COFFEE BREAK B8 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2021 Common dog-walking habit raises stink with readers other week in my community. I’m sure your readers can do the math. Then I end up having to work around all this poop, and not only does my garbage can perpetually stink to high heaven, but I have to be judicious with what I throw away myself. Rough materials will rupture those bags and poop gets all over the inside of the can. I’m cur- rently saving up to modify my property’s retaining wall so I can keep the receptacles away from the street, but I’m at the mercy of dog owners until I can aff ord this renovation. Please, if you have a dog, be a good neighbor. Be responsible for its waste. If you don’t want to carry it, get your dog a harness or pack with a pocket, and dis- DEAR ABBY: I’m responding to your request for comments about your answer to “Doggy Business” (Oct. 28). Please implore your readers not to put their dog’s poop in their neighbor’s garbage cans, even if the cans are on the street. This may seem harmless, but I live near a park and daily dog walkers use my trash can like it’s a public service. My garbage quickly fi lls with endless poop bags, sometimes between fi ve and 10 a day. Gar- bage is collected only every pose of it in your own can when you get home. — PEEVED IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST DEAR PEEVED: I advised “Doggy Business” that dis- posing of his dog’s waste in neighbors’ garbage cans is a big no-no. After asking for readers’ thoughts, an AVALANCHE of responses descended. The vast majority agreed with me, expressing disdain at the prac- tice and explicitly sharing the messy, smelly details of their experiences. Some areas require trash be placed in a large, sealed plastic bag in the receptacle. When gar- bage collectors pull the bag out, the small poop bags can spill out and the contents disperse onto the street. Worse, if the bags are thrown into a neighbor’s garbage container AFTER collection, those bags remain at the bottom and smell for days. Readers, encourage dog walkers to take a larger bag with them or wear a fanny pack with multiple compartments to trans- port their pets’ “souvenirs” back to their own home. DEAR ABBY: Our nosy children have been pressuring us to explain their inheritance. I’m appalled. I was taught that this is something for the par- ents to tell, not the kids to ask. Several friends of ours who are executors for their parents are now being questioned by sib- lings while the parent is sick and fi ghting for life. Please explain to readers what is the best etiquette with regard to inheritance. — UNSURE IN CALIFORNIA DEAR UNSURE: I know this can be a sensitive sub- ject, but it is also an important one. Although some may not agree with me, I happen to be in favor of open communication regarding money matters. Too often money (and the promise of it) is used to manipulate and control family members. This is not a matter of etiquette. If adult children are going to inherit, they need to learn early how to wisely and responsibly handle money. And, if circumstances change and the estate is aff ected, the heirs should be given as much forewarning as possible so they are prepared and not shocked. NEWS OF THE WEIRD Crews may have found 1887 time capsule in Lee statue base RICHMOND, Va. — Crews working to remove the pedestal where a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee towered over Richmond for more than a cen- tury believe they’ve found a time capsule that was buried there in 1887. The massive bronze eques- trian statue of Lee, erected in 1890, was taken down in Sep- tember, more than a year after Gov. Ralph Northam ordered its removal after protests over racism and police brutality erupted across the country fol- lowing the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The day after the statue was removed, work crews spent more than 12 hours searching for the time capsule in the 40-foot-tall pedestal, but were unable to locate it. On Friday, Dec. 17, Northam announced that crews found the top of a square box embedded in a 2,000-pound granite block. It was located about 20 feet off the ground in the main section Steve Helber/The Associated Press Michael Spence, superintendent for Team Henry construction, looks over a time capsule that was placed in 1887 in the pedestal that once held the statue of Con- federate General Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue, Friday Dec. 17, 2021, in Rich- mond, Virginia. Gov. Ralph Northam ordered the pedestal removed and the land given to the city of Richmond. of the pedestal, not in its base. Workers who searched for it in September believed it was tucked weather | Go to AccuWeather.com inside or under a cornerstone of the pedestal. “It looks like it is (the time AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 45/50 Kennewick 43/50 St. Helens 40/48 34/44 Condon 34/42 42/49 WED THU FRI SAT A bit of late- night snow A rain or snow shower A little morning snow Cloudy, snow tapering off A snow shower possible 35 22 34 23 35 16 Eugene 1 0 1 43/51 38 28 35 28 37 22 2 0 2 La Grande 31 39 35 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 0 2 0 28 41 33 Comfort Index™ 4 36 23 34 21 0 0 3 1 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Sunday Low Sunday High: 90° Low: -17° Wettest: 3.75” 32° 28° 36° 32° 36° 32° PRECIPITATION (inches) Sunday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.01 0.31 0.53 5.32 8.74 Trace 0.69 1.18 10.67 16.70 Trace 3.13 2.35 25.17 24.53 HAY INFORMATION WEDNESDAY 60% S at 7 to 14 mph 4.0 0.04 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Monday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir OREGON High: 54° Low: 8° Wettest: 3.36” 1% of capacity 20% of capacity 16% of capacity 14% of capacity 13% of capacity 13% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Sunday) On this date in 1989, a temperature of 4 degrees at Dulles Airport, Va., broke the record low. This was the eighth straight day on which the record low was broken. SUN & MOON TUE. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset WED. 7:29 a.m. 7:29 a.m. 4:12 p.m. 4:13 p.m. 6:24 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 9:45 a.m. 10:21 a.m. MOON PHASES Grande Ronde at Troy 1060 cfs Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder 0 cfs Burnt River near Unity 14 cfs Umatilla River near Gibbon 148 cfs Minam River at Minam 150 cfs Powder River near Richland 20 cfs Last Dec 26 New Jan 2 First Jan 9 Full Jan 17 34/49 34/45 Powers 47/50 43/51 Silver Lake Jordan Valley 29/42 Frenchglen Paisley 33/43 26/43 31/39 Diamond 38/45 Klamath Falls 26/41 Lakeview 24/39 McDermitt City Astoria Bend Boise Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Council Elgin Eugene Hermiston Hood River Imnaha John Day Joseph Kennewick Klamath Falls Lakeview Hi/Lo/W 50/39/sh 48/29/sn 41/36/pc 49/40/r 40/30/c 50/39/r 48/37/sh 38/34/sn 39/35/sn 51/38/sh 46/38/c 44/38/sn 42/39/sn 45/34/sn 39/33/sn 48/39/pc 41/29/c 39/28/c Hi/Lo/W 43/38/r 40/32/c 41/28/sn 44/39/r 36/20/sn 43/41/r 43/36/r 37/25/sn 37/29/sn 44/38/r 41/36/c 41/37/sn 39/32/sn 39/29/sf 33/25/sn 43/39/c 35/22/sn 33/19/sn 24/37 RECREATION FORECAST WEDNESDAY REGIONAL CITIES THU. 27/41 25/41 29/41 Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are Tuesday night’s lows and Wednesday’s highs. WED. Grand View Arock 33/43 Fields Medford Brookings Boise 26/41 41/45 46/49 27/43 23/41 Chiloquin Grants Pass Juntura 22/40 33/45 Beaver Marsh Ontario 27/38 Burns Brothers 29/38 Roseburg Huntington 28/38 41/49 Coos Bay 24/38 28/39 Seneca 39/48 Oakridge Council 20/34 John Day Bend Elkton Creswell Lakeview Florence WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Vero Beach, Fla. Big Trails, Wyo. Florence, Ore. 26/35 34/50 Florence SUNDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin Sisters 47/50 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. 23/35 Baker City Redmond 46/48 47/53 Halfway Granite 41/48 Newport 44/52 34 25 31/47 41/48 44/51 Corvallis Enterprise 28/41 31/39 Monument 33/41 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 1 Elgin 29/39 La Grande 31/42 Maupin Comfort Index™ 29/47 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg 41/49 Lewiston 35/41 Hood River 29/47 46/51 20 34 27 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 30/48 Vancouver 41/48 TIllamook Baker City became a symbol of racial injus- tice, was one of fi ve Confed- erate tributes along Richmond’s Monument Avenue and the only one that belonged to the state. The four city-owned statues were taken down in 2020, but the Lee statue removal was blocked by two lawsuits until a ruling from the Supreme Court of Virginia in September cleared the way for it to be taken down. Northam announced earlier this month that the enormous pedestal would be removed, a reversal from September, when the governor said the pedestal would stay in place so its future could be determined by a com- munity-driven eff ort to reimagine Monument Avenue. After Floyd’s murder in 2020, the Lee statue became a focal point of the racial justice move- ment in Richmond. Since then, the pedestal has been covered in graffi ti, some of it profane and much of it denouncing the police. Some activists wanted to see it remain in place as a work of pro- test art. capsule),” said Clark Mercer, Northam’s chief of staff . “We’re hoping it hasn’t been damaged by water over the last 100-plus years.” By late Dec. 17, workers had lowered a large piece of granite containing the box to the ground and were planning to bring it to the state Department of Historic Resources to be opened some- time next week. Mercer said the box was still encased in granite and needs to be dislodged and X-rayed before offi cials can be certain it is the time capsule. A newspaper article from 1887 suggests the capsule con- tains Civil War memorabilia and a “picture of Lincoln lying in his coffi n,” although historians believe it’s doubtful the picture is an actual photograph, which would be rare and valuable. Records from the Library of Virginia suggest that 37 Rich- mond residents, organizations and businesses contributed about 60 objects to the capsule, many of which are believed to be related to the Confederacy. The Lee statue, which The Associated Press City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla WED. THU. Hi/Lo/W 41/35/sn 50/39/sh 39/35/c 45/36/r 48/37/sh 47/37/sh 38/33/c 45/38/sn 47/37/c 49/39/sh 50/37/r 49/32/r 51/39/r 51/40/sh 39/33/c 42/37/sn 41/32/sn 47/37/sn Hi/Lo/W 40/33/c 44/37/r 37/30/sn 41/34/r 43/38/r 42/35/r 42/28/sn 44/37/c 40/35/pc 44/38/r 43/39/r 43/31/sf 44/38/r 44/39/r 35/28/c 42/35/c 32/27/c 41/33/sn ANTHONY LAKES PHILLIPS LAKE Colder A snow shower 25 18 36 29 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. A snow shower A little snow 32 27 39 36 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK A snow shower Rain/snow shower 28 22 38 28 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR P.M. snow, 1-2” Rain and snow 39 33 48 37 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK A snow shower Rain/snow shower Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice 34 27 39 35 Save on Santa's favorite recliner! now only $ Collage • • • • 1520 ADAMS AVENUE LaGRANDE, OREGON 97850 499 Free Delivery In-Store Credit 65 Store Buying Power Decorating Assistance now only now only $ Vail 599 (541) 963-4144 Toll Free 888-449-2704 HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 9:30 am-6:30 pm Sat. 9:30 am-5:30 pm Sun. Noon - 4:00 pm 699 $ Pinnacle CLOSING at 3 Christmas Eve CLOSED Saturday & Sunday for Christmas