Liza Comes to Town!

Dear Jasper and Kestrel,

I am writing to you because Cousin Liza is here in Portland! She and her Mommy and Daddy flew up Saturday.

First, we all went for a walk to Laurelhurst Park. The weather was clear but still a little chilly, but Grandpa fetched the frisbee and badminton set from the garage, anyway. As we all walked around the park, seeing all the kids, families, couples and dogs enjoying the lawns, he was secretly on the lookout for a place to set the net up and play.

And, not far away from the meadow where we see Shakespeare every year, he did just that! Within minutes we had the net up, coats off, and were having the first game of the season! Hooray!

Of course, it took all of us some time before we remembered how long the rackets make our arms, and Liza had never played at all. But Uncle David figured out a way for her to serve successfully, and we all had a great time.

Back at the house, we chatted, read stories, made dinner, and ate….. and ate some more.

i will tell you more about our adventures tomorrow!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Pi Day

Dear Liza,

Pi is a very special number. It is usually written 3.14159, but is really much longer, going on…well, we don’t know how far it goes yet.

It is useful for finding the radius, area and circumference of a circle, which is otherwise a hard thing to do. When Auntie Katie was in high school, there was a math team, and she made up a cheer for them that went,

“Tangent! Radius! Cosine! Sine!

Three point one four one five nine!”

You gotta love math nerds…

Yesterday, being March 14, or 3.14, we took a walk after dinner, to celebrate Pi Day. We walked a mile and a bit up to Glisan and 24th, to The Pie Spot. I enjoyed the S’mores, Bridgett the Brandied Apple, and Grandpa Nelson, the Pie Crust cinnamon roll. All, very tasty.

We drove there last fall, thinking it was a long way away, but it really isn’t. When everyone is feeling well and rested, it is a delightful trip through the neighborhood.

We passed all sorts of interesting things.

The weather was warm-ish but overcast, so there was no lovely sun, but the clouds made a nice backdrop for the rooster weather vanes on an old building.

A bicycle sculpture that really turned when you pushed it reminded me of the street signs down on Clinton, with their pretty bicycles.

We found “Portland Pairings”, which advertises itself as Portland’s weirdest wine shop, and from the looks of the sign, they may be right! We also passed the still functioning 1940s style Coca Cola syrup factory, painted white and red, looking all vintage and wonderful.

When we got home, we were tired, happy, and full of pie!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Another Layer of Story

Mary Pickford, my model for Margaret

Dear Liza,

I love the way my story is growing! It started out just having one character; a terribly shy ten year old girl named Clara. Then, I decided she needed a best friend, who is bookish but confident Cynthia. Then, a resourceful Eastside counterpart named Henry, and his artistic best friend, Frank.

But every story needs a villain! Draco Malfoy, Lex Luthor, Snidely Whiplash, whoever. Every hero needs a villain to test their mettle and allow them to grow. My villain’s name is Margaret.

I found a photo of Mary Pickford as a child and saw my villain in her well-tended, dissatisfied expression. She has a lot, but it’s not enough, and if you have more, she will make you suffer for it. And if you have less, she will tease you about it.

As I wrote more, Grandpa Nelson said she needed her own chapters. So now, sprinkled between the chapters about Clara and Henry are what I am calling “Margaret interludes”, scenes that give you an insight into our villain and her home life.

Of course, a new character means more research. Sometimes I wonder if I will ever be done! But I think the only way this story will fail is if I give up on it. And THAT isn’t going to happen.

See you this weekend, sweetie!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Yes, Spring!

This week, our temperatures have started moving step by step from the low 40s toward the 50s! Because of the time change, it is even light in the evening, and we went for a walk after dinner last night and I didn’t need gloves or a scarf. Auntie Bridgett even wore her sunglasses.

And just as I am getting more confident in the warmth, so are the flowers. Crocus, jonquils, and even some trees are budding. I keep waiting for Willie, the baby dawn redwood that was planted in Laurelhurst Park, to sprout his first new leaves.

And, yes, romance is in the air on Firwood Lake. Robins and ducks are chasing each other around, flapping and acting like misguided missiles. We keep creating dialogue for them…

“Edna! I love you!”

“Leave me alone, Sheldon, for goodness sakes!”

“But I love you!”

“Stop splashing me, Sheldon!”

I hope the weather stays nice and warm for this weekend, so we can all have some adventures while you are in town.

Cousins in Town

Dear Liza,

This weekend, two of Grandpa Nelson’s Cousins came to Portland to visit. Cousin Ann is a massage therapist in Kent, Washington, and her sister Carol does the same job in Oxnard, California.

