Monday, December 29, 2008

cousins at Christmas

After church Dorcas and I hosted four cousins--Kendall and Deborah Martin, left, and our own two contributions to the Miller cousin pool--Joel and Stephanie, right.

Kendall and Deb were on their way from Lancaster to Grantsville, Md. They live in Phoenix, Ariz., and had been visiting his sister.

Here's one warm December day. Sweaters will do as we hide a shrub (see lights above my head) in front of our porch.

Friday, December 26, 2008

elephant appears as gift



At the Lehman Christmas my brother, Milton, got Horton the elephant as a gift. Squeeze a paw and he says, "I meant what I said and I said what I meant--an elephant's faithful one hundred percent."

Milton gives the Dr. Seuss book by memory and it's a trademark of family gatherings sometimes.

Friday, December 19, 2008

harp clip by Sarah

Last Sunday Sarah and Ryan and the harp went to Zion Mennonite Church where I'm finishing up my interim. I had my H-2 digital recorder on a music stand, center of the front wall. Here's "Lo How A Rose." Click on this and then hit play.
http://www.box.net/shared/mksm26re7r
Can't get too much of this Christmas!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

lights out




In six days the shortest day of the year arrives. So I put out the lights. I didn't outen them. I strung them around the two shrubs in front of the house. I put them up, really. Up and out--and then plugged them in to turn them on. What would a rabbit see, looking up from underneath--the rabbit's-eye view? I sat the camera on the ground and clicked with the remote to see.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

outback wakes up in Monterey


For the first time in 12 years, the sun rose on Monterey without a Dodge caravan in our drive. Now it's a Subaru outback. It got Dorcas to work and she reported: "On my first drive to school, I really like the outback. Could be that it fits me better than any other car we've had since I drove my superbeetle to my first job over the mountains in snow." Not quite new at 34K miles. How to say good-bye to 216,000 caravan miles?

Friday, December 5, 2008

thistle hog


Okay. Anybody know this bird?

Thursday, December 4, 2008

What is Festivus?

If you like a little unholy humor. Festivus? Sounds like a Latin heavy weight.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

19th century saw

Here's a close-up of the saw. This blade is about six feet long, a wooden handle attached at each end. You pull it towards you. Your mate pulls it away. I had fun as a child helping my dad saw with it.

grandpa's two-man saw fells oak

L. to R. below--Ryan, me, Joel, and Milton gathered today to bring down the oak. It never truly lived since it left the nursery. It must have suffered poisoning at the contruction site before we got it for free. For two years I had hope. My father's two-man saw takes it down and then slices the trunk into short logs. Think of that, cutting up a tree without any imported materials such as gas! Then it was hot chocolate with marshmallows in the kitchen.





Saturday, November 22, 2008

tools of the feast



Dorcas got the fancy knives out today to see that they are ready for Thanksgiving. We plan for 16 persons on Thursday. The turkey's coming from an organic farm in Lititz. Not flying in. Sarah plans to pick it up. photo by Joel

Thursday, November 20, 2008

woodpecker in snow



Snow was falling lightly after breakfast. A pair of red-bellied woodpeckers had some seeds outside the window. Step carefully when walking down a snowy roof! Now help me out if you know this bird is not a red-bellied.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

pilgrims in the village




Montereyans don't forget Thanksgiving Day. Let's see--it's the day we remember Pilgrims eating out with Indians one fall day. Synchronize that with Sesame Street images and you have a bright display on main street. Are the Indians sitting on the bales, or do they show up later?

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

wedding today

Approach Monterey from the north and here's your first sight on the left. Amish revival meeting in a tent? No. Well, kind of.

It's revival. It's conversion. It's sweaty palms and nervous teens. It's till-death serious. It's not under the tent. It's a wedding today at the neighbor's place. The bride and groom are in the two-story shop between the tent and the house. The horses have run of the tent. Well, tethered run.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

new office for Dorcas




Friday at dusk I helped Dorcas move into her new office at Lancaster Mennonite School. It's wider by three feet. Top photo is the last peek before we stripped the walls and everything else. Below is the new office with the things moved but not set up yet, mirror on floor. Each room has the same single window

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

more family











Several moments in our family story converged and brought us together, 14 of us, Nov. 10 in Harrisburg. I won't try to prioritize.

