This spring unfolded early in Big Grove, a reminder of how closely gardeners watch nature. Phenology — the study of recurring seasonal events in plants and animals, such as leaf-out, flowering, migration, and fruit set — is an unfamiliar term that gives meaning to what gardeners do by nature when weather and climate change.
Garlic scapes are already emerging weeks ahead of what once felt normal, while fruit trees set despite the season’s accelerated pace. Kale, collards, chard, basil, and herbs surged into abundance under the steady warmth and rain, producing the kind of lush May growth more typical of June. The landscape feels slightly ahead of itself this year, as if the growing season quietly skipped a page on the calendar. As I said to a neighbor who stopped by the garden, “Garlic doesn’t pay attention to human calendars.”
A single lilac bloomed on Tuesday, May 26, far later than the main flush a few weeks ago. Perhaps one bud missed the cue for the stage call, yet persisted in making an entrance. It felt weird to see a late bloom, yet this has been a season of weird weather, so anything seems possible.
Main work last week included preparing the soil, ground cover, and cages for 19 varieties of tomatoes. This is a main crop, so doing it right is important. Rain on Sunday delayed planting again after 1.5 of 6 rows in.
I opened the covered row and everything looked good. Herbs were in abundance, with six basil plants leading the way. Everything I planted is growing in the herb bed. I harvested lettuce for tacos, and left everything else to mature. I am continually amazed by the productivity and quality of what I grow under the covered row.
The cruciferous vegetable plot is going gangbusters. I am just a few quart bags of scarlet kale from filling the four bins in the freezer for the coming year. After that, we will keep them to use fresh, with more than we can use to be given away to neighbors or the local food pantry.
I am experimenting with spring vegetable broth with deliberate attention to which greens I use for it. The first batch will include a 2:1 mix of collards to chard in an effort to make it more flavorful, and less generic. As a finishing herb, I plan to cut the outside green leaves from leeks and add them in for the final minutes of cooking. The idea is to harvest only the tops of the outer leaves so leeks can grow to maturity. I am looking forward to tasting this first batch.
Radishes and onions are plentiful. I finished picking the first round of radishes and sparingly culled a few green onions. I am determined to have a good crop of onions this year. The aforementioned leeks should be plentiful.
Week 8 feels like it should for a gardener. That’s before popular crops like tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, eggplants, and celery are planted. It was a good week.
Clipping from the March 4, 1923 Des Moines Register. Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Not long after the Kennedy assassination, Mother found me a job as a newspaper boy. Before dawn, I rode my bicycle to pick up a bundle of Des Moines Register dailies and deliver them. The homes were spread out because the Register was not our local paper. It was the route that was available. My goal was to take a paper from my bag, fold and toss it on the porch, as close to the door as possible, without getting off my bike. I could do it most of the time. I almost never saw my customers because the Register had centralized billing and I did not have to do collections. It was just me, my bicycle, and my newspaper bag in early morning darkness.
Even though I delivered newspapers for the Register, then the afternoon Times-Democrat, until starting high school, I seldom read them. I preferred to read books I selected at the public library. Once the job provided money of my own, I bought books at the drugstore near the end of my route. My customers did read the paper, though.
In 1965, the Des Moines Register, under the Cowles family who bought the paper in 1903, had become one of the nation’s premier regional newspapers, famous for statewide reporting, editorials, and investigative work. By the 1960s, it had national stature beyond the readers on my paper route. Newspapers weren’t “media” as we define that word today. They were the physical labor of printing and distributing newsprint, a community ritual. The ritual aspect was evidenced by some of my customers coaching me on where exactly on the porch they wanted to find their daily newspaper. Newspapers were part of the infrastructure of Midwestern life.
Readers sought newspapers to participate in community. Many were reading the same stories on the same day. They also sought noon radio news, and this was the time of the rise in nightly televised news which changed from 15 to 30 minutes in 1963. News was comparatively linear, bounded, and voluntary. A person made a conscious decision to sit down with a paper. The newspaper occupied a defined portion of the day. My work as a newspaper boy was the end of the line, though. Once delivered, newspapers and other news outlets did not actively pursue the reader’s attention.
