8B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THuRSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2020 COFFEE BREAK Awkward online photos put in-laws on the outs DEAR ABBY: I have been with my husband for 20 years, mar- ried for eight of them. He thinks his mother can do no wrong. She takes pictures of me when I least expect it, and then posts the worst ones on Facebook. She laughs and thinks it’s funny, but I am really hurt by it. To make it worse, his sister does the same to me now. They constantly have their phones pointed toward me, and when confronted, they deny taking pic- tures or insist all pictures have been deleted. I have always supported my husband’s relationship with his family, but I don’t feel like they support us being together. I have deleted his mother as a friend on Facebook and no longer go to family functions. My husband agrees that what she’s doing is DEAR wrong, but offers no support. His family ABBY prides themselves on class, but this is anything but classy. — CAUGHT OFF GUARD DEAR CAUGHT: It isn’t classy to willfully hurt others, as your MIL and SIL have been doing. Both appear to have a cruel streak, and this is their way of needling you. What troubles me is that you have allowed them to drive you away from family func- tions, which I assume your hus- band is attending without you. Have another talk with him. Go to another family gathering, and when you see the cameras aimed at you, tell them to cut it out. Your spineless husband should back you up on it, tell them that it isn’t funny, and if there are any shots of you on their FB pages, HE wants them deleted immediately. DEAR ABBY: I’m in an eight- year relationship, and we have a 3-year-old child together. We talk about marriage, but I’m having doubts. He has a wandering eye, which is a total turn-off for me. For instance, when we go to a restaurant and the waitress walks up to assist us, as soon as she turns around, he glues his eyes on her backside. I don’t say anything about it, but it’s so annoying. broken English. Some of the fish he gives me I don’t use, so I offer it to another neighbor or throw it out. I would like to tell him which fish I prefer, but don’t want to seem ungrateful or like it’s shop- ping from home. Any suggestions on how to handle this? — GRATEFUL IN NEW YORK DEAR GRATEFUL: You might “innocently” mention which fish you especially appre- ciate when he brings it to you, but other than that, I think you should be grateful for your neigh- bor’s generosity and forget about “placing an order” for something you’re not paying for. You should also make an effort to reciprocate in some way so the man and his wife are not doing all the giving. Should I say anything or just con- tinue to pretend that I don’t see? — BOTHERED IN LOUISIANA DEAR BOTHERED: Many men ogle, but for most of them, it’s only their eye that wanders. Because it bothers you so much you may not want to move the relationship forward, by all means speak up. Pretending not to notice has changed nothing. After eight years of silence, I think it’s time to set the father of your child straight, don’t you? DEAR ABBY: I have wonderful neighbors. They own a fish market in Chinatown. Since they moved in three years ago, he has given me fish almost every other week. My dilemma is, he speaks almost no English, and she speaks only News of the Weird Official: Toilet display mocking mail-in voting is a crime By Joseph Wilson Associated Press MASON, Mich.— A Michigan resident’s apparent joke showing disdain for voting by mail is no laughing matter for one election official. The resident put a toilet on their lawn with a sign that says, “Place mail in ballots here.” Barb Byrum, the Dem- ocratic clerk of Ingham County, filed a complaint with police over the dis- play, saying it could mis- lead people who aren’t familiar with the voting system. “It is a felony to take illegal possession of an absentee ballot,” Byrum said Sept. 18. “Elections in this country are to be taken seriously and there are many people who are voting by mail for the first time this election,” she said. Police told the AP the complaint is being investigated. President Donald Trump has repeatedly warned that voting by mail could lead to fraud and spoil the election, making distorted claims that elections officials fear could cause anx- iety and confusion among voters. It’s the “safest way to vote during the pan- demic,” Byrum said. She didn’t identify the person who lives at the address. The lawn also Associated Press Spain recently prohibited yachting along its northwest coast due to orcas knocking into sailboats. Matthew Dae Smith/Lansing State Journal via AP A political display is set up in the lawn of a home in Mason, Michigan, on Friday, Sept. 18, 2020. Barb Byrum, the Democratic clerk of Ingham County filed a complaint with police over the display, saying it could mislead people who aren’t familiar with how mail-in voting works. Find more weird news online at lagrandeobserver.com Orcas knock into sailboats, force Spain to limit yachting has a sign that calls for the recall of Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. No one answered the door the night of Sept. 18, the Lansing State Journal reported. More than 2 million Michigan voters could cast absentee ballots after changes in election law. Separately, a judge recently said absentee ballots postmarked by Nov. 2 can be counted if received within 14 days after the Nov. 3 election said the area covered by the ban meant to protect both boats and maritime mammals and could be extended to “follow the migration routes” of the whales. Boats could leave port to go into the open sea between the capes of the Prioriño Grande and la Punta de Estaca de Bares, but they could not remain near the coast off the country’s northwestern tip. The ministry said the first reported incident occurred