COFFEE BREAK B8 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD TuESDAY, SEpTEmBER 21, 2021 Prison sentence complicates longtime friendship lent crime, it was horrible just the same. He has called me several times from prison, declaring his innocence — always requesting money. Abby, I live paycheck to paycheck. Even if I had extra money, I wouldn’t feel comfort- able giving it to him. I feel hurt and used. Part of me says I need to end the friend- ship; the other part says he needs friends right now and it’s not my place to judge him. I have refused to accept his last few calls because I really don’t know what to do. Your thoughts are appreciated. — Blindsided in Pennsylvania Dear Blindsided: This person hasn’t used you — yet. The next time he reaches out, accept the Dear Abby: I have a former high school classmate who, over the years, I’ve gotten pretty close to. He has been there for me when I was at my lowest, and I have been there for him as well. He lives several hours away, but we talked almost daily in addition to being on social media. A few months ago I stopped hearing from him, and his social media profile went dark. I had a bad feeling, so I Googled him and was shocked to see he had been arrested. While it wasn’t a vio- home. He said he found a job and decided he wants to stay there and work for some months to save up enough money to pay off the bulk of our debt. He did not consult me before making this decision. He told me he has worked out a COVID- safe housing arrangement with his sister and his aunt. The type of work he will be doing there is something he could do here, where our home is. I don’t want to discourage him, but it baf- fles me that he would take a job 1,000 miles away. What if some- thing were to happen to me or our animals? When I told him I didn’t agree with his decision, he told me I should be happy he’s no longer unemployed. How should call. When you do, make clear that you can offer moral support, but you cannot give him money because you live paycheck to pay- check. You may not hear from him after that. But if he continues to ask, take a giant step backward and recognize this friendship has run its course. Dear Abby: My husband and I have been together for three years. He recently went back to his home state 1,000 miles away for what I thought would be a two-day trip to grab some things from his late mother’s estate. He has been unemployed for most of this past year due to the pandemic, so I’m somewhat conflicted about some- thing he told me when I called to ask when he was coming I handle this? — Far away in Missouri Dear Far Away: Your husband shouldn’t have taken a job 1,000 miles away without first talking with you. That said, what’s done is done, and you need to let this play out. There’s nothing to stop you from visiting. Fortunately, you and the animals are all doing well. If circumstances change, he can always quit the job and come back. When the time comes, wel- come your debt-free husband home. There will be plenty of time for the two of you to hash out in person what caused him to make such a disruptive decision if there were similar jobs available in your own community. NEWS OF THE WEIRD Idled Thai taxis go green with mini-gardens on car roofs The Associated Press BANGKOK — Taxi fleets in Thailand are giving new meaning to the term “rooftop garden,” as they utilize the roofs of cabs idled by the coronavirus crisis to serve as small vegetable plots. Workers from two taxi coop- eratives assembled the miniature gardens last week using black plastic garbage bags stretched across bamboo frames. On top, they added soil in which a variety of crops, including tomatoes, cucumbers and string beans, were planted. The result looks more like an eye-grabbing art installation than a car park, and that’s partly the point: to draw attention to the plight of taxi drivers and operators who have been badly hit by coro- navirus lockdown measures. The Ratchapruk and Bovorn Taxi cooperatives now have just 500 cars left plying Bangkok’s streets, with 2,500 sitting idle at a number of city sites, according to 54-year-old