The weather cooled down from the 80-90 degree highs of the 3rd and the 4th. Storms rumbled and lightning flashed while at the Great Northern Brewery in Whitefish, sampling their ales (I can highly recommend the 'Going to the Sun' IPA). It was a close call--for a moment I had expected that we'd follow Mary and her mom to a quilt show--but Bob saved the day by breaking off to the pub.
The pattern of late afternoon storms continued through the middle of the week, postponing a planned backpacking trip. At Apgar in Glacier National Park, the skies turned from partly cloudy to heavy rain to hail in the space of 15 minutes and tourists, myself included, huddled under the eaves of the gift shops.
I was dead set on running 30 or more miles that week, so would go out for a six-mile run on Middle Road every afternoon. This area, paralleling the middle fork of the Flathead river between Columbia Falls and Kalispell, is largely small farms and ranches. There aren't a lot of runners. It's not helped by the fact that there's literally no shoulder on either side of the road. But there isn't a lot of traffic either (though on one occasion, a road-width-spanning harvester came up from behind). I get the feeling that, sooner or later, someone will pull up along side and ask if my truck--and my horse--have broken down. We commonly spot deer while leaving or returning on this road and according to some of the neighbors, a bear was recently spotted. Dogs, not used to human intruders, run out into the street after you. I've developed a pattern that works with all but the most aggressive canines. You slow to a walk, cross the street away from them if you can to show that you're leaving their turf, don't look 'em in the eyes, but keep moving steadily. With repeated passages, they'll become uninterested in you. A similar strategy also work with cops... they smell fear, and any erratic behavior will set off their senses.
I was also helping Mary's parents deal with the dread Microsoft Operating System. I'd convinced them to purchase a Wi-Fi DSL modem/router, a new wireless 'N' model, at not insignificant expense, so we could all use our laptops throughout the house. Their PC, though fairly recent, had slowed to a crawl, taking nearly seven minutes to boot up and be usable. Mary's oldest brother was also having trouble with an infected PC.
Seriously, I do not know how people can stomach Windows. It's always the same: you boot up and get a spray of reminders about this-and-that malware detector expiring in so many days, notifications about the last run or prompts to ignore the prompt this time or be continually prompted, confusing and conflicting messages between Windows and third-party firewalls and virus scanners, and so on, ad infinitum. The latest virus keylogs entries into popular online banking sites and delivers your account info to criminals in waiting. So you can literally be robbed just using Windows and surfing the net. But evidently, that's still not enough to get most people to try Mac or Linux? I really do not understand....