Last Tuesday morning shortly after 6:30 a.m.,
just before sunrise, we headed for Lincoln, as Larry had a dentist appointment
at 8:30 a.m.
Below is a grain truck in a field being
filled with corn from an auger or conveyor that’s drawing from an on-the-ground
grain-storage bag. Would you believe a
300-foot-long bag, ten feet in diameter, costs almost $1,000?!
The people at the dentist office took Larry’s
temporary dentures to remake them into permanent back-up teeth, and told us to
come back for them at 3:00. We had over
six hours to kill.
Fortunately, Larry looks quite normal without
his teeth.
“Just don’t laugh,” I tell him, which of
course makes him laugh.
First, we drove to Fremont so Larry could pay
for some cedar siding and a couple of large fuel tanks that he’d purchased online.
Then he suggested that we go to a Bernina
store in Omaha and look at their machines, particularly to see if they might
have a used Bernina Artista 200 or 730, as a quilting friend who lives in Texas
has one she has offered to sell me, and I wanted to take a good look at one
before deciding. My Artista has a couple
of little glitches, such as not wanting to quit reversing after I let up on the
backstitch button... and the screen isn’t big enough for me to see what I’m
doing very well (plus, it’s black and white). I have to enter one letter
at a time, save each row of print separately... and it takes soooo long to save
my longer labels – 30-45 minutes, if I’m lucky... and sometimes it works all
that time only to inform me that there’s too much data, so I have to erase a
line and start the save all over again. Sometimes letters and lines
overlap, and I don’t even know it until it stitches out. Really, really
aggravating.
When I looked for the Bernina Store address
on my tablet, I was amazed to find a store in Lincoln again, and it’s been
there since 2017. The previous Lincoln
store where I bought my 1300DC serger and Artista 180 had gone out of business
after getting flooded out two times in short succession.
The owner himself – owner of both the Lincoln
store and the Omaha store – showed me the Artista 200 they had on hand, and he
also showed me the 790 and the big 880.
((...droool...)) He was so helpful and nice, I felt a little bit
like a heel, taking his time and a brochure, saying “Thank you so much!”
-------- and departing. 😑 But I promised I
would be back one of these days, and I will, especially since I discovered that
they have a nice selection of longarm thread.
Next, we went to Vintage Village Antique
Mall, on the chance of finding some of those handmade linens quilter and
teacher Kelly Cline uses so beautifully in her quilting.
The sidewalk out front was sloped downhill
from the lot where we parked, and it was also sloped toward the center of the
walk from both the storefronts and the curb.
Furthermore, it was covered with a sheen of ice, satin-smooth. Now, I know the picture doesn’t really look
that bad; so you’ll just have to take my word for it: it was bad.
Neither of our rubber-soled, thick-treaded
shoes were doing a very good job on that stuff, but we made it.
I found nary a linen, but what a store this
was! Bunches of little rooms, all
connected with a labyrinth of hallways.
There were a couple of nicely crocheted shawls, and I’ve seen
pieces of crocheting used in quilts; but... these didn’t appeal, much.
It took us a while to make our way through
all the rooms in that store. We found
not a solitary thing we wanted, though we did feel like we’d been to a
museum. So out we went again to wend our
way back to the Jeep on that ice – this time, uphill.
It was approaching 3:00 p.m., time to return
to the Affordable Dentures office. Larry had learned earlier that he
would only get his redone temporary teeth back that day; he was supposed to
come back the next day to get the permanent ones. Don’t they
understand that some people have jobs, and actually need to go to work now and
then? He didn’t return until today.
Well, he
waited... and waited... and waited... and I, sitting out in the Jeep working on
last week’s journal, could tell from the parade of people wandering in and out
of the building that they were waiting, too. Turns out, the lab tech had been two hours
late to the office for some unknown reason, and there was a big backup with
patients. After waiting for an hour and
a half, they told Larry he could leave, and they’d call him when his teeth were
ready.
