundary of Baker County, and the eastern border of Grant, is defi ned by the hydrologic divide between the Powder River and the North Fork of the John Day River. This past Sunday, May 16, I went for a hike with my wife, Lisa, and our son, Max, during which we crossed that divide — and the county line — in the mountains several miles northwest of Sumpter. Our route was on a forest road with moderate grades and occasional views of the multiple mountain ranges. It was a fi ne morning for a hike, the penultimate day of the summery stretch that has since been rudely inter- rupted by weather more typi- cal of March than May. Forest Road 900 branches off the Elkhorn Drive Scenic Byway northwest of Sumpter (see “If You Go ...” box on Page 1B). From the Byway it’s about 2.2 miles, with an eleva- tion gain of 700 feet, to the divide that marks the county boundary. We drove up Road 900 for a little more than a mile, starting our hike near where the road runs beneath the Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative power line that goes to Granite. The road runs through a classic Blue Mountains mixed-conifer forest. On the warmer, drier south-facing slopes big ponderosa pines share space with grand fi rs and Douglas-fi rs, while on weather | Go to AccuWeather.com DEAR SNUBBED: I think you and your husband are more than DEAR ABBY: We welcomed new neighborly. I also think you are neighbors and allowed them to use blessed with common sense, some- our garbage can until they got one, and gave them a bottle of wine and a thing your new neighbors may lack. housewarming card. We also offered My advice is to let this unfortunate to let them use our downstairs bath- incident slide without holding a grudge. Take the high road and room until the contractor fi nished move on. Nothing positive will come — OVER IT NOW IN theirs. No one else on the block did of allowing this to fester. Whether TENNESSEE anything for them. Nothing. the couple is worth knowing better They then invited a neighbor will become apparent with time. DEAR OVER IT: Your husband and his wife over for drinks and AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 51/58 Kennewick 53/63 St. Helens 52/67 52/67 51/73 53/65 48/66 Condon SUN MON TUE WED Partly cloudy and chilly Warmer with a shower Times of clouds and sun A shower in the morning Partly sunny 66 41 62 38 67 36 Eugene 10 4 8 48/64 65 43 63 41 69 40 9 8 10 La Grande 38 64 41 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 1 8 35 59 38 Comfort Index™ 1 64 39 10 10 10 TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Thursday Low Thursday High: 100° Low: 21° Wettest: 4.08” 53° 33° 57° 39° 60° 34° PRECIPITATION (inches) Thursday Trace Month to date 0.03 Normal month to date 0.90 Year to date 1.69 Normal year to date 3.95 Trace 0.03 1.26 5.87 7.07 Trace 0.05 1.41 13.76 11.10 AGRICULTURAL INFO. HAY INFORMATION SUNDAY Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration 45% WNW at 7 to 14 mph 3.2 0.12 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Friday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 50/62 17% of capacity 93% of capacity 51% of capacity 98% of capacity 59% of capacity 91% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Thursday) Grande Ronde at Troy 5060 cfs Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder 107 cfs Burnt River near Unity 102 cfs Umatilla River near Gibbon 222 cfs Minam River at Minam 1270 cfs Powder River near Richland 40 cfs Phoenix, Ariz. Crater Lake, Ore. Lafayette, La. OREGON High: 68° Low: 21° Wettest: 0.51” Hermiston Crater Lake Rome WEATHER HISTORY On May 22, 1804, a tornado ripped through New Brunswick, N.J. A hotel, two barns and three houses were destroyed. Most tornadoes in the U.S. hit areas from the central Plains through the Ohio Valley. SUN & MOON SAT. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset 5:15 a.m. 8:24 p.m. 3:47 p.m. 3:27 a.m. SUN. 5:14 a.m. 8:25 p.m. 5:07 p.m. 3:50 a.m. MOON PHASES Full May 26 Last Jun 2 New Jun 10 First Jun 17 38/58 Beaver Marsh 32/59 Roseburg Powers Brothers 45/59 Coos Bay 49/69 Burns Jordan Valley 36/55 Paisley 36/60 Frenchglen 40/59 Klamath Falls 35/63 Hi/Lo/W 58/49/sh 64/38/c 62/45/c 60/47/pc 61/36/sh 58/45/pc 66/46/pc 57/41/c 64/41/pc 64/46/pc 77/51/pc 67/51/pc 60/41/sh 59/39/c 58/36/sh 80/49/pc 63/35/pc 60/33/sh Hi/Lo/W 59/49/sh 66/41/sh 70/48/pc 59/48/pc 67/41/pc 60/47/sh 68/48/c 66/43/pc 65/40/pc 69/48/c 76/51/pc 68/52/sh 69/43/c 66/43/pc 60/40/c 78/51/s 68/43/pc 66/38/t Grand View Arock 42/67 39/58 Lakeview 31/60 McDermitt 37/58 RECREATION FORECAST SUNDAY REGIONAL CITIES City Astoria Bend Boise Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Council Elgin Eugene Hermiston Hood River Imnaha John Day Joseph Kennewick Klamath Falls Lakeview Diamond 39/58 40/62 Shown is Sunday’s weather. Temperatures are Saturday night’s lows and Sunday’s highs. MON. Boise 41/62 Fields 47/73 SUN. 41/66 Silver Lake 36/58 Medford Brookings Juntura 37/61 47/75 47/60 Ontario 43/68 36/62 Chiloquin Grants Pass Huntington 36/55 42/64 Oakridge 40/57 44/62 Seneca Bend Elkton Council 36/63 41/59 43/63 Florence THURSDAY EXTREMES ALMANAC 33/53 John Day 41/64 Sisters 48/58 Comfort Index takes into account how the weather will feel based on a combination of factors. A rating of 10 feels very comfortable while a rating of 0 feels very uncomfortable. 