My newspaper reading during and after high school and university was intermittent. In eighth grade, I completed a class project that involved clipping news stories and assembling them into an album. Later, at the University of Iowa, I regularly picked up the Daily Iowan to follow coverage of student anti-war demonstrations during the final years of the Nixon administration. The next newspaper-reading experience that stands out came while I was living in West Germany during the Cold War.
For three years I lived near the main railway station in Mainz, Germany. During scarce free time, I often walked to the station newsstand and bought copies of the International Herald Tribune, where many of the same stories published in the United States appeared in a reformatted international edition. The Stars and Stripes was also widely available, carrying American domestic news, sports, comics, and reports related to military affairs. By then I had become a steady consumer of news, both in print and through Armed Forces Radio, although the way I gave it attention differed little from my days as a newspaper boy.
In the military, I developed an identity that differed from the one I carried in civilian life. Mine became the “Iowan,” even though I had never thought much about Iowa as a defining identity before leaving home. During field exercises, bundles of Stars and Stripes arrived through the military supply chain and were distributed in the mess hall during meals. This Iowan and others like me read the paper not simply for information, but for reassurance that we were still participating in American life while stationed overseas.
I especially remember President Jimmy Carter’s 1978 trip to Wiesbaden during a state visit to West Germany. Our unit became involved in preparations for it. Afterward, reading about the visit in the newspaper felt like direct contact with public events. I saved newspaper clippings about Carter’s speech and the events. It felt like I was preserving pieces of history.
When I returned to Iowa after military service, many newspapers were experiencing strong financial performance. After the choppy waters of the 1970s—stagflation, a recession, and the fuel crisis—advertising remained strong. If a department store, grocery chain, automobile dealer, or realtor wanted to reach large numbers of local consumers, the newspaper remained the most efficient vehicle available. Newspapers were making money the way they printed advertisements.
This period of prosperity made diverse news coverage possible. In Iowa and elsewhere, newspapers could afford to send reporters across the state for feature stories, agricultural reporting, political campaigns, and local investigations because advertising revenue subsidized ambitious journalism. The Cowles family reaped the benefits of this period of economic growth. Eventually, though, they could not withstand the pressure of newspaper consolidation and were acquired by the Gannett Company, which later became USA Today.
What newspapers could not foresee during those profitable years was that their greatest vulnerability was not competition from other newspapers, television, or even radio. It was the transformation of human attention into a measurable and marketable commodity. Newspapers had always competed for readers, but they did not follow people through every idle moment of the day. Once the paper landed on the porch, the transaction was complete. Readers either opened it or they didn’t.
Writers such as Tim Wu in The Attention Merchants and Chris Hayes in The Sirens’ Call argue that modern media systems are designed not merely to inform but to capture and retain human attention. Digital platforms monitor clicks, scrolling behavior, viewing time, and engagement in ways newspapers never could. Earlier newspapers sought readers, but they could not track whether one page held attention longer than another. Modern systems can measure every interaction.
At first, newspapers participated enthusiastically in this transformation. Publishers moved content online, often giving it away free in the hope that digital advertising would replace print revenue. Instead, companies such as Google and Facebook absorbed much of the advertising income that once sustained local journalism. Classified ads virtually disappeared almost overnight. Newsrooms shrank. Stories increasingly came from wire services, syndicated material, and content-sharing agreements because local reporting had become expensive.
Today, when I open the digital edition of the Cedar Rapids Gazette, I find I already know many of the stories going in. During the day I encounter headlines through websites, social media, email alerts, and conversations. The newspaper no longer organizes the public’s attention in the way it once did. It now competes within a crowded marketplace where every platform seeks clicks, engagement, and time spent looking at a screen.
I still subscribe to a newspaper because they continue to provide something difficult to find elsewhere: a sense of deliberate attention. Someone has made decisions about what matters, arranged stories into a coherent order, and attempted to distinguish what is important. That older idea of news persists even as the economic and technological world that sustained it continues to disappear.
