October
22, 2006:
Another
cool, overcast day but the overcast is lighter. Some days during the past
week our carriage lamp stayed on all day because of the heavy overcast.
We
took Lucille to
Saskatoon
on Friday and came home yesterday. Gas in the city was 89.5˘; at Wakaw it
was 88.5˘ and at Tisdale 85.9˘. Quite a difference from $1.20! There
were only traces of snow in
Saskatoon
, but it was just as cold as here.
We
stopped at Tisdale and went to Doghide Gallery, where Rose Steadman was
having a show of her paintings. The place was packed, and the paintings
were very well displayed. I meant to ask Sandra if she had full spectrum
fluorescent tubes in her fixtures, because ordinary fluorescents can just
kill colors, especially skin tones. It seemed to me to be a genuinely
interested crowd, not just a bunch of people killing time.
They
were serving refreshments, and there was entertainment by Freddie and
Sheila Pelletier, guitar and vocal music in every genre you could think
of. I remarked to Freddie that he was just about due for a new guitar
because the top was almost worn through on his. He said his guitar dated
from 1909, Sheila’s from about 1920. They were Martins, mass produced
and sold by Sears Roebuck in the olden days. They sure produced some nice
music!
I
bought a couple of their CDs, and got permission from Freddie to use them
in my slide shows. Nice, lively music to keep people awake.
We
looked at some condos in
Saskatoon
. Doreen commented that every one of the places we saw was just screaming
for one of Rose’s big, colorful paintings! They can turn winter into
summer.
We
woke up last Monday to see several inches of fresh snow covering
everything. Jenny came out from Kelvington, intending to pick up Lucille
and carry on to
Saskatoon
, but decided against it. We got her to drive us over for coffee in her
Jeep; there was ice under the snow and driving conditions were not good.
We
decided not to battle roads to go to the rummage sale at Perigord. They
had a pretty poor turnout and, because they had a lot of good stuff for
the sale, they decided to hold it again tomorrow, the 23rd.
Good, because I hate to miss lunch at Perigord. Not just the lunch, but
the friendly people and scintillating conversation!
The
weather stayed cold all week. We lost a lot of the snow but there is still
some around, and some icy patches here in the Park. Maybe it will warm up
next week, the snow will go, and we will get several weeks of nice Indian
summer! (And maybe pigs will fly!)
We
missed coffee row this morning. I have been battling a cold for the past
week, and last night I slept for eleven hours. Got up, had breakfast, and
slept for another hour. Had lunch, did a bit of work on this column, and
went back to bed for another three hours! Now I’m trying to keep my eyes
open long enough to finish this. There has been a nasty cold going around;
in some cases it seems to be over with in a few days, but in others it
hangs on for weeks and weeks.
The
coffee row crowd seems to like the new setup at The Round Table. The big
round table is usually full, then when the women get too noisy we send
them to the other round table. It must average at least twenty people for
coffee. They have been serving some great lunches, too: chili, soup, buns,
toast. We have eaten there more since the change than we did before. Donna
has been running The Round Table, and she does wonders for the
cheerfulness of the place.