Shabbat, SCA event
May. 22nd, 2005 10:34 pmSaturday Dani and I went to AEthelmearc War Practice at Cooper's Lake. ( Read more... )
Saturday Dani and I went to AEthelmearc War Practice at Cooper's Lake. ( Read more... )
Saturday we went to the AEthelmearc Academy (SCA event), which was held at Seton Hill College (universtiy?) in Greensburg. It's a really pretty campus. (Looked to be pretty unfriendly to wheelchairs; I'm glad a local member who was using a wheelchair last year isn't using one now.)
Dani spotted a poster on campus advertising a field trip to Giant Eagle and WallMart. The campus is not exactly downtown, so while you could walk to those locations, it'd be a shlep and you wouldn't want to do it carrying groceries. So this makes sense, but it never would have occurred to me.
The event was pleasant. There weren't many classes that particularly interested me, but I ended up at some that were pretty decent. One of the classes I specifically wanted to attend got cancelled, unfortunately (instructor didn't make it to the event). The overall feel was pretty casual; I've seen university-style events that were higher pressure for the instructors, but this didn't seem that way.
The school provided the food. It was very good for catered food -- not really medieval in content or ambience, but no one expected it to be (given the catering) so that's not a problem. It did look like they ran out of some things before everyone got through the line; I assume this is due to the too-common SCAdian tendency to take large portions.
At the end of the day they put out some fruit and bags of potato chips/pretzels/etc, and there were a lot of leftovers. I noticed that our college students were grabbing some extras; when the autocrat announced that people should take the leftovers home, they went into full starving-student mode. It was kind of cute -- kind of like Halloween, sack and all. :-)
The event ended around 6:30 (no feast). We failed to find a local restaurant without a long line, so we just headed back to Pittsburgh. (Well, first we bumbled around a little, because the directions to the site didn't reverse neatly and, ahem, some drivers just won't ask for directions. But we found the highway entrance and all was good.)
After we dropped off our passengers Dani and I went to Indian Oven, a newish restaurant in Squirrel Hill. It replaced Platters and is, alas, no longer kosher. It has a significant vegetarian and adequate vegan menu, though.
We both got samplers (meat for him, veggie for me), and we both liked the food a lot. Service was a bit slow due to a sub-optimal waiter:customer ratio. But I'd definitely go back. The vegetable korma (ordered at a spice level of 7) was nicely zippy and not mushy. The mattar paneer (one of my standard benchmarks) was nice but not excellent. The raita was very good, as were the green and red chutneys. The spiced tea (with cream) was evocative of chai.
This afternoon I finally took down the sukkah. Sometime before next year I'm going to take the vertical poles to be cut down a foot or so (a friend has the relevant power tool for cutting metal tubing), so that next year I won't have to do awkward things involving a ladder to put it up. I don't need my sukkah to be 8 feet tall; 7 would be fine.
Tonight was a pleasant dinner with
ralphmelton
and
lorimelton. Dessert was a nice pumpkin
cake with whipped cream; Lori mixed some powdered ginger
into the cream before whipping it, which added a nice
effect. I'll have to remember that. (Ok, whom am I
kidding? When's the last time I whipped cream rather
than buying it that way? But hey, I might...)
There are only two classes at the upcoming Academy (SCA
event) that specifically interest me. (Thanks,
dagonell, for the list.) Naturally, they
are scheduled against each other. Sigh. (They weren't
on the previous draft.) There are some classes that
I wouldn't mind taking so it's probably worth
going, mind; I'm just a little frustrated. (The advance
information doesn't include names of teachers [update: just
added, yay], which could
make a difference for classes I wouldn't attend just based
on title. A good teacher can make all the difference, and
we have some of those in this kingdom.) Still, it looks
like a weaker slate than I'm used to.
A news story reported that someone was convicted of "attempted first-degree intentional homicide". I thought the difference between homicide and manslaughter was intent, meaning there's no such thing as unintentional homicide. So I'm assuming sloppy writing here, though I'll admit to being a little confused at times about the degree thing, which might be relevant. My impression is that "first degree homicide" means "I specifically meant to kill you, in cold blood if necessary, you scum", that "third degree manslaughter" means "I was doing something I should have known could kill someone, but I sure didn't mean to kill or hurt anyone, let alone you specifically", and that everything else falls in between.
To the writers on West Wing: we want our characters back; could you repeat the ransom demand?