Aug. 19. Since BARCELONA, Spain — Spain temporarily pro- hibited yachting across 62 miles of its northwestern coast after orca whales apparently got carried away while playing and damaged several sailboats. Spain’s transport min- istry issued the week- long prohibition for sail- boats under 49 feet long beginning Sept. 22. It weather AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 57/67 Kennewick 55/79 St. Helens 55/83 55/86 52/88 57/82 55/84 Condon Baker City 8 8 MON Sunny and very warm 82 43 81 40 80 38 Eugene 8 8 8 54/81 81 45 80 42 78 40 8 8 8 8 46 79 45 Comfort Index™ SUN 8 79 41 74 46 9 9 10 9 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Tuesday Low Tuesday High: 109° Low: 14° Wettest: 2.92” 85° 33° 84° 33° 89° 35° PRECIPITATION (inches) Tuesday 0.00 Month to date Trace Normal month to date 0.53 Year to date 2.99 Normal year to date 7.62 0.00 0.33 0.64 13.39 11.55 0.00 0.73 0.79 26.04 15.90 HAY INFORMATION FRIDAY 20% NNW at 6 to 12 mph 9.4 0.16 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Wednesday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 9% of capacity 21% of capacity 42% of capacity 46% of capacity 13% of capacity 6% of capacity OREGON High: 98° Low: 30° Wettest: none Medford Burns On Oct. 1, 1752, the second hurricane in two weeks hit coastal North Carolina. The storm erased Beacon Island. SUN & MOON THU. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset 6:51 a.m. 6:32 p.m. 6:57 p.m. 6:26 a.m. 751 cfs 17 cfs 48 cfs 46 cfs 78 cfs 30 cfs Full Oct 1 Last Oct 9 New Oct 16 Beaver Marsh 57/87 FRI. 6:52 a.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:16 p.m. 7:28 a.m. First Oct 23 Burns Jordan Valley Paisley Frenchglen 47/86 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 67/54/pc 86/49/s 84/52/pc 70/56/pc 86/35/s 67/55/pc 80/51/s 84/46/pc 83/50/s 81/53/s 87/47/s 86/53/s 84/52/s 87/51/pc 78/46/s 86/50/s 86/43/s 87/42/s Hi/Lo/W 64/54/c 83/47/s 82/54/s 69/56/pc 85/40/s 66/53/pc 77/50/pc 82/45/s 82/48/s 78/51/s 86/51/s 83/53/s 83/47/s 86/51/s 77/43/s 85/51/s 85/42/s 86/42/s Grand View Arock 45/87 43/86 46/88 Klamath Falls 42/86 Lakeview 41/87 McDermitt Shown is Friday’s weather. Temperatures are Thursday night’s lows and Friday’s highs. SAT. Diamond 48/84 Fields Medford FRI. Boise 45/82 43/86 44/85 57/91 59/70 45/90 52/84 56/92 Brookings Juntura 36/86 Silver Lake Chiloquin Grants Pass Ontario 46/86 40/86 44/86 RECREATION FORECAST FRIDAY REGIONAL CITIES MOON PHASES 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 Chino, Calif. Walden, Colo. Saluda, Va. WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration 61/81 45/84 43/84 Roseburg Powers Brothers 58/86 Coos Bay Huntington 48/83 50/86 Oakridge 44/84 50/87 Seneca Bend Elkton Council 39/84 53/87 48/87 Florence TUESDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin 44/79 John Day 45/88 Sisters 53/67 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. 46/84 Baker City Redmond 53/64 54/64 Halfway Granite 51/80 Newport 56/77 78 43 51/90 56/87 55/83 Corvallis Enterprise 46/79 43/83 Monument 51/87 Idanha Salem Sunny and very warm 8 43 83 44 Comfort Index™ Enterprise SAT 39 84 42 Comfort Index™ La Grande FRI Elgin 44/83 La Grande 54/83 Maupin Partly sunny and Sunny and very warm warm 56/82 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 53/83 Hood River 53/84 TIllamook Mainly clear Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020 Walla Walla 48/86 Vancouver 54/81 52/69 TONIGHT causing damage.” Orcas are particularly attracted by sail boats due to their size, the waves they make and the lack of pollution they produce compared to fishing boats, Díaz said. This stretch of water where the Iberian Peninsula juts out into the Atlantic Ocean is rife with tuna for them to hunt and on their migration route. Spanish television has shown footage taken by sailors of groups of orcas swimming extremely close to their boats. No injuries have been reported so far. Even so, the close encounters have put a scare in some sailors and hurt their pocketbooks with repairs that were needed. British sailor Mark Smith told Spanish state broadcaster TVE that he was “a little” frightened “because they were very big and we couldn’t stop them” from banging into his boat. then, it said orcas damage an unspecified number of sailboats with some needing assistance from Spain’s maritime rescue service after their rudders were wrecked. Biologist Bruno Díaz of the local Bottlenose Dol- phin Research Institute said the orcas were most likely just playing a bit too rough. He said orcas, like other cetaceans such as dolphins, like to swim alongside boats. Running into hulls is rare, but he believed it was likely done by “immature teenage” orcas getting rowdy. “We will never be in the mind of that indi- vidual animal, but based on experience, we think that there is absolutely nothing (threatening about their behavior). We are not their natural prey,” Díaz told The Associated Press by phone. “They are having fun. And maybe these orcas have fun 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 83/53/s 79/55/s 82/42/pc 91/53/s 64/53/c 77/51/pc 86/47/pc 85/49/s 84/53/s 82/57/s 81/57/pc 88/45/s 87/54/s 83/53/s 78/51/s 88/54/s 82/42/pc 82/56/s Hi/Lo/W 82/52/s 74/54/s 80/41/s 88/53/s 63/52/c 71/50/pc 83/46/s 85/49/s 84/51/s 76/56/pc 77/55/pc 84/43/s 78/54/s 76/53/pc 78/51/s 86/51/s 81/41/s 83/56/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; mild Partly sunny; warm 62 42 81 46 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Partly sunny; warm Partly sunny; warm 72 45 85 44 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Partly sunny; mild Partly sunny; warm 69 36 78 41 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Mostly sunny; warm Partly sunny 78 46 84 55 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Partly sunny; warm Partly sunny; warm 84 42 83 44