A Visit to Reed College

Dear Liza,

The Old Dorm Block, complete with Sallyport

Another busy weekend has flown by! As the summer winds down, activities become more tightly packed and we try to keep up.

Saturday we drove a few miles south to Reed College, a beautiful college built in 1912. The original buildings were designed by A. E. Doyle, who designed some of my favorite old buildings downtown. They are a brick Gothic design, with tell narrow windows, peaked arches and doorways, and lots of Hogwarts-style detail.

Eliot Hall

The campus is built on land donated by William Ladd, who had done very well in business and owned huge chunks of land on the east side of the Willamette. It was funded and named for Mr. Simeon Gannet Reed, who had made his money in transportation and left it to be used for a “college of lectures”, that is, liberal arts and humanities.

Lovely curving bridge

At the north end of the campus is Reed Lake, a stretch of water surrounded by tall pines and maples. A beautiful arching bridge goes over a narrow section, allowing long views of ducks and apparent wilderness. I like this part of the campus because it feels woodsy, like UC Santa Cruz.

Reed Lake, home for ducks and long views

Coming out of the woods we found Eliot Hall, the main administration building. It had the elegant brickwork and glazed Terra Cotta details that Mr. Doyle used in so many of his buildings.

Not a gargoyle, just a silly, friendly face!

Maybe he’s reminding us to stay awake in class?

Further along we found the Old Dorm Block, a long building that tickled our Harry Potter funny bones. There were goofy carvings, a rabid beaver on the roof, and a Sallyport. This is a feature borrowed from old castles, a passageway through a building that, in medieval days, was a place to run in case of attack.

Salute to Oregon’s state mammal (and a lion, of course…)

The Student Union had a wonderful dining hall that looked like the King and Queen should host the knights for dinner. Intricate wooden trusses and a huge brick fireplace gave it a feeling of history. This was appropriate, since the hall is now over a hundred years old.

Student Union’s Baronial Hall

I will tell you more about what we found at Reed tomorrow!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Inside Fun

Dear Liza,

Being stuck inside because of the heat outside, I have had more time to do my two Inside projects.

The long term one is my history story. I’ve been working on it for about two and a half years, doing historical research, walking neighborhoods, creating characters and learning how to write a novel.

It is all about Clara and her new life in Portland in 1903. Here is the first few paragraphs.

An old photo I am using to visualize Clara

—–January 20, 1903 

Somewhere between Brownsville and Portland, Clara realized she could not speak. A silence like death had lodged in her throat and would not budge.

Chapter 1 

Tuesday, March 17, 1903  

“Well, here it is, at last,” Clara’s Aunt Elizabeth was reading The Oregonian at the breakfast table. She took a second to calm herself before continuing, but didn’t wait for a response from her niece. “The date of President Theodore Roosevelt’s visit to Portland has been set. He will arrive on May 21st and dedicate a monument to Lewis and Clark in City Park.” Clara looked up and raised her eyebrows politely. “Is that all you have to say about it?” Aunt Elizabeth chided. Aunt Elizabeth frowned, her own eyebrows rising in disapproval.

Clara hadn’t said one word in the three months she had been in Portland, and Aunt Elizabeth found it increasingly hard to put up with. Clara felt her aunt’s irritation, but mostly noticed how the light in the breakfast room was different this morning.—–

It’s a work in progress, and is the longest I’ve ever worked on any writing project.

Last year’s “Concentric Circles” stitchery project
This year’s : First steps…

My other project is a pillow. I finished one last year, using fabric I had bought for a “Backpacks for Stuffties” collection that never got off the ground. I like the way it turned out, so started on the coordinating fabric and working in a variation on concentric circles.

Further along…

I am just using back stitch, blanket stitch, and a nice V shape called bird stitch in some books. There is still a lot of stitching needed, but I like the direction it is headed. I’ll stop when I think it’s done, ’cause that’s how art is.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Midwest Northwest Weather

Dear Liza,

I haven’t been out much this week because it has been so hot! We have had 96 degrees temperatures a few days, and that is just too darn hot for a Grandma Judy.

I have been staying in and making good progress on my story. It is getting sadder, happier, and more interesting, but more about that later.

Last night, just as the sun was going down, clouds started to gather. First it looked like a potluck of some sort, with just a few clouds casually blowing by. By the time it was dark, there was a full-on cloud convention going on.

It stayed hot, though. When we turned in at 10:00, it was about 80 degrees. With fans blowing full blast, we managed to fall asleep.

I woke up with a bang. The 3 a.m. lightning showed right through my black-out blinds and my eyelids, and the thunder sounded like empty wine barrels rolling down the hills of San Francisco. It was wonderful!

