COFFEE BREAK 8B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THuRSDAY, JunE 3, 2021 Husband reveals a frighteningly short fuse that he would kill the dog. He then turned on me, yelling and breaking things. I’ve never seen him this angry, and I am afraid it’s escalating and he will physically harm the dog or me. Is it time to leave? He’s no longer the man I married. — Fearful in Texas Dear Fearful: What you are describing is not normal behavior. Contact your doctor about the drastic change in your husband’s personality because it could be symptomatic of a serious illness. After that, the next time he pres- ents a physical danger, call the police and ensure your safety by leaving. And if you do, take your rescue dog with you. Dear Abby: I am about to start my new college experience, DEAR ABBY ADVICE Dear Abby: My husband and I have been together 23 years. A few years ago, he told a friend of his he wasn’t in love with or attracted to me. I’m the same 5-foot-6-inch, 135-pound woman he married. Recently, he has become increasingly short-tempered. He gets angry at every driver on the road, he destroyed the vacuum when it stopped working and recently went after our 10-pound rescue dog for peeing when he yelled at him. I inter- vened when he started screaming open and honest with them about your desire for neatness and tidi- ness. They may not be as partic- ular as you are, but it will pro- vide you the opportunity to live with different kinds of people. As to the peace and quiet you crave, if adapting to each other’s schedules isn’t possible, consider heading to the library to find the peace and quiet you need. I wish you luck. Dear Abby: I am retired, so I have free time on my hands. Recently, while doing a favor for a neighbor couple, I was standing on their porch when a board broke and one of my legs went through up to my thigh. They expressed concern at the time, and I told them I thought I was OK. but I have a few concerns. I’m very picky, and I enjoy my alone time. I like to keep my space clean and tidy, and I’m afraid my roommate(s) will be slobs and I’ll end up cleaning up after them. I also need alone time so I can focus on myself to recoup after a long day. When I’m here at home I will usually do that in my bed- room. But if I have roommates, that will be difficult to do. I guess I’m asking how to find a happy medium so my roommates and I can be at peace at all times. — Wants To Prepare Dear Wants: Because you didn’t specify how many room- mates you will be sharing your space with, I will assume there are more than one — which may place you in the minority. Be The next day, my knee and upper thigh were swollen and bruised. My leg is improving each day, and for that I’m thankful. This happened more than two weeks ago, and I have not gotten a phone call or any- thing else from these neighbors. Have people really gotten that insensitive, or am I making a big deal out of nothing? — Old School in Georgia Dear Old School: No, you are not making a big deal out of nothing. And yes, some people have become that insensitive. The reason for your neighbors’ silence may be lack of empathy, or it could be fear of a lawsuit. Or they may have thought it was unneces- sary to check further because you said you were OK. NEWS OF THE WEIRD Plague of ravenous, destructive mice tormenting Australians The Associated Press BOGAN GATE, Australia — At night, the floors of sheds vanish beneath carpets of scam- pering mice. Ceilings come alive with the sounds of scratching. One family blamed mice chewing elec- trical wires for their house burning down. Vast tracts of land in Australia’s New South Wales state are being threatened by a mouse plague that the state government describes as “absolutely unprecedented.” Just how many millions of rodents have infested the agricultural plains across the state is guesswork. “We’re at a critical point now where if we don’t significantly reduce the number of mice that are in plague proportions by spring, we are facing an absolute eco- nomic and social crisis in rural and regional New South Wales,” Agri- culture Minister Adam Marshall said this month. Bruce Barnes said he is taking a gamble by planting crops on his family farm near the central New South Wales town of Bogan Gate. “We just sow and hope,” he said. The