Thursday, July 12
Today marks the start of a four-day vacation for JoAnna. Even though she didn’t join me on a morning walk today, she got out of bed at least 15 minutes before I did. I hit the snooze alarm twice before finding the energy to move more than my right arm.
When I left the house, JoAnna was sitting on our new upholstered chair and reading the newspaper, her feet stretched out on the ottoman. She looked very comfortable. By the time I returned, though, she was busily working away in the kitchen, mixing the batter for chocolate tortes
My work schedule didn’t allow me to take off the entire day. And this happens every year right before our big party. The Dane County librarians always meet on the second Thursday of every odd-numbered month. It’s not as if going to work today required a huge sacrifice on my party. The way that JoAnna and I have organized and streamlined the planning for Bastille Day, there’s no longer a need for us to have every minute of Thursday and Friday reserved for party planning.
For example, I used to wait until Saturday morning to buy the soda, water, and beer, but the first two beverages are already taken care of. (Almost. And we always purchase the wine way in advance.) It wasn’t that long ago when from early Thursday morning through late Saturday afternoon seemed like a rush of nonstop, hellbent motion. We could barely settle ourselves down for a good night’s sleep.
Practice makes perfect, as they say.
Friday, July 13.
Yesterday seemed like one of the longest days of my life – but in a very positive sense. Leisurely, productive, rewarding.
On the drive home from my series of meetings, I stopped at Target to buy four 12-packs of soda – 2 diet Coke, 1 Coke, and 1 Fresca – to add to our current inventory. Sierra Mist is the only other offering on the menu. Up until two years ago, we used to have up to 10 varieties of soda on hand. It became too much of a chore for the bartenders (Larry, Andy, and Eddie) when the coolers needed to be organized. And the more choices you offer to people, the longest it takes them to make a decision.
Same with the beer. I used to purchase as many Canadian and French beers as I could get my hands on. (And believe me, it’s not easy to find French beer!) As of last year, we limit the number of choices to two: Sleeman’s and Labatt’s Blue. (Three, if you separate Labatt’s Blue regular from Labatt’s Blue light.)
I also stopped at Johansen’s, now our preferred nursery for buying plants, and bought a flat of begonias for $10. The pansies we planted in containers – or in the ground, for that matter – haven’t done well at all. We used to have rotten luck with petunias, but this year they’re thriving with big, beautiful purple and white blooms.
JoAnna parents arrived around 6:00 yesterday. An hour later, we enjoyed a family meal – the boys included, of course – on the patio. The main entrée was marinated flank steak on the grill. The two large slabs of meat I had purchased earlier in the day proved to be just enough for the six of us. With perfect weather and no bugs to harass us, we stayed outside until dusk.
Later in the day
I spent an hour and a half shopping for beer this morning. One brand. Sleeman’s Honey Brown lager.
Last year at this time, I discovered that this Canadian “craft beer” is not available in as many liquor stores as it used to be.
“We don’t carry it anymore,” clerks would reply when I asked for this specific brand. “It didn’t sell that well,” they all added.
Can I be the only person in the Madison area who buys this beer? I asked myself.
Because of its clean, zesty, slightly sweet taste, I refer to it as “the nectar of the gods.”
I would have been better off had I reversed my course. I drove all the way to the UW-Madison campus area, making a total of four stops, before visiting the two most likely locations, both of them located near West Towne Mall. At Apollo Liquors, part of Cub Foods, I bought all the Sleeman’s they had available: 6 six-packs. At Woodman’s, I grabbed another 6 six-packs, leaving just one on the refrigerated shelf. (It won’t be a problem if we have any leftovers!
This extended search might be seen as a wasteful effort in light of current gas prices -- $3.29 in the Madison area. But it gave me a chance to listen to two chapters of an audiobook. Lately I’ve been in a nonfiction mood. Earlier this week I finished True North, which attempts to set the record straight regarding the controversy over who was the first to reach the North Pole. Robert Peary, on whom the honor was initially bestowed, comes across as an insufferable egomaniac who worked relentlessly to discredit his rival, Frederick Cook. Based on historical documents now available to researchers, Cook is now considered to be the true discoverer. =
I’m currently listening to Mayflower, which is not about the street on which we live. It tells the story – minus all the mythology that has developed through the centuries – of the voyage of the Mayflower in 1620 and the settling of Plymouth colony.
The two most interesting pieces of information so far?
The Pilgrims had been given title to land near the mouth of the Hudson River. Massachusetts was not their destination.
Since none of the Pilgrims knew how to sail, they hired a ship and crew for their Atlantic passage. (I don’t know why I would have assumed it was just the Pilgrims on the boat.) The sailors who accompanied the Pilgrims on this arduous journey were a profane and unsympathetic lot.
Needless to say, the book reaffirms the fact that what is taught about the Pilgrims in grade school is primarily fiction, right down to Plymouth Rock itself.
Sunday, July 15
The party’s over, but there’s still more clean-up to be done this afternoon. The largest and the messiest tasks, though, have been taken care of, and I’m just in the mood for a little downtime.
At 6:30, I was the first to get out of bed this morning. By the time Larry made an appearance, I had cleared most of the area under the 20' x 20' canopy tent that we rent. He then helped me dismantle it. By 9:30, I had loaded the Matrix with the two 8' x 30" tables, 30 folding chairs, and the three bags holding the stakes, poles, and tent itself. Using a borrowed truck, I made a second trip to A to Z Rent-Alls to return four 60" round tables.
So many people tell us that they consider our Bastille Day event “the party of the year”.
Bastille Day follow-up.
At the time, I was enjoying a “calm-before-the-storm” moment with JoAnna’s dad, as he completed the final preparations for the bar area. All of a sudden, we heard my name called out – rather loudly and urgently – from the utility room door. Once I reached the kitchen, JoAnna greeted me with the bad news.
And here I thought we were going to avoid this crisis.
(Shouldawouldacoulda.)
(Last year they stayed an hour after the party to help us clean up the kitchen.)
I escorted her cousin Mary, carrying a baking pan filled with 48 tortes, across the street, where Karen was waiting for us at her front door.
At the end of our visit to Circus World, I felt eager to read a detailed history of the circus in America. A timeline with photographs and other illustrations, displayed along a wall inside of one of the huge “barns” that housed part of a collection of old-time wagons, provided a starting point. At one point in time, well before my childhood and even a little bit before yours, Mom, the circus was one of the premiere, most eagerly anticipated, entertainment events just about everywhere. Traveling circuses – the train being the preferred mode of transportation – criss-crossed much of the United States. By 1909, more than 100 different shows, large and small, were in operation. The major-league, deep-pocket operations of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey circuses set the standard. World War I accelerated a decline in the circus’s cultural impact, which even the go-go years of the Roaring Twenties couldn’t reverse. By the 1950s and 1960s, the last-gasp years for most of the remaining operators, canvas tents gave way to municipal arenas. When we first moved to Warren, the circus used to set up at the airport on the West End. (In the 3rd or 4th grade, I remember seeing slides or photographs – or maybe it was even home movies – that someone’s dad had taken and brought to school for Show and Tell.) I also recall a traveling carnival spending a few days on the land where the Holly Apartments now sit. I know I made at least one visit there, but whether it was with family, friends, or on my own is long forgotten. Back in the day when I rode my bike from one end of Warren to the other, it wouldn’t surprise me if I had just taken off on my own. And without saying a word as to where I was going.
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