Of course, after all that excitement, it was a challenge to fall back asleep. I guess the heat was the price we had to pay for some air clearing, root feeding, tree washing rain. It was worth it.

This morning it is still cool and drizzly, and feels more like Portland.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Hawthorne Street Fair and more, 2019

Dear Liza,

Must be a street fair!

Portland summers are packed with activity! Because our winters are wet and cold, we tend to mostly stay inside from November to about March. But once summer comes, look out!

This past weekend, for example. It is the last weekend of the Oregon State Fair, which draws thousands of folks to Salem, and there were still thousands more in town for the Timbers Game.

Portland Parkways…off and riding!

On Saturday morning, Grandpa Nelson and Auntie Bridgett rode in the Portland Parkways neighborhood bike ride. This is the one that I did last year, over the bridges and into downtown, then back up the hill and home. Eight miles, with the last two being uphill! I stayed home to work on my story.

past the Convention Center

They were sure pooped when they got back!

But they rallied. After some water, food and rest, they were ready to head to the Hawthorne Street Fair. This is the second to last fair of the season, and is always full of interesting booths and people.

Friendly people, good drinks!

We saw some old friends, like the group for Voluntary Human Extinction, and some new folks, like The Juicery, who opened a new shop on Hawthorne and had a booth right out front to sample their juice goodness.

The Juicery

Auntie Bridgett found a new, water resistant bag from Portland Gear to use when the weather gets wet again, and Grandpa Nelson enjoyed some shave ice and Karmelcorn.

Auntie Bridgett and her new bag from Portland Gear

It was very warm and sunny, and we were always on the lookout for shade. But some folks seemed to seek out the sun, like young violinists and the talented musicians from Gaeasoul.

Gaiasoul making music

Walking home, we passed the HiLo Gallery, where we met sculptor Jim Gion a few years ago. Jim has passed away, and his family are selling some of his works. He loved to sculpt dog portraits! We enjoy his pride of lions at the zoo, and he puts the same love and detail into his dogs. It was nice to see them, as well as a few lucky humans.

Mr. Gion’s work

We got home and made a quick dinner so we could catch the Providence Volunteer Jazz band at Laurelhurst Park… doctors with horns! Very nice.

Such a face!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Flags

Dear Liza,

The Star Trek flag…

There are lots of flags in Portland! A flag, being made of just fabric, is an inexpensive way of showing what you think about something. I have been thinking a lot about flags lately, and this morning it sort of all came together.

is just a few blocks from the Marine Corps flag

Visiting different neighborhoods around town, you can see the official view on things by the murals. Murals take permits, cooperation, and are viewed as permanent…that is, once it is up, you can’t cover or remove it without the permission of the artist. So murals tend to be less controversial.

Non-controversial mural

But a flag… it is more temporary, so it can be personal, whimsical, or controversial.

House flags from Hogwarts

Harry Potter or Star Trek flags show a certain geek camaraderie, which I like very much. These represent make believe worlds with heroes and values I respect.

US flag at Rose City Cemetery

The United States or Marine Corps flags are more complicated. I love my country, but don’t like how it is being run or what we have come to represent. I respect individual Marines but not the culture of the Corps.

The rainbow flag, showing acceptance and pride in the Gay community (and which I was told not to show in my classroom just ten years ago), is now everywhere, hanging from City Hall and yarn bombed on telephone poles.

Rainbow Yarn bomb!

Then, this morning, there was a story in the Portland Oregonian about the fans at Portland Timbers (our men’s soccer team) not being allowed to wave their anti-fascist flags at games. This is what it looks like : three arrows in a circle. The image was originally used in 1932 Germany to demonstrate resistance to the Nazi Party. It has become popular in Portland and other places as a sign of opposition to the way President Trump and his allies are running the country.

Iron Front Anti-Fascism flag at Timbers Game

So, if people are being forbidden by the Government to wave their flag which protests fascism, is the government itself Fascist? The government will tell you NO, but it seems to me that there is no middle ground on this one. Either you are against Fascism (your daddy can tell you about World War II when you are older) or you are for it.

I know I am probably over-simplifying but I am okay with that. Flags are a way to simplify issues, to support a cause you believe in with a piece of fabric. Flags are a powerful tool, like speech and art and writing, for good or evil. Fly your own flag, girl!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Meeting New Dead People

Dear Liza,

Meeting the dead folks

You know I love visiting cemeteries. Last week I got to visit a new one! While I was on my way to help my friend Misha move, I stopped by Rose City Cemetery and said hello.

Straight and tidy

Rose City is on Fremont Street in the Northeast part of the city. It was opened on May 27, 1906 and contains 37,263 graves. It is flat, and most of the trees are very young. I was there at noon on a sunny day and there was not much shade. The graves, all marked and in straight rows, face the paved roads. It felt …. suburban. Open, flat, well-swept.

