Thursday, December 31, 2009

Hockey at Dodge Arena.

Pics taken at Dodge Arena on the 29th when a group of 12 of us
went to watch the Bees play on a 'winter Texan' night. It was a great, exciting game which went into overtime and then sudden death.
Unfortunately, the Bees lost 3-2. Winter Texan night is whenever the Bees are playing at home and costs $6 on weeknights and $12 on weekends.
Its a fun outing and something different to do, especially when the weather is,
shall we say, a little less than perfect. Try it, you'll like it.
Ken and Lois #409

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Patsy Remembers

STORIES FROM MY CHILDHOOD, Part Two

“From the Mouths of Babes”

I was born into a segregated world in Gladewater, Texas in 1938. My parents moved to Fort Worth, Texas, another segregated place, in 1939. I don’t know that I heard the word “segregation” until the Civil Rights movement of the late 1950's culminating in the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. I’m sure that most of you studied the Civil Rights movement in school, but that is not what this article is about. This is about my personal experiences with racial segregation in Texas from my birth until the election of an African-American president in 2008.

First, I’ll give an overview of my life as a child. I lived in a segregated neighborhood, learned at a segregated school, worshiped at a segregated church, saw movies at a segregated theater (not totally segregated; the African-Americans could watch from the third balcony reached by climbing some outside stairs), ate out at segregated cafes and restaurants, and played at segregated parks, swimming pools, bowling alleys, etc., etc., etc. Whites were even buried in segregated cemeteries. None of this seemed unusual to me then.

I also need to address the topic of language. We didn’t call people African-Americans, Mexican-Americans, Cuban-Americans or any of those other hyphenated names. African-Americans were called “Negroes” or “Colored”. Mexican-Americans were called “Mexicans”. Those were the polite, respectful names that were used. The names Blacks, Hispanics, Afro-Americans, Latinos, or Chicanos all came later. We all know what the impolite and disrespectful names were. In this piece, I will refer to African-Americans as Negroes or Colored, because that is what they were called in Southern society during the 1930's and the 1940's.


I have fond memories of my mother and I riding the bus to downtown Fort Worth, TX to shop. In the 1950's. We rode the bus because we didn’t have a car yet. This was before the days of malls, so all of our shopping was done at the large department stores downtown. When we boarded the bus, we automatically sat in the seats in the front of the bus. The seats from the back door to the very back were for the Negroes or Colored people.

We shopped at large department stores. There were no discount stores like Walmart or Target back then. I was always fascinated by the two drinking fountains located between the elevators. They appeared to be identical, but one was labeled “White” and one “Colored.” I wondered what would happen if a person drank out of the wrong one, but no one ever did. Of course, there were also four restrooms, two for White women and White men and two for Colored Women and Colored men. “That seemed like a waste of space to me and still does.” Every public place, including the train station and bus station had this same arrangement of restrooms and waiting rooms.


Colored people had certain swimming pools, parks, and restaurants that they could use. The eating places where they were allowed were located in what we called “Colored Town.” At a few Whites- only restaurants, Coloreds could order food to go at a back window and stand outside until it was ready to take out. One highly popular barbecue place was called The Big Apple and was located in Colored Town. The odd thing was that Whites could eat there but Coloreds couldn’t except for the “to go” window outside.

After I graduated from high school in 1956 and Baylor U. in 1960, I started teaching Government in high school in San Antonio, Texas. In 1964, I was teaching seniors in High School. We were studying about the Civil Rights movement, and I told my students about my experiences growing up in a segregated society. I felt that I had done a good job of explaining to them about segregation. Most of the students seemed to be really enthralled by my account.

The class was quiet when I finished. Finally, one of my students raised his hand and said,
“Well, Mrs. Thompson, what did you DO?”

I stood silently for a few moments and finally said, “Nothing.”

Are you cold?