The relevant network [1] moved Jack and Bobby into the same time slot as West Wing. That's a smart move, as the show seems to be aimed at the same viewers (though the shows are very different) and WW is floundering. But I also wonder how much scheduling actually matters these days; doesn't just about every TV-viewing household have at least one recording device? Competing shows aren't the problem they once were.
[1] Yeah, branding is real effective on me... I notice the intrusive logo on the screen but just don't retain the data, and the VCR takes care of remembering what channel it's on.
Shabbat morning I got a phone call from that day's torah reader, saying that she couldn't get there due to flooded-out areas between her house and the synagogue. I feel bad for her because she spent time learning the portion and now she can't use it until this time next year. She felt bad for leaving us in the lurch, and I tried to reassure her that it was obviously not her fault.
The rabbi couldn't stay today, so I suspected this would mean we wouldn't have a torah service, but then I said "hey, I read this portion last year; I wonder...". With ten minutes available to me to answer that question, I pulled out the tikkun and scraped the rust off of enough to make a valid torah reading. I wasn't going to be able to do all of it with that amount of time, but so long as you do at least three verses you can read torah. And I was able to do that, because (IMO) Ha'azinu is one of the easiest torah portions out there, and I'd done it before. When I got to shul I asked someone else to lead that part of the service and a third person to read the haftarah portion, because I didn't want to just take over myself. Remember those words; they'll be relevant later.
I mentally composed a d'var torah while walking to shul -- so it wasn't as polished as it might have been under better circumstances, but it was passable. I talked about the season and not the parsha directly. As my rabbi pointed out last week, this season is characterized by t'shuvah (repentance, or return), s'lichah (forgiveness), and kapparah (atonement). We've talked about the first and the last but not as much about the middle one. When we talk about forgiveness, we often focus on seeking it -- but we also have to be ready to grant it, when someone asks or even when the person doesn't ask. Sometimes the person who wronged you has no idea that he has done so, in which case he's not going to come to you. And sometimes the person knows he wronged you but he's not going to approach you and it's just not worth staying angry about it. So, I said, try to grant the possibility that the person might not know, and even if he doesn't, try not to carry minor grudges into the new year. It's just not worth it. Remember those words; they'll be relevant later.
One of the members of the group is a professor at a nearby college and is teaching a religion class this term. So, with advance notice to the rabbi, she brought about a dozen students to the service. The rabbi welcomed them and was extra-careful about giving page numbers, but otherwise did nothing special. Everything was going fine, and I assume the professor gave the students an overview of the service before she brought them.
( problem: the return of ranty-guy )
But other than that the day went really well, and I received many compliments on my last-minute torah reading. After the ranty guy left I spoke with a freshman from Pitt who was there for the first time, and she said she really enjoyed the service and will be back. We also told her about Yom Kippur services, and it sounds like she's planning to come. She seems like a nice person; I'm glad the ranty guy didn't scare her off.
After services we went to Coronation (SCA event), giving a ride to a student who's in the choir. It took a long time to get there due to heavy traffic caused by closed roads, but it was a good event and it was fun to spend the time in the car chatting with a newer member. We also sat with two newer members at dinner (I hadn't met them before, though one of them had heard of me), and they are both nice people I hope to see more of. A lot of people in the SCA worry about getting new members, which often comes through big demos and the like. But retention has a lot to do with that kind of one-on-one contact, and it's what I enjoy more. I'm not all that interested in pitching the SCA to a boy-scout troop, but I'm very interested in chatting with folks who've already decided to get involved about what they want to do and helping get them pointed in the right direction.
The dinner at the event was really good. I like it when Johan cooks. :-) In addition to being talented, he takes care to make sure that everyone will be able to get enough to eat -- at many events vegetarians basically get bread, noodles, rice, and maybe a salad, but I ate quite well yesterday -- spinach quiche, salmon (ok, "regular" vegetarians wouldn't eat that), noodles with cheese, asparagus, salad, nuts, another cooked vegetable, and more. I didn't even save room for dessert, as it turned out.
I missed the morning service, alas, because Dani and
I went to the kingdom academy event in Erie. (Why
do the good things all have to pile onto the same
weekends?) The event was being held in a synagogue's
school, and part of the agreement was that members of
the congregation could attend the classes, so the
folks in charge asked me to organize a track of
classes on Jewish topics. That went pretty well
overall, though the number of congregants wasn't high
and dwindled over the day. We had an overview class
taught by Eleazar ha-Levi (the person who wrote the
Complete Anachronist issue a couple years back),
a class on the Khazars which was very good, a class
on Salamone Rossi and his music taught by
lefkowitzga which was also very good,
a class on Hebrew poetry, and a class on Hebrew
manuscripts. The organizers had asked for some sort
of round-table discussion, so I finished with an
item called "being Jewish in the SCA". I left it
fairly open so that we could talk about whatever people
wanted to discuss -- choosing a persona, coping with
feasts, tricks for attending events on Shabbat, and
so on. None of the congregants showed up, though; it
ended up being me, Eleazar, and Remus, who isn't
Jewish but was just curious.
