COFFEE BREAK B8 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2021 Shoplifting sister shows no remorse for actions seem to get it. Would it be wrong of me to tip off the security guard on our next shopping trip? I want her to learn a lesson before it’s too late. Yet, it could result in juvenile detention and a fi nancial burden on my parents. I love my sister, but I’m wor- ried her habit may lead to an unfortunate adulthood. She has had counseling in the past for numerous issues, but she either lies to her therapist or just sits quietly and says nothing. Please help me, Abby. — Sticky Fingers Dear Sticky Fingers: If you do what you are contemplating and your sister fi nds out you Dear Abby: I’m a 28-year-old mother of two. My teenaged adopted sister steals makeup from stores. It sometimes hap- pens when we are together, but I never catch her doing it. She has told me she feels no remorse about stealing the items. My parents and I have lec- tured her time after time. She’s now claiming her friends give her makeup they don’t like. I’m exas- perated because she just doesn’t were the person who turned her in, she will never forgive you for it. I agree that the girl has serious problems. That’s why I’m advising you to tell your parents what has been going on and let them handle it. While my inclina- tion would be to give her a dose of tough love, it would be better if it comes from your parents, because they are responsible for her. Dear Abby: We didn’t ask them to, but my parents recently retired and moved from Vir- ginia to Georgia to be close to our family after our son — their fi rst grandchild — was born. The move down here was a huge undertaking for them. It included selling their home in Virginia and building a new one here in Georgia with the assumption that in their old age they would never have to move again. The problem is, my husband and I are considering a move to a diff erent state to pursue career opportunities for the better- ment of our family. I feel awful because it will mean my par- ents may have to move again. We currently live in a location where they don’t know many people, so I don’t think they will want to stay after we leave. How should we bring up the topic of our potential move and discuss it with them? — Moving in the South Dear Moving: If the opportu- nities are better elsewhere, then that’s where you should go. This should not have been a deep, dark secret. Tell your parents you are considering another move so they can make plans of their own. They may want to move to a location near you, back to Vir- ginia where their friends are or to a retirement community, where they can form new friendships and won’t be entirely dependent upon you and your husband for social contact, as they appar- ently were when they moved to Georgia. NEWS OF THE WEIRD With no tourist handouts, hungry Bali monkeys raid homes the tall nutmeg trees and leaping about the famous Pura Bukit Sari temple, and are considered sacred. In normal times the pro- tected jungle area in the southeast of the Indonesian island is popular among local residents for wedding photos, as well as among international visitors. The relatively tame monkeys can be easily coaxed to sit on a shoulder or lap for a peanut or two. Ordinarily, tourism is the main source of income for Bali’s 4 million resi- dents, who welcomed more than 5 million foreign vis- itors annually before the pandemic. The Sangeh Monkey Forest typically had about 6,000 visitors a month, but as the pandemic spread last year and international travel dropped off dramatically, that number dropped to about 500. Since July, when Indo- nesia banned all foreign travelers to the island and shut the sanctuary to local residents as well, there has been nobody. The Associated Press SANGEH, Indonesia — Deprived of their preferred food source — the bananas, peanuts and other goodies brought in by tourists now kept away by the corona- virus — hungry monkeys on the resort island of Bali have taken to raiding vil- lagers’ homes in their search for something tasty. Villagers in Sangeh say the gray long-tailed macaques