Frohe Feiertage (that's German for Happy Holidays)

Did I hear complaints about the weather down at Sandpipers???
Let me be the first to tell you that Bob and I will gladly trade weather with you!!
We’re in Germany visiting our daughter and her family for the holidays.
Before Christmas we attempted to visit
one of the regional Weihnachtsmärkte (Christmas markets).
It was 9 degrees.
After 15 minutes,
we could no longer feel our feet and our noses were frozen solid
(well, OK, maybe that second part is a tiny exaggeration).
Despite the cold, the rain, and the snow, we’ve managed to see a number of interesting sights. When you look at the pictures, remember how nice southern Texas weather can be in the winter.
We sure do!Happy New Year!
Pam & Bob

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

New Year's Eve Photos


New Year's Eve Party:
Tom B. will take photographs of those who wish to
be immortalized.
He'll take a number of poses
and will print the best
4x6 for $2.00.
Stick a little cash in your pocket (or elsewhere)
to pay for your photo!
If you want additional prints or enlargements,
information on those will be available when pictures are taken.

Santa's Elves!

Where'd you elves get those great socks?
Oh, I'm so sorry I missed this fun event!
Next year...next year!

Monday, December 28, 2009

Trip to Santa's Texas Workshop

Calling all Gals and Guys

Come one, come all!

Join us On Thursday, January 7, 2010

for a Tour of
The Christmas House and Santa’s Texas Workshop

in Falfurrias, Texas

Leaving Sandpipers at 7:45am

The plan is to leave sharp at 7:45a.m.
Need a ride?
Please indicate by your name on the sign-up sheet.
*
The Minten sisters will entertain us with their family history, songs, stories,
their richly decorated house and much more.
Cost is $8.00 per person.
After the tour we will be able to shop at the Workshop.
Lunch at Strickland’s will follow.

Please indicate on the sign-up sheet in the pavilion if you will attend
as reservations will need to be made by NOON on the 4th.
For more information please see Phaleta #406 or Mary #5
* WE ARE LIMITED TO 15 *

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Taking It All Off!

Great little article found by John #5 on the web...
************
Nudist resorts and club sprout up everywhere, including rural Ohio

By Ryan McLendon
**
I might be a closet nudist.

The realization began this summer while I was in Montreal covering a story.
I was producing a radio story on an all-nude yoga studio in the heart of the old city
— much safer than a video, I thought.
Before the class began, I was confronted with a logistical dilemma
when the prophetic-looking yogi asked that I be naked too.
I wanted to make sure his class remained comfortable with my presence,
and he didn’t think that was possible.

So I reluctantly disrobed. And it was spectacular.

While an initial shock and awkwardness was expected — I can’t remember the last time I was stark naked in front of 16 French Canadians — I didn’t anticipate an overwhelming wave of euphoria would replace it.
It didn’t feel creepy or depraved or wrong.
Being naked frankly felt better than being clothed.

It is (or was) my little secret.

Southern Ohio also has a similarly little-known secret: It’s crawling with confirmed and potential nudists. Nudism is all the rage in the pastoral, bucolic settings in and around Cincinnati and other major cities. Nudist resorts — bastions of naturalism and freed inhibitions — dot the lush Ohio wilderness around the state.

You can virtually find nudists everywhere: Ohio currently has seven nudists resorts registered with the American Association for Nude Recreation (AAMR).
Most are open seasonally, and some operate year-round.

The AANR was founded in 1931. They serve more than 213,000 individual members and have over 260 affiliated clubs, resorts and campgrounds in the U.S. and Canada.
In 2008, The New York Times estimated that nude recreation
is a $440 million per year industry.
Nudism is increasingly attractive to a variety of demographics
but is growing most quickly among young adults.

One of the year-round resorts can be found nestled in the suburbs
of Cincinnati, Paradise Gardens in Colerain Township.
Another is near Amish Country like Cedar Trails Nudist Retreat in Peebles, Ohio.

Jo Anne and Fred Roessler are the founders and primary residents at Cedar Trails,
the 60-acre, screened-in campground near Peebles.
The Roesslers opened Cedar Trails in 1992 and the facility is open to full-time and part-time residents, vacationing families and day visitors alike.

The Roesslers are veteran nudists.
Fred’s first nudist experience was in the late 1970s on family trip to Lake Manitoba in Canada. When he met Jo Anne, he introduced her to the Midwestern nudist lifestyle.

“I didn’t know there were (nudist) clubs around in the Midwest,” Jo Anne says.
“When we went … I realized that no one was paying any attention to me anyway.”