37/63 Baker City Redmond 49/57 Halfway Granite 47/66 Newport 50/66 60 38 44/67 45/58 51/67 48/54 61 40 4 Corvallis Enterprise 35/59 38/64 Monument 47/71 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 4 Elgin 37/64 La Grande 44/65 Maupin 0 45/71 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 47/70 Hood River 40/71 TIllamook 36 63 39 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 45/80 Vancouver 51/66 50/58 Comfort Index™ — SNUBBED IN THE SOUTH tallest peak between the Elk- horns and Steens Mountain; and fi nally a brief glimpse, through a gap in the interven- ing ridges, of Dixie Butte. I briefl y considered making a loop hike — I generally abhor backtracking — but after a quick look at the map I decided against that option. To get back to the 900 Road junction we’d have had to walk nearly three miles on the shoulder of the Elkhorn Byway. Returning the way we’d come was both shorter and, perhaps more attractive on a day that had warmed into the 70s, much shadier. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald The grandest viewpoint The Greenhorn Mountains seen from Forest Road 900, near the Baker-Grant county border. turned out to be almost within sight of where we the shadier north and east As we didn’t want to was no need to perch its sight — the Greenhorns, with parked. We came round a cor- slopes, where snowdrifts de- regain several hundred feet lookout atop a tower to afford the naked pinnacle of serpen- ner and suddenly the eastern fi ed the balmy air, the stand of elevation, we opted to stay the fi rewatcher an expansive tine, the actual green horn, horizon was dominated by the is a denser, more diverse on Road 900, which is mostly view. standing conspicuous below Elkhorns, and in particular combination of tamarack, fl at as it contours along a At each bend in the road Vinegar Hill, the range’s apex; Rock Creek Butte, highest in lodgepole and grand fi r. slope. another range came into then Strawberry Mountain, the range at 9,106 feet. The road switchbacks a I’m glad we did, not so couple times before reaching much for the easier hiking the 5,800-foot crest of the but because of the views ridge in a wide saddle. This from the relatively lofty is the sort of remote moun- vantage point. First to appear tain intersection that always between gaps in the forest — intrigues me because it is mostly young lodgepoles that such a natural rendezvous recolonized this area follow- spot. I wonder how many ing bark beetle outbreaks gatherings have happened and fi res decades ago — was here, how many times hunt- shield-shaped Desolation ers have paused on a snowy Butte, its fi re lookout tower November day to talk about barely discernible. elk, or fi refi ghters have As the road continued stopped to spread a map south we had a fi ne view of across a pickup truck’s warm Mount Ireland, another sum- hood while searching for a mit capped by a fi re lookout reported plume of smoke. that’s staffed each summer. Another road — the 850 Ireland’s lookout, though — joins Road 900 here. Road several miles closer, isn’t vis- 850 descends for a mile or so ible from this point, though to Bull Run Creek and Gold — unlike the thickly forested Center, where a pipe spills (if curiously named) Desola- frigid spring water at a turn- tion, Mount Ireland’s summit out on the Elkhorn Byway. is mostly bare rock, so there Continued from Page 1B Baker City didn’t invite us. My husband says I shouldn’t be offended by this. I cer- tainly would have had the neighbors who had welcomed me over fi rst. What do you think? City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla SUN. MON. Hi/Lo/W 70/54/pc 63/48/pc 64/41/pc 73/47/pc 54/47/pc 63/46/pc 68/47/c 79/51/pc 71/50/pc 65/50/pc 62/44/pc 64/38/c 69/47/pc 67/47/pc 69/47/pc 73/53/pc 60/37/c 71/52/pc Hi/Lo/W 74/51/c 63/50/c 65/38/pc 75/52/pc 55/47/pc 60/46/c 74/51/pc 79/52/s 73/48/pc 67/52/c 72/50/pc 68/42/c 73/52/c 69/51/c 69/45/c 73/54/c 63/39/pc 72/51/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice ANTHONY LAKES PHILLIPS LAKE Rain and snow Spotty showers 37 31 57 35 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Spotty showers A stray shower 51 37 63 42 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Spotty showers Spotty showers 44 26 58 38 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Spotty showers A shower; warmer 58 36 69 49 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK A shower; warmer A shower; warmer 63 39 64 41