17 May 2026

Greek Festival at St. Barbara's

While I was in Texas on business earlier this week, my mother went to A Greek food truck she loves, and found out about a local Greek festival at St. Barbara Greek Orthodox Church.  We'd loved going to them in Chicago, and I've been to ones in Dallas and when visiting my grandmother in Florida.

We decided to go early in the day and  it was a good plan and it's a hot weekend.  We arrived just in time to get through the long line into the church, most of whom were heading to the food area, and with a quick left turn found ourselves in the sanctuary in time for a tour.  It wasn't a walking tour, but a tour of the iconography which is the many-years work of a paritioner.

Their shrine to St. Barbara, patron saint of the
church, carefully brought from their previous location.

The communion table in the area where only
a consecrated priest has access.

The altar, which is behind the iconostasis.

The Bible accessible only to the priest.

This signals the burial and is used only on
Good Friday, but is available the rest of the year.

Saints ringed the sides, including Joachim and Anna with an
infant Mary, Mother of Jesus.

Saints here include Nicholas at left, Peter and Paul in the center.

The back wall, under which you enter, showing the Dormition.

Interior of the dome.

The iconostasis.  You can see through to the priest-only area.

The Resurrection, with Christ pulling up Adam and Eve.

The Transfiguration, with before and after images on the sides.

After the tour we joined the food line, having spanikopita and salad for lunch, taking home pastisio and a gyro sandwich and baklava and the walnut cakes I like and and cannot remember the name.  There was dancing and music, a jumble sale and a tent of artisans raising money for Ukraine.  I bought a few things (carefully avoiding the table of books) and picked up some fresh feta cheese before we headed home.

10 May 2026

Revisiting a childhood activity.

This week was busy with an assortment of things, including a professional organization mixer on Tuesday, which happened to be Cinco de Mayo.  So the food was a taco bar (tasty, but not worth photographing) and we made paper flowers to contribute to an artist's work:

I made this type of flower as a child, and it was very quick to remember how.  Of course the artist showed people how to do it, had the pieces of paper precut (you can see a pile of deep blue at the top of the lower photograph), and even some of the flowers ready to fluff.  I did several from start to finish, and we look forward to the finished image.

Most of my yarning this week was making Warm Up, America! pieces, using up leftovers of acrylic, because any pattern I wanted to do needed more focus than I could manage.
Three in various garter stitch patterns, lower right is crocheted.

Currently OTN is one from their 30th Anniversary Pattern Bundle, a block in bamboo stitch which I hadn't heard of before and looked intriguing.  I have some speckled yarn that I wanted to work into a pattern stitch, and so far it's going well.  I'll probably take it and some other balls of yarn on my business travel this week, something easy that doesn't need much focus.

I also had my book club at the library on Wednesday, and errands plus all the trip laundry, and time with my mother after being away for a week.  Today is Mother's Day and my brother and his wife and I went to my mother's house for brunch.  Going out on Mother's Day is too crowded and noisy for us.

This weekend I started a more complicated item, the "Winter Sapphire" pattern using yarn that I purchased in Iceland.  Because the yarn is a bit "sticky" I realized I will need to pull from the outside, so went on a hunt for one of my Lemonwood mini-minders.  I think it's not officially the two-ball size, but it works for me:

03 May 2026

Back from Iceland.

It was a marvelous trip: geysers and waterfalls, storyteller and musical stories, yarn-buying, good food, knitting and knitting classes, and a float in the Blue Lagoon.  I definitely want to go back someday to see more of museums and have other experiences.

One of the last things I did was wear the cardigan (in the unfinished state you see) to the smaller shop of The Handknitting Association of Iceland for buttons:



19 April 2026

Striped.

I finally started on a sweater from the plant-dyed yarns I bought at last year's Maryland Sheep & Wool Festival.  I want another warm sweater to wear in Iceland, and decided to knit something that would be like a jacket.  Unfortunately, the sleeves are a bit close-fitting, but I don't have the time (or possibly the yarn) to redo anything.

Here's the current progress, you can see how the gold yarns shade in tone:
I am still deciding whether the sleeves will have
a garter stitch cuff, or ribbing, and what colour(s).

I use the safety pins on the sides to track decrease rows, and also the length.  To work the sleeves to the same length when I have only a single ball of colour, I pinned a couple of points together:

Also from this week, my irises are doing very, very well this year:
   

The photos are from three days apart, the plant in the back of the lefthand photo.  It's been very hot and I didn't water, so they didn't last as long as they could have.  Since it hasn't rained much, we're on water restrictions.

14 April 2026

Remembering


Today is Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, when we read names of persons murdered in the Shoah during World War II.  In my congregation the reading happened on Sunday, and I participated, reading five pages, doing my best with names and geography.

12 April 2026

Exceeded.

Again this year I participated in the Knit 4 Food A Thon, raising funds for four organizations that fight food insecurity.  Because there was a community garage/tag/yard sale that day, I decided to sell some of my stash of yarns and other crafting supplies and donate the funds to the cause.

Overall goal was to raise more than last year - mission accomplished!

On Friday evening, of course, I watched the Artemis II splashdown.  It was a nice break from setup for the sale on Saturday.  For my part of the sale, I raised about $100, plus the sale of a crafting workbench.  I shared the funds with others on my team, donating a portion of the proceeds to anybody who had not met their goal.

Today I saw "Churchill", a one-man show and fascinating two hours.  I definitely recommend it.  In a brief post-show chat, the performer/writer mentioned a related show, "Churchill & Roosevelt: The Christmas That Saved The World!" will be in performance in Phoenix next year.  I looked up the theater he mentioned, and the run will overlap our Spring Training trip!

04 April 2026

A puzzling week.

 This week, A Word A Day had a bonus, linking to an online jigsaw that included a riddle about a word.











I haven't done this month's puzzle, but it's early.  I did buy something new today, which I may wait to put together until my next trip to see a friend, because she also loves puzzles and this is a fun one.