Our family first logged on to the internet using a personal computer and dial-up service on April 21, 1996. I didn’t anticipate how this new technology would change how I gathered news about our world and society. I certainly did not understand how media outlets would seek my attention and monetize it.
By then, the idea of a paperboy was more nostalgia than reality as adults began newspaper delivery in automobiles to cover a new set of challenges, including growing suburbs, declining circulation, and more complex logistics. The way newspapers are now is much different from when I tossed them on porches in early morning darkness.
While our sense of community changed, and newsprint has largely gone away, a newspaper remains important to our sense of community. There is value in that.
I want to say something about artificial intelligence’s intrusion into life. Because the emerging technology is rapidly changing since public awareness of it increased a few years ago, whatever I might say seems unlikely to persist in relevance for long. For now, people I know reject it as something of value. Evidence is everywhere.
May commencements brought a share of public derision. Speakers were being booed after bringing up AI and touting its benefits, notably former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Gloria Caulfield, a real estate executive. Graduates face a difficult labor market, and a technology that could make it more difficult to find a job was neither welcome nor news.
There is a lot to hate about Schmidt, but who is Gloria Caulfield? She comes from the Lake Nona development world, a 17-square-mile, master-planned smart city and innovation hub in Orlando, Florida. To her, AI and related innovation represent modernization, economic growth, and future competitiveness. She thought her speech was relevant, yet graduates in media, arts, and communications heard another warning that the professions they trained for may become more unstable. No wonder they booed.
Among problems encountered by recent college graduates are that their work internships are not turning into jobs as employers don’t accept that as experience. The use of resume scanners instead of a human is off-putting. The struggle to talk to a human at a prospective employer creates uncertainty. In addition, there are fewer jobs out there. Entry level positions are viewed as most likely targets of AI-driven automation. These things put together create stress in graduating seniors. AI is simply one more thing.
When I’m working at my desk I have a Twitch stream on in the background. The community is more than five years old with a good group of regulars I’ve gotten to know, some of them in real life. To a person, they are not fans of artificial intelligence. When the chat turns to AI, rejection is immediate. There are reasons for that, although the discussion never gets to them.
In part, this cohort spent years adapting to unstable working conditions. They are well-versed in the digital world, and a bit weary of yet another technology purporting to make their lives better when so many new technologies did not fulfill their hype and promise. They lived through outsourcing, remote work transitions, automation, software churn, layoffs, and constant demands to retrain or rebrand themselves professionally. AI is yet another source of volatility in the job market, yet another skills race with no certain outcome, and one more way to jimmy-jack the job market to the advantage of business interests.
My Twitch cohort is mostly of digital natives likely to have played Oregon Trail in school computer labs, and first experienced the internet by loading a disk into their home computer to access by dial-up on a phone line. They have seen it all and the commercial nature of AI represents nothing special. They are tired of the next new thing.
Why don’t I like it? The theft, mainly.
In October 2025, my blog got a dramatic increase in number of views from a single source. By dramatic, I mean in September the view count was 2,800, and October was 51,335. Most of these views took place from Oct. 7-9, or roughly 12 views per minute on average. The views were of individual posts going back to the first still existing online. Obviously a machine was doing this “viewing.” To what end, I don’t know, but I suspect AI training.
A local used bookseller reported a surprising number of recent online purchases of obscure books, to the tune of 500 orders per week. They feared the worst, that the purchasing was algorithm driven to acquire the books, tear off the covers, scan the pages for AI, and then discard them. In aggregate, taking millions of used books out of the marketplace. The Washington Post recently ran a story about this operation. This is a clear intrusion into what many of us believe are social norms—people buy books to read and cherish them. It represents AI theft.
I use artificial intelligence almost daily, mostly through Google’s Gemini which is now embedded into the search function. I also use ChatGPT for more complex questions. Both provide responses quickly but I find half of them problematic, or more simply said, they are garbage. Crappy work product makes AI just one more suspect opinion in a society where there is a lot of that going around.
Likely a machine designed the rollout of artificial intelligence to more public use. As is typical, the machines missed the human factor, which is another reason to boo.