The Roesslers live on the grounds and make their living by running the facility.

“It’s basically like any other campground with standards better than a state park,
except that the people here are nude,” Fred says.

Cedar Trails has lots to offer naturalists physically. The camp borders the rim of a 300-million-year-old meteor crater, and the Great Serpent Mound, the 1,330-foot-long, 3-foot-high effigy mound, the longest on the planet, slithers against the northern edge. Cedar Trails offers a wide variety of activities for the rugged and the adventurous. Residents can hike bare around the meteor crater, skinny-dip in the lake or play an unrestrained game of beach volleyball.

On an average weekend, Cedar Trials gets 100 to 150 visitors.
They have 100 regular members on nearly 30 campsites.

The busy season is May through September, but people can rent campsites and cabins and then come as they please even in the winter.
Certain members visit only during the winter.
However, most of activities must wait for warmer weather.

“Nudists aren’t nudists when its 10 degrees out,” Fred says.

As a member club of the AANR, Cedar Trails is required to follow a regimented code of conduct that ensures the facility remains safe and family-oriented. Foul language and sexual innuendo are all but forbidden. Alcohol is allowed, but only within designated areas.

Some residents are such committed nudists that they don’t leave the camp. LaVerne McGowan, 52, and her boyfriend Ken Christiansen, 54, have been permanent residents of Cedar Trails since 2006. McGowan’s stepson’s fiancee introduced her to nudism on a camping trip in 1998. She converted Christiansen in 2006 after dating several years.

“That was one part of her life she wanted to share with me,” Christiansen says.
“We came down here and I was nude within five minutes.”

McGowan and Christiansen first began camping at Cedar Trails in 2006 and gradually eased into making it their home. Sundays were hardest for the couple because they had to make the two-hour commute back to their house in Columbus in order to be at work the following day.

As each Sunday passed, their departure time from Cedar Trails became more delayed.
After six months, they downsized from a two-bedroom house into an RV on the site
and started calling Cedar Trails home.

“It was a freedom that I never experienced and that I loved,” Christiansen says. “We didn’t need the next new big house. We just wanted to get out of the rat race.

“We cook, we clean, we shop — we do everything that everybody else does,” McGowan says. “We just live nude.”

McGowan’s and Christiansen’s experience as nudists affirms many of the facts boasted by the AANR. They think of nudism as a great equalizer. People of all ages, income levels and lifestyles create a rich tapestry of friendship for the couple. All of McGowan’s children — one of McGowan’s daughters is also a nudist — and both their mothers have visited them at Cedar Trails.

Cedar Trails residents insist nude recreation camps are fiercely family-oriented and note the misconceptions about nudists, such as nudist colonies being a Petri dish for lewd and lascivious behavior, are often wrong.

“(Nudism has) been excellent for our relationship,” McGowan says. “This place is very couple oriented and relationship oriented.”

Jo Anne Roessler is aware how nudists are perceived, but she insists the nudist lifestyle is less sexualized than plain-clothed society.

“You’re going to find that you’re far more comfortable here,” she says. “It’s a different atmosphere.”

Christiansen thinks most people would warm to nudism once they tried it.

“They’d make their lives a heckuva lot easier,” he says. “If people could just get past (the hang-ups of nudism), there’s actually a place where people don’t care what you do or what you look like. That’s what motivated us to stay down here.”

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Wine Class Openings

The Wine Appreciation Classes have filled up rather quickly, but there is a couple will not be able to be with us at Sandpipers this season due a problem at home and two other vacancies.

This leaves some openings in our class roster:
There are two openings in the January 10th class ($8) Wines of Sonoma County, CA,
two openings in the February 14th class ($15) Italian Food and Wine
and four openings in the March 14th class ($8) Wines of the State of Washington.
If you haven't yet signed up or know of anyone interested, please see us as soon as possible as the spots may fill up soon due to my advertising the vacancies.


Bernie and I will be sponsoring the annual "Cheese Tasting"
event coming very soon, Friday, January 8th at 3:00 PM.
We have already purchased the cheese as the best selection is just prior to Christmas.
The selection for this event is great and the various cheeses
were listed on the Sandpaper BLOG a week ago.
The cost is $4.00 per person, and we will be available to receive registration/payments at Junk and Java, Saturday, January 2nd as well as at our site (#36)
and 'Happy Hour' in the 400 row, weather permitting.
Please join us in the event as it has been a very popular one for four of five years!


