Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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You are here: Home / Archives for social distancing

Day Seventy-One

May 23, 2020 at 9:56 am by Claudia

Yesterday was a busy day – 80 degrees and very humid. We tag-team mowed the front lawn, then dragged four tarps-full of debris across the property to that place near the shed that I never photograph. Then we donned masks, etc., and drove to the post office where I had two packages to pick up – dear friends who sent me packages, I now have them, though I haven’t opened them yet as I usually wait a couple of days to open them in these times. Then we drove to Lowes where I had to pick up an online order of a new watering can and two pruners. Lowes was incredibly busy; in fact, I heard an employee say it was the busiest it has been since lockdown started. Then we drove to the shop where we order chocolates – slightly decadent, though to us, an essential item. The only sweet I eat is this shop’s sugar-free chocolates. We had ordered via the phone. When you arrive, you call them and let them know you’re outside and they put the bag on a bench outside the door. No contact.

The only snag was this. There is only one person allowed in the counter area of our post office at a time. Somehow, though I was initially the only person in the post office box area which is a separate room, there ended up being three of us in there at one time. Thankfully, we were all masked and the brief moment when we numbered three was just that, about two seconds. Our little post office is incredibly small as this is a very small town. That’s why I avoid going there for long periods of time during this lockdown. Still and all, everyone in Lowes was wearing a mask. Everyone at the post office was wearing a mask. I did see some young idiots walking around town maskless, and – get this – a young father pushing a stroller down the street and neither father or child were wearing masks. But the vast majority of people I saw were wearing masks.

Anyway, at the end of it all we were exhausted; physically because of the outdoor work, emotionally because of the stress involved with running any kind of errand these days. Once again, washing hands, disinfecting doorknobs and purchases, washing hands again, showering.

Today it is supposed to rain and we’re staying home. Unfortunately, Don has just talked me in to cutting his hair with a pair of clippers he is borrowing from Rick. I told him he can’t blame me for whatever the end result is. The exchange? He will trim my hair – and by that I mean whack about four inches off – when I order a pair of hair cutting scissors. I cannot abide how long my hair is!

Let’s hope this doesn’t send us to Divorce Court.

Okay. This arrived the other day:

One of my bookseller contacts (via Instagram) has a bookshop in Ironbridge, Shropshire, England, and she sells a lot of vintage Penguins. I knew there was a vintage Penguin edition of To Kill a Mockingbird   that was issued within a a few years of its first publication in 1960 and I asked her to keep an eye out for it. Sure enough, a copy came into her hands and she messaged me. And here it is! This fits in two collections, my collection of various editions of my favorite novel and in my Penguin collection, as well!

Then, another bookseller – Maureen of Fine Preservers Books in Ithaca, NY – sent me a message. She remembered that I had asked her to let me know of any Tri Band Penguin editions of P. G. Wodehouse that might come into her possession. Sure enough, one had. And here it is:

Wodehouse is truly the funniest writer that ever lived. Don and I sat on the sofa this morning and I read a few pages aloud and we couldn’t stop laughing. Don knows far more about Wodehouse than I do, but I’m going to remedy that.

Wish me luck on the – gulp – haircut.

Stay safe.

Happy Saturday.

Filed Under: books, bookshops, collecting, Don, social distancing 38 Comments

Day Seventy

May 22, 2020 at 9:41 am by Claudia

Porch sitting, guitar playing; all-in-all, a lovely day yesterday.

Today, there are chores to be done and errands to be run.

It’s going to reach 78 degrees today. Rain tomorrow. Before you know it – I give it about 5 or 6 days – we’ll be putting those window air conditioning units back in place for the summer.

I’m currently reading A Room of One’s Own  by Virginia Woolf. It’s a book I should have read long ago. I found a lovely little Penguin Classics copy last fall at Shakespeare and Company in Paris. What a powerful essay on women!

Today should bring to my mailbox a new copy of The Deptford Trilogy  by Robertson Davies. That will be my next read. Or reread. As it’s been 30 years or more since I read it the first time, I suspect it will seem like a ‘new’ read. Don has been watching old episodes of Roy Rogers on YouTube. He met Roy and Dale once in a diner in Los Angeles. They were gracious and kind and gave him their autographs. (He lost them at some point.) He’s having such fun watching them again. Anyway, he mentioned Zane Grey the other day and wanting to read him, so I snuck in copy of two of his novels as a surprise for him.