With spring’s garden work, my joints ache in the morning. By the time I finish my daily exercises and 30-minute walk on the state park trail, the ache subsides. I wouldn’t change anything, yet have to wonder how many more years I can continue tending the large garden we have. That’s not a question for today as I don my overalls and prepare to dig yet another plot. It is a question for the near-term future.
This week’s focus was on getting the tomato plot planted. I spent much of Tuesday clearing the ground of collected fencing, ground cover, and other things stored temporarily. Then, I mowed the tall weeds, being careful to avoid mowing the large toad who had taken up residence. I encouraged it into the fringe area where I left the grass tall. No toads were harmed in this operation. Next comes spading the ground, applying fertilizer and soil conditioner, then rototilling.
The other limiting factor is the unseasonably warm ambient temperatures. On Wednesday morning, the forecast was for a high around 90 degrees. I have to pace myself as the heat index climbs. In earlier days, when I would work in the hot sun for hours at a time, I relished the sweat as it poured off my brow. Being older has me realizing at some point, I need to shut myself down and head indoors to the cooler temperatures. That has usually been a matter of how I feel. Septuagenarians pay attention to that.
This coming weekend is my last filling in for Blog for Iowa author Dave Bradley as he moved his family back to Iowa from Indiana. I don’t know what I will do with the extra time. The older I get the more I discover there is always something waiting for my attention.
Faith Wilmot died on Jan. 10, 2026 in Coralville, and her Celebration of Life was on Saturday, May 25, at the Unitarian Universalist Society. Faith was one of our small gang of locals who did politics. We met during the 2004 John Kerry campaign for president. Faith was for Howard Dean. She was a lot more than her politics.
My fondest memory was while I was walking in our annual parade through the City of Solon. She walked up to the curb with her adopted young daughter Miracle. It was something to see them together, Mother teaching Daughter about life in the community. More than most people Faith was part of the fabric of our community, her bright colors standing out in the warp and weft of a society we made.
The election day dinners Faith and Monique hosted in their home were legion. She started a turkey early in the day and we all brought side dishes to serve with it. With a house full of food aromas we made the last minute telephone contacts around their large dinner table. If we couldn’t reach someone on our list, one of us drove over to their house to see if they were home. There were more than a few last minute dispatches to drive people to the polls when they couldn’t get there without us. We worked until every contact was made before the polls closed.
At the memorial someone referred to us as the “Solon Mafia,” although they said it was a positive thing. I replied, it’s not like we were trying to bump anyone off. After some reflection, they said, there are a few that maybe you should. We all pulled together on election day and were better for it.
Faith had been ill before moving to Coralville and the illness eventually took her from us. We all moved on yet will remember Faith as a shining light in a world of meanness. I don’t think Faith knew how to be mean, especially with people she knew. May she rest in peace.
There is so much life at the end of May! Here are some photos taken in the garden and during yesterday’s trail walk. Living near the state park has been quite the perquisite!
Lilacs on May 26?Sumac.Multiflora Rose.Multiflora Rose.Black raspberries forming.False Indigo Bush.Radishes.Leafy greens harvest on May 25.Pre-dawn light.
Poll worker walks toward the entry point of a drive-through voting lane.
Last week I worked three six and a half hour shifts as a poll worker for the Johnson County Auditor, helping with drive-through voting. This operation is conducted in a parking ramp located next to the county administration building. If a person is sociable, the work interacting with voters can be engaging. If less so, it is the perfunctory stuff people do to fill out a schedule of security and retail work, and retirement activities. As I said to a colleague after the shift, and before they went to their next job as security staff, “It is good work if you can get it.”
My job was guarding the ballot bin, and making sure voters signed their ballot envelopes and sealed them before they went into the slot. The first two days, my partner was a Republican with whom I had worked at the home, farm and auto supply store. I got caught up on the doings over there. With a couple of exceptions, everyone I knew no longer works there.
The county makes sure there is an even match between the number of Democratic and Republican poll workers. Not that it makes a difference, because the process itself delivers fairness. These days, accusations fly and the Republican-Democratic evenness is an antidote to accusations of foul play.
