We went to Renee’s brother’s house in Little Rock for Thanksgiving. Her family needed to be together after the death of Lori, her sister, last week. Lori’s husband and their daughter were also there. It was good, but sad. It’s OK, though, because it’s supposed to be sad when people you love die.
Entergy took advantage of school being out for Thanksgiving break, and chose today to turn the power off for a few hours in order to change some equipment out.
I worked this morning at a table in Cups, a coffee shop in our neighborhood, and had this inspiring view all morning.
I used to work in coffee shops all the time, before the pandemic. But now, I’m used to working from home, with two large screens. I felt like a pioneer or something, working from my tiny laptop.
Today I began cleaning up the front beds after church, and my Caldwell Pink was just blooming away, despite the freezes last week and that it’s the middle of November. It truly is one of my favorites – it just blooms and blooms.
I’ve been working on some new designs of treenware, and these are the two latest. The long knife is made of Black Walnut and designed to reach the bottom of a Costco peanut butter jar. The other is made of cherry and is a sort of scraper.
Being Friday, and thus date night, we went to Ding How for supper. It’s a Chinese joint in Ridgeland, a nearby suburb, and the family that own it are delightful. We always get updated on her kids, and hear about the rising food costs, and she asks how we are doing, and she thanks us effusively for being suck loyal customers. We probably eat there once a month or so.
Dinner was somber – we learned this morning that Renee’s sister Lori had died. We knew it was coming, but still – you can know a thing is coming, and yet not be ready for it.
I’m teaching myself (with the help of books and videos) how to make staked furniture – that is, furniture where the leg is driven into a flat surface, usually the seat or table top. This style of building is very, very old.
This is the second stool I have made, and I didn’t use someone else’s plans, so that’s cool. For posterity, I used a 15 degree leg angle, a 1 inch leg tenon, and hide glue. The stool is made of Southern Yellow Pine (from a 2×12!) and has red oak wedges. The seat is 14 inches from the floor. I don’t think I would have liked it much lower.
The legs are a bit clunky – they were octagonalized from 1.5 inch SYP, and tenon turned on the lathe. Next time I will taper the legs, wide part near the floor, to lighten it visually.
For my second effort, I’m quite pleased, honestly.
One thing I love about living in Mississippi is the long “shoulder” seasons. Our springs and falls are nice and temperate, and are the best part of living here. I’ll have roses in November and again in March.
This is just a Knockout in the bed in front of the house, but almost all my roses are still blooming.
I’m the cook, but Renee is the baker. Tonight she made a caramel apple crumble sort of thing – apples tossed in caramel, then a crumble topping and baked until it surrenders.
One of our favorite dishes in our rotation is Salisbury Steak, rice and gravy, and green beans. It gives off very 50’s vibes, but it also feels like comfort.