Of course, they wanted to see our new home, so we dusted and tidied up, and had nice long chats catching up on their lives and those of their five brothers and sisters and their parents, Grandpa Nelson’s Aunt Bonnie and Uncle Paul. Then we headed down a block down on Belmont to Suzette, our local crepe place… actually, one of our local crepe places…but it’s the closest. The food was tasty and the atmosphere, as always, was friendly and comfortable. We stayed long after we had finished eating, just chatting away.

But we did need to get moving, because the cousins also wanted to see Auntie Katie’s bookstore, Books with Pictures, and her NEW, gonna-be bookstore, which, for now, is called “Building for Books” to differentiate it from the actual shop. Auntie Katie hopes to open it and give it its proper name by mid-May.

When we got there, we found six people, plus Katie, doing all sorts of work. A mother and daughter team were taping and masking windows so the walls could be painted. A burly fellow was trying to pick the lock of a door (from the inside) that had been locked years ago and the key lost. Another man was spackling holes and all sorts of gouges in the walls, also to be ready for painting.

I know this building will get done, because Auntie Katie DOES things. And I know that once it is done that it will be successful, as well. She has great books, wonderful service and love of her customers, and her new shop is actually across the street from an elementary school! Customers just walking by, every day! Hooray!!

After seeing all the progress being made (and all that is yet to be done) we sent the cousins off to the new part of the Jupiter Hotel, up on Burnside, so they could rest and shower. This new part is called Jupiter Next and we actually visited, but did not stay here, this past summer when it was new. It is very modern and hip, and the crowd and music in the bar sort of make the whole building vibrate. Even the art in the mirrored hallways is cool.

We met them for dinner in the Doug Fir, the log-cabiny looking restaurant that is part of the hotel. It was chatty but not deafening, and the food, beer, and wine were very good. Hours more of conversation and we hugged goodbye and headed home.

What a family! What a visit! Looking forward to seeing you this weekend, Liza McGeeza.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Spring! Really?

Ice in one part, water in the other

Dear Liza,

It has been a weird few days. Exciting, but weird.

First, we had blooms…lots of blooms. Jonquils, crocus, Daphnes, and jasmines, looking like they came off a Hallmark card and smelling like a perfume factory. Bright yellows and purples, in bizarre combinations, just all over the place.

Then we had snow…drifting flakes that match the lyrics to the song we used to sing in Kinderbloom, “It snowed last night, it snowed last night, the sky bears had a pillow fight!”

Then the temperature went up two degrees, and it all melted away, except for the little lake in Laurelhurst Park, half of which stayed frozen. Sticks tossed on it bounced. Frozen weeds looked like trapped Inferi. Confused ducks walked on it.

Spring is coming, and I’m sure that in the hot weather of July, I will remember this cold weather fondly.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Spring is making a good try!
Puzzled ducks

Another Night with Hamilton

Dear Liza,

Our final destination

Last year for my birthday, Auntie Katie and I went to see the play, “Hamilton” in downtown Portland. It was amazing, but incredibly expensive. Last night, Grandpa Nelson, Auntie Bridgett and I all went to the Alberta Rose Theater to see “Rise Up”, the Hamilton tribute band. It was wonderful, fun, and not expensive. The evening was cold, dry, and windy, so we bundled up and ducked inside shops… a lot.

Distraction!

First, we stopped by the Guardino art gallery to see the new show there. You know I don’t take pictures in galleries, so you will have to take my word for it, the felted creatures of Karen Thurman are whimsical and delightful. They are cute, in an alien-invasion sort of way, and make you smile while wondering what, exactly, you are smiling at.

John Brodie of Monograph Bookwerks

We wandered down the street, enjoying donuts from Angel’s and stopping in at Monograph Bookwerks, run by John Brodie. Auntie Bridgett fell in love with the collection of books on art and design, bringing home the catalogue of a Jean-Michael Basquiat show we just missed seeing years ago in Paris. She also succumbed to the charms of walnut ink made from a heritage walnut tree that grows in the southwest part of town. I had fun looking at the “ephemera” collection, which included radical political pamphlets from the 1960s and advertisements for non-standard schools of the 1970s.

Auntie Bridgett’s splurge: Walnut Ink!

Crossing the street, we found “&”. Yes, “&” is the name of the shop, pronounced “Ampersand”. They carry books about artists and had on display some intriguingly fun plays with song lyrics, including The Beatles “A Day in the Life”.

Lyrics as art at &
Handsome Grandpa and Distraction!

We had a tasty dinner of clam chowder, Shepherd’s Jacket, Guinness and cider, at T. C. O’Leary’s Pub, then braved the cold once again to wait in line for the show, just across the street at the 1925 Alberta Rose Theater.

