Sunday, August 26, 2012

August news


        I must say that, up to now, school has been pretty time-consuming….planning meetings, setting up classrooms, preparing for classes, figuring out my schedule.  I THINK I can say that things are now pretty well set up and it will just be moving forward.  I HOPE!
         I have not begun my CIS orchestras – that starts tomorrow – but I have been contacting students and setting up size-me-up sessions all last week.  My violin class at Lange is comprised of twelve students – 10 girls, 2 boys – who range in playing ability from “pretty good” to “how did they make it through all last year?”  One girl literally received an F and yet, she is back and in my class.  Oh boy!  My Rock Bridge High School orchestra is great – 12 violins, 6 cellos, 2 basses, aaaaaaaaaand 1 viola – and he is not very strong, at that.  But, we will work around that by asking assorted violins to fill in on the viola part.  I teach six students at Central Methodist University – 3 cellos and 3 violins.  All are at the beginning level and last week was my first time to see them.  It was not as tiring as I thought it would be and I think I will come to look forward to my Thursday afternoons in Fayette. 
Since I do so much driving, I decided last spring to check out books on CD to help pass the time in the car.  I am currently listening to Huckleberry Finn and I am really enjoying it…. laughing out loud many times.   My pathetic high school English education left me without exposure to many of the great authors so I hope to make up for that this year by listening to them on CD. 
        Ruth Marshall turned 91 on Wednesday and her son, Richard, and his wife Roseanne flew out from New York to be with her.  I was invited to join them and Ruth’s sister, Rosie and her family at Golden Corral Wednesday evening.  It was a nice evening.

 Below is a photo of Siri, Julia, and Margaret - the ladies in the Prairie String Quartet - at a little luncheon we had last Saturday.  The picture was taken on Siri's deck of her beautiful new home in west Columbia.  Our quartet has many weddings booked for the fall and we needed to have a planning meeting.  We played for two weddings just yesterday!
Last Friday evening, we traveled to St. Louis to attend the temple and we stayed over at Emily and Joe's.  Here are some cute pictures of Lucy and Noah that I took Saturday morning before we returned to Columbia.  (kind of blurry, Emily, I know)

        We are still suffering from no rain.  We are supposed to get some today but I will believe it when it happens.  Sarah has moved out and into a cute one-bedroom apartment above the garage at Charles and Rebecca Lamb’s house (members of our church).  She is literally in the middle of the woods in the middle of Columbia.  Trissy has moved with Sarah on a trial basis.  We are not sure how it will work since the house on Parker has been the only home she has ever known.  And, Steve is probably her true “person” but we are not sure about that.  Steve DID discover her newest escape route yesterday.  I thought she was climbing over the fence but, no, she is still crawling under the fence by the garden.  There is a spot where she doesn't have to dig and that is how she gets out so quickly (less than 5 minutes!) She won’t do it if we are out in the yard with her (which is pretty much all the time because she is so persistent in escaping) but, Steve went back inside and peeked out and caught her “red pawed” so to speak.   
        Beckie’s progression towards leaving for Hawaii continues.  She took a truckload of stuff to St. Louis to sell in her friend Kathy’s yard sale last weekend and made $400.00.  She will empty out her storage unit this week (it is mostly empty already) and will start living out of suitcases the first of September.  She has been working LOTS of overtime lately at MBS.  That and the hoops she has to jump through to bring Max to Hawaii have been her biggest stressers. 
        So, that brings you up to date with us here in Columbia….

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

It's blogging time - finally



Where did July go???  Where did the summer go??!!??  School begins in the next two weeks and there you are, “summer” is over but I bet the heat won’t be over.  This oppressive heat and drought is one of the worst on record – certainly the worst we have ever experienced.  All I do is water – trying to save the garden and all the fruit bearing bushes and trees that we have planted. 

That is what July was – watering…..and having a Lambson family reunion.  Kirsti and Ryan flew out from Utah.  Elise flew in from New York.  And Julina drove in from Indiana.  The reunion started
 with a campout at Johnson's Shut-Ins State Park - for old time sake.


 
 We haven’t camped there in seven years – not since the Taum Sauk dam burst and flooded the state park.  Heck, we really haven’t camped at all in those seven years.  So, add oppressive heat, a campground that is totally different and farther away from the Shut-Ins, and old, decaying (or absent) camp equipment and you have a recipe for a less-than-perfect camping trip.   
 

Sleeping was hot.  Eating was drawn-out because there was an open-fire ban (due to the drought) and we could only use charcoal.  
 
 
  our poor bacon trying to cook over charcoal.....

 After we learned to light little piles of charcoal every thirty minutes, cooking got easier but the first couple of meals were kind of a disaster as our charcoal briquette heat faded too quickly to cook effectively.  

 
  pie irons did OK - but look how funny the egg cooked?  Looks like a little volcano!

  of course, Noah had fun, no matter what!
and it was fun to have Papa Joe along (he was stateside for a meeting earlier in the week)
  
Only the water (which was low, but still present) saved the day.  Swimming was wonderful!
 
  Elise and Papa Joe 
Steve found one of his hole-in-a rocks
Lucy was NOT happy that she couldn't go down the Shut-Ins with mom, dad and Noah
 
Camping went from Thursday to Saturday and then we congregated in Columbia for 24 hours – enough time to have a family portrait,
 

   a family council, and  two family dinners – the first one being cooked by those who do not like to camp and stayed home (Beckie, Tamara, Julina, and Melanie) – and the second one to celebrate Elise’s birthday.   
 

 We got to attend the new Kansas City Temple twice – once before picking up Elise at the airport and again before her flight back home.  That was great.  
 
 Ryan, Kirsti, Steve, and Elise at the Kansas City Temple.

  Overall, it was a family gathering that exceeded my hopes and expectations.  So grateful to have everyone home one last time before Beckie leaves in September.

July was also grandkids.  Emily flew to Utah last week to be the photographer for Kamrie’s wedding (Jeff’s oldest daughter) so Steve and I took care of Noah and Lucy for four days.  It was great – both adapted really well to being away from their parents.  I was so busy that I didn’t take many photos except these when Noah and Lucy were on our bed.   
 
 It was Lucy’s FAVORITE thing to do – bounce on grandma and grandpa’s bed.  We explored the little-kid’s swim at Oakland Park and we returned to Stephen’s Lake Park with the spray ground and sandy beach.  
 
And, now it is time for school.  I am still teaching zero-hour orchestra Monday through Fridays at CIS.  I have six applied string students (basically private lessons) at CMU that I will drive up to Fayette to teach hopefully just once a week but I might have to split the lessons between two days  BECAUSE, I was asked late last week if I would consider teaching part-time with Columbia Public Schools again!  That was a surprise.  And, after a weekend of considering, I accepted the job of teaching a morning 7th grade viola/cello class every day for 45 minutes at Lange Middle School and driving down to Rockbridge High School every other day to direct their orchestra for 90 minutes right around noontime.  I really believe this to be only a year-long assignment as next fall, the third high school will open and CPS will be able to hire another full-time string teacher (which I WON’T be).  SO, for this year, I will be doing LOTS of string teaching on LOTS of different levels.   OH, and remember my adult string group – the Da Capo Strings?  I have been thinking it was time to integrate them into the RTO (Really Terrible Orchestra – for people who want to play in an orchestra but are not skilled enough for CCO).  Only, the director of the RTO was ready to fold the group because she didn’t want to handle it alone any longer.   So, we have put our resources together and we will co-conduct/direct the RTO.  This is actually a lighter load for me as Da Capo Strings met weekly and this will be twice a month. But, considering how crazy my summer was, maybe going back to school will be a vacation???