Here's to the happy couple! The traditional gift for the tenth wedding anniversary is aluminum or tin. This left me (as usual) scratching my head for ideas, but I decided we could go rent an aluminum boat at Lake Benson in Garner. You just can't go wrong with all the nature you would possibly want for $3.00 an hour. We saw a mother goose sitting on her giant nest, a big pile of beaver-chewed sticks, and some turtles. But the real reason we were out there was so I could snap a photo of us on our tenth anniversary to go in the aluminum frame I was lucky enough to find at Target.
Here are some pics of the garden in its current state. I got it all walled-in finally. We've been gone the past two weekends, so it's nice to come home and see how things change in a few days. You know, a watched pot never boils. This morning, I thinned my dill and cilantro, so I'm drying out the dill I pulled, and we'll have the cilantro in salads. In fact, I also pulled two lettuce plants to make room for tomatoes at that end of the bed, and went ahead and transplanted the tomatoes to their final destination.
I have Marty Balin's Hearts stuck in my head, and that's a good thing. I'm considering learning a set of songs from that era of popular music (circa 1980-1984, which is when I first started to have favorite songs on the radio), and play a coffee house with them and maybe some original material. My dad has always worked in radio, so I kind of keep track of everything that's happened in my life by which songs were popular at the time. My dad does it too. Both of us really have a knack for remembering years and dates like that. Definitely some Alan Parsons and Hall and Oates will be on the set list.
The theme of the latest podcast offering from Phil Keaggy (March 2008) is death. (By the way, no comments from Phil for disappearing off the podcast radar for halves of years at a time, but whatevs.) Seriously though, that is the theme, and in particular, the deaths of musicians that Phil was close to, and it was a very good one. Lots of great music, lots of laughs (with Larry Norman particularly), and lots to meditate on. It seems to fall in line with the book I've been reading by my friend Matt Rogers about the fallen state of the world, and how we need to be prepared to deal with grief, not to mention our own expiration.
Aluminum/Tin? Well that's if you go ...