Los Angeles Times

Energized to reach spring

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We seem in a funk — postholida­ys, postfootba­ll — peeking out the window to see whether spring is coming. You can almost imagine the summer scents: sunscreen, sausage on the grill, live bait, baseball. Yet not quite.

Even California finally got a dose of cold, and now rain, and some wet late-winter snow — heavy, high-grade Sierra butter.

The winter sun is still low, and the shards of light come in sideways on the starboard side, showing every speck of dust and the crud coating the patio windows. So what. A little dirt never hurt any house.

It’s the dog hair I loathe, and the dogs, both of which joined our household under dubious circumstan­ces. No one came to the inspector general — me — and asked: “Hey, can we raise this beagle? Can we adopt this wolf?”

No. The 300-pound beagle and the wolf (White Fang) just moved in one day, leaving me to feed them at 3 a.m., or let them out at sunup. Obviously, we need a new inspector general. This current one is seriously underperfo­rming.

The dog and wolf feed off my disinteres­t. They wait by the front door for me, their eager faces in the window. If there’s anything I’m a sucker for — and there really are a million things — it’s the welcoming face of a dog or wolf who loves you no matter what.

I now write them both off on my taxes, and the IRS has yet to question it.

The other day, I was digging in the yard. Sometimes, I just go out there with an ax and a shovel and start swinging for the fences. At one point, the holes and trenches made it look as if I were installing a sprinkler system, so I did.

All these mounds of dirt puzzle the neighbors. The wise guys — and my neighbors are mostly wise guys — roll down their car windows when they pass. “How’s it going?” they yell. “You say that,” I say, “as if it could possibly be going well.”

When you own a home, one thing leads to another. First, I scraped off the old sod, most of it the color of urine, in hopes of installing a new front yard the gophers could be proud of. Then the ancient sprinkler system went sffffftttt­ttt. It apparently dated to the Bronze Age.

The dogs were very impressed and quick to pitch in. The wolf, who has more digging power than the Corps of Engineers, accomplish­ed the most. She backhoed the one section of PVC that I had finished to create a cool hole in which she could lounge.

This is one of the joys of keeping an undomestic­ated wolf. White Fang sits there proudly in her muddy nest, watching me work the land. She smiles as I bloody knuckle the old sprinkler valve, hoping to avoid underminin­g our suburb’s entire water system. That takes time … the bleeding, the cussing. It’s good to have some company.

From inside, the wolf and I can smell toast burning. My family consistent­ly burns toast because everyone sets the dial to something different, then forgets to turn it back. The house smells of angry yeast.

Or of a dryer about to catch fire.

We are mostly a civil family, yet world wars can erupt over whether someone forgot to transfer wet clothes from the washer to the dryer or who took the last paper towel.

From the yard, I can hear the screaming, as they work together to resolve these important issues.

I can also smell the toast. Our honey-haired daughter Rapunzel, who might shed even more than the wolf, does this thing with toast, where she smears garlic avocado spread that she buys at the farmers market, then plops aboard a slice of tomato and a peppery fried egg. Maybe some pesto, whatever pesto is.

It is a splendid mess she creates. I told her the other day that, with this one dish, she had reinvented breakfast, a meal that — much like her old man — hadn’t much changed since the Milky Way was born.

She seemed pleased by that. Millennial­s know how to take a compliment. They accept it with grace and a smile, and the underlying knowledge that they somehow really deserve it.

“Thanks, dude,” she cooed.

I asked her: “Ever eat a breakfast, but your mind was elsewhere, and when you were done, you didn’t remember eating your breakfast at all?”

“So, you want two breakfasts?” she asks.

Sure, dude.

 ?? Chris Erskine Los Angeles Times ?? WITH THIS ONE DISH, Rapunzel has re-invented breakfast, as far as her hungry father is concerned.
Chris Erskine Los Angeles Times WITH THIS ONE DISH, Rapunzel has re-invented breakfast, as far as her hungry father is concerned.
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