have been ven- turing out from a sanctuary about 500 meters away to hang out on their roofs and await the right time to swoop down and snatch a snack. Worried that the sporadic sorties will escalate into an all-out monkey assault on the village, residents have been taking fruit, pea- nuts and other food to the Sangeh Monkey Forest to try to placate the primates. “We are afraid that the hungry monkeys will turn wild and vicious,” villager Saskara Gustu Alit said. About 600 of the macaques live in the forest sanctuary, swinging from Firdia Lisnawati/The Associated Press A worker feeds macaques during a feeding time at Sangeh Monkey Forest in Sangeh, Bali Island, Indonesia, Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2021. Deprived of their preferred food source — the bananas, peanuts and other goodies brought in by the tourists now kept away by the coro- navirus — hungry monkeys on the resort island of Bali have taken to raiding villagers’ homes in the search for something tasty. Not only has that meant nobody bringing in extra food for the monkeys, the sanctuary has also lost out on its admission fees and is running low on money to purchase food for them, said operations manager Made Mohon. The donations from vil- lagers have helped, but they are also feeling the economic pinch and are gradually giving less and less, he said. “This prolonged pan- weather | Go to AccuWeather.com demic is beyond our expec- tations,” Made Mohon said, “Food for monkeys has become a problem.” Food costs run about $60 a day, Made Mohon said, for 440 pounds of cassava, the monkeys’ staple food, and 22 pounds of bananas. The macaque is an omni- vore and can eat a variety of animals and plants found in the jungle, but those in the Sangeh Monkey Forest have had enough contact with humans over the years that Astoria Longview 52/68 66/86 59/84 Mainly clear and mild Mostly sunny and pleasant Baker City La Grande 4 54 86 53 Comfort Index™ 4 6 9 9 55/89 84 51 81 50 81 46 7 9 9 6 8 5 TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Sunday Low Sunday High: 113° Low: 22° Wettest: 1.92” 90° 35° 90° 42° 95° 41° PRECIPITATION (inches) Sunday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.00 0.00 0.08 3.11 6.50 0.00 0.00 0.11 6.54 11.44 0.00 0.00 0.16 15.79 16.07 HAY INFORMATION WEDNESDAY 20% NW at 4 to 8 mph 7.1 0.21 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Monday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir N.A. 19% of capacity 14% of capacity 40% of capacity 0% of capacity 0% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Sunday) 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 High: 97° Low: 32° Wettest: 0.04” 55/82 SUN & MOON TUE. WED. 6:21 a.m. 7:18 p.m. 6:53 a.m. 8:06 p.m. 6:23 a.m. 7:17 p.m. 8:08 a.m. 8:28 p.m. MOON PHASES 442 cfs 0 cfs 85 cfs 41 cfs 51 cfs 3 cfs First Sep 13 Full Sep 20 Last Sep 28 New Oct 6 Jordan Valley 56/91 Paisley 50/89 44/87 Frenchglen 56/93 60/95 Diamond Klamath Falls Lakeview 47/90 44/89 McDermitt 51/94 Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are Tuesday night’s lows and Wednesday’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 THU. Hi/Lo/W 68/54/pc 87/55/s 97/65/s 66/52/pc 92/51/s 68/52/pc 84/53/s 93/56/s 86/51/s 89/53/s 90/61/s 86/63/s 92/57/s 92/56/s 86/53/s 91/57/s 90/47/s 89/47/s Hi/Lo/W 65/50/pc 83/50/pc 97/62/s 67/51/pc 91/48/c 67/51/pc 78/53/pc 92/55/pc 83/50/pc 82/54/pc 85/54/pc 80/56/pc 90/51/c 90/52/pc 82/52/pc 90/55/pc 84/47/pc 88/47/c 53/98 53/97 Fields 62/94 WED. Grand View Arock 56/92 56/97 Medford Brookings Boise 63/97 Silver Lake Chiloquin 53/66 Juntura 54/96 50/90 RECREATION FORECAST WEDNESDAY REGIONAL CITIES Record-breaking temperatures on Sept. 7 included 101 at New York City. Two days earlier, the same hot, dry air helped to spread wildfi res in Michigan on Sept. 5, 1881. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset 57/88 Ontario 56/96 47/92 49/88 Beaver Marsh Grants Pass Huntington 60/96 Burns Brothers 46/86 55/93 50/88 57/87 Oakridge Roseburg Powers Rome Lakeview Astoria WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Palm Springs, Calif. Walden, Colo. Big Spring, Texas 55/92 Seneca 57/86 Coos Bay SUNDAY EXTREMES ALMANAC 54/90 Council 45/91 John Day Bend Elkton 51/68 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. 56/95 54/82 55/87 53/82 86 46 6 Sisters Florence 52/62 Halfway Granite Baker City Redmond Eugene 82 56 Monument 56/93 56/83 49/61 83 44 85 49 54/86 52/84 Newport Enterprise La Grande 59/86 65/87 Idanha Salem 83 45 6 49/86 54/86 Condon 65/91 61/84 57/89 Corvallis 89 49 5 54 86 53 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 4 Elgin Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg SAT Clouds and sun Partly sunny and Partly sunny and pleasant nice 45 91 49 Comfort Index™ FRI 64/90 62/87 55/85 Lewiston 61/93 Hood River Vancouver 56/83 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 60/91 Maupin THU AUBURN, Maine — A Maine landlord arranged for the rescue of 15 tarantulas and one python that had been left behind by a tenant. Animal rescuer Drew Desjardins was called to the apartment Wednesday in Auburn, the Sun Journal reported. He found that four of 19 tarantulas had died and that the ball python did not have water. Desjardins said Thursday, Sept. 2, that he took the surviving animals back to his home and that they were doing fi ne. All the recovered ani- mals are illegal in Maine and will be relocated. There was no word on whether the tenant was being sought. Kennewick 55/79 St. Helens 52/70 WED Landlord fi nds 19 tarantulas, 1 python left behind by tenant AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION TIllamook TONIGHT “That’s why I have urged villagers here to come to the forest to play with the mon- keys and off er them food,” he said. “I think they need to interact with humans as often as possible so that they do not go wild.” they seem to prefer other things. And they’re not afraid to take matters into their own hands, Gustu Alit said. Frequently, monkeys wander into the village and sit on roofs, occasionally removing tiles and dropping them to the ground. When villagers put out daily reli- gious off erings of food on their terraces, the monkeys jump down and make off with them. “A few days ago I attended a traditional cer- emony at a temple near the Sangeh forest,” Gustu Alit said. “When I parked my car and took out two plastic bags containing food and fl owers as off erings, two monkeys suddenly appeared and grabbed it all and ran into the forest very fast.” Normally, the monkeys spend all day interacting with visitors — stealing sunglasses and water bot- tles, pulling at clothes, jumping on shoulders — and Gustu Alit theorizes that more than just being hungry, they’re bored. 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 93/62/s 79/55/pc 86/51/s 94/61/s 61/50/pc 78/52/pc 96/61/s 94/56/s 87/63/s 84/60/s 82/52/pc 90/50/s 88/56/pc 89/58/pc 84/59/s 91/60/s 83/47/s 90/63/s Hi/Lo/W 90/60/pc 73/52/pc 84/48/pc 89/56/pc 62/49/pc 75/49/pc 95/63/pc 90/54/pc 84/55/pc 78/57/pc 76/52/pc 85/45/pc 83/54/pc 80/55/pc 82/53/pc 83/57/pc 80/41/pc 84/58/pc 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 Mostly sunny; warm 64 47 84 50 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Mostly sunny Mostly sunny; warm 72 53 95 61 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Mostly sunny; warm Mostly sunny 71 42 80 41 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Mostly sunny Sunny and pleasant 86 53 87 59 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Sunshine and warm Mostly sunny 91 49 86 53 LABOR DAY EVENT $ Hurry...promotion ends September 12th Special Financing Available SAVE $ 600 UP TO on BEAUTYREST® HARMONY LUX TM and BEAUTYREST® HARMONY LUX TM HYBRID mattresses and adjustable sets.* • Free Delivery • In-Store Credit • 70 Store Buying Power • Decorating Assistance H H H H H "It’s soft enough for me and firm enough for my husband. It’s the perfect combo of soft and supportive!" HOURS:Mon. - Fri. 9:30 am-6:30 pm Sat. 9:30 am-5:30 pm Sun. 12 noon-4 pm Closed September 5th and 6th for Labor Day Check out beautyrest.com for more great reviews! (541) 963-4144 • 888-449-2704 1520 ADAMS AVENUE La GRANDE, OREGON 97850