Since I’ve been needing everyday skirts, we went
to a nearby Goodwill – and hit pay dirt:
I found seven nice skirts, most of them soft denim, and a silky white
blouse for church.
By this time, we were getting awfully hungry. It had been eleven hours
since we ate breakfast, after all. So we
stopped at a convenience store to get a couple of bananas and a smoothie that
Larry could manage without teeth.
We headed back to the dentist office – and
they called, just as we parked. Larry
went in to get the teeth, which were now supposed to be permanent back-ups,
well-made, perfectly fitting, and so forth.
They were
the worst-fitting things he’s had during this entire year since he had his own
teeth removed.
The tech, rushing
to catch up, had made a mangled mess of these teeth that are supposed to now be
permanent backups. The young woman who
was fitting them for him gave effort to improve them, but she’s young and
inexperienced, and simply couldn’t cope with the mess the tech had already made
of them.
When we
went to eat at Cracker Barrel after finally getting them at nearly 6:00 p.m.,
Larry had a terrible time eating, even though he got all soft foods. Before we went in, he whittled a sharp edge
off those dentures with his pocketk
nife, hacker-surgeon-style; but even so, by
the time he finished eating, his tongue was cut and bleeding.
This
three-hour delay caused the forecasted bad weather to start before we even
reached Seward, some 65 miles from home, counting the short jaunt we took to
Shelby to fill the Jeep with E85. It
runs sooo much better on that. Why
doesn’t Columbus have any stations that sell the stuff, for pity’s sake?!
We stopped at a convenience store in Seward,
and discovered that the rain was indeed freezing; the parking lot and sidewalk
were getting slick.
On we went, a little slower, with a little
more caution.
Question:
If you have your lights on dim on account of the weather (fog or rain or
snow), then upon meeting another car forget and accidentally flash your brights
at him, is there a set number of further flashes that sends an ‘I’m sorry’
code? Or should you just turn your
lights off and drive along in the dark as penance? 🤔🙃🥴
The
windshield began icing up, and we took the heat off our feet and applied it to
the defroster.
The last two miles before we got to our house
were on one of the slickest roads we’ve ever traversed – and believe me, we’ve
traversed some mighty slippery roads in our time. Whew.
When the
Jeep Commander, festooned and bejeweled with aggressive new tires, can barely
make it up the hill to our lane on Old Highway 81, that’s slick.
As we were
turning off of Rte. 22 to come up the hill to our house, we could see a car and
at least one, but more likely two, big trucks to the west, heading farther
west. They had brake lights on, and
appeared to be nearly stopped. The wind
was blowing our Jeep a little bit sideways on the ice, so I can only imagine
the troubles they were having, car and truck alike. I hoped they could make it to some place of
safety.
We drove
slowly and carefully down the lane... turned into our downhill-sloped drive... and
discovered it was a glistening glaze of ice.
We slowed to a near-stop to avoid hitting tree and house... decided it
wasn’t wise to continue – and then discovered the Jeep would not stop.
It just
continued on sliding, slowly and inexorably.
We feared we would bump the stock trailer and the engine hoist at the
bottom of the drive, and we knew good and well we’d never make it around
the corner and into the garage, as the drive gets steeper as it rounds the
corner.
We sat
silently, sliding, and I imagined plowing over the engine hoist, ka-thumping
off the end of the drive, careening on down the hill, and crashing headlong into
the big garage Larry is building down there.
But finally
the Jeep slid sideways enough that the rear wheels bumped slightly against the
flowerbed, where the snow is fairly deep and there’s a lot of tall old flower
growth, and that stopped it. With the
freezing rain still coming down, though, we figured it would eventually just
start sliding again, and could very likely crash on down the hill.
We gathered
up our paraphernalia and managed to get out, hanging onto the Jeep, until we
could get our feet into deeper snow. We
shut the doors carefully, trying not to start the thing sliding again. Then we trudged to the front walk-in garage
door by marching crunchity-clomp-crunch through the snow and the Autumn Joy
sedum. Thank goodness I never cut those
things down before spring! I leave them
up because the little birds love the seeds, all winter long. I never knew that they’d provide good
traction in an ice storm!