There was no formal feast but they had a buffet out all day (starting with the first break in classes). The food was varied and mostly low-key; I wonder if they did it as a quasi-pot-luck, with members of the host group each bringing something. Either they did not use the synagogue kitchen or the kitchen isn't kosher; that much I'm sure of. :-) So maybe the former; that would be consistent with the dishes that were there, all of which could stand up to being driven in from elsewhere. We've had events at sites where either there was no kitchen or we weren't allowed to use it; it's a challenge, but it can be done.
The event ended early and there was a dinner expedition forming, but Shabbat still had two hours to run so we had to decline. Pity the event didn't run later (and that it was held so close to the summer solstice :-) ). Oh well.
Since people were spread out I didn't get a feel for how
many were there, but it seemed like a good turnout.
I sometimes wonder if the academy events plan too many
tracks of simultaneous classes for the number of people
who come, but it seemed to have worked. I wonder if
lyev got enough people for each class in
his dance track.
This Wednesday Dani is heading off to a gaming convention (Origins). He has signed up mostly for games he's never played before, which is a good way to survey what's out there. I wonder how many he'll come home with this year. :-)
The choir had a discussion about Pennsic and beyond at the most recent practice. I'm not sure what will come of it. We will have a Pennsic performance, though the group is small and someone will be filling in as director. We won't have some of the material we were planning to have for it, but we'll have enough. Eh. It's not the performance we wanted to have, but it will do.
This Shabbat was the bar mitzvah of one of the regulars in our morning minyan. He is, in fact, the only pre-bar-mitzvah person (well, was) to come regularly. (He comes with his father.) They actually came to the early service and stayed until they had to go get ready for the late service with the family. And the bar mitzvah has said he's interested in reading torah in our minyan -- great! I picked up another reader last week too, so if both of them stick we'll be in pretty good shape.
On the way home on Saturday I ran into
lyev,
so I lured him back to our place to hang out for a while
and eat. I'd prepared a low-key lunch -- just a pot
of stew and fresh fruit. It figures -- I plan something
more elaborate and get no guests, but I slack and I
get someone. :-) Oh well. Lyev showed us a new
translation of a 16th-century fencing manual, and
demonstrated some of the moves. It looked nifty.
Not that I know anything about fencing, but I could
see how valuable a source this would be for those who
do.
Tonight we hosted an SCA pot-luck dinner. The theme was fruit, and we had a good balance of dishes. (We knew we were running the risk of six fruit salads and five pies, but we decided to do it anyway.) I made a (supposedly) Moroccan dish with chicken and dates which went over well; I also made a pineapple kugel for the vegetarians. No vegetarians showed up, as it turned out, but the omnivores were happy to eat it. :-) There was one casualty: one of the guests took a turn a little too quickly on the drive over, and his car is now wearing the strawberry torte. Oops. I hope that cleaned up without too much trouble.
The conversation was very pleasant, and after most people had left a few of us decided to play a game of Merchants of Amsterdam. (It's a Rio Grande game, so in some ways it's like all the other Rio Grande games. But it's fun.) The one person who had never played before won.
Next weekend is the kingdom Academy in Stormsport (Erie). They're holding the event at a synagogue (on a Saturday -- wonder how they managed that?), and the person in charge asked me to coordinate a special track of classes on Jewish topics to which the congregation would be invited. It'll be interesting to see how that plays out. We have some good classes lined up.
As we were walking in from the car, we ran into Prince Rurik and one of his retainers. Rurik is a great guy, and he seemed to be happy to see us. (I didn't really think he knew us from Adam. Pleasant surprise.) He insisted on giving us his retainer long enough to carry our cooler (which I was carrying) to the main area, which I thought was really nice. I tried to decline, on the theory that reigning royalty probably needs the help more than I do, but he insisted. This is the same Rurik who pretty much always helps clean up events, including when he was royalty last time. He's a great example of courtesy and supporting the society.