Have a Very Happy New Year,

Bob and Bernie

RV & HOME FIRE SAFETY “2.0”

By Lanny # 16

Happy New Year, y’all.
Many of you will remember a RV & Home fire safety presentation
made last season by the Edinburg Fire Marshal.
After the presentation, we intended to provide for you a
hands-on fire extinguisher exercise, also conducted by Edinburg FD,
but alas, we ran into a very dry spring with extended burn bans,
& after 2 reschedules & no rain in sight,
we had to scuttle the extinguisher training until this season.
Edinburg FD kindly scheduled our extinguisher class for Dec 17,
and as you know, that one had to be rescheduled.
Due to rain.
Love that Texas weather.
It is presently re-rescheduled to JANUARY 7, 9:30AM
(weather permitting, of course)!
The NEW sign up sheets are on the table in the pavilion,
& we hope tons of y’all will sign up & come.

The second purpose of this note is to share the findings of the questionnaire
you filled out at the training session last season.
Some of the responses were expected, & some were not.

• 84% said they had 1 or 2 fire extinguishers in their living unit.
• 53% of those extinguishers are 8 years or older.
• 69% of you have actually discharged an extinguisher in an emergency or training exercise (that’s surprisingly high).
• All said they have smoke detectors, and 82% said they had replaced batteries within the last year.
• 64% said they have actually tested smoke detectors while in bed to verify they could be heard.
• 83% of you have designated an assembly point for other family members in case of an emergency evacuation, & the same number say they have their address, space number & gate code readily available in case of a 911 call.

All very commendable numbers, gang.
Give yourself a bow.
However…….(you knew there would be a however, didn’t you?)
Much confusion exists relative to the different types of detectors,
in particular, “CO” or carbon monoxide detectors.

There are 3 types of detectors found in our mobile homes or RV’s.
All of us have “smoke” detectors that monitor combustion by-products
that occur in the incipient stages of a fire.
They will be mounted high on ceilings or walls.
Each RV should have come with at least one smoke detector
& mobile homes with one in front of each sleeping room or hallway.

RV’s built in the last 15 years WITH GAS FUELED APPLIANCES
will also have “CO” or carbon monoxide detectors, typically one per unit, also mounted high. CO is the odorless, colorless by-product of incomplete combustion.
CO can occur when gas ranges or ovens
are used without adequate ventilation,
or when gas furnaces or water heaters (RV’s) are not operating correctly
or have worn heat exchangers with perforations.
CO detectors are also recommended for mobile homes
& site-built homes with gas fueled appliances.

The 3rd type of detector is the LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) alarm,
or “propane sniffer”.
These are normally found only in RV’s,
and are mounted very low to the floor.
They are monitoring the air for unburned propane
& will alarm before explosive concentrations
can occur in the event of leakage.

What’s the life span of these detectors?

Smoke detectors – replace at 10 years.

CO detectors – replace at 5 years.

LPG alarms – replace at 5 years.

All of these devices require immediate replacement if they fail to respond to their test buttons.

Hope this clears the confusion on detector types & life spans.
Now, let’s do the fun stuff on Jan 7th,
and attend the re-rescheduled fire extinguisher class!


Thanks, Lanny & Donna # 16.

Friday, December 25, 2009

New Year's Eve Party

OH BOY!
New Year's Eve!
This is gonna be SPECIAL!

We are not talking black tie here folks!

This year's theme is "Come Change the Page With Us",
and wear pink or purple (or both) to do it!

Pink & Purple are Sandpiper's signature colors, after all.

*
There will be prizes and surprises all night long.

Hourly raffles
Tons of spot dances
A midnight champagne toast
Hugs and kisses all around!

*
The very affordable tickets ($2 each) are available from Marie #421 and Karen #403.
Put your name & lot number on the back and bring the tickets with you to enter the raffle.
No ticket, no raffle entry.
And you'll want to be in the hourly raffle, believe me!

Prizes are rumored to be outstanding!
Wine, dinners, towels, t-shirts, lunch tickets...the list goes on and on.