The seeds
are now scattered all over the snow, and scrunched into it. But we stayed on our pegs.
We’d no
sooner gotten inside than Larry remembered: his teeth were still in the Jeep in his empty
smoothie cup. We laughed about it for a
bit, but he really needed to get them and clean them and put them into the soaking
solution. So he hunted up some de-icing
salt, and scattered it in front of him all the way back to the Jeep. Then he put a liberal layer down in front of
the tires, so the Jeep wouldn’t slide down the drive any farther.
The salt
melted the ice so well, he went on putting it down, laying a track on down the
driveway, around the corner, and right up to the garage door (and walking in
the track as he went along, to keep from falling).
Then he went
back, got in the Jeep, and managed to drive it around to the garage, and right
on in.
After all
that, he even remembered to bring his teeth in the house!
Thank
goodness we weren’t 30 minutes later, or we might never have made it up Old
Highway 81 to our house.
After church Wednesday night, we made Grant
happy by delivering his stuffed fox back to him. I noticed when we were
there that its arm was about to come off, so I asked him if he’d like me to
take it home and repair it. He did, and I did, and the fox is home
again. 🦊
On one of my quilting groups, we were
discussing favorite childhood hobbies.
My favorite hobbies were reading, riding my
bike, playing the piano, singing, hiking hither and yon, climbing trees,
playing with my dog Sparkle and teaching her every trick I could think of,
taking pictures with my cute little red 126mm camera (later graduating to a
110mm), and sewing.
When I was quite young, I would ride off on
my bike through the town (population, about 15,000, back then in the late 60s),
turning this way and that way until I was totally lost, and a great rush of
almost-frightened adrenaline would hit. Then
I would turn around and pedal like anything until I’d finally see something
familiar, and work my way back home. My
parents’ hair would’ve stood straight up on end, had they known how far afield
I got.
A few times, I wound up at the far edge of
town, on the opposite side from my house, staring in wonder at open cornfields
or woods. Daddy and Mama probably
thought I was just the other side of the block, playing with the neighbor kids!
Sometimes I did the same, sans bike, out in
the mountains when my parents were cooking/setting up the camper/ napping/etc. Amazingly, I never got truly lost, nor bitten
by a rattlesnake, nor attacked by a grizzly. And I somehow got myself back to the camper
before Daddy and Mama got worried. My
guardian angel was probably exhausted. (Not
that angels ever get exhausted.)
I got my dog Sparkle, a German
shepherd/collie mix, when I was 12. Here
she is decked out in a couple of my Easter hats, lace, and some beads. I entitled the first picture, ‘Party Dog’,
and the second, ‘Party’s Over’.
When
I put the perky hat on her, I said in a bright, cheery voice, “Good dog!!! Such
a good dog!!! You look so pretty!!!” –
so she looked all happy and perky, and quite matched the hat.
When
I put the droopy hat on her, I said in a mournful tone, “Wellll, pooooor,
poooor doggy.” So she looked all sad and
dejected, just because of my voice.
I
called her my ‘push-button’ dog, because she’d happily try to do anything I
asked of her. By the time she was a
little over a year old, she’d do most of her commands by hand/eye/ head signals
alone. If I’d mix signals, she’d stop,
stare at me with those bright eyes, and say, “Woof-OOF!” which always made me
laugh, which in turn made her wag furiously, figuring she’d done the right
thing, of course. She was a wonderful,
intelligent dog.
The
longest trip I ever went on with my parents was when we went to
Newfoundland. We had driven our big Buick Electra, and we had Sparkle
with us. At North Sydney, Nova Scotia, we took a big ship, the John
Hamilton IV, across the St. Lawrence Strait to Channel-Port aux Basques,
Newfoundland. It took 6 ½ hours to cross the Strait. I’d go down to
the level where our car was parked fairly often to care for my dog.