While we were eating lunch, Degan (one of my apprentices) introduced us to two friends of his at their first event. They're Jewish, and it sounds like one of them is less observant than he wants to be, and we talked a little about Shabbat/SCA stuff, but they all had to run off to a class so we didn't talk for long. I had hoped to run into them again later in the day, but it didn't happen. I hope they enjoyed themselves. They seemed like nice people.
I've finally seen hound-coursing! I keep showing up to events where "that happened this morning" and missing it. It's been growing in AEthelmearc over the last year or so. I saw four greyhounds (heh -- I didn't know they come in non-grey too). They were using a piece of plastic for the lure, with a cord and several pullies to form a "course". I only saw two dogs run it, and both of them got distracted by other things moving through the tall grass and had to be nudged, but they did both tackle the plastic in the end. It makes me wonder how they solved that problem in period, when (I presume) grass was not neatly trimmed the way it tends to be today. The person I spoke with didn't know; I speculated about setting the pullies higher off the ground, and she said that there were some places that were specifically set up for coursing and maybe those lawns were more carefully tended. (I am assuming that at least sometimes, coursing in period involved lures rather than rabbits, and that said lures had to be rigged somehow. I don't know how, though. I hope in time the folks doing it now move away from plastic to some other (non-live) lure.)
I finally connected with
dagonell again in person
(it's been a long time), and we spent a couple hours chatting.
That was fun. I also saw Lia, a fellow music geek (from
West Virginia) for the first time in a while. There were
several people I missed, but large events are like that.
Court was long. Baronial court had what I thought was a poor balance of schtick to real business; some of that would have worked better at smaller events. Kingdom court ran more smoothly, except that it seemed that a third or so of the people who were receiving awards had to be fetched from their camps. Oops. Several people I know received well-deserved awards. I'm partcularly happy about the Fleur (grant-level arts award) for Leifr for his glass-blowing.
We left not long after court. (Dani wanted to leave sooner and stop for dinner on the way home; I pointed out that we had to wait for the end of Shabbat before hitting a restaurant, so we needn't be in that much of a hurry to leave. It all worked out.) I hope that if a storm did hit last night it didn't do as much damage as Friday's, which knocked down some trees and a bunch of tents.
This weekend I read about a new (expensive) geek-appeal gadget, a robotic vacuum cleaner. It wanders around your house and automatically goes to the docking station to recharge or empty itself when needed. The review I saw said that it's slow -- its navigation isn't the greatest, so it might do a stretch several times before getting to parts it hasn't done yet -- but since it's the robot's time, the reviewer doesn't care. He was out running errands. :-) This sounds handy (though I do wonder how pets would view it). Now if they could just build the laundry robot, the shopping robot, and the kitchen-cleaning robot, life would be grand. (At $1500, I should clarify that this is wishful thinking, not a planned purchase.)
Shabbat morning we had another new torah reader (and new service leader, the mother of the torah reader). They both did good jobs and I think the mother, at least, will sign up to do this again (and even read torah). I am pleased by the progress our minyan is making, building participation one person at a time. We need to think about workshops or tutorials or something for people who lack self-confidence. (There are several people who I think would do just fine, but they don't think so yet.)
Today was the local SCA group's 12th-night event. It was a fun, low-key event, like many I remember from 20 years ago. This was the second year we've done it; I hope this establishes the tradition. :-) Free site (university), pot-luck feast, good mix of planned activities and schmooze time -- very pleasant and comfortable.
Mapquest says Pittsburgh to Cincinnati is a 4.5-hour drive (slightly under). Is that really right? I thought Pittsburgh to Columbus was close to four hours, and Cincinnati is a good deal beyond that. I thought Cincinnati would be 6 or 7 hours just from looking at a map.
The SCA event was originally advertised as an event about children, Christmas, and shopping. The first two I don't do and the last I don't do on Shabbat, so I started off inclined against. And, of course, the event charged the corporate tax, which is a point against. A very deserving friend was being elevated to the peerage, which I wanted to see, but ultimately I decided that the combination of event activities, high price ($15+), and Shabbat complications argued against. (I wasn't willing to miss Shabbat services for a third event this fall, and stuff was happening before we would have gotten there.) I regret missing the elevation but I don't regret missing the event.
This afternoon I helped cook latkes for my synagogue's ("first annual") latke sale. That was fun, though I wasn't paying enough attention to repetitive motion early enough so one wrist is a little sore. I noticed it early enough that things should be fine tomorrow, though. And I learned a useful technique: form the patties by taking a slotted spoon, scooping up potato mixture, and squeezing with your other hand to send the excess moisture out through the slots while forming a spoon-shaped patty. That's much easier than pressing 'em between your hands, which is what I've done in the past.