Nov. 10 was the 27th anniversary of Dad's passing. Photo 4. It was the return from Syria of Mel, one week after Gary's death for Evie, and the first evening out for Loretta after back surgery.

Photo 3. Another moment was the visit of Oregonians Bonnie and Chris. And, photo 2, it was the one-year anniversary of Joel and Stephanie. We anchored them at the end of the Chinese restaurant table. All in all it looked like this, photo 1.















Saturday, November 8, 2008

after the interment



After the interment we returned to the cars to plan the 30-minute drive back to the church to enjoy the fellowship meal. L to R, Dorcas, Sarah, Stephanie, Joel, Ryan, and Patrick.

Friday, November 7, 2008

good-bye Gary

Gary Shaar's funeral was held at the Hope United Methodist Church in Ephrata, Pa., today, at 10 a.m. We got the bouquet of flowers given by the whole family at Central Market. Arrived at the church in plenty of time for the 9 a.m. viewing. The interment followed at Sinking Spring. There my sister Anna Lois (l), brother Milton, and Evie, my sister the new widow, contemplate the cemetery tent.




Thursday, November 6, 2008

brother-in-law dies

Nearly everyday my newspaper reading includes the obituary page. Here's the sad news of Gary's sudden passing--sudden as in instantaneous. My sister, Evelyn, had dropped him off at the house after a doctor's visit. While she drove on to the pharmacy he walked into the house and died.

He often said at family gatherings, I never saw a U-haul trailer behind a hearse, meaning one can't take anything from this world to the next. After a Thanksgiving feast he would say, I wonder how the rich live, meaning the rich could eat no better than we just did.

I'll miss him. I doubt if he would have voted for Obama, but his obit (first three paragraphs here) was published in the same paper that announced Obama's election.






Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Why Obama won



1. Sarah and I attended his rally at Stevens Tech in Lancaster Mar. 31. There she is, waiting. He would soon step up to the podium.
2. He popped a "vote" flier on our front porch rocker on Saturday.
When asked to put an Obama sign on our lawn, I begged off, saying our house is in Amishland National Park and the natives would not understand.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

neice launches blog

This is not Monterey exactly, but, hey, Richmond can't be far behind. Here's the link to my Niece Angela's foray into the Elysian Plains and slippery country roads of culture. http://the-peoples-snob.blogspot.com/.

The blog describes itself as looking at "the fine arts in Richmond, Virginia, with an emphasis on classical music; offers musings on arts and culture in general; and intends to dispel the notion that chamber music is for fogies.With a body of knowledge that's impressively broad but as shallow as a sheet of roadway water, the Snob can opine authoritatively but will sometimes hydroplane into a fiery carcass beside the road. You wouldn't want to miss that.The Snob, however, drives a Ford Escort, so don't be looking for a bandwagon in the flames."

Thursday, October 23, 2008

"foundation" meets



That is, the Lehman Foundation met at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia today. That's it--Mel, left, me and Milton.

The minutes of our annual meeting are not public, but I think I could divulge that in the 32 years of its existence, this is the first year the balance fell. Not as far as Wall Street, but by a few points.

This is also the first year we split our benevolences two ways. One to a population concern group and one to a prison reform group.

You have to understand that we are talking about three brothers who want a day out. Some brothers go fishing. We pretend we are a foundation. The money is real--a little bit more real than Monopoly money.

The Phillies were tossing around a baseball and practicing for a world series game as we met. It was purely an after-thought to me that baseball was not mentioned once. We ate lunch and held our annual session in the food court.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Ryan's birthday party










Ryan turned 28 and proved he still has the puff to take care of the candles at the party we threw for him Saturday.


Besides our sixsome (Sarah, Ryan, Joel, Steph, Dorcas and me) we had guests--Milton and Lois, and cousin Chris from Oregon public radio. Steph, with her new apple laptop, pulled up Chris's recent story which went national.