Once
while down there, a young ship worker asked me to go visit the boiler/engine
room with him.
I
was 12. I looked 18.
I
thought, This ain’t right, and ordered Sparkle, “Sit.”
She
sat.
Shipworker
the Bearded backed up a step.
I
smiled, answered his request with a polite “No, thank you,” and told my dog
(who didn’t really need voice commands, but it was impressive),
“Heel.” And off we went, Sparkle immediately at my left side with her
right shoulder perfectly aligned with my left knee.
Scruffbeard
didn’t bother me again.
Here’s a picture of Sparkle and me on the
shores of Echo Lake, halfway up Mt. Evans.
As for reading... I read everything I could get
my hands on, including the entire unabridged Merriam-Webster dictionary, when I
was about 6. I found a set of old
encyclopedias in our basement when I was 7 or 8. There was a big overstuffed chair down there,
too. Thus, I was lost to the world for days.
Mama would have been horrified, had she
known all the things I learned. 😲
I remember the day I went to the public
library at about age 9, walked slowly through the children’s section looking
for books I hadn’t read – and realized, I’ve read every single book in this
section. Sooo... I graduated to the
young teens’ section.
And climbing trees? There was one just outside the door to
Daddy’s big garage. It was a lovely,
limber thing, and I could climb to some of the smaller branches and make that
thing sway to and fro like a swing carousel.
(The thought of the branch breaking never occurred to me.)
One summer evening, I was up there doing just
that, when I heard Daddy closing things down in his garage, preparing to come
out the side door. I quickly worked up a
strong rhythm, making those branches dip right down to the ground. One way, then the other, I swayed that
tree. Timing it just right as the tree
bent low, I took a leap and landed ker-PLOP right in front of my startled
father. 😂
Thursday I began quilting the central panel
of the Atlantic Beach Path quilt:
Two hours later, it looked like this:
A
friend remarked that one of the quilting designs reminded her of a
seahorse.
That
gave me an idea: if I was skilled
enough, I could quilt little sea and beach critters into some of these hexagons.
Trouble is, I’m the child whose parents
had to look at drawings other parents stuck on their refrigerators to see if
their little girl had drawn a pig, or a giraffe! 🤣
The Schwan man got stuck on the ice in our
driveway Friday afternoon. Fortunately, Larry had just purchased a couple
of bags of salt de-icer (that stuff is expensive!). I scurried out
to the garage for a bag (those things are heavy!), and the man put down
a layer behind his rear wheels, and was soon out again (that stuff is magic!).
Before heading back to the quilting studio, I
put some venison, baby bakers (potatoes), and corn on the cob into the French
oven, and set it to baking slowly. A
couple of hours later, I got the French oven out of the oven, turned up the
heat, and put in an apple pie. We would
have Butter Pecan ice cream with it.
As usual, Larry was late. He’s always late when I make a big
supper; it must be one of Murphy’s Laws.
He’d gone hunting, and the carrier bearing had fallen off of his pickup,
so that he had to limp it home slowly.
At least he got a deer, so he wasn’t too awfully woebegone. And he soon had the pickup fixed. But he had a dreadful time trying to
eat.
Once upon a time, back when Larry was about
16, he decided to not only butcher a deer himself, but also to tan the
leather himself.
He used his mother’s dryer for the job.
Astonishingly, she let him live.
I worked on hexagons and borders Friday. Meanwhile, Teensy was over there wondering who
shrunk his Thermabed.
“Pssst, Teensy, you’d fit better if you turned
the other way.”
After turning:
Ahhhhhh! There, that’s a little bettah.
Not quite right, but... bettah.
He clambered out of his bed and came
mrrrrowing to request treats periodically.
Teensy started out as
TNC (The Neighbor’s Cat). Their adult
daughter left him there when she moved.
He’d never been outside, but they didn’t want him inside. He ran away.