“Rise Up” is two female and three male vocalists backed by a piano, drums, bass, synthesizer and electric violin. Because of copyright and licensing rules, they do not perform the songs from Hamilton in order, nor do they do only Hamilton songs, nor all the Hamilton songs. Of the forty-six (twenty three in each act) songs, they did about seventeen. But they did them so well, with such style and strength, joy and energy and vocal power, that it was a great show.

At one point, the cast invited Bridging Voices, a local choir of LGBTQ folks from age 13 to 19, on stage. Bridging Voices gives these at-risk people a place to shine as well as hone their musical skills, and they performed “My Shot”, an incredibly difficult song, very well.

After singing an encore of “The Battle of Yorktown”, the band received a standing ovation and we all dashed off to our freezing cars to head home. It had been a great night, but it was late and cold, and we were ready for time on the couch with Mousekin the cat.

Love,

Grandma Judy

Hanging Out in the Trendy-Third

I love this sign in Downtown!

Dear Liza,

Auntie Bridgett got a lovely offer last month to display her art in Moonstruck Chocolate, a pretty candy shop in a fancy shopping neighborhood. It is on 23rd Street in the northwest part of Portland, and is nicknamed The Trendy-Third. We visited it a few weeks ago and she knew there was a lot of wall space, so she took a lot of pieces!

The walls were bare when we got there. Jennifer, the lady in charge of the place, was very friendly and offered coffee and chocolates to keep our spirits up.

Friendly, busy Jennifer

Since I have helped Bridgett hang art many times, we work well together, and the morning went smoothly. Deciding on placement, measuring, measuring again, putting in nails, leveling and labeling each of the twenty or so pieces took all morning and by lunch, we were hungry!

Bridgett and the artwork
One grouping on the wall

We walked down to The Fireside, where we had dinner last year. Sadly, they had been vandalized, with big windows broken, but they were open for business as charming and delicious as ever. Auntie Bridgett enjoyed their Delicata squash salad, and I had a grilled cheese sandwich ( with cheese outside as well as inside). So yummy!

The marquee says “Yes, We are open!”

We finished up at Moonstruck and headed for home, and I realized how tired I was. I stretched out in the couch and napped, being lazy for the rest of the day.

Art is exhausting!

Love,

Grandma Judy

New Building for Books with Pictures

Dear Liza,

Proprietrix Katie

Auntie Katie has had her bookshop, called Books with Pictures, near the corner of 12th and Division for two and a half years now. And she has lived at Tamarack and Hickory Streets, about four blocks away, for much longer. That’s a nice, short commute to work.

Now, her commute is going to be even shorter! She has just bought a building, at the corner of Division and Orange, that will have her shop on the ground floor and an apartment for her and the cousins to live in on the second floor! To get to work, she just needs to head downstairs. (She could even go in her jammies!)

This building, which was built in 1926, started out as a grocery store. It then changed to a butcher shop. But it has been a bookstore for about fifty years, under the names Serendipity Corner, Pegasus, and more recently, Longfellow’s Books. People in the neighborhood were sad to see the old shop close, and are very happy and supportive of Katie in her work to keep this lovely building healthy and prosperous.

Piano upstairs in the apartment!

Since the building is so old, it has some problems that need solving. The plumbing needs work, the electrical system is not enough for modern living, and the roof (probably) leaks a little.

But it has a basement that is dry and has space for a (planned) record shop and music venue. It has street front windows that will invite people to stop in, chat, and buy some books. It has a two bedroom apartment upstairs that came complete with an old, sweet-sounding piano. And most important, it has Auntie Katie, Jasper and Kestrel, who will turn it into a home.

A nice, dry basement is a thing of beauty!

This is going to be so exciting!

Love,

Grandma Judy

Kids at The Pittock Mansion

Dear Liza,

The Pittock Grandchildren who grew up in the Mansion

Mr. and Mrs. Pittock raised several daughters, who married and had children, and also adopted some nieces when the girls became orphaned. So the Mansion couldn’t just be elegant, it had to be fun.

Puppet Theater

The children must have spent summer days running in the woods and gardens, and there was also a tennis court. For inside play, there was a playroom filled with all sorts of fancy toys…..a puppet theater, rocking chair, and toy elephant. These toys were made of wood and metal, and have been well cared for, so we can see them today.

Down in the caretaker’s house, we saw toys for children of the servant class… lovely, but not as elaborate. The beds and furniture were kid-sized to leave more room in the small rooms for play.

Caretaker’s daughter’s bed

I enjoyed imagining the children running up and down the grand staircase, maybe bouncing balls along the marble hall, their voices echoing out over the gardens. And maybe, on quiet evenings, playing piano or learning to embroider.

Embroidered table linens

I know we can’t live in the past, but I do love to visit!

Love,

Grandma Judy