I learned last night that a longtime friend of mine, someone I’ve known as long as I can remember, died last week. We were friends through the church we attended. I was very close to her family, her brother was my age. I was a camp counselor at a Lutheran camp when I was in college and while I was there I met a wonderful guy named Bob who kept me in stitches much of the time. We kept up our friendship and several years later, Bob was again working at the camp for the summer – this time as a lifeguard. While he was there he met Sue, my friend from church, who was working there as a counselor. They fell in love. Two friends from different parts of my life met and got married. I was at their wedding. They raised two children together and lived in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota. She had cancer. They would have been married for 36 years this year. Heartbreaking. I’m very saddened by this news. Sue followed me on Instagram, so we were able to keep track of each other’s lives. She will be missed. Sue and Bob are two of the finest human beings it has ever been my privilege to know. Rest in peace, Susan.

Please keep Kathy from Iowa in your thoughts and prayers as she has been ill the last few days and tested positive for COVID-19. As you know, she is a truly wonderful person who responds to everyone’s comments with love and compassion. She had to keep working through this lockdown as she is a social worker. Let’s surround her in prayer and healing energy. You can read her comments about her diagnosis on yesterday’s post.

Stay safe.

Happy Friday.

Filed Under: books, friends, social distancing 41 Comments

Day Sixty-Eight

May 20, 2020 at 10:14 am by Claudia

I just took this picture the other day – they’re still blooming. Everything is a bit late this year. These daffs were planted by a previous owner. There’s a mound of them just beyond the back of the shed, as well. I think they’re so delicate and beautiful.

I took it easy yesterday. Basically I just hung out inside the house, except for a brief watering session with the newly sown seeds. It’s quite lovely right now; another gorgeously sunny day. Don has been making trails up in the woods, clearing out the paths we already had established. It looks good up there and it gives him a satisfying project.

Now if he could just learn some building skills so I can have a greenhouse.

That’s been a dream of mine for a long time, and it’s not helped by all the photos of greenhouses I see on Instagram or on Gardener’s World. It sometimes seems as if every British gardener has a greenhouse of some sort. My dream planting area would be surrounded by a brick wall with beds full of flowers and plants and vegetables and a greenhouse tucked in the corner. It also seems like every other garden I see on Gardener’s World has a beautiful brick wall, the perfect background for vines and climbing roses and clematis.

But, really, all I want is a modest little greenhouse. But even modest ones are pricey. Highly doubtful that will happen. Still, it’s always nice to have a dream, don’t you think?

Can you tell I’ve been watching my favorite gardening show?

Don received a letter from his agent the other day, updating all her clients about what’s going on during the lockdown. The future looks bleak. Broadway is officially closed until September but she said that it’s quite likely that nothing will reopen until 2021. It’s now May of 2020. That leaves at least seven more months of no work. And if that’s the case for Broadway, then it’s most likely the case for regional theaters. Maybe television and film could start up earlier than that, but how to film with social distancing? Don has been on plenty of sets in his 50 years as an actor and he says there is no way you can distance. Neither of us will have the opportunity to work until next year, at the earliest. Extend that same timeline to prop artists, set designers, lighting designers, technicians, sound designers, crew, stage managers, directors, composers, front-of-house crews, ushers, box office staff, house managers, production companies and all of their staff members, rehearsal studios, marketing, publicity, artistic directors, administrative staff, costume designers and crew, production managers, television and film studios, grips and every other worker you see on the list of credits at the end of a film – and there are thousands. This list is just off the top of my head, but there’s more. We know of a few shows, one of them directed by a friend of ours, that were just about to open on Broadway when the lockdown occurred. Will they ever open? What shows (that are already running) will not be able to sustain this long break without an audience and box office sales? What regional theaters will go down? What agencies will not survive?

And then, extend this scenario to opera companies, dance companies, symphony orchestras, museums, cultural organizations of every kind…and you have a nightmare scenario for the Arts, which, let’s face it, are always just getting by.

Even though Don had certainly been thinking about it, seeing it in the email really threw him. He had a delayed reaction. He’s not ready to retire and was worried about commuting to the city for auditions, having already made the decision to put his auditions on video – what is called self-taping. But nothing for at least the rest of the year and beyond? It’s really devastating. We are grateful for Don’s pensions and for Social Security – it’s tight, but we can survive. Imagine how hard it is for those who have no other source of income.

So that’s the reality at this house right now. Neither of us has or will have any work for the foreseeable future. We saw it coming, of course, and I’ve mentioned it here before, but…wow.

Stay safe.

Happy Wednesday.

Filed Under: flowers, garden, social distancing, theater 45 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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