Victoria found him a week later, half-starved --- and he’s loved us and
been here ever since, some ten years. Say
‘TNC’ fast several times, and it becomes ‘Teensy’. 😃 Makes a good joke, because he’s so big. 😄
News Flash, News Flash!!!
Violet is walking.
Both Aaron and Joanna got ‘new’ vehicles Saturday. Aaron’s is a 2017 Ford Escape, and Joanna’s
is a 2012 Chevy Malibu – her first car.
I got ten more hexagons done that day. Take
a look at this ‘oops’,
followed by the fixed block.
Speaking of ‘oopses’... I have sometimes removed
a wobble in my quilting – only to put it straight back in two or three
times. 🙄 At least this time there were no stitches to put
back in.
I actually thought as I was doing it, This little spot doesn’t
hit the corner, like those other ones did. But when one has one’s
nose pressed to the quilt (softer than a grindstone, heh), one just doesn’t see
the bigger picture until one steps back.
You know, there’d be a whole lot of things in
life that would be mighty aggravatin’, if one couldn’t laugh at one’s self!
Sunday morning, it was 22° at 7:45 a.m.—and I
had the bathroom window wide open, because I get boiling hot when I blow-dry my
hair.
A friend’s story that day about holding her breath
as her granddaughter held a lit candle during a Christmas program reminded me of
when I was 4 years old, and got to say a little poem in the Christmas
program. The 4-year-olds didn’t usually say poems, but they were short of
children for the particular acrostic they wanted to use that year, and so I got
the privilege. I was shy, but I could memorize quickly, and had a voice
that carried (I was the preacher’s daughter, after all, and had a voice to
prove it!).
My poem started, “I’m just a tiny candle, Not
very big at all;” and ended, “I’ll let my little light shine!”
I was given a little green, red, and gold wax
candle to hold, and thought that was plenty nice; but, oh, you can’t imagine
how delighted I was when just before I went up the steps to the platform to say
my poem the night of the program, one of the ushers, a dear friend of my father’s
whom I loved very much, stepped forward with a lighter and lit my candle!!!
Ohhh. My candle was lit.
Larry went to his dentist in Lincoln this
morning. He called this afternoon to tell
me where he was, and to say that they’d worked on his temporary teeth, so now
they fit better. The permanent teeth
aren’t done; they just have a few teeth in the gums, and had him try them on to
decide if the gums were okay, and the few teeth in them so far positioned
correctly. Seems it will be a process
before they are completed.
He was on his way to a town in Iowa to pick
up the cedar siding and the fuel tanks.
He bought those items for $125. The
cedar alone is worth over $1,000, even at Menards. He plans to use it on walls and ceiling of the
bathroom in our upstairs addition.
I baked Schwan’s Canadian Bacon pizza for
supper tonight – and Larry, who got home around 8:00 p.m., could not chew the
Canadian bacon. His teeth fit fairly
well now, but his mouth is still sore from last week’s ill fit.
Oops, there was a small landslide in the
lower cupboard behind me. Time out while
I cram a couple of things back in there.
I need to clean that thing out. Even the cats know that when we open it, they
should probably move, fast, since empty Tupperware and
Sterilite containers are liable to come tumbling out. One of these
days...
I’m sipping Passion
Berry Jolt Tiesta tea –– loose-leaf black tea with raspberry, passion fruit, and
pineapple bits, cornflower petals and marigold flowers in it. I used the little stainless steel infusion
teapot from John H. and Lura Kay for the first time. It has a little basket inside it that holds
the tealeaves.
It brewed really nicely, with lots of flavor,
and stayed hot until I needed to refill it with water.
I feel like I’m at one of those
fancy-schmancy restaurants, where they bring you a pretty china teacup and
saucer, along with a little teapot of hot water and a variety of teas.
Only it’s better, because loose-leaf tea has more flavor than teabags, and this
little pot is bigger and prettier.
Plus, I didn’t have to trip the waitress to
get her attention when I wanted more water.
Bedtime!
,,,>^..^<,,, Sarah Lynn ,,,>^..^<,,,
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