I asked the coordinator if this fund-raiser was effective, and she said she wasn't sure yet. It replaces, in part, the annual "Jewish Food Festival", which I feel was way too much effort for too little money. And some board members fixated on it too much, and hounded other board members for not volunteering tons of time and effort to make it work. I remember one board meeting where I almost said, "Look, you're planning on tons of work to bring in $X. We have Y members. Here's $10, more than my share. You can keep the change but you have to stop pestering me." But I didn't, and we were finally able to kill it.
So this year we're doing a latke sale that probably won't raise that much money, but it's also not as much work. And they were able to graft a raffle onto it for basically no cost, so that might end up making a difference. We'll see.
There seems to be this mentality that working on fund-raising events is inherently fun and good, so even if they don't produce a lot of money you should do it. I take a more businesslike approach: if you aren't going to make a reasonable amount of money from it, you shouldn't abuse your volunteers, whose time is valuable. I would have been happy to pay an extra $10 a year in dues to never hear from the food festival again. This year I was willing to spend a few hours making latkes, but if I learn that it was basically a wash, I might not be willing to do so next year.
No one explained this aspect of the Jewish community to me, and I find it a little peculiar. When I was a kid involved in various organizations that needed to raise money, we did our best to optimize the payoff:effort ratio. I don't see that happening in my synagogue, and I get the impression it doesn't happen in others either.
Sunday dinner was fun.
ralphmelton
passed around a new game he picked up, My Life
With Master, which looks like it could be neat.
It's not a genre I'm generally fond of -- Victorian
horror -- but it's almost pure role-playing, which
has a lot of appeal. I'm looking forward to
reading the rules. (He's written about it in
his journal.)
Dessert tonight was a yummy concoction involving gingerbread cake, peaches, cranberries, whipped cream, and probably other stuff. Very pretty to look at (it was in layers in a colorless glass dish) and quite tasty.
The schedule for the evening at my synagogue was a program of some sort (mainly discussion), then a bit of a social (cookies and lemonade), and then the S'lichot service. I got there just as the social part of this was starting, so I ended up with about 15 minutes to spare. (In an ideal world I wouldn't have missed any of it, but I knew that wouldn't happen. My goal was to not miss the service.)
Traditionally S'lichot begins at midnight, but that isn't a popular idea at my synagogue. So we started around 10 and finished up around 11 or so. I'm reminded of some very pretty music that I haven't heard since Yom Kippur last year. (Most of the formal music that shows up for the high-holy-day services is too "artistic" and operatic for me, but last night's mostly wasn't like that.)
Today I learned of one glitch in the HHD part assignments, which I'll try to fix tomorrow. We have a rehearsal (more like blocking, so people know who goes where when) on Wednesday. I'm participating in the Yom Kippur morning service (I have the haftarah blessings).
Today was mostly errands and household foo. We watched two more episodes of West Wing tonight, and got a really good laugh during mostly-serious episodes. I'm glad the funny bit came right before the opening credits. :-)
Rosh Hashana is soon. I bought some extra food on spec today (chicken doesn't go bad, after all :-) ), because I ordered guests for dinner Friday and don't know yet if I'm getting them. I should know by Wedenesday. (Well, "ordered" might not be the right word. I let the person who's organizing such things know that I would welcome guests for that meal, and she'll tell me soon if I'm getting any. I have different guests for Saturday lunch already.)
The reason we got home early enough to do this is that the SCA event was enough of a disappointment that we bailed. (And for this I missed morning services? Sigh.) There were a few contributing factors. First, there wasn't much in the way of planned activities other than fighting and fencing, and the site wasn't really conducive to just schmoozing. A lot of folks I expected to see there weren't in evidence; maybe they were off doing stuff behind the scenes or maybe they weren't there, but either way, it meant I didn't get to visit with them. The advertised lunch was very disappointing in both content and quantity; I'm used to much better. Maybe I'm just spoiled because I live in a group that does a good job with food; I don't know. Many of our friends weren't staying for dinner, and I was kind of hungry from the lack of lunch, and it was cold and rainy, so after the choir performance we went home.
The choir performance went fairly well, and we had more of an audience than I thought we would given the event logistics. One member was sick and one was absent for unknown reasons, but we still had reasonable part coverage.