We were not very busy. My mobile device monitor recorded two hours of reading my kindle app on Friday, our busiest day of the three. I had forgotten I started Suze Rotolo’s book, A Freewheelin’ Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties. She is not a great writer, yet the record of that time is of interest to people like me who participated vicariously in that era. Rotolo was Bob Dylan’s girlfriend and is featured on the cover of his 1963 breakthrough album The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan. It helped pass time.
On the last day I partnered with a younger man with a backpack. We got along fine and got the job done. He was not a talker, hence the two hours of reading my Kindle.
The worst part of the shifts was standing on a concrete floor. The auditor provided folding chairs for us, yet being on my feet so long in a day is something I had forgotten. I knew to wear shoes with inserts to protect my feet from the concrete.
Of the jobs I held previously, it most reminded me of working at Kentucky Electric Steel near Ashland, Kentucky, and at the sub-assembly operation for Whirlpool in North Liberty, both of which had concrete floors. There I wore steel-toed shoes with metatarsal protection yet the concrete floors were hard on my feet. The latter led to my first case of plantar fasciitis. During poll working shifts I did exercises to hold off plantar fasciitis. My shoe inserts and exercises did their job and my feet were fine immediately after work and the next days.
I have two additional shifts as a poll worker. One is at the auditor’s office working on early voting inside and the other is election day coverage in our precinct. My spouse and I voted early so there would be no hassle on election day. I have been a Democratic poll watcher the last two election cycles, and know the level of activity to expect. I may be able to finish my Kindle book.
The bipartisan nature of poll working makes it a positive experience. Unlike some of my colleagues at the drive-through, I don’t expect to marry up poll working with security work, despite the similarities. Will know more on that after the primary election.
Daisies at the Unitarian Universalist Society in Coralville, Iowa.
This week in the garden is mostly about what I did last Monday and Tuesday, which is not much. The overnight rain—four days in a row—made the ground too wet for digging. However, it was ideal for weeding and I made a clean sweep of the leeks, onions, turnips and radishes. They all look good right now. I brought in and began to freeze kale, harvested radishes, and pulled three green onions for the kitchen. There are already plenty of herbs. The garden is only half planted and abundance is evident.
It did not help that I had three six-and-a-half hour shifts as a poll worker. It took me away from the garden on clear days with ambient temperatures in the 50s and 60s. I took the job, so I had to show up. That is one of the positive benefits of hiring a septuagenarian.
Saturday when I returned from a memorial service I got dressed and got on my mower to cut grass for mulch. As I was unloading the bags, I notice garlic is already producing scapes. After I finished emptying the first bags of clippings it started to rain. At least I didn’t have to water. On Sunday I finished laying ground cover for plot #4, ad planted fennel, green beans, and cucumbers.
Some weeks are like this. A gardener simply lives with nature, and a rain-out week is part of that.
I wrote at length in 2020 about Pattison Sand wanting to mine the Jordan Aquifer and ship the water out west. They persist in needing water, and Iowa DNR sent me this email about their current permit request on Tuesday.
You are receiving this email because you previously expressed interest in or commented on Pattison Sand Company’s Water Use Permit Application.
For a quick recap: Pattison Sand Company requested additional water last year for their quarry facility near Clayton, IA. In response to comments received during the public notice period for the current modification, the Water Use Program held a public hearing, a public meeting, and gathered additional public comments on the proposed permit modification.
Since the last meeting, the Iowa Geological Survey completed a Hydrologic Investigation and the Water Use Program evaluated options for environmental safeguards and permit conditions. We’d like to share those findings with you at an upcoming meeting:
When: Tuesday, June 9th, 2026 | 1:00–6:00 PM
Where: Garnavillo Community Center, 106 W Niagara St, Garnavillo, Iowa
Staff from the Water Use Program, Iowa DNR Field Office, and Iowa Geological Survey will present on permit conditions, local geology and hydrology, environmental impacts, and timeline. Feel free to drop in at any time during the event. There will be presentations at the beginning (1pm) and end (5pm) of the event.