risk is that the mice will maintain their numbers through the Southern Hemisphere winter and devour the wheat, barley and canola before it can be harvested. NSW Farmers, the state’s top agricultural association, predicts the plague will wipe more than $775 million from the value of the winter crop. The state government has ordered 1,320 gallons of the banned poison Bromadiolone from India. The federal govern- ment regulator has yet to approve emergency applications to use the poison on the perimeters of crops. Rick Rycroft/The Associated Press Mice scurry around stored grain on a farm near Tottenham, Australia, on May 19, 2021. Vast tracts of land in Australia’s New South Wales state are being threatened by a mouse plague the state government describes as “absolutely unprecedented.” Just how many millions of rodents have infested the agricultural plains across the state is guesswork. Critics fear the poison will kill not only mice but also animals that feed on them. including wedge-tail eagles and family pets. “We’re having to go down this path because we need something that is super strength, the equiv- alent of napalm to just blast these mice into oblivion,” Marshall said. The plague is a cruel blow to farmers in Australia’s most pop- ulous state who have been bat- tered by fires, floods and pan- demic disruptions in recent years, only to face the new scourge of the introduced house mouse, or Mus musculus. The same government-commis- sioned advisers who have helped farmers cope with the drought, fire weather | Go to AccuWeather.com and floods are returning to help people deal with the stresses of mice. The worst comes after dark, when millions of mice that had been hiding and dormant during the day become active. By day, the crisis is less apparent. Patches of road are dotted with squashed mice from the previous night, but birds soon take the carcasses away. Haystacks are disintegrating due to ravenous rodents that have burrowed deep inside. Upending a sheet of scrap metal lying in a paddock will send a dozen mice scurrying. The side- walks are strewn with dead mice that have eaten poisonous bait. But a constant, both day and night, is the stench of mice urine and decaying flesh. The smell is people’s greatest gripe. “You deal with it all day. You’re out baiting, trying your best to manage the situation, then come home and just the stench of dead mice,” said Jason Conn, a fifth generation farmer near Wellington in central New South Wales. “They’re in the roof cavity of your house. If your house is not well sealed, they’re in bed with you. People are getting bitten in bed,” Conn said. “It doesn’t relent, that’s for sure.” Colin Tink estimated he drowned 7,500 mice in a single night last week in a trap he set with a cattle feeding bowl full of AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 49/62 Kennewick 48/72 St. Helens 50/77 56/78 61/83 52/77 47/77 Condon FRI SAT SUN MON Mainly clear and mild Mostly sunny and warm Sunny and cooler Abundant sunshine Partly sunny 73 38 74 39 69 38 Eugene 10 10 9 49/79 70 42 69 41 67 42 10 10 9 La Grande 57 84 50 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 6 4 6 52 83 47 Comfort Index™ 4 64 40 10 10 10 6 ALMANAC TUESDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Tuesday Low Tuesday High: 115° Low: 21° Wettest: 2.37” 86° 42° 89° 45° 96° 46° PRECIPITATION (inches) Tuesday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.00 0.00 0.05 2.23 4.58 0.00 0.00 0.06 5.90 7.86 0.00 0.00 0.07 14.21 11.99 AGRICULTURAL INFO. HAY INFORMATION FRIDAY Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration 25% NW at 7 to 14 mph 5.6 0.27 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Wednesday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 17% of capacity 88% of capacity 49% of capacity 97% of capacity 55% of capacity 88% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Tuesday) 5690 cfs Grande Ronde at Troy Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder 93 cfs Burnt River near Unity 120 cfs Umatilla River near Gibbon 179 cfs Minam River at Minam 2210 cfs Powder River near Richland 27 cfs Death Valley, Calif. Burgess Junction, Wyo. McAllen, Texas OREGON High: 103° Low: 40° Wettest: none The Dalles Meacham Charlotte, N.C., was swamped by 3.78 inches of rain on