Play in a Garden

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Last night, my husband John helped to run the light board for a community theater group presenting the short play “Christ in the Concrete City” by Philip W. Turner. The production was by the Saint Andrew’s Players, directed by Melita Thorpe, and was held at dusk in the garden of St. Andrew’s Episcopal School (Saratoga, California). It was an interesting play, at times disturbing, and a fun evening.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Raising the Neighborhood

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Over 150 years ago, our part of San Jose, California, in the neighborhood of Willow Glen, was a marsh – an extension of the Guadalupe River. In the 1860s, Frank Lewis built the Lewis Canal to drain the marsh that gave Willow Glen its name to create rich farmland. Still today, the land shifts season by season under the houses that cover it, often causing wall and foundation damage.

John and I spent a long time in the last few months working with contractors to get our 1930 home more-or-less level, adding several beams to support soft spots. Our house (which was built on what was once a chicken farm) was raised and given a new foundation after the Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989 but it has shifted since. This summer, several other houses near us have been raised entirely so that new foundations could be built under them. Mostly the rebuilders take the opportunity to add new rooms to the home, enlarging it at the expense of the surrounding garden.  Modest old bungalows become homes that will sell for much more.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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DCC Brakeman

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My husband John has been designing model train open source hardware for many years – as I have written about before. Recently, at the urging of fellow enthusiasts (or “Train Nuts” as their wives call them), John brought out his first retail product – the DCC Brakeman. The DCC Brakeman is now for sale for $6.99 at The Train Shop, 1829 Pruneridge Ave, Santa Clara, California, (408) 296-1050. (The first version sold for $6.25 but everyone wanted him to have a weight added, which costs a little more.)  Some assembly is required.

The rule of the railroad used to be that “When a train stops on a main track, flag protection must be provided.”  This little electronic guy is about one inch tall. He represents a flagman with a red lantern – as a visual aid to protect model trains when switching from fouling the main line. He is used in DCC (digital command and control) model train operations – about which you can find out more at the Operations Special Interest Group.  He wears a baseball cap which says DCC.  The little man’s front says Brakeman and his back says Safety First! (“Safety First” has been an American railroad industry motto since around 1910.)

Details on the DCC Brakeman are on John’s website: spcoast.com.

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Images Copyright 2012 by John Plocher

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Refinishing Douglas Fir Floor

In my April 2012 blog entry called Douglas Fir Discovered, I presented the first installment of the story of creating my husband’s new office in our 1930 Spanish Mission style home in Willow Glen, California. So far, we have:

  1. Ripped out stinky old pink carpet, pad, nailing strips
  2. Ripped out ugly yellow linoleum under the stinky pink carpet
  3. Leveled the floor and reinforced some soft spots (big project in itself!)
  4. Stripped, filled, stained, sealed the Douglas Fir boards under the ugly linoleum

The work is being well done by the Willow Glen Floor Company.  We have also had them address several areas where the oak floors were scratched or there was a board cracked. To finish up, we still need to:

  • Add baseboards
  • Touch up paint

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Scarf Adventure

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Earlier this month while my family was camping at the Lair of the Bear, my scarf went missing. It was a small silk rust-colored neck scarf I wore on the day we arrived, something I inherited from Grandma Dickinson many years ago. I had laid it on my pants when I changed for bed and it wasn’t there in the morning. I looked and asked around but no one had seen it. I figured it was mixed in with someone else’s stuff and would turn up eventually. But it didn’t.

On the last day at the end of our camping week, during my final check that our tent was completely empty and clean, I moved the shelving unit where we put our towels and games. In the far corner, in a heap of shredded tissues and feathers, was my scarf. I guess that a mouse grabbed it when we were asleep and dragged it away. Surprisingly, there were no holes or stains.  After being washed, my scarf looks the same as always even after being mouse bedding for a week.

Image Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Paul’s 20th

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My son Paul turned twenty recently, with much celebration of the life milestone – no longer a teenager!  Paul has been camping at the University of California Alumni Association Lair of the Golden Bear family camp since before he could walk. As usual, his first birthday celebration was a chocolate Lair Cake in the dining hall. His final party was last night at the Melting Pot restaurant.  The big present was a violet and white deep carved crystal vessel by Celestial Art Glass which he fell in love with last month at the Palo Alto Clay & Glass Festival.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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San Francisco Bay Area Labyrinths

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California Pacific Medical Center – courtyard, Pacific Heights, Buchanan at Clay, San Francisco

Labyrinths are maze-like paths used for thousands of years in design and public structures. Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, I have seen two types of public labyrinths: those inspired by the design on the floor of Chartres Cathedral (from around the year 1250) with 11 circuits and a distinct flower-like center, and the much-older classical Greek or Cretan patterns. Walking a labyrinth is a popular form of meditation, particularly in hospitals and Christian church buildings and gardens.  Some groups think so highly of this calming exercise, that they have painted portable labyrinths on canvas for spiritual retreats in places where no permanent labyrinth exists.  Some of the public labyrinths in the San Francisco Bay Area may be visited at:

Other Labyrinths in the area are listed here:

You can even have your own home labyrinth by buying a rug of that pattern from the Signals catalogue (pictured below).

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El Camino Hospital – inside main lobby, 2500 Grant Road, Mountain View:
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Saint Thomas Episcopal Church – courtyard, 231 Sunset Avenue, Sunnyvale:
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Lincoln Avenue downtown bench near Meredith Avenue, Willow Glen – San Jose:
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All Saints’ Palo Alto CA – Added March 2013:
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Images Copyright 2011-2013 by Katy Dickinson

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