executive Thapakorn Assawalertkul. With the capital’s streets deathly quiet until recently, Sakchai Lalit/The Associated Press Miniature gardens are planted on the rooftops of unused taxis parked in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021. Taxi fleets in Thailand are giv- ing new meaning to the term “rooftop garden,” as they utilize the roofs of cabs idled by the coronavirus crisis to serve as small vegetable plots and raise awareness about the plight of out of work drivers. there’s been too much competi- tion for too few fares, resulting in a fall in drivers’ incomes. Many now can’t afford the daily pay- ments on the vehicles, even after the charge was halved to $9.09, Thapakorn said. So they have weather | Go to AccuWeather.com walked away, leaving the cars in long, silent rows. Some drivers surrendered their cars and returned to their homes in rural areas when the pandemic first hit last year because they were so scared, he said. More gave up and returned their cars during the second wave. “Some left their cars at places like gas stations and called us to pick the cars up,” he recalled. With new surges of the virus this year, the cooperatives were “completely knocked out,” as thousands of cars were given up by their drivers, he said. Thailand’s new infections have ranged just under 15,000 in recent days after peaking above 23,400 in mid-August. The government hopes the country is easing out of this wave, which has been the deadliest so far, accounting for 97% of Thailand’s total cases and more than 99% of its deaths. In total, Thailand has con- firmed 1.4 million cases and over 14,000 deaths. The situation has left the taxi companies in financial peril, struggling to repay loans on the purchase of their fleets. Boston’s famous Skinny House sells for a nice fat price: $1.2 million BOSTON — Boston’s famous Skinny House has sold for a nice fat price. The home in the city’s North End hit the market in August for AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 50/65 Kennewick 52/70 St. Helens 57/73 53/74 Condon 51/79 56/75 WED THU FRI SAT Mainly clear More clouds than sun Sunny and nice Mostly sunny and pleasant Mostly sunny and warm 35 75 38 74 36 79 39 82 40 Eugene 10 10 8 51/75 73 40 79 45 83 48 10 10 8 46 74 43 Comfort Index™ 10 Enterprise 10 49 72 43 Comfort Index™ 10 77 51 82 47 10 8 8 10 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Sunday Low Sunday High: 106° Low: 26° Wettest: 4.87” 58° 33° 59° 43° 60° 44° PRECIPITATION (inches) Sunday Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Normal year to date 0.01 0.43 0.29 3.54 6.71 0.11 0.43 0.39 6.97 11.72 0.39 0.43 0.59 16.22 16.50 HAY INFORMATION WEDNESDAY 25% WNW at 4 to 8 mph 10.7 0.14 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Monday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir N.A. 12% of capacity 11% of capacity 32% of capacity 0% of capacity 0% of capacity High: 72° Low: 33° Wettest: 1.49” Ontario Crater Lake Florence Hurricane Hugo intensifi ed on Sept. 21, 1989, as it moved toward Charleston, S.C. Hugo made landfall just prior to midnight on Sept. 22 on Sullivan’s Island, north of Charleston, with winds of 130-150 mph. SUN & MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset TUE. WED. 6:38 a.m. 6:52 p.m. 7:34 p.m. 7:10 a.m. 6:39 a.m. 6:50 p.m. 7:54 p.m. 8:16 a.m. MOON PHASES 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 WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Zapata, Texas Bodie State Park, Calif. Fayetteville, Tenn. 496 cfs 0 cfs 52 cfs 49 cfs 91 cfs 3 cfs Last Sep 28 New Oct 6 First Oct 12 Full Oct 20 40/66 42/74 46/80 Beaver Marsh Powers 55/74 52/80 Silver Lake Jordan Valley 45/77 Frenchglen Paisley 49/81 48/73 41/70 Diamond Klamath Falls 54/82 Lakeview 41/74 39/75 McDermitt 42/82 RECREATION FORECAST WEDNESDAY 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 THU. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 65/49/sh 68/50/s 72/40/pc 73/44/s 81/49/pc 79/50/s 64/53/pc 76/56/s 78/36/pc 78/36/s 67/51/pc 71/56/s 76/50/pc 77/49/s 76/44/pc 79/44/s 74/41/pc 73/42/s 75/50/pc 76/48/s 80/51/s 78/48/s 73/50/pc 79/49/s 80/46/pc 76/46/s 80/43/pc 77/46/s 72/44/c 71/46/s 80/52/s 80/47/s 74/37/pc 79/41/s 75/38/pc 77/37/s 42/81 40/80 Fields Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are Tuesday night’s lows and Wednesday’s highs. WED. Grand View Arock 49/80 46/85 Medford Brookings Boise 52/81 55/82 49/64 39/84 42/77 Chiloquin Grants Pass Juntura 36/78 42/74 38/73 Roseburg Ontario 43/80 Burns Brothers 51/76 Coos Bay Huntington 41/77 49/72 Oakridge 46/76 46/75 Seneca Bend Elkton Council 35/75 John Day 46/72 Florence SUNDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin Sisters 50/67 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. 40/74 Baker City Redmond 49/62 49/61 Halfway Granite 49/76 Newport 54/76 72 46 45/80 52/73 54/77 Corvallis Enterprise 49/72 46/74 Monument 51/76 Idanha Salem TONIGHT La Grande Elgin 44/74 La Grande 49/74 Maupin 10 54/76 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg 49/73 Lewiston 51/79 Hood River 50/78 48/68 Comfort Index™ 10 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 50/80 Vancouver 53/72 TIllamook Baker City $1.2 million, and the deal was closed Thursday, Sept. 16, for $1.25 million, according to Zillow. The home “received multiple offers and went under agreement for over list price in less than one week,” real estate agency CL Properties posted on Facebook. The four-story home built in 1862, according to a plaque on the facade, is about 1,165 square feet — even though it is about 10 feet wide at its widest point and nar- rows in the back to about 9.25 feet. It has two bedrooms and one bathroom and includes a pri- vate deck with a view of Boston Harbor. The home does not have a front door. Instead, residents enter through a side door. It was last sold in 2017 for $900,000. It is also known as the Spite House, according to the plaque. According to local lore, two brothers inherited some land. When one of them joined the Army, the other built a large house that took up most of the land. When the soldier brother returned, he built the Skinny House to block his brother’s view and sunlight. Ratchapruk and Bovorn cooper- atives owe around $60.8 million, Thapakorn said. The government has so far not offered any direct financial support. “If we don’t have help soon, we will be in real trouble,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday, Sept. 16. The taxi-top gardens don’t offer an alternative revenue stream. The cooperatives staff, who were asked to take salary cuts, are now taking turns tending the newly-made gardens. “The vegetable garden is both an act of protest and a way to feed my staff during this tough time,” said Thapakorn. “Thailand went through political turmoil for many years, and a great flood in 2011, but business was never this terrible.” WED. City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla THU. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 79/53/pc 77/52/s 70/50/sh 72/50/s 72/41/c 73/40/s 82/51/pc 86/53/s 62/48/pc 64/49/s 70/47/r 70/47/s 80/50/c 81/44/s 81/49/pc 78/46/s 78/50/pc 74/49/s 75/54/sh 76/54/pc 74/51/pc 81/54/s 74/38/pc 76/42/s 80/52/pc 80/51/s 77/52/c 76/53/s 71/46/pc 71/48/s 79/53/pc 81/55/s 73/37/pc 71/37/s 76/53/pc 74/54/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 Clouds and sun Partly sunny; nice 49 31 68 34 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Mostly cloudy Some sun; pleasant 60 40 79 48 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Mostly cloudy Variable clouds 57 33 68 35 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Mostly cloudy Partly sunny 72 44 77 47 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Nice with some sun Mostly cloudy 75 38 74 43 Casual Sofa with Accent Pillows only $ 799 Lay-Z-Boy Recliner $ 599 5 Pc Mango set Solid mango wood 42” X 60” leg table that extends to 78”. Paired with 4 side chairs. • Free Delivery • In-Store Credit $ Only Bench available at extra cost. 899 HOURS:Mon. - Fri. 9:30 am-6:30 pm Sat. 9:30 am-5:30 pm Sun. 12 noon-4 pm (541) 963-4144 • 888-449-2704 • 70 Store Buying Power • Decorating Assistance 1520 ADAMS AVENUE La GRANDE, OREGON 97850