Well, like so many others, I have BO (blogging overwhelm)
due to the length of time it has been since I last made an entry. So, I will just dive in
I last wrote about Hawaii. Since then, the entire month of October has
happened!
The first week, we had Rod and Karen Smith over for
dinner on Friday– they are such great people.
And, we had a fabulous Saturday and Sunday of General Conference. How can you top such a weekend?
The second weekend, eight of my Rock Bridge students played
in a double quartet for wedding of the principal of our school, Jen Mast.
It was outdoors at her parent’s farm east of
town and the weather was picture perfect.
And, I was completely surprised when Jenna McAllister and her parents
walked up to me as the kids were tuning up!
Jenna (can’t remember her married name) played on the RBHS basketball
team with Jen in high school. She flew
all the way from Italy to be at this wedding!
Before the wedding, Steven joined dad and me on a
shopping trip to the Amish.
Oh, it is
such a fun store to explore. They have a
gluten-free section and their bulk candy
and spice prices cannot be matched anywhere.
They do not have electricity so the store is a bit under-lit. And, the family who owns and runs the store
live above on the second floor and it is always fun to hear the tromping of
little feet running all around. I love going
there.
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this is how the store building looks |
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Amish vehicle |
Another highlight of that
Saturday was a celiac carry-in at noon.
The attendees were few in number and the food was ho hum – either because
some of the dishes were not only gluten but also egg and corn and dairy and pretty
much everything else-free which equals taste-free OR the cooks were not very
good. But, it was good to hob nob with
my fellow celiacs for a bit.
The third week was a doozy because I had two BIG EVENTS
to carry-out. Rock Bridge Orchestra’s
first concert of the year was on Thursday, the 17th. Of course, we have been preparing since the
beginning of school but concert day is always crazy. First, we rehearse in the Performing Arts
Center which means setting up 54 chairs and stands, stuffing programs,
addressing any last minute glitch in the music.
Then, I have to go home, get in my concert black, eat something, and
dash back to the school in time to help the boosters (Friends of Rock Bridge
Orchestra) get refreshments set up and tune instruments. And, then the concert –which I programmed too
much so it lasted over an hour and a half (we DID have an intermission in the
middle). By the time I was conducting the last page of the last piece, I was SO
READY to be done.
The second big event
overlapped the concert – Julina, Alex, and Imogene arrived Thursday afternoon
from Indiana for their open house the next evening. So, early in the week I went shopping for
decorations and refreshments. We kept it
simple, thankfully, so shopping wasn’t too ridiculous. Emily and Joe and family arrived Friday
morning. We set up the cultural hall
after my class at Lange (yay for not being an A-day and going to Rock Bridge). I was a little disappointed with the
attendance that night but, hey, we have a year’s supply of ice cream in our
freezer now.
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Noah and Lucy helping with the set-up |
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No receiving line! Juli and Alex just visiting on couches with the guests. As you can see, it was very casual. |
Because it was a simple décor,
take down was fast and we were all in bed by 10:30 so we could all leave in a
timely manner on Saturday – Emily and gang at 7:30 to be at the First
Congregational Pre-School Fall Festival by their start of 10:00, Julina and
gang at 8:00 to get back to Greenwood, and Steve and me at 8:15 to meet the
Southerlands at the Fall Festival (well, we picked up Lucy but left Joe with a
napping Quinn and met Emily and Noah at the event).
We only stayed until noon because there was a
stake presidency/high council temple session at 1:00 that we attended. But, we returned to the Southerland home
afterward for hanging out and a chili and cornbread dinner before driving back
to Columbia. Because, Sunday, Steve had
to speak in Moberly Ward and I had to speak in the Macon Branch. Wow, I am tired just re-reading this
paragraph!
Last week had a few out-of-the-ordinary events (who wants
to read about Lange, Rock Bridge, private students, CCO, and church all the time???)
First, on Tuesday, I was interviewed about the RTO (Really Terrible Orchestra)
by Paul Pepper in his new radio show called “Radio Friends” (his television show, Pepper and
Friends, was cancelled a few years back) that airs every morning on KBIA. The show will air on Wednesday, October 30th. And, I think anyone can access either a
podcast or a vodcast of the show through KBIA’s website. Check it out.
On Wednesday, dad and I actually went to a movie! On Beckie’s recommendation, we went to see “Gravity”
in 3D. Wow, it was an incredible
movie. Well worth the effort to see on
the big screen and worth the 3D price.
Thursday, I had a doctor appointment and a haircut. And, Sadie broke my cello bridge that evening
during a lesson. She was lunging for
Littlecat and knocked over the cello and SNAP!
Thankfully, Tom Verdot, our local luthier, answered my frantic phone
message the next morning and I dropped the cello off twenty minutes later. By the
time I finished teaching at Rock Bridge, it was done. Whew – especially since I had a wedding the next
day! Dad and I made another quick trip
to St. Louis to attend the Southerland’s ward Trunk or Treat Friday night, stay
overnight with them and go to the temple Saturday morning.
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We had to return from St. Louis by noon so we could attend an RTO rehearsal and then I had the wedding out at the winery by the river. What a view, huh? |
We came home at noon to a very sick
Alfred. Although, we didn’t know how
sick he was at the time – he was just barfing.
But, as the afternoon progressed, he got sicker and sicker so that when
I returned from the wedding, both dad and I felt his condition was emergency
status and we called the vet. She agreed
– he had a blocked urethra and x-rays showed a bladder four-times the normal
size with kidneys also enlarged. We left
him with her and immediate surgery. He had to have oxygen during the surgery
because his lungs were also bad (he was mouth breathing – a bad sign) and the
vet really didn’t think he would make it through the night. He did, however but he is still not out of
the woods. There may be extensive kidney
damage and possible muscle damage to his urethra to the extent that he cannot
urinate on his own. So, the next couple
of days will tell. Until then, he is
staying at the vet.
OK, that was long.
Most of you who read this also follow me on Facebook so you saw the
video I took of the mass leaf drop from our big tree out back. Well, it is now completely bare – in 24
hours!
Check out my bonsai maple all decked out in red....
U love that Bonsai Maple tree!! It is so vibrant!
ReplyDeleteSadie's an idiot. Hope she can pick up that paper route Sarah and Kirsti used to do to make the money to pay for the cello repair. Hope Alfred is getting stronger/better. As always, wish there were more pix, but that's only because I wasn't there.
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