June 3, 1909 -- the great- est amount recorded there in one day for decades. The storm represented almost a month’s worth of rain for Charlotte. SUN & MOON THU. 5:07 a.m. 8:35 p.m. 2:23 a.m. 2:00 p.m. FRI. 5:06 a.m. 8:36 p.m. 2:42 a.m. 3:03 p.m. MOON PHASES New Jun 10 First Jun 17 Full Jun 24 Beaver Marsh 51/72 53/82 Silver Lake Last Jul 1 Jordan Valley 56/89 Paisley 54/90 51/81 Frenchglen 56/92 Medford City Astoria Bend Boise Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Council Elgin Eugene Hermiston Hood River Imnaha John Day Joseph Kennewick Klamath Falls Lakeview SAT. Hi/Lo/W 62/51/pc 86/49/pc 95/63/s 66/49/pc 90/47/s 63/46/pc 78/46/pc 91/52/s 83/47/s 79/48/pc 89/60/s 78/56/s 85/49/s 85/46/s 83/47/s 94/59/s 87/44/pc 88/47/pc Hi/Lo/W 60/48/sh 72/40/s 85/50/s 65/47/s 78/38/s 61/44/pc 68/44/c 79/43/s 68/38/s 71/44/c 75/51/s 68/50/c 76/43/s 75/41/s 69/37/s 78/51/s 77/41/s 80/41/pc Grand View Arock 69/98 62/94 60/94 Klamath Falls 50/87 Lakeview 51/88 McDermitt Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Thursday night’s lows and Friday’s highs. FRI. Diamond 55/90 Fields 59/90 50/66 Boise 67/95 55/90 Brookings 59/94 49/86 Chiloquin Grants Pass Juntura 56/90 49/81 45/80 Roseburg Ontario 73/99 Burns Brothers 52/76 Coos Bay Powers 53/86 Oakridge Huntington 51/83 Bend Elkton 63/91 75/94 Seneca 59/92 RECREATION FORECAST FRIDAY REGIONAL CITIES WEATHER HISTORY Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Florence Council 55/84 56/85 52/83 48/63 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. 52/81 John Day 52/86 Sisters 48/77 69 40 57/89 Baker City Redmond 49/62 Halfway Granite 47/78 Newport 46/58 68 38 54/85 51/74 51/79 Corvallis Enterprise 52/83 57/84 Monument 56/85 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 4 Elgin 53/83 La Grande 55/78 Maupin Comfort Index™ 64/88 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 65/92 Hood River 59/87 TIllamook 55 84 48 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 65/94 Vancouver 50/74 44/64 Baker City water at his farm outside Dubbo. “I thought I might get a couple of hundred. I didn’t think I’d get 7,500,” Tink said. Barnes said mouse carcasses and excrement in roofs were pol- luting farmers’ water tanks. “People are getting sick from the water,” he said. The mice are already in Barnes’ hay bales. He’s battling them with zinc phosphide baits, the only legal chemical control for mice used in broad-scale agricul- ture in Australia. He’s hoping that winter frosts will help contain the numbers. Farmers like Barnes endured four lean years of drought before 2020 brought a good season as well as the worst flooding that some parts of New South Wales have seen in at least 50 years. But the pandemic brought a labor drought. Fruit was left to rot on trees because foreign backpackers who provide the seasonal work- force were absent. Plagues seemingly appear from nowhere and often vanish just as fast. Disease and a shortage of food are thought to trigger a dramatic population crash as mice feed on themselves, devouring the sick, weak and their own offspring. Government researcher Steve Henry, whose agency is devel- oping strategies to reduce the impact of mice on agriculture, said it is too early to predict what damage will occur by spring. He travels across the state holding community meetings, sometimes twice a day, to discuss the mice problem. “People are fatigued from dealing with the mice,” Henry said. City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla FRI. SAT. Hi/Lo/W 92/56/s 72/51/pc 81/48/s 90/53/pc 58/48/pc 69/50/pc 99/64/s 91/56/s 87/53/s 77/53/pc 72/49/pc 86/45/s 82/49/pc 79/51/pc 83/54/s 83/56/s 81/40/s 88/56/s Hi/Lo/W 77/50/s 63/46/c 68/39/s 81/49/s 56/46/c 62/44/pc 87/53/s 79/48/s 71/47/s 66/49/c 68/45/pc 72/37/s 73/47/c 68/47/c 69/44/s 72/51/pc 65/36/s 73/50/s 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 Mostly sunny Very warm 60 41 83 47 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Mostly sunny; nice Mostly sunny 70 47 92 55 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Mostly sunny; mild Mostly sunny; warm 68 37 76 40 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Very warm Mostly sunny; warm 83 47 86 51 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Mostly sunny; warm Mostly sunny; warm 84 48 84 50