One hundred and eleven, and looking spiffy

This is very different from Lone Fir Cemetery, in our neighborhood. Lone Fir opened in 1855 and most of its trees are over a hundred years old. It is hilly and shady, and the roads were laid in years after the burials began, so that as many as 10,000 of the estimated 25,000 graves have been lost to time, paving and vandalism.

Our delightful, overgrown Lone Fir

There were years when it wasn’t maintained at all, and a lot of lovely monuments were damaged or simply collapsed.

Proper, straight mausoleum at Rose City

The graves are not in rows and often face each other, rather than a path or road. It feels dusty and cluttered, a proper place to be dead.

Not to spiffy mausoleum at Lone Fir… but sincerely dead

I have done some research on Rose City Cemetery, trying to learn more about who founded it, interesting people buried there, and why it was built where it was. There isn’t much to learn, so far.

Bartender’s memorial at Lone Fir

After it was opened in 1906, at the eastern edge of the new Rose City neighborhood, the Nikkei Jin Kai, or Japanese Ancestral Organization, bought a part of it. After World War II and the horrible internment camps where Japanese American citizens were locked up, the Nikkei Jin Kai bought most of the cemetery, and now maintains and owns it all.

Veteran’s Memorial at Rose City

Of course, since it is newer and has been consistently taken care of, Rose City’s tombs are straight and strong and its trees and hedges are trimmed. I will learn more, and tell you about it when I do. But I think I still like Lone Fire better. As Linus would say, it is a sincere cemetery. “Not a sign of hypocrisy as far as the eye can see.”

Love,

Grandma Judy

Accidentally Trendy

Very urbane, urban sculpture

Dear Liza,

Portland is a big city. There are almost two million people living here! This makes it very different from Salinas, in ways both good and bad. But mostly, really interesting.

THE Magazine du cite’

There is a big, fat, magazine, printed on paper with a luxurious matte finish, just about things to do in the city. It is called Portland Monthly, and is usually full of places we never heard of, but it is, like the city itself, always fun to look at and explore.

Very uncool ME

This past April’s edition had a cover article called “75 things every Portlander must do”. I didn’t even open that issue.

This magazine, I said, is not the boss of me. I am no servant to COOL.

Then something awful happened. I opened it, and found out I was accidentally cool. Yes, I confess. I did cool stuff.

Menu at Palomar
Amazing interior of Palomar

For example, Candace Molatore, one of the young hipsters interviewed for the article, recommends Palomar, the Cuban restaurant I took your Daddy David to on his last visit. She also likes Tender Loving Empire, where Auntie Bridgett gets presents for her family, like onesies with tiny baby Sasquatches on them.

From Tlikum Crossing…
to Sellwood.

Laura Foster, who is billed as an “Urban Trekker”, recommends walking tours in the city, and many of them are places that Grandpa Nelson and I have been! Walking from the Tilikum Crossing Bridge, down the West Bank, and back over the Sellwood Bridge… we did that just a few weeks ago!

Anthony Hudson, AKA Carla Rossi

And finally, Anthony Hudson, a drag performer also known as Carla Rossi, is interviewed as an icon and trend setter. He is also a friend of Auntie Katie, and has helped her on presentations for her bookshop.

All this comes by way of a confession, sweet Liza. I’m afraid that, despite my best efforts to remain a crazy old lady, I have accidentally become trendy.

Forgive me.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Sauvie Island, Summer 2019

Dear Liza,

The Sauvie Island Bridge

Just nine miles north of downtown Portland is a big piece of real country. Sauvie Island is in the Columbia River and was founded many years ago as farmland to help feed the growing city. It now has 3,000 people living on it, but since there are 32 square miles, they are pretty thinly scattered.

Grandpa Nelson and I went there this past weekend for some yummy summer fruits. First we stopped at Belle’s Organic. Their blueberry season was over, but they were selling blackberries, so we got some. Outside, we visited the petting zoo and got to see Scout, who is three, get the hang of feeding hungry goats.

Little Scout

We continued on to the same place we got blueberries last year, Columbia Farms. We picked another flat, trying not to listen as two big girls who forgot that we were just on the other side of the bushes talked way too much. Then we met a nice family and gave them pointers on picking the berries. “You need to get down under the bush and look up,” I said. They nodded and headed off.

Close up with blueberries

We drove around the island, just enjoying the long views across the fields. These open areas are called, in Latin, “agora”, and fear of open spaces is called “agoraphobia.” I do not suffer from it.