I got email tonight from Amazon UK telling me that the new West Wing DVD has shipped. This came as a pleasant surprise, as the published release date is Monday. With luck, we'll actually be able to watch a couple episodes before leaving town for Pesach. (I am, of course, assuming that they aren't going to close the city of Toronto due to SARS...)
Last week I shared my comments on the new siddur with another member of our morning minyan (I emailed her the URL). This is someone who understands liturgy, is smart, and enjoys talking about stuff like this. (I wanted to wait until she had completed her own evaluation before hitting her with the full force of my opinions.) She was there Saturday morning and told me that she really enjoyed reading my comments, and she said some very flattering things. That made me feel good. (She also asked if she could share them with an ex-congregant who is now in rabbinical school. The person in question is someone I wish I had a closer relationship with than I do, so I said sure.)
Saturday was a local SCA event, the Vetr Thing, on a Viking theme. It was a lot of fun! ( Read more... )
Today someone from the cable company came by to pick up the converter box (we dropped the digital cable), and I discovered that the "basic" service he returned us to is not the same service we had before we did this experiment. Before I was getting some extra channels that I no longer get (the History Channel is one), and some of the channels were assigned to different numbers. (On the other hand, I think we're getting one or two channels now that we didn't used to get, though they're ones I don't care about.) The person from the cable company swears that this is the basic service that I should have had before, but it's not and I want to know what happened. For the most part I don't think I care, but I am puzzled that we didn't revert to prior state.
The cable company also didn't disable the extra channels that come with digital until today, though the converter box stopped responding to the remote (and stopped offering features like the on-screen program guide) the day I cancelled the service. Since it took a week and a half for someone to collect the box and finish the downgrade, and that's not our doing, I hope they stopped billing us for the digital service on the day they said they would. I'll know when the next bill comes, I guess.
Yesterday after I got home from services we went to kingdom 12th night, about an hour north of here. We got there just as a court was finishing; I hadn't known there would be more than one. There was an artisans' exhibition, but there was very little time to look at anything before I had to go to my first meeting. (I thought the meeting was later. Oops.) This was very much the day of long meetings, and next time I end up with multiple meetings at a single one-day event I will choose one to attend and not attend all of them.
The choir performed before court (the later one, I mean). I could actually hear the tenor parts! (This has sometimes been a problem with our choir, I'm told. I'm usually in the choir, but not for Christmas music.) The altos and sopranos were down in numbers compared to the tenors and basses, and each of the upper parts had one weak singer, so balance was a little off. Aside from that, though, and one piece that really suffered from this week's rehearsal being snowed out, it sounded good. The environment wasn't really all that good for performances, unfortunately. (There was one large room with lots of background noise.)
The site for the event was a little strange. They were using a high school, so most activities took place in one large room (the cafeteria), which was plenty big enough to accommodate that. But changing rooms and meeting rooms were separate, and they were far away. (This event would have benefitted from a published map.) We had to walk quite a way to get to the changing rooms, and had to go to a different building to get to the meeting rooms, yet we walked past many suitable classrooms on the way to those destinations. Was the school unwilling to let the SCA use rooms that were actually close to the cafeteria? How odd. I felt sorry for the people who have trouble getting around. (Oh, and pretty much all of the parking was a good distance from the building, too.)
The feast was good. Starch-heavy for vegetarians (few veggies), but that's normal. I guess I should start packing raw veggies when going to events. (I am not complaining about the cook here; most feasts have this issue, for various reasons.)
A lot of people took off right after the feast. I had planned to spend that time schmoozing with people I didn't get to see during the day because of meetings, but had limited success. Some of them will be at today's baronial party, for which I'll be leaving soon.
dagonell and Cigfran got snowed in,
so they didn't make it down after all. Pity.
Today was the Great Race, which starts pretty much in front of our house. I can live with the necessary sound, once a year, of a few thousand people getting set up to run a race. However, blasting music for more than an hour (starting at 8am) at volume levels that would get me cited for disorderly conduct if they came from my house is inappropriate. I wonder who the correct body is to complain to. (City council?)
I guess this race just has bad karma for me or something. In 1999, the first year we lived here, Dani and I got tickets (and threat of towing; someone rang the bell at 7am) for being parked on the street. The "no parking" signs were apparently invisible that year in our block. Dani paid the ticket; I went to traffic court and the judge dismissed it. (After: "And how long have you lived in Squirrel Hill?" "We moved into the house 10 days before this happened." "Ok, dismissed. Just so you know, they do this every year and they're not real good about signs." I didn't ask if there was something the courts could do about that deficiency.)
( Simchat Torah )