6B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD SATuRDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2020 COFFEE BREAK Too much togetherness tires hen-pecked man’s patience DEAR ABBY: Since the coro- navirus lockdown began, my wife and I have been cooped up together all day, every day. Though we have lived together for 35 years, she’s now discovering that I “don’t cook vegeta- bles correctly.” (It goes without saying that I’m no longer allowed to pre- pare the entrees.) I don’t sort the trash the way she thinks it should be, so I can’t take out the garbage without her first inspecting it. Not only do I not wash the dishes properly, I don’t even wash my face right. Thus far the only thing I seem to be able to do is go to the restroom without her supervision, but I lock the door now just in case she decides to kibitz. I realize that during this tense DEAR time, people feel a loss of control ABBY over their own lives and try to compensate how- ever they can. I’m able to hang on to my patience almost all the time, but occasionally I want to either scream at her or look for an apartment of my own. Do you have any advice for either or both of us? — KEEPING CALM IN THE WEST that isn’t sufficient, the two of you should discuss what’s going on with her physician. DEAR ABBY: I am instinctively tight-fisted with money. It’s also necessary because my brother and I have been in business for ourselves for only a few years, and we are just now starting to turn a decent profit. My girlfriend earns a good living as a nurse. She is pretty thrifty, but not when it comes to food. My question is, how much of the bill should I be expected to foot for an expensive dinner I didn’t want to go out to, or an overpriced breakfast burrito from some snobby food truck? If I don’t look enthusiastic about the DEAR KEEPING CALM: You are far from the only spouse who is experiencing this. Your com- ment about your wife’s hypervig- ilance and fault-finding being her way of coping with her anxieties is perceptive. If you haven’t talked with her (calmly) about how her behavior is affecting you, please do it before you explode. Being cooped up together all day, every day, isn’t healthy for either of you. You both should be getting out separately for at least 30 minutes of walking (60 could be even better) and sun- light every day. The exercise and change of scenery would not only be healthy, but may lower both of your stress levels. However, if prospect of going to one of these places, she says not to worry because she’ll pay for it, which makes me feel insecure. Any tips on how to handle this? — PROUD GUY IN WASHINGTON DEAR PROUD GUY: Yes. You appear to be an old-fashioned guy who is dating a contemporary woman. Accept her generosity and quit tying your masculinity to how she chooses to spend her own hard-earned money. That said, if you are thinking of marrying her, it would be in both your interests to have premarital counseling to ensure that disagreements about money don’t cause serious prob- lems in your marriage. News of the Weird Feisty Tasmanian devils roaming mainland Australian again By Victoria Milko Associated Press JAKARTA, Indonesia — Tasmanian devils, the car- nivorous marsupials whose feisty, frenzied eating habits won the animals car- toon fame, have returned to mainland Australia for the first time in some 3,000 years. “Seeing those devils released into a wild land- scape — it’s a really emo- tional moment,” said Liz Gabriel, director of conser- vation group Aussie Ark, which led the release effort in partnership with other conservation groups. The 11 most recently released devils began exploring their new home once they were freed from round white cages at the nearly 1,000-acre Bar- rington Tops wildlife refuge in New South Wales state, about 120 miles north of Sydney. Tasmanian devils, which were once called Sarcoph- ilus satanicus or “Satanic flesh-lover,” went extinct in mainland Australia before the arrival of Europeans. Scientists believe the intro- duction of carnivorous din- goes, a surge in the indige- nous human population and a devastating dry season caused by a prolonged El Nino contributed to the devils’ migration to pres- ent-day Tasmania, said University of Tasmania ecologist Menna Jones. “I think any one of