Grandpa Nelson, blueberry picker

We found Krugers, where last year we fought big crowds to get pulled pork sandwiches and corn for lunch. This past weekend there were no big crowds, but the food was just as delicious. We also got peaches, corn, cherry tomatoes and celery, grown right here on the farm. Talk about local!

Thinner sunflowers crop

Kruger’s sunflowers weren’t as successful as last year, but I managed to cut a few to take home to Auntie Bridgett.

Pretty, anyway!

Bounty

When we got home, after a well-deserved rest, I made a cobbler and started freezing the blueberries for cobblers this winter. What could be better than blueberries for Christmas?

All our hard work ain’t been in vain for nuttin’!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Back to the Echo Theater

Cousin Jasper on the bar…

Dear Liza,

When I lived in Salinas and saw you every week, I got to watch you learn things step by step. You went from crawling to walking to climbing, and I got to see it happen.

But since I was living THERE and Cousins Jasper and Kestrel were HERE, I didn’t get to see their progress. I just saw a tiny kid, then a bigger kid. Now that I am here, I get to enjoy their growing up show week by week.

Kestrel is becoming more gracious and verbal, telling wonderful stories as we go on adventures around town. She doesn’t just tell what the characters do, but how they feel about it.

and the ring…

Cousin Jasper is growing in confidence. Last summer at the Cascadia Circus Camp, he was able to perform, but would scoot off stage as soon as he could. He got stressed out being in the spotlight.

This spring, I got to see him and Kestrel at their Echo Theater aerobatics camp, and they both enjoyed it very much. But it was only their first week.

and cooperating!

Yesterday I got to watch Jasper after five full days of camp. He was not only performing tricky bits on the rings and in the scarves, but he was working as part of a team on some tricks. He was able to coordinate, cooperate, and be half of a whole.

He also would time his turns so that he was sometimes on stage alone, the center of our attention. He was focused on his work, but hearing our applause made him smile. And watching him grow, step by step, made me smile.

Cousin Kestrel, being adorable with her Mommy

Kestrel didn’t want to be part of the show, so she spent half the show on her Daddy Dave’s lap, and half on Auntie Katie’s. We all had a good time.Love,

Grandma Judy

Adventure to Sushi

Poke bowl at Wasabi Sushi

Dear Liza,

It is still very hot here in Portland, so when we go for walks we take Auntie Bridgett’s Snoopy water bottle filled with ice water. Yesterday, it came in handy.

Saying g’bye…

Auntie Bridgett wanted to walk up to Columbia Art and Drafting, a wonderful art supply store on East Burnside. I wanted to have sushi for lunch. We found a way to combine these goals and found some extra goodies on the way!

Echos of SoCal

As we left, Grandpa Nelson and Mouse came out onto the balcony to say goodbye. We ran into Nina and her corgi, Kody, who is sweet with people but very barky with other dogs.

Baby Monkey Puzzle

Just across from Columbia we stopped in to visit Little Baja, a garden decor yard that reminds me of my childhood in Southern California. There are chimineas, birdbaths, enormous pots, and statues made to look like Aztec treasures. There is even a young Monkey Puzzle tree in one of the pots.

The art store was not my main goal, but it was air conditioned and pleasant. I watched videos promoting Posca markers while Auntie Bridgett shopped for new sketchbooks.

New favorite place!

Once we left Columbia, the adventure got magical. Across the street we found Bees and Beans, a tiny shop that creates handmade, high end, organic, honey-based chocolates. Mmmmmmmm. Andrea Marks, the owner and queen bee, was wrapping some of her wares.

Andrea Marks, working her magic

We chatted and got free samples of Bert Bars (which are sort of like a Whachmacallit Bar) and some honey based caramel. They are so delicious! The smell of the shop, and Andres’s joyful, busy personality left us refreshed for the rest of our walk. It is amazing how an unexpected meeting can do so much.

Wall art at Wasabi Sushi

We got a bit lost as I navigated us to Wasabi Sushi, on 10th and Madison, but we were not disappointed. My Caterpillar roll and Bridgett’s poke bowl were fresh and delicious, just spicy enough to have a zing, and very filling.

Neighborhood mural
Artsy house..look up!!

This is what I would call a working man’s sushi bar… construction dudes from across the way, businessmen discussing contracts, and folks from a convention down the block came by to order lunch and enjoy it under the umbrellas outside. We stayed inside, in the cool.

When we felt ready, we set off for the long walk home. We were serious about staying cool, sometimes zigzagging up the street to find the deepest shade and appreciating folks who were out watering their yards.

We got home thirsty, having finished the Snoopy water bottle blocks before, and drank glasses and glasses of water. We had walked a total of four and a quarter miles, and we were justifiably pooped! Needless to say, the rest of the day was quiet.

Love,

Grandma Judy