Last and least were the two hounds, Simon and Brutus, who I noticed did not help to sing "Happy Birthday" and didn't get any of the food. They did regale us with some antics. (pics by Joel)


Saturday, October 18, 2008

hand packed at market



Unless you make them yourself, there aren't many places where chips are weighed and packed by hand as you watch. They still are at Central Market (Lancaster, Pa.).

A great day to shop market! The Obama table was there. The McCain people must have been at the Palin rally the other side of town. To think what must have been said there that I missed!

Friday, October 17, 2008

weeds to gardens



When there was still a little wild around the edges of fields, nature was full of adventures. Blades of grass taut between your thumbs sounded like an oboe. You could "smoke" dried lily stems. Maple seeds floated down like helicopters.

Milkweed (see pic) was everywhere, a favorite home for the Monarch butterfly. Milkweed was a weed growing in hedgerows and ditches. Now Amishland National Park (Monterey's environs) is intensely farmed to the last inch. When we put in the butterfly garden, milkweed was one of the plants put in.

The "milk" is merely the hairs attached to each seed. When the wind catches them right, they get one little thrill ride to where they will grow next year. You spread by flowing with nature. Change the economics and you change milkweed. Change a US president and you change milkweed. It could go the other way, too.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

politics and freezers



After the 3rd Obama-McCain debate which showed Obama in a slightly better light than McCain, and after the Phillies won the game that gets them in the world series, it's back to politics as appliances.

Boxy freezers make me think of Nixon and Krushchev debating over cold war races in home appliances. So passe. I'm gonna bet that the old freezer we had to let go because the inside lid insulation was broken away from the lid past the duct tape patch it up quotient, was entirely built in the US of America by union labor. I'm gonna bet that the new Frigidaire (on cart) was mostly fabricated in China.

But, hey, we're doing stuff for China. And who listens to whose music? Pic at 10 a.m. today, their permission.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

politics, money, and scarecrows

Maybe it's all scarecrows. But at market this morning I saw all the recent headlines up close. There are the Obama and McCain tables the day after Palin gets embroiled in the brother-in-law cop firing and McCain's rallies get nasty. There's the friendly scarecrow and pumpkin cookies at the bakery stand, signalling the fall season. And across Penn Square, despite the tailspin money markets, Lancaster's biggest building project keeps chugging along.


Friday, October 10, 2008

Menno House, the romance began



If you take our romance back to the origins, you get to Menno House in New York. The house itself celebrated its 50th anniversary three weeks ago and we went. Here (photographer unknown) we take our seats at the Saturday evening outdoor banquet.

At my left elbow is David Wenger, one of our friends in the dating days. At his left is John Rempel who was pastor in a later decade of the Manhattan Mennonite Fellowship, the church which now owns Menno House.

When we met there in 1976, it was owned by the eastern mission board and used to house volunteers and students.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

sister's kitchen painted



My sister and her husband asked me to paint the kitchen cupboards. As it happened, today I finished the job. Here's the before at 10 a.m. with sister Evie who was dog-sitting and who made us a wonderful lunch. Seven hours later, somewhat weary, we pose in front of the almost-finished cupboards. The pics don't really do justice. Brother Milton put in a full day.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

lunch in a village

My camera is back from its trip to the Pacific by rail. I took it along to church today and used it when we had lunch at the village of St. Peter's, exactly mid-way between Monterey and Souderton. We ate on the patio out back. Our photo by the waitress.



Saturday, October 4, 2008

Ryan's birthday

Come the middle of October, son-in-law Ryan Schrock celebrates a birthday. This summer he demonstrated his newly-purchased Bianchi bike. So I guess he won't get a bike for his birthday. I'm sure I can think of something else. If you ever have a son-in-law, this is the one you want.

Monday, September 22, 2008

more train vacation

Here's quilting with a flair in their room, boats moored at the end of the journey, Bonnie and Chris at a falls, and a tunnel in an aquarium they visited. Pics by Joel