those three factors alone prob- ably wouldn’t have caused extinction — but the three of them together likely Cristian Prieto/WildArk via AP Members of a conservation group release Tasmanian devils into the wild at Barrington Tops, New South Wales state, Australia, on Sept. 10, 2020. Tasmanian devils, the carniv- orous marsupials whose feisty, frenzied eating habits won the animals cartoon fame, returned to mainland Australia for the first time in some 3,000 years. AP Photo/Rob Griffith, File In this Dec. 21, 2012, photo, Big John the Tasmanian devil growls from the confines of his tree house as he makes his first appearance at the Wild Life Sydney Zoo in Sydney, Australia. Conservation groups recently released some cancer-free devils in a wildlife refuge on the mainland. caused the devil to become extinct on the mainland,” she said. Devils have been pro- tected in Australia since 1941, and conservation- ists have worked to bolster their populations for years, citing their importance as top predators that can sup- press invasive species — like foxes and feral cats — and in turn protect smaller species and biodiversity. One of the biggest blows to conservation efforts came in the 1990s when a communicable cancer called devil facial tumor disease — which passes between devils through their bites while mating and causes large tumors that prevent them from eating — reduced the pop- ulation from some 140,000 to as few as 20,000. In response, researchers established an insurance population of cancer-free devils in wild-type enclo- sures in Australia’s island state of Tasmania. But the releases in July and Sep- tember are the first time the squat mammals — all of which have tested negative for the contagious cancer — have been released on the mainland in a protected wild landscape. Gabriel said Aussie Ark aims for devils eventually to live in non-protected areas in mainland Aus- tralia, with the hope the devils will contribute to keeping cat and fox popu- lations under control. Some experts question whether the introduction would have that hoped-for level of impact. Nick Mooney, an Aus- tralia conservationist who has worked with Tasmanian devils for some 40 years, said feral felines are likely to return to hunting for a food source rather than weather OKC jailers face cruelty charge for playing ‘Baby Shark’ on loop Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — Two former detention offi- cers and their supervisor were charged Monday, AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 52/59 Kennewick 51/57 St. Helens 52/58 Hood River 48/58 48/62 52/58 49/57 Condon SUN MON TUE WED A few showers A passing shower or two Mostly cloudy, a shower Cloudy with a few showers A shower possible 61 34 62 37 64 32 Eugene 47/61 La Grande 40 54 44 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 3 0 0 7 9 60 38 58 45 59 43 4 3 7 0 35 49 40 Comfort Index™ 7 58 42 55 41 7 5 7 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Thursday Low Thursday High: 104° Low: 14° Wettest: 7.61” 81° 32° 80° 35° 81° 34° PRECIPITATION (inches) Thursday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.00 0.00 0.14 2.99 7.78 0.00 0.00 0.24 13.39 11.82 0.00 0.00 0.29 26.04 16.22 HAY INFORMATION SUNDAY 50% SW at 6 to 12 mph 0.3 0.07 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Friday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 9% of capacity 21% of capacity 41% of capacity 41% of capacity 13% of capacity 5% of capacity OREGON High: 84° Low: 21° Wettest: 0.01” Rome Lakeview Florence A World Series game was snowed out in Baltimore, Md., on Oct. 10, 1979. The early snowstorm dumped 12 inches on Webster County, W.Va. Over 2 inches accumulated at Philadelphia. SUN & MOON SAT. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset SUN. 7:02 a.m. 7:04 a.m. 6:15 p.m. 6:14 p.m. none 12:19 a.m. 3:21 p.m. 4:02 p.m. MOON PHASES STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Thursday) 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 Ocotillo Wells, Calif. Walden, Colo. Baton Rouge, La. WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Florence 50/62 726 cfs 16 cfs 15 cfs 45 cfs 62 cfs 20 cfs New Oct 16 First Oct 23 Full Oct 31 Last Nov 8 34/53 Beaver Marsh 31/50 Roseburg Powers Brothers 47/56 Coos Bay 48/65 Jordan Valley 36/53 Paisley 31/58 Frenchglen 37/57 Klamath Falls 31/60 Hi/Lo/W 59/52/r 57/48/r 59/47/pc 62/52/c 57/35/s 60/55/r 60/49/r 51/40/pc 52/44/sh 61/52/r 66/52/sh 58/52/r 52/43/pc 56/47/sh 49/39/sh 66/54/pc 60/37/s 58/31/pc Hi/Lo/W 62/53/r 62/43/pc 65/43/s 64/54/pc 63/29/s 64/51/r 65/47/r 59/37/pc 59/39/c 66/48/r 69/50/pc 63/48/r 62/38/c 61/41/pc 55/34/pc 72/49/pc 65/34/pc 65/27/s Grand View Arock 41/64 37/60 Lakeview 27/58 McDermitt 34/60 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 37/55 38/61 Shown is Sunday’s weather. Temperatures are Saturday night’s lows and Sunday’s highs. MON. Boise 41/59 Fields 44/65 SUN. 39/61 Silver Lake 35/55 Medford Brookings Juntura 27/57 47/66 50/62 Ontario 40/62 Burns 33/58 Chiloquin Grants Pass Huntington 32/51 38/57 Oakridge 34/51 39/61 Seneca Bend Elkton THURSDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin 42/56 37/55 Council 36/57 John Day 34/59 Sisters 51/60 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. 38/56 Baker City Redmond 52/59 54/60 Halfway Granite 35/47 46/52 47/59 49/63 58 36 0 Corvallis 42/57 46/60 Newport Enterprise 35/49 40/54 Monument 45/61 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 0 39/52 La Grande 44/55 Maupin Comfort Index™ Elgin Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 46/61 47/59 48/61 53/60 36 57 42 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020 Walla Walla 51/66 Vancouver 49/57 TIllamook Baker City Oct. 5, after an investi- gation found inmates at the Oklahoma County jail were forced to listen to the popular children’s song “Baby Shark” on a loop at loud volumes for extended periods of time. At least four inmates were subjected to the “inhuman” discipline in an attorney visitation room of the jail last November and December, according to the charge. The inmates were forced to stand the entire time, hands cuffed behind them and secured to the wall, the investigation found. Charged were Gregory Cornell Butler Jr., 21, of Edmond; Christian Charles Miles, 21, of Oklahoma City; and Christopher Ray- mond Hendershott, 50, of Wellston. District Attorney David Prater charged them with misdemeanor counts of cruelty to a prisoner and conspiracy. released in coming years won’t go into the wild just yet. Instead they will receive supplementary feedings and be monitored by remote cameras, with some devils tagged with GPS trackers to learn more about how they adjust in their new environment, said Gabriel. “We dream of many more sanctuaries with devils in them and really growing the numbers of the species to pro- tect that species, but also the animals in the envi- ronment around them,” she said. “This is just the beginning.” relying on carrion in com- petition with the devils. “There is an argument that by putting devils into a situation where you stop the other carnivores scav- enging is that those ani- mals, like cats and foxes, will simply start hunting. You could actually make a conservation problem where it didn’t exist before,” said Mooney. There’s also a matter of reputation. While devils tend to feed on small mam- mals they’re also known to eat the carcasses of cattle and sheep, potentially making them a nuisance to farmers. “When you do big interventions like this, there needs to be buy-in from the community, par- ticularly those who are affected in the commu- nity,” said Jones. “There needs to be consultation.” For now, the devils released this year and those expected to be 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 61/50/pc 57/52/r 49/43/sh 65/49/pc 59/54/r 56/48/r 62/45/pc 67/48/pc 61/51/pc 58/55/r 62/57/c 59/45/r 65/54/pc 59/53/r 57/43/sh 62/53/r 50/41/r 59/51/sh Hi/Lo/W 63/44/c 63/48/r 57/38/pc 70/44/s 62/54/r 61/45/r 68/40/s 70/46/pc 65/47/pc 66/52/r 70/50/pc 62/42/pc 70/50/pc 64/49/r 58/40/c 65/47/c 57/35/pc 64/47/c 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 A p.m. shower Rain and drizzle 34 28 49 42 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. A shower or two A stray shower 43 37 56 42 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK A stray shower A shower or two 38 33 48 40 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR A shower or two Rain and drizzle 49 39 60 50 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK A stray shower A shower or two 57 42 54 44