COFFEE BREAK B6 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 2022 Elderly mom struggles to adjust to senior living Although she looks like a frail old lady, she’s in denial. She also has bouts of crying and irrational con- cerns and demands. Abby, my mother has a roof over her head she can aff ord, food, access to health care and family nearby. She’s just used to the constant go-go-go of her former country club life (which she never paid for). I’m recently retired, and her manipulations and the eff ect she could have on my mar- riage have me stressed-out. Please advise. — STUCK IN THE MUCK DEAR STUCK: You are a caring, if frustrated, son. You mentioned that your mother has spent her entire adult life DEAR ABBY: My elderly mother spent her entire adult life spending her men’s money, and now she has morphed into an entitled, self-absorbed and vapid woman. She blew through her inheritance years ago with no regard for future needs. I have now moved her into senior housing near me. She wants to make friends, but the problem is that she thinks she’s better than everyone. She criticizes people’s dress and perceived social status. indulging herself and living the “country club life.” Change at any age can be diffi cult, but as people age, they can become less resil- ient, which is more of a challenge. I can understand why your mother might sometimes shed tears over her changed status and even be in denial about it. You didn’t men- tion how much freedom she has now, but she may have too much idle time on her hands. If she can’t fi nd things in common with her neighbors, per- haps she could make friends vol- unteering for some of the charities or activities in the community. You would be doing her a favor to suggest it. However, if her crying spells increase, she might benefi t from being screened for depres- sion by a medical professional. DEAR ABBY: I have been in a mostly online relationship with a man for years. He is a musician, and we met after one of his shows. We live a thousand miles apart and, since COVID shut the world down, we have seen each other only twice. We love each other very much and have developed our relationship via texting constantly. My problem is I’m not a wealthy woman, but I have been sending him more than $1,000 a month all this time so he can post his music on various websites. I’m not entirely comfortable with this. I have a strong aversion to being used, which is what it sometimes feels like. What do you think I should do? — OUT OF TUNE IN DELAWARE DEAR OUT OF TUNE: Listen to your intuition. Tell the musician you love him very much, but you will have to stop sending him money because you can no longer aff ord it. It happens to be the truth. How he behaves in the months that follow your announcement will show if he is on the level or if you have been used. █ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. How the climate deal would help farmers aid the environment culture and climate policy specialist at the environ- mental group Earthjustice. Cover crops, for example, are only used by a fraction of farmers. If their use were to triple — from around 5% of cropland to 15% — it could remove the equivalent of 14 megatons of carbon dioxide per year, roughly the total annual emissions of New Hamp- shire, according to Kevin Karl, a fl ood food and cli- mate researcher at Columbia University. “The adoption rate is so low,” Karl said. “There’s a lot of potential improvement.” Federal offi cials already off er farmers help with a variety of environmentally focused issues including irrigation and fertilizer use. One program helps fund conservation easements for agricultural land. Dan Sheafer works on nitrogen research with the Illinois Fertilizer and Chem- ical Association and operates a 20-acre farm. He plants cover crops and keeps soil By MICHAEL PHILLIS The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — The cli- mate deal reached last week by Senate Democrats could reduce the amount of green- house gases that Amer- ican farmers produce by expanding programs that help accumulate carbon in soil, fund climate-fo- cused research and lower the abundant methane emis- sions that come from cows. The bill includes more than $20 billion to improve the agriculture sector’s impact on the environ- ment, mostly by expanding existing U.S. Department of Agriculture programs that help farmers change to better practices. Farmers would be paid to improve the health of their soil, withstand extreme weather and protect their land if the bill is enacted. The roughly $370 bil- lion climate and energy spending deal would bring the country closer to cutting greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030, according to new analyses. That is some- thing many scientists say is important, and that Pres- ident Joe Biden promised. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., a long-time holdout on climate legislation, endorsed measures that would benefi t electric vehicles, renewable energy and climate-friendly farming. Agriculture is responsible for 11% of the country’s climate-warming emissions. The funding would expand programs favored by both environmental groups and the agricultural sector, said Ben Thomas, who focuses on agricul- ture at the Environmental Defense Fund. Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press, File A cow grazes in a pasture as wind turbines rise in the distance, April 27, 2020, near Reading, Kan. The climate deal reached by Senate Democrats could reduce the amount of greenhouse gases that American farmers produce by expanding programs that help sequester carbon in soil, fund climate-focused research and lower the abundant methane emissions that come from cows. “They are voluntary, they are incentive-based, they get results in terms of imple- menting conservation prac- tices on working lands,” said Thomas. “It’s great to see.” Thomas said historically, the agricultural sector has not aggressively tackled its contribution to climate change, but that hesitation has shifted in recent years and more money will accel- erate progress. There’s a lot of potential, he said. “It is worth taking very, very seriously,” Thomas said. Cows belch an enormous amount of methane and agriculture is responsible for more than