We hope to see you there.
This looks to be an excellent meeting.
For background information, here is an excerpt from my 2020 post on Pattison Sand:
Mining the Jordan Aquifer
News on Friday, Feb. 28, 2020, was Pattison Sand Company of Clayton sought to extract 34 million gallons of water per year over a ten-year period from the Jordan Aquifer, according to Perry Beeman of Iowa Capitol Dispatch. The water would be shipped by rail to arid regions in the American west, potentially to New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Arizona or California. The Jordan Aquifer is also the source of municipal water for the city of Marion which lies within Liz Mathis’ senate district.
Earlier this month Pattison proposed to extract 2 billion gallons per year from the Jordan Aquifer using wells they drilled to support their frack sand mining operation. This proposal was rejected by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.
The problem with tapping the Jordan Aquifer is it is prehistoric water, in other words, it has been there a long time. The aquifer does not recharge at the same rate as the Silurian Aquifer which lies on top of it. Once the Jordan Aquifer is drained, the water will be gone and communities that currently rely upon it could be left without a reliable water source.
The climate crisis is evident in the American west. Demand for water exceeds the region’s capacity to produce it through rainfall, snow melt, and underground aquifers. Something’s got to give for people who settled there to survive. Mining and shipping water from Eastern Iowa is not a good idea because what may be abundant to meet our current needs will be diminished by the extraction proposed by Pattison and others. It is easy to see how a discussion over water rights could escalate into regional conflict over this basic human need.
If we look at history, humans have continued to exploit natural resources until they are gone, in many cases leading to the collapse of societies. Our brains are not wired to perceive the threat shipping billions of gallons of water from Iowa to the west could have. We have to pay attention, and the role of government is to look out for the common good.
It is hard to image an overall plan to resolve the climate crisis at its root causes. Further exploitation of natural resources doesn’t solve anything and could potentially make matters worse. At least we were discussing it and in doing so raising awareness on a sunny morning in Ely over kolaches.
The primary season has been a prelude to an important election in the history of our state. Since Republicans gained majorities in the Iowa House and Senate in 2016, along with the governorship, they have been hammering away at our freedoms. Energy is building to reverse policies created since then. 2026 may be a decisive year.
Rob Sand has been the sole Democratic candidate for governor since filing day, March 13. He has had the luxury of preparing for the general election instead of expending resources on a primary fight. He has been making the most of it. Due to hard work and political savvy, Sand’s outlook has been positive, with strong fundraising, favorable early polling, growing national attention, and a race increasingly viewed as genuinely competitive despite Iowa’s recent Republican dominance.
Democrats fielded an entire slate of statewide candidates, although none of them is operating at the scale of Sand in name recognition and fundraising. Of the group, attorney general candidate Nate Willems stands out, having raised $1.25 million according to the reporting period ending this week. The remainder are strong candidates with individual strengths, yet none has broken out like Sand or Willems. They all depend on Sand pursuing the governorship at a high level and, in doing so, motivating Democrats and no-party voters to turn out for the Democratic ticket.
Sand is well positioned to do this. He is the only Democrat currently holding statewide office in Iowa. He has significantly more money than the other Democratic candidates and substantially higher name recognition. Polling on the other statewide candidates is sparse, and Sand is the only Democrat currently showing consistent competitiveness in public polling against a top Republican opponent. To the extent they matter, national Democratic groups appear to view Sand as the party’s best chance to make Iowa competitive again. These are the reasons I say Rob Sand has been using the time before the June 2 primary well.
The Johnson County Democrats pointed out the obvious in their May 13 newsletter: “We’re heading into one of the busiest and most exciting seasons of the year, with parades, fundraisers, and community events filling our spring and summer calendar. These moments are more than just celebrations. They’re opportunities to connect, organize, and build the momentum we need for the months ahead.” At the county party Hall of Fame event on May 16, inductees mentioned the need for Democrats to come together after the primary and work toward November as a team.
As primary candidates jockey for position, last week was relatively quiet. We hope it was the quiet before the storm that brings new leadership to Des Moines and the state.
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