And rumor also has it that the
Mistress of Cermonies will be
wearing light up stilettos!
***
If you can, stay for a few moments to help break down the party.
Further clean up and Xmas decoration removal will occur the next day to get ready for the Jan. 1st FunBuzz.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Time to SING!

Join in with your friends and neighbors
and get into the spirit of the season
with some Christmas carols.
If the weather is nice bring a flashlight (and a chair and a toddy, perhaps)
and gather at the
firepit garden north of the pool.
If it is too cold we'll gather in the pavilion and sing songs
that remind us of our childhoods and our families.

Merry Xmas from Bob & Mardi!

A Christmas greeting from Mardi & Bob....
We yearn for all of you terribly and will greatly miss
our Sandpipers family at Christmas.
Florida has so thoroughly ensnared us we had to buy
a condo in Cocoa Beach!
We hope to be with you by late January
but after four changes in our trip plans
we are making no promises!

Mardi & Bob

Wow, Mardi! You look fabulous!

Love the longer hair.

**********

Accolades are due for Elaine & Kim who stepped in to run the Christmas Cookie Exchange when Gloria was sidelined by the flu.

According to those who observed the pastry fest, these two dynamos pulled it off seamlessly and with great skill.

Way to step up, guys!

*******

Peeps, leave comments on the blog to bring attention to those of us who step up when needed to make Sandpipers such a fun place to live.

Every comment get's a shot at a free lunch from The B.A.B.E.!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Cheese Tasting

One of Bob & Bernie's signature presentations is the annual cheese tasting, where we get to sample some of the cheese we drool over at Sam's, at Feldman's, at H.E.B.
But, wowzer, who wants to spend big bucks
buying a large hunk of cheese that you may not like?
And the variety...who can pick from such a dizzying display of dairy goodness.
B & B have done it for us, buying a wonderful variety of mouth-watering cheese
to tempt the strictest dieter from his ill advised path.
Take a gander at this list....
*
Cranberry Cinnamon goat cheese log,

Tuscan Cheddar,

Cahill's Whiskey Cheese,

Old Amsterdam (Gouda),

3 Alarm Colby-Jack cheese intense pepper flavor (chipotle/Habanero/Jalapeno),

White Stilton with cranberries,

Double smoked cheddar, cranberry & chipotle peppers

*

Do I detect the holiday spirit with all the cranberries?

Oh, Mama, I loves me some cheese!

**************************
There is only one open spot for the January 10th Wine Appreciation Class

Sonoma County CA Wines. See B & B #36

I bet they'll serve left over cheese with the wine!

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Christmas Pot Luck Dinner

Please DO sign up on the sheet in the pavilion, even if you can't bring a dish.
At the Thanksgiving dinner there was some confusion
about how many would be attending.
The powers that be NEED to know.
Meat has to be bought & prepared,
tables & chairs arranged,
plates and utensiles set up.
At Thanksgiving 75 signed up but 114 showed up.
Mad scramble!
And if you sign up but discover you can't come for whatever reason,
please scratch off you name, OK?
*
The Thanksgiving dinner turned out so nice, partly because of the wonderful table arrangement, partly because of the company, and a big part because of the food!
Christmas dinner will be just as lovely,
so plan to come and celebrate this joyous time of year.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Xmas Gift Exchange

This event is SO MUCH FUN!
You MUST attend!
Simply MUST!
*
First...
go buy a gift.
Something nice, oh, in the $20 range.
$20 Minimum!
Some people go way beyond that!
A uni-sex gift is most versatile.
Something you would buy for yourself.
Then wrap it up pretty.
NEW GUIDELINE THIS YEAR:
Tuck your name & lot number inside so whoever ends up with the gift
can express their thanks to you.
*
Second...
Get down to the pavilion before 6 pm.
BEFORE!
Be seated at your table by 6 'cause the show starts right on the dot!
BEFORE 6!
I warned you.
BEFORE...or FACE THE WRATH OF SANTA'S ELVES!
*
Third...
When your turn comes go pick out the prettiest,
most special gift you can and return to your table.
*
Fourth..
Be astonished when the next person STEALS your present.
But then you can go pick again so it's OK!
*
It's great fun, full of laughter.
I think the Gift Exchange is a real high-light of the year.
Some of the gifts I can remember from past years...to give you inspiration..
Gift cards from restaurants, Walmart, Lowe's, Roosevelt's.
Bottles of wine with plastic carafes and glasses.
Liquor, Martini Kits, Excellent chocolates. Baskets of food specialties.
One year a radio controlled car was stolen repeatedly.
(I believe the theft limit is two times)
*
If you have attended in past years what are your memories of really good gifts?
Remember, each comment gets you into the Jan. drawing for free lunch with the B.A.B.E.!