one-third of human-caused methane emissions, according to the U.S. Environmental Protec- tion Agency. This is a way that people’s diets — if they are high in meat or dairy — contribute to greenhouse gas buildup. The bill directs funds toward altering what cows eat to reduce those emissions. On farms, soil can hold or sequester carbon if it is left undisturbed and covered by a crop. Money from the bill will expand programs that help farmers turn their soil less, implement cli- mate-friendly crop rotation practices and plant cover crops that aren’t for harvest but improve soil health. “The historic funding validates the fact that these practices are important,” said Ranjani Prabhakar, an agri- Computer not running as fast as when it was new? Let us install lightning-fast solid state drive! Are you running an outdated Windows Operating System? We’ll help you avoid critical issues by installing Windows 11! weather | Go to AccuWeather.com AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 53/73 Kennewick 54/81 St. Helens 56/85 56/87 58/91 57/85 54/85 Condon FRI SAT SUN MON Partly cloudy Partly sunny and pleasant Plenty of sunshine Sunny and hot Mostly sunny and very hot 85 43 94 50 97 54 Eugene 8 7 4 54/87 89 48 95 56 99 59 7 5 2 La Grande 50 85 46 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 9 8 8 47 82 46 Comfort Index™ 7 92 59 99 59 7 5 2 9 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Tuesday Low Tuesday High: 115° Low: 41° Wettest: 2.75” 91° 60° 93° 60° 93° 59° PRECIPITATION (inches) Tuesday 0.00 Month to date Trace Normal month to date 0.03 Year to date 4.47 Normal year to date 6.02 0.00 0.00 0.04 8.98 10.70 Trace Trace 0.04 17.76 15.27 HAY INFORMATION FRIDAY 20% N at 6 to 12 mph 9.8 0.25 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Wednesday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 13% of capacity 63% of capacity 27% of capacity 84% of capacity 3% of capacity 55% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Tuesday) Grande Ronde at Troy Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder Burnt River near Unity Umatilla River near Gibbon Minam River at Minam Powder River near Richland OREGON Medford Meacham Lakeview Powers 56/75 SUN & MOON THU. FRI. 5:40 a.m. 5:41 a.m. 8:16 p.m. 8:15 p.m. 12:59 p.m. 2:14 p.m. 11:29 p.m. 11:56 p.m. MOON PHASES 797 cfs 95 cfs 143 cfs 53 cfs 197 cfs 26 cfs First Aug 5 Full Aug 11 Last Aug 18 Grants Pass New Aug 27 Jordan Valley 57/87 Paisley 57/89 56/86 Frenchglen 60/90 62/90 65/96 55/67 67/92 Klamath Falls 57/89 Lakeview 55/91 McDermitt 62/87 RECREATION FORECAST FRIDAY SAT. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 73/55/s 80/56/s 85/52/pc 89/58/s 92/67/pc 92/64/t 67/55/pc 63/54/pc 91/54/s 90/54/t 70/53/s 74/54/s 86/55/pc 94/60/s 90/54/pc 89/56/t 85/48/pc 89/53/s 87/54/pc 96/58/s 87/51/s 94/55/s 87/63/s 95/66/s 87/59/s 87/56/s 88/53/pc 86/56/s 82/48/pc 85/53/s 88/54/s 92/55/s 89/55/s 91/57/s 91/54/s 89/55/s Grand View Arock 59/90 60/91 Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Thursday night’s lows and Friday’s highs. City Astoria Bend Boise Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Council Elgin Eugene Hermiston Hood River Imnaha John Day Joseph Kennewick Klamath Falls Lakeview Diamond 58/90 Fields Medford Brookings Boise 66/92 Silver Lake Chiloquin FRI. Flooding struck Erie, Pa., on Aug. 4, 1915, killing 75 people, destroying bridges and inundating streets. Such sudden local fl oods are major hazards in the summer. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset 60/89 59/93 51/88 REGIONAL CITIES WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Death Valley, Calif. Gothic, Colo. Effi ngham, Ill. High: 98° Low: 52° Wettest: 0.18” Beaver Marsh Juntura 52/91 51/84 54/87 Roseburg Ontario 67/94 Burns Brothers 55/87 Coos Bay Huntington 50/86 53/85 Oakridge 59/90 65/93 Seneca Bend Elkton Council 46/83 54/88 50/86 Florence TUESDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin 47/79 John Day 49/87 Sisters 53/70 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. 52/90 Baker City Redmond 50/65 53/67 Halfway Granite 53/86 Newport 59/83 87 51 54/88 53/87 56/88 Corvallis Enterprise 47/82 50/85 Monument 54/88 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 8 Elgin 48/85 La Grande 53/81 Maupin Comfort Index™ 55/85 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 58/86 Hood River 54/85 TIllamook 46 83 45 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Walla Walla 55/88 Vancouver 56/85 49/75 Baker City disturbance to a minimum — practices that benefi t soil health and reduce soil erosion. But he said cover crops also have drawbacks, requiring farmers who want an environmental benefi t to change their practices. “There’s just more time involved with doing cover crops,” he said. The bill also includes money for research. While it is clear that managing soil properly can capture carbon, more needs to be known about important questions like how long sequestered carbon stays in soil. Kaiyu Guan, a professor focused on climate and agri- culture at the University of Illinois at Urbana Cham- paign, said some people believe farmers don’t pay enough attention to climate change. “I think farmers shouldn’t be blamed, they actually should be incentiv- ized,” Guan said. “Not only are they doing this to be part of the solution to help the climate, they are doing this to help their land.” FRI. City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla SAT. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 86/59/pc 92/61/s 81/55/s 90/60/s 81/41/s 86/45/s 96/66/s 99/69/s 65/50/s 67/51/s 79/50/s 89/53/s 94/68/s 93/62/t 88/53/s 94/54/s 85/54/pc 93/59/s 85/60/s 96/64/s 75/56/s 80/58/s 87/50/s 91/53/s 89/61/s 95/66/s 88/57/s 95/63/s 81/56/s 86/58/s 91/62/s 97/64/s 78/40/pc 85/44/s 85/58/s 89/64/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 Partly sunny Partly sunny 66 42 82 46 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Mostly sunny Partly sunny 73 44 89 54 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Partly sunny Partly sunny 72 37 74 37 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Partly sunny Partly sunny; nice 82 48 83 53 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Partly sunny Partly sunny; nice 83 45 85 46