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| The Unipiper |
Seriously, how many cities can claim such a treat? And he does so much for us!
He officiates weddings.
He shovels our snow.
He entertains us.
But mostly he helps keep Portland Weird.
And so it goes
peace~~~
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| The Unipiper |
Yesterday my fella and I were heading up to celebrate our grandboy's 16th birthday. Traffic through the tunnel that leads to the freeway entrance was stop-and-go, so we had plenty of time to read the spray-painted tunnel walls. Not a pretty sight. Now don't get me wrong. There are plenty of beautiful graffiti tags out there. But this specific tunnel doesn't sport such a visual treat.
The mullet. Yes, the mullet. Business in front and party in the back. We think of this style as a 1980s icon, but the beloved style dates pretty far back. Incidents of the hairstyle were documented more than 1,400 years ago,
when Byzantine scholar Procopius wrote of a craze among young Roman men
in the 6th Century BCE, who sought to emulate the look of Hun barbarians
by growing their hair long all around the head except across the
forehead, where they kept it cut short. (here I feel so scholarly when I do this)
President James Polk sported a mullet. And of course every great athlete and many entertainers in the 80s gave us this look--Paul McCartney, Billy Ray Cyrus, Andre Agassi, Larry Bird, David Bowie. The list goes on. So the mullet is deeply ensconced in history.
Others would disagree and will march to the right to wear their hair in any style that floats their boat, flips their skirt, or bounces their ball. All-in-all I can appreciate the small voice heard with a sweet little plea posted right there among the tagged riff-raff.
I had become special friends with a man in Kentucky and spent a year in that long distance relationship. When that fell apart, I vowed to never do the long distance relationship thang again. But alas, the majority of my friendships were online, it was inevitable I would meet someone else who would become important.
What fun we had! I was able to travel to new places and meet new old online friends. I had traveled the south the years before and now I was able to travel more north, including Canada and Niagara Falls. And then it was time to go home in order to write my research (I had been teaching an online class for the year) and finish out the academic year. I returned in the summer and we set about plans for Doug to move to Oregon. I always said that he followed me home so I had to keep him. He arrived Halloween 1998. We were perfectly happy to remain unmarried but it changed. We wanted to make it official.
There's really nothing special about our love story, except it is our love story. We were pioneers in that we met online and married...and still together celebrating our 20th anniversary of marriage. We are still having fun but it seems it is "older people" fun. He still makes me laugh. I still get him out and about on spontaneous whims. And life is good.![]() |
| Spring Rain |
In June I took a class up in Washington at the best little fabric store around: The Paisley Duck. Well worth the 40 minute drive. I wanted to make this cute pup. I have it in mind for friends who lost their sweet pup last fall. It was an interesting process of reversing the pattern and appliquéing with fusible webbing. I usually do needleturn appliqué, so this was a bit of a challenge. I now need to sandwich and quilt it. I will be using different stitches on the pup body to help the illusion of a crazy quilt on the pup body.
Probably the worst procrastination on my design board is my husband's stepdaughter's (I call her my stepdaughter-once-removed) stepson's (I call him my stepgrandboy-twice-removed) high school graduation. I make every niece, nephew and grandie a wall-hanging that focuses on their interests when they graduate from high school. It is the worst procrastination because he graduated a year ago June. Gotta get it done! ![]() |
| Washington Park Swim Center |
We were simple people in that a sprinkler was the best of fun when the pool wasn't available for us. Or we'd just get the hose out. Cold water was all it took (and you could take a long cold drink in the middle of a game!). ![]() |
| Evergreen Airport Waterpark |
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| Evergreen |
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| Super Waterpark |
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| The Ashley House |
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| Theodore Sedgwick |
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| The Sedgwick Home |
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| Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. |
Living out in the county was great because there were no sidewalks and lots of space to play. We had a large front yard where Dad installed lights and then a badminton/volley ball net was able to hook on the light poles. We slept outside in the summer with a contest on who had the most mosquito bites the next morning. I always won *beamin with sweet blood pride*
Our backyard was pretty barren. Dad had his large collection of stuff that he could dig into when he needed a part or something, but under the clothes line all the way back to the fence (where the neighboring goats lived) was open. We'd have a little campfire, roast marshmallows and watch the fireworks over the tree tops. Glorious!
Vanilla is the most popular flavor. To some it is too boring, so they love exciting new flavors like Banana Peanut Butter Chip and Brown Butter Bourbon Truffle. Some like it deep fried. Some like it soft-served. Some want healthier choices. Some want the full fat content. And who makes the most ice cream? California, of course.