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Let's All Move to Cancun!

At least let's go on a mini vacation to the tropics until this crummy weather is over!
*
Fire Extinguisher Class POSTPONED until, perhaps, Dec 23rd or 24th.
Watch the white board for further info.
*
S.N.O.W. Tournament POSTPONED until Jan 13 &14.
*
Garden Relocation Party.
Are you crazy?
Who wants to dig around cold, wet dirt and plants?
POSTPONED til a warm & sunny day in January.

Merry Christmas from the North.

Joyeux Noel!
from Raymond & Francine!
They miss us, each and everyone, and wish they could be here
to enjoy our blue skies and warm temperatures!
Oh, wait...
Raymond, Francine, we aren't much warmer than you right now.
But at least the stuff falling from the sky isn't white.
We miss you both soooo much!
*
Everybody...
go to the Sandpiper Resort site, http://www.sandpipersresort.com/
Click on the tabs for Home, Facilities and Regulations and
listen to Raymond sing the Sandpiper songs.
Go on now.
I'll wait.
*
*
*
*
Wasn't that GREAT!?
Merry Christmas Raymond & Francine.
We love you!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Decorating Contest!

Haul out the tinsel and deck those halls.
Outshine your neighbors, highest wattage wins!
Anonymous judges will be roaming the park
looking for creativity and sparkle!
Be at the Jan. 1st FunBuzz (hangovers do NOT excuse you)
to find out if YOU are the winner!

Planning for January 2010.

The calendar is so full right now you may think there won't be room for anything else.
Au contraire mon amie!
This is a head's up for planning purposes.
More detailed blogs will follow but to get you in the right frame of mind,
and so you can begin to gather your goodies:
*
Jan 17 will be the From the Heart Auction.
There is already a sign-up sheet in the pavilion with some truly outstanding donated items.
...Dinners by outstanding cooks
...massages
...quilts
...pies and jams
and the list goes on and on.
This auction benefits the Activities fund and it's a super fun activity, so win-win!
***

Jan 21, the third Thursday Pot-luck dinner.
Ooh-la-la!
Rumor has it that this will be a Sandpiper Cookbook Pot Luck.
Recipes from our very own cookbook.
No, you don't have to be the one who submitted the recipe but it would help if you had the cookbook, wouldn't it?
Have you picked yours up from Sue (that's me) #38?
I seem to have an awful lot left and the list of peeps who ordered one but haven't yet picked it up, is long.
They also make great little gifts for family and friends and the pricing structure brings the cost down to $7 each
if you buy four or more.
*****
Jan 23rd, Funs-A-Poppin
Holy Moley, is it that time again?
Laugh fest extraordinaire!
See Jon if you'd like to perform.
Or if you don't want to perform you'd better hide 'cause he'll get you.
*******
Jan. 24, Sandpiper Arts & Crafts Showcase
This is a brand new activity to showcase the
extraordinary talents possessed by our friends and neighbors.
This isn't a glorified Junque & Java but rather a venue for showing off what we can do.
Items or services may be for sale but that isn't the point.
There will be furniture lovingly crafted out of rare hardwoods,
personal hand made jewelry collections, fine arts, hand made quilts, stained glass treasures,
beautifully tailored outfits, items intricately crocheted or knitted.
What have you made that you are proud of?
Or what can you do?
This is a heads-up to think, to plan,
to bring it back with you if you are going home for the holidays.
The items will be displayed throughout the Comm room and pavilion on a Sunday afternoon. You'll wander and chat, drink wine, nibble cheese and schmooze with the artists and artisans.
We are so high brow!
********
So there you have a few of the Jan plans. Just to get you thinking.
Jam Packed January!

