Sue and Mo at Harris Beach

Sue and Mo at Harris Beach
Sue and Mo at Harris Beach

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

11-30-2021 November Journal

After such a hot dry summer, and a beautiful sunny October, it was as if someone turned the switch in November.  Early in the month, the rains began and only let up as the month progressed from rain to cold, wet fog.

Mo and I had a few details to attend to with the MoHo, and finally had an appointment with Mock Ford here in town to get her in for a 120,000 mile tune-up and a coolant leak repair.  We had to park the rig outside in their parking lot with assurances that it would be about a week before they could complete the work.  Long story short, after many calls and much frustration, we paid what we owed for the unfinished work and pulled the MoHo off their lot in early December.  We had a trip planned, and determined that we could deal with the slow leak rather than putting up with the MoHo being stored outside on an unlocked lot as the temperatures got below freezing.  We don’t winterize the MoHo because we travel in the winter.  Needless to say, we were NOT happy with the local service, but finding an appointment anywhere seems nearly impossible.  We did finally find a place in Medford that made an appointment for us in early January.  I’ll see how that goes, but I am feeling optimistic.

In early November, the leaves are coming down in earnest, and it is a big annual job to get them off the ground and loaded for hauling to the local compost facility.  Folks often say, “why don’t you compost them?”  Nope, not an option with an acre of oak leaves.  Those leaves have weird tannins in them that hinder plant growth.  Great for piling up somewhere nothing needs to grow, but not in the gardens!  I learned that the hard way one year when the rains kept us from picking up some big piles we had made on the pasture grass.  Nothing grew in those spots for almost 3 years.  We decided that burning all those leaves made too much smoke in the neighborhood. So we haul the leaves.  Every year when the job rolls around, I remind myself what a treasure our huge old oaks are to have in the heat of summer.  I do love those trees, and try not to complain about the leaves…at least not much.

This year I had even less reason to complain because Mo did a much higher percentage of leaf raking than I did, although I did manage to do a bit.  We take about 15 trailer loads to the facility each year, a pretty 20 minute drive along the Rogue River toward the west where it is located.  Amazing what qualifies for entertainment during wet, rainy, foggy November.

Mo had an outdoor project that kept her busy in between the rain.  She added the black lattice screens underneath the new deck extension.  I bought some new small herb plants to plant along the edge to replace the huge plants we had to remove when the deck was extended.  They should catch up in a couple of years, especially at the rate that herbs grow in this area.  Those rosemary plants to the left of the stairway were just 4 inch pots 3 years ago.  Rosemary loves Grants Pass and I love rosemary.

Early in the month the everyday stuff was set aside for a fabulous visit from my friend Jeanne from Vermont.  She flew west to visit several of her friends who live in Oregon and Washington and we were delighted to have her here for three whole days and nights!  We were thrilled that the weather was good enough that we could enjoy a bit of wine tasting, with plans to go to our favorite winery, Schmidt Family Vineyards. 

Even though the website said they were open, we arrived to no one in the parking lot and a feeling of doom as we walked up to the darkened tasting room.  Still, it was nice to walk around the grounds for a bit before we traveled a bit farther south on Upper Applegate Road to the Troon Vineyard.  Happily, they were open and we settled into the heated courtyard for wine flights and a charcuterie board filled with several menu choices.  I somehow didn’t manage to get any photos of that part of the afternoon, maybe the wine was too nice and the warm heaters too delightful.  I had my first taste of some kind of gourmet salami and discovered how much different it was than all the regular Gallo stuff.  What a treat!.

On another day while Jeanne was here, we went downtown to favorite little restaurant, the Bohemian Grill.  There we had fabulous cocktails.  Jeanne loves martinis, the real kind, and her order was perfect enough that she impressed the waiter.  I guess it is a bit like knowing how to order a good espresso from Starbucks.  A love of good martinis is a class level above me for sure.  I’ll take some lemon and lavender with mine, thank you.

After our sweet respite with Jeanne, Mo and I went back to the ongoing leaf raking and hauling until a short little visit to Brownsville broke the monotony.  Daughter Melody was singing in the Albany Civic Theater version of “All Together Now”.  The performance was a collection of Broadway hits that was shown at theaters all over the country to help fund the local community theaters.  For that one performance, the charges for using the music were waived to help support the locals. 

By the time we got to Albany on that Saturday afternoon, Melody was already at the theater.  Melody’s Robert drove us to Albany in his big brand new 4 Runner and we went to dinner together before the show.  The Italian restaurant was just a block or so from the theater and our wait time wasn’t terribly long to get a really nice upstairs table.  The food was fabulous, some of the best Italian I have had since Italy.

The show was nice, and as always I love hearing Melody sing and seeing her onstage.  We slept in their upstairs guest room and were treated the next morning to a great breakfast before we headed back south to Grants Pass.  It was a quick visit, but still great to see Melody once again performing at ACT.  She has been involved with that theater since 2000 or so.

I have to laugh at my lack of photos for this part of November.  I used to have the camera out all the time, and somehow it has become less of a priority.  I have a few of the four of us relaxing in the big recliners in the tv room, but they are definitely not for public consumption.  Didn’t get a photo of the show, of course, because it wasn’t allowed.  And how in the world did I miss taking a photo of our fabulous dinner at Gamberetti’s.

We returned to Grants Pass on Sunday, and on Monday I had a thrilling appointment with a new doctor.  How can a doctor appointment be thrilling?  For one, the new neurologist/neuromuscular specialist I am seeing is right here in Grants Pass, associated with my current doctor at Asante, ten minutes from home.  No more travels to Portland to OHSU for specialist visits.  It was a good visit, with a bit more information about what I am dealing with, a prescription to help with leg pain, and instructions to come back in a year for updated evaluation.  I guess that shows just how much the specialists think they can do for this slowly progressing muscle disease.  Not much.  The prescription is helping a lot with night  leg pain and isn’t any kind of narcotