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Road Scholar has a grandparent and grandchild adventure about the Boxcar Children. Since Joanna absolutely loved the book after I read it to them, and keeps re-reading it, I thought this would be a great birthday present for her when she turned 8. (I also gave her a box of the first 12 books, that looked like a boxcar.) She's been very excited about the camp.
 

The kids had been visiting with Grandma since the end of May, so Bernadette planned to meet me with Joanna on Monday the 25th in Dunsmuir at the Railroad Park Resort.. (Gareth would follow the next week when he and Rob would go to Camp Lassen.)
 

I, of course, started early, with the plan to eat in Corning and do some geocaching, mostly in Willows. I did find 3 of the ones I marked in Willows but didn't look for more, as it was getting hot and I certainly didn't want to be late. I got a couple of fancy sauces in Corning, but I didn't even sample the olives. Then, as I went through Redding and got close to Dunsmuir, I realized I was going to be early. I spent some time at the viewpoint reading the signs, but eventually had to get to the resort.
 

They were willing to check me in early, which was good, since I needed the bathroom. I had caboose #22.After my bathroom break I went back and sat on a bench outside the office with my iPad and waited for Bernadette. 3 O'Clock came and went, but no sign of her. Finally I heard her talking and spied her and the kids, who had parked in the Park instead of the resort and were waiting for me there. So I walked with Joanna and Padreic and had her drive over to the caboose.
 

Because of the confusion over permission slips, she came with me to meet Heather and sign in. I had brought two copies, signed by Rob, and Bernadette signed them at the time. Heather had a lot of goodies for Joanna, including a water bottle and a backpack and a folder with songs and games in it. There was a medical form that Bernadette had filled out over the phone, but it was easier for her to fill it out in person anyway. Then we went back to the caboose. Padreic was convinced he was staying, too, and was quite distressed to have to leave, but Bernadette told me he went right to sleep when he got in the car.
 
 
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I thought Joanna would be excited to go swimming, but in the event it was "too COOOOOOLD" and "too DEEEEEP." (Later in the week, with other kids in it, suddenly she loved it.) So, at a loss for something to do, as I'd forgotten to bring a deck of cards, we went to the gift shop and bought some. She wanted the ones with cats on them and had to read every one before she actually played. Then I taught her how to play clock solitaire and she caught on right away, then played another solitaire for awhile.
 
Clock Solitaire
 

At last it was time to go to orientation and meet Pat and get introduced. Joanna spoke up, to my surprise. Afterwards, there was a pizza dinner, though Joanna stuck with salad. Without front teeth, she doesn't do crusts very well. Then Pat started talking about the Boxcar Children, and Joanna, not knowing where the bathroom was, wet her pants. The kids had been given bandanas and told to think of new uses for them, but we decided not to admit to "hiding your indescretion" to the list. We scooted back to our caboose and she changed her clothes and we scooted back in time to get a free Boxcar Children book!
 

So back to our room and ready for bed, and Joanna read in bed until she finished the book.
 

Tuesday morning we were awake for breakfast (there's a coffee pot in the room, so I was fine waking up early and reading while enjoying my morning cuppa.) Bacon and eggs and all kinds of good stuff. There was a workshop on writing and, by coaxing her along, I got a couple of paragraphs out of Joanna about how she got to camp and what she did on Monday.
 

Then at 9:15 we got on the bus and met Todd, our driver, and off we went to Mt. Shasta Fish Hatchery and the Sisson Museum. The kids fed trout, then spread out through the wonderful museum, which is very hands-on. There's a volcano to walk through, a fire engine to climb onto, costumes to wear, a bear to pet, a model train to run, old-fashioned toys, all kinds of lovely things.
 

At one point, Tate was being loud, and the docent said "inside voice please." I told her, on the basis of one evening's acquaintance, that the PA voice WAS his inside voice! Tate is very loud, and very enthusiastic, and his parents obviously take him places because he knows a lot about a lot of things. And he's not shy about sharing.
 

At the Fish Hatchery I picked up a really pretty black and white feather and managed to keep it unbroken till we got home.
 
 
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DSC01995 DSC01999
 

After an hour or so, we left the docents to heave a sigh of relief as we left for McCleod Falls, which was new territory for me. It's pretty. Joanna didn't like her lunch, since she'd asked (as we were filling out our menus) if the white bread was soft. It actually was a crusty bun, so no. I told her to eat the insides but left her on her own until I found that she'd had 6 (SIX!) packs of gummy bears and none of the sandwich. Eat the ham and the cheese, it's what you ordered. (And the pickles.) She had the cheese and didn't want the ham, and gave the pickles to someone else.
After that, they made s'mores.
 

Then they made survival kits, including a whistle, a silver foil strip to wave at an airplane, ways to keep warm etc. Joanna was having trouble fixing the knots, and one of the grandmas helped her but it wasn't right, so I unpicked it and talked her through a square knot to finish.
 
They painted craft sticks and then had to find 10 small rocks for an Indian (OK, Native American) game, which she and I played back in the room the next couple of days. It's kind of fun, and definitely takes no skill, unlike Go Fish which I had to feign deafness and Alzheimer's to keep from winning. I did win the stick and rocks game, but it was entirely by luck.
 

We took a very short hike down to the creek. Afterwards, Joanna gave the last of her water to a tiny tree.
DSC02007 DSC02009
McCleod Falls DSC02018
 

Then it was back in the bus to go to Mt. Shasta again to the source of the Sacramento. Joanna and I both filled our water bottles there and kept them in our fridge overnight. Great tasting water. Pat and Heather were more bothered by the hippies than I was.
 
DSC02019
 

The long day wasn't over. We were back at the resort about 3:30 and the kids had crafts, and I went to the bar at 4 for a much-needed beer.

Then in the evening the ladies of the Botanical Gardens guild had fixed us a lovely spaghetti dinner there. A man took pictures, but I haven't seen Joanna's yet. Pat gave out another book while the adults strolled the gardens, but Joanna already had this one, so got a special one back at camp. And, again, read herself to sleep.
 

Wednesday morning, we watched two of the boys play a remarkable Jenga game. They got it as high as themselves!
 
Jenga Game
 

Because Joanna was so all over the place on Tuesday, I gave her an Adderol this day and Thursday. I couldn't see much difference, except she may have been sleepier.
 

Breakfast was OK, though she didn't eat much. Writing, she decided to write a list of things she had done on Tuesday. I'd been talking to her about what she would like to have as a story, without luck.
 

The trip today was to Turtle Bay. It turns out that Joanna had stopped there with her Mom on the trip north. Pat had a "scavenger hunt" on the way down, a game that had them looking for signs along the hour-plus drive.
 

First we fed the birds. I had not remembered that we did this 3 years ago on our Lassen trip. Joanna liked it well enough that I got her another dollar's worth of food. Next, we went to the animal show. We had to stay in our seats for 45 minutes and somehow all the kids managed it. We met a number of rescue animals, Sweet Pea the skunk, a fox, a badger, a barn owl, a crow, a lot of animals and the main lesson was not to try to make a pet of a wild animal. It was a really good show.
 
DSC02039 DSC02050
 
 

We had a boxed lunch and the kids had some playtime before we went to look at butterflies and the "barn." In that was a skyjumper exhibit which we didn't understand at first, but then Heather taught us how the kids were to sit in the swing, not jump out, and steer it to get close to the targeted landing. This looked like fun.
 
 
DSC02055 DSC02060
 
Then Joanna really wanted to play in the water again. She learned about "priming the pump" and enjoyed that. They had some ice cream, then walked across the Sundial bridge. I just wasn't up to that, mostly because I'd had enough of telling Joanna to stay with the group and to listen. I did get her a stretched penny.
 
Joanna and a dinosaur leg Chocolate Face
 

On the way home the kids all sat in back and sang songs with Pat while the grownups dozed or chatted quietly. Then they had crafts (this is when they made some really good muffins) while, again, I had an adult beverage (different bartender, though. I'd enjoyed chatting with the guy the week before.)
 

Then, in the free time, Joanna suddenly realized she wanted to swim, since all the kids were. At one point I had to go back for her goggles, which of course she didn't really want to use after all. The kids took over and the adults sat nearby. Tate's Mom sat in the pool area with all the kids (the next day we all did.)
 

After dinner we played a game, which would have been more fun if the kids (especially Joanna) was listening at all. They were talking and giggling together the whole time. The grandparents all had a story from their past that maybe the grandchildren had never heard. Mine was about living in a basement when I was 4. Nobody guessed me.
 

And they got another new book!
 

That night Joanna was "lonesome." Mostly I just wanted to finish the book I was reading, which was Agincourt by Bernard Cornwell, which is very good!
 
 

Thursday was our last full day. After breakfast there was the dreaded writing. I had thought maybe a different approach would appeal to Joanna, so I had her dictate to me all the things she did Wednesday, then pick one to write about. It was no surprised that she chose swimming. She then was making another list... "first, next, last..." and I asked some questions when she got stuck on "last." I asked was it cold or warm. "I don't know what the temperature was." No, what did it feel like? Or, were you alone or with other kids? "I don't want to." Pretend you're writing a letter to Grandma and she would want to know what it was like. "I don't like it, I can't do it, I don't want to." Pat came up and Joanna, who already had her back to her, kept it there hanging her head. Pat tried a number of approaches and finally said "you don't have to write, you can read". Great relief from Joanna. As Pat said, no point in making her miserable.
 

We had a short trip in the morning to the Dunsmuir Depot, which was kept open by a dedicated batch of volunteers. Joanna broke her water bottle here, so that kept the docents busy. Then we hopped on the bus and went down to O'Brien, and the Shasta Lake Caverns.
 

There we had a picnic, and I did get Joanna to eat most of the middle of her sandwich (but in this case, not the cheese.) Also carrot sticks.

Then they went "placer mining" for semi-precious stones, which magically appeared in the sand they were given. She got some really pretty rocks. Then it was time to walk down to the boat and go across the arm of the lake to the other side, where we boarded a bus, then got off at the top of a very scary ride. (I'd been on this road before, so I was ready, though the bus ride to get to the boat ramp was scarier than I'd remembered, probably because we were driving it when I was here before.) At the top the kids got their helmets and learned how to use them. Our guide, Addy, was enthusiastic and patient and really helpful to the kids.
 

And Joanna was entranced. She had been eager to see a real cave and it was beyond her expectations. There's no time when it's totally dark, though there was an 80 step climb through a narrow tunnel that had my claustrophobia acting up. There;s a spot in the cave where the stalactites and stalagmites no longer grow so we were allowed to touch them and the kids dug for calcite crystals (and put them back.) It's really beautiful.
 


A Little Spelunker DSC02115
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Before we got back on the boat I got her another stretched penny.
 

She enjoyed being on the rail for the boat ride. On the bus, the kids again went in back, and Joanna, who had slept most of the way to the caverns, slept all the way home. Thus avoiding the story stick that Pat and the kids were doing. Back at the resort, she was supposed to go to art but saw some kids in the pool and thought that was what they were doing. Not our kids, for starters, but she didn't believe me till Heather waved her over to the crafts.
 

At the bar I sat with a couple of grandparents and talked mostly about widowhood. The kids went swimming and Tate's whole family appeared.

Then we had dinner. The kids read their stories. Pat asked if Joanna had a story and I said no, she didn't. I think she was a little sorry, as the others all got applauded for their stories.They got certificates and their crafts. The kids performed a song. The grandparents read out their advice to their grandchildren. I was pleased with two of mine... "you have two ears and only one mouth, so you should listen twice as much as you talk" and "always always always remember you are loved."
 
 

DSC02135 The Kids Sing Goodbye
 
 

When it was time to break up, I took Pat aside and asked if we could be piggish and have another book. Yes. Then, as we walked back to the cabin, Joanna said she wanted to come back and I had to let her know she would be too old. Tears. Total meltdown. And I'm a failure because I was supposed to take her when she was 6 and 7 and 8. Which is what she will do with her grandchildren, by the way. "I'll never see Pat and Heather aga-a-a-in!" I hugged her and assured her she would have many fun adventures in her life. I felt sorry for her but also happy that she liked it that much.
 

Joanna and Heather Joanna and Pat
 

Friday
, breakfast and checkout. We drove to Shasta Dam, and saw Teddy and Laura (cousins) and their grandparents there.. There was an osprey nest! Then Joanna fell asleep. I made a quick dash into the service station to pay for gas while she slept, but I couldn't leave her long enough to go to the bathroom, so it was an uncomfortable ride home the last hour or so!
 
 
Osprey Nest   DSC02143

Mid-March

Mar. 23rd, 2018 03:15 pm
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol 1 p. 595
31.3 miles
sunny, mild!
 

320 recordings of 23 types, 67 old SVU. 28% clear.
 

Monday the 11th I realized that it was going to be cold and windy over the weekend so I called Alicia, and yes, she could come house-sit while I went to San Jose. Hooray!
 

My feet got cold and I remembered the toe socks. Sure enough, that helped. Later, the house got up to 69, this without the heater.
 

The cleaners came.
 

It rained that night and overnight it only got down to 67 in the house. I've been trying to keep the heater off as much as possible. The cold snaps recently made my gas consumption go up even so. (The previous Saturday it got down to 62.)
 

Tuesday I went to the ladies' breakfast. There were only three of us there, so I'm glad I went.

Then I went to get my taxes done. I hadn't brought the 1099 for the one thing that is not taxable anyway. And I found out that it will probably not benefit me to itemize deductions next year. This year it gives me $1200 but next year the standard deduction will be $1300. And I had my aha! moment why Rich didn't itemize... there were two of us, it wasn't worth it. But I didn't because he didn't in 2013, and then the light dawned that it might be worth it, and sure enough, it has been.
 

Claire went to get her Africa pictures so we compared notes afterwards. She also has a "rub my tummy" picture of a lion!
 

I got to the WPAC office for my name badge, (and then lost it again, for about a day, till I got it off the car floor), and to the AAA office for maps and tour books for Pennsylvania, New York, and Ontario. (I'm beginning to get excited.)
 

I had canned tamales for dinner. I don't think I've had this since I lived with my Mom on Ord Street. (I'm fairly sure my granddaddy would not have been happy with this dinner!)
 

Wednesday it was so rainy I didn't want to drive the freeway with Padreic, so instead of going to Wee Wednesday I just stayed at the house with them and read the Faith Ringgold books to him and played with him.
 
The Neighborhood Signpost Faith Ringgold Book and Quilt at Wee Wednesday
The neigborhood signpost and Wee Wednesday on the 7th.
 

Bernadette has both Siri and Alexa, so they can fight it out.
 

As it was still raining, Bernadette went to get the kids and I read to them. I especially enjoy Gareth's reaction, as he seems to be really enjoying the story and listening well. Joanna hadn't had her meds in the morning and was definitely wiggly.
 

I accidentally got TWO copies of Charlotte's Web, so decided to donate the extra to the kids' school library.
 

Thursday
I went to the Retreat House, where I volunteered to help with the June 3 picnic. Then I went to the commissary. This was a medium expedition. I had a big shopping thing to really load up the freezer and pantries in September, and then have been going about once a month with fairly small ones since. There was quite a bit to get today. I had been looking for falafel mix, and this time I found it. (But not tahine sauce, so I'll try that somewhere else.) I made falafel the next night. Yum. I also picked up meat, though there is still quite a bit in the freezer. And I got stovetop cleaner, then discovered I already had two bottles of it!
 

Also, in Fishdom (am I opening my data up to the Russians? Maybe not, since I don't use the iPad with any money accounts (except, of course, iTunes and Amazon)) I played a side game. They finally opened the Wonderland aquarium on the next day and I had a grand time playing and stocking it up. Then I have to wait until the next Thursday when they'll load up 15 more games. Their Easter stuff is all the same as last year, so I only moved the hedgehog playing with the egg to Wonderland. I'll play to get enough eggs to get the two fish, Humpty and Dumpty. (I have "Alice", "Chessie", and two clown fish, "Tweedledee" and "Tweedledum." One day as they were swimming, one of the Tweedles hoped I would buy a clown fish, "they're a lot of fun." Heh.)
 

The Russians keep giving me Oz decorations, Dorothy's house with a cyclone, ruby slippers, and a tin man. Apparently they don't know the difference. I've stashed all of those decorations.
 

There was a terrible bridge collapse in Miami.
 

Before the commissary I tried to renew my Air Museum membership but they weren't open when I was there.
 

And I put down my deposit for Oberammergau. They want the rest April 19... I sure hope Father Giltus has sorted it out by then so I can cancel and only lose the deposit. Otherwise, I'll either go with Road Scholar or transfer the $$ to a Japan trip.
 

Friday I woke at 3 to the pouring rain and decided not to go to Renaissance, and then it had cleared up by the time I got up... but I chose not to go anyway and had a jammie day! The only thing I really missed was the forum with Sacramento's new police chief. The Time Travel movie was "Back to the Future."
 

Fiona from Ngoko safaris was visiting the school and wanted a letter from me to the kid I'm sponsoring, Kuthula. I thought I'd missed my chance but was able to send one for Monday, with the elephant-ride picture.
 

I'm watchng olde Oscar-winning movies, and enjoyed Liz and Dick in "Taming of the Shrew." (I wonder if this is the one I saw at Renaissance).
 
I booked my hotel in Haliburton, Ontario. It's too early to get Syracuse. (I hope to use my stay points for it.)
 

Saturday, I did quite a bit, emptied the compost jar, poured out the garden cart, policed the yard, moved the car... then got a haircut, stopped at Lazy-Boy for a grill set for looking around, found a farmer's market, which wasn't much good for me since I got lots of veggies at the commissary, got money, then wine to share with Helena.
 

A couple of geocaching friends came by for the stuff we had that they might be able to make geocaches with, and we stood outside and talked. I missed some of the Gonzaga game but we won anyway.
 

I watched, again, "Gone Girl." Scary stuff.
 
 
Biggest Leprechaun Ever
Biggest leprechaun I've ever seen.
 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol 1 p. 595
31.3 miles
sunny, cold
 

319 recordings of 23 types, 67 old CPD, 28% clear.
 

Friday the 9th was Renaissance and I was really eager to see the mini-seminar on how the Music and Memory program, to slow the progress of Alzheimer's, is working here in Sacramento. During the inspirational speech we were encouraged to write our own playlist... the very first song I thought about was Peggy Sue, and the rest of Buddy Holly's work, then of course the Everly Brothers, and so on.
 

I really enjoy the tuna banh mi for lunch, and I'd parked close enough to go after my pillow, so the Time Travel movie, which was "Arrival," was viewable. Very mnd-blowing. I really enjoyed it.
 

In the evening I took Laurie to Jesuit where we met Bernadette and Gareth, to see "Willy Wonka." To my surprise, the dentist and his wife were there, because their daughter was Veruca Salt. It was very funny and Emma did fine. They all did.
 
 
Saturday I changed out the flannel sheets, so of course it got cold.
 

Pharaoh's DNA arrived. He's 1/4 pit bull, no surprise, but only 1/8 German shepherd. The rest is 1/4 chow, which I don't see at all, and 1/8 gordon shepherd and1/8 Italian greyhound (also a real surprise) and 1/8 who knows what.  Fascinating.
 

I took a box of nice books to the SPCA. (On Friday I had taken two of these off for the University library and bought a Bernard Cornwell book. I stopped at Trader Joe for biscotti because horror of horrors, I ran out of Belvita breakfast biscuits.  On the way I saw the Cristo Rey High School building. It's nice, but I wish they could have had the Loretto campus. Oh, well.
 

That night was a church dinner, Filipino food. It was great and I saw a number of my friends. I twitted Pete Mithin on when he was in 8th grade and I was one of the chaperones for a trip to the Manteca water slides. He didn't follow directions not to put his pass in his trunks and ended up with a soggy mess  I helped him redeem. Not surprisingly, he didn't remember this at all.
 

Sunday I forgot to take a book to Gerrie, and I forgot about Communion at the retirement home until Mass was nearly over, so I told Brenda I wasn't going to do it. Instead, I went down to the Crocker and really enjoyed the new exhibits. (I really have to move the pictures off the camera so  I can share them here!) I got the two Faith Ringgold books for Padreic. Then I walked 1.3 miles around to geocache... one was dubious... I don't know if I found it at all, and have asked the hider, and one had someone having lunch next to it. No luck there.
 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol 1 p. 585
(I started this book right after Rich died and if I'd held
to the 5 pages a dayI planned, I'd have been done in June 2012!)
4.3 miles
cool, partly cloudy
 

348 recordings of 48 types, 0 old SVU, 69 old CPD, 48 Last Man Standing. 24% clear.
 

I didn't mention on Thursday that I'd also done more on the jigsaw puzzle, day 8 so far, and I'd scratched off North America on the map Vince and Niki gave me. I slipped and got a tish of North Dakota, the upper peninsula of Michigan (I decided Detroit airport didn't count) and some of Nova Scotia, so obviously I have to go to those places to make it right.
 

Yesterday I had more errands. I reconfigured the car and took Joanna's car seat inside, to wait for when Padreic is big enough for it. I took stuff to St. Vincent de Paul, stopped at the church to request a Mass for Rich on February 4, and took a bag of books (mostly Nero Wolfes) to the library. I came back with an Aunt Dimity book I hadn't read. I just told Bernadette that I was sick of cosies, but hey.
 

I got back to work on the "books read" spreadsheet, and behold, I was two off last year, actually read 108 books!
 

Today I took the dog with me in the morning in the car. I was early for breakfast so walked him around the parking lot of the strip mall. He actually behaved well. Maybe I can take him for walks again, which I haven't done for over a year.  Of course, I would still have to worry about other dogs, but it might work out.  A pleasant breakfast, 32 people or so, and I had a steak skewer skillet.  (For lunch I used my new griddle to make a proper grilled cheese sandwich. The way Rich used to make them. Yum.)
 

Then I went geocaching a bit: the first one I tried for the third time (2009 and 2013) and found it. I dunno how I missed it before. I also had spied a man with a Gonzaga sweatshirt so I commented... his son had gone to Jesuit and Gonzaga but quite a while after my kids. Then the second one was at a place I'd tried last year with Richard without luck, and again I had no luck today. Oh, well.
 

At home I started watching the current season of SVU, though I think I'm missing an episode. (Still 2 missing in season 18, too.) And I'm slowly getting through the madness of Big Cat Week and of my Christmas movie binge on TCM. 
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol 1 p. 560
189.1 miles
cloudy, cool
 

367 recordings of 28 types. 29 old CPD, 4 old SVU. 24% clear.
 

Wednesday I finished Pinocchio with the kids. Not only were they reading along, which is fine, but Gareth was reading ahead of my voice which I found immensely distracting.
 

I ordered Doc Martin season 8!  Also, my African nativity set was supposed to arrive and it wasn't until Sunday that I questioned it. 
 

Thursday I finally heard from a gastroenterologist about making my appointment. I thought I would hear in July, and when I didn't, I tried calling the number on the card my doctor gave me, with no luck. Because my doctor had left me, I finally figured I'd get the colonoscopy next year.  But now, I guess I'll just call them and make an appointment (AFTER Thanksgiving!)
 

I stopped at the SPCA booksale. I had a really good day there, with 2 Trollopes (Anthony, not Joanna) and 4 Cornwells (Bernard, not Patricia) that I didn't have. Yay! I also got a book of Grimm Fairy Tales. It's slanted to grownups, with commentary about the sexual fantasies, etc, but the stories themselves are good. (I was hoping for Rainbow Fairy books, no luck there.)
 

And I finally had the last day of the dinosaur candle and then had to carve away the rest of the wax.  This should have worked better but I had to keep carving down the egg so the flame wouldn't drown. Oh, well. At the end it cracked the glaze, but the dinosaur is cute anyway.
 

Friday the computer was very slow and I spent a lot of time on Facebook. I finally, about 11, got out the door to go to Rancho Cordova and geocache.  I had ten in mind, on a bike trail that makes a loop so I wouldn't be too far away from the car when I finished.  The first two were DNFs, and I was beginning to be dubious, but then I found one.  The fourth I tried was down a really steep hill, and I was a bit scared to try it by myself, but I went down and looked, but couldn't find it, and then somehow managed to get back up the hill, cussing myself out for being stupid. I also couldn't find the next one, then had to try to get to the other side of the loop. I was paralleling it for awhile, but then found access and again couldn't find one. Then I found #7, and was on my way to #8, but by that time the skies opened and I was half a mile away from the car. I had left my raincoat at Bernadette's on Wednesday and forgot I had a decent rain jacket that I had taken to Spain. Hence, I had a light jacket, which didn't protect me very much. I was soaked by the time I got back to the car. I was too wet to stop at a fast food place so came on home, arriving about 1:30.
 

In the evening, the Chatauqua show was "Frankenstein." I was glad to see my friend Bill, who is still looking good despite the Pancreatic cancer. His tumor hasn't shrunk but is less dense, and after Thanksgiving he starts a round of radiation.  I'm impressed with his upbeat attitude. Anyway, it was great to see him (and his wife, of course.) 
 

I had no idea how they would present "Frankenstein" but it was just terrific. It was Mary Shelley telling the story and the other characters showing her story. I was very impressed with it.

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