Monday, December 14, 2009

Feel Lucky?

Dec. 15, Tues. Soup Night.

Turkey Soup/Veggie Soup, Bread, dessert.

All you can eat!


5:30pm.

Bring your beverage, but all other tableware is provided.

Benefits Adopt-A-Family.


The support of the Sandpiper family is greatly appreciated.
*

Time is getting short for this year’s donations and already the
mighty quilters of SPR are hard at work for next year.
*
At the April 1st Fun Buzz we will be raffling off a quilt.

This quilt is about 76” X 80” and is handmade.

Tickets are $1.00 each and will go on sale starting at this week’s soup night.

Please see Mary at #5 to purchase your tickets.

To paraphrase a well known Louisiana politician “remember to buy and buy often” .

Sunday, December 13, 2009

What a Dinner!

Last night was the absolutely tremendous, unforgettable lasagna dinner.
A real cafe experience has come to Sandpipers!
I had the vegetarian lasagna just because I love eggplant,
but my taste of the traditional version was just as delicious.
A nice touch to begin the evening was that the doors opened at 5:30.
No early seating or saving chairs.

We were seated by attentive waiters in ties
and waited on hand & foot!
Caesar salad, to-die-for garlic bread
and strawberry shortcake completed the meal.
Oh..and let's not forget the
bottomless wine carafes.
Just as soon as they were emptied they were
whisked away to be refilled.
The wine did FLOW!
The crew that put all this together,
from the wonderful ambiance to the last crumb of dessert
did a remarkable job.
Louise & Tom, George & Pauline, Garland, Jon, Sue R., Barb...
geesh, I hope I didn't leave anybody out!
This act will be hard to top...but...
Rumor has it....


The next dinner should REALLY be something!
Very limited seating with live entertainment and a Mediterranean theme!
Just as soon as the date to buy tickets is announced get in line.

I foresee a quick sell out!

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Elsie's Elves at Work!

Some of Elsie’s elves have been busy this morning
wrapping gifts for some of the families that are the beneficiaries
of the generosity of the Sandpiper family.
*
Still a few more days left to pick up some food for their Christmas.
Something to think about: These children normally get two meals a day
through the school lunch program.
The Christmas break means two weeks of families trying
to find money to feed the kids...this when money is tight.
We cut back on maybe going out to eat, or buying another outfit.
What can they cut back on? Lunch? Dinner?
So pick up an extra jar of peanut butter or something else from the food list,
and drop it at Elsie's #114, by the 17th.

Winter Vacation

Annie & Bill and Jim & I disappeared for about 10 days for a loop around Texas,
hitting some of the spots we've always meant to visit.
The trip started on an ominous note with a boo-boo on our NEW RV
caused by a hot dog driver skidding around corners at a gas station.
Ask Jim about it. I'm sure he'll want to tell you.
How he got Bill to do all the dirty work is a mystery.
Well, Jim did hold the umbrella, which became our theme for the next week or so.Our first stop was Fredericksburg, that quaint German town full of charm and wineries.
It rained.

It drizzled...But we struggled on..We even found Luckenbach. No mean feat!

Our next stop was Big Bend National Park-Gorgeous place!Full of fascinating rock formations...
Surprising colors....
Commerce on the trail. Since 9/11 the river crossing in this area has been closed, cutting off the tourist trinket sales from the sleepy little town across the Rio Grande. That doesn't stop them, though. They paddle across in a leaky canoe to replenish the stock of walking sticks and wire scorpions.
Here the restockers are waiting out Ranger Cindy who made them a little nervous. No problem. They just paddled across the water and waited on the other side until she left.

What's wrong with the above picture?
Oh, so many things.
College students are in the hot springs, clothed, while the nudists are bundled up and shivering.
It was cold, I tell ya!
But the weather did break long enough to get a good moon shot!We frolicked in the snow...
Went on long hikes through beautiful scenery....Visited a ghost town where the most interesting thing was the cemetery.Even Missy had a great time. We kept her safe from coyotes and javelinas.Yep...had a great time!We finished up at Davis Mountain State Park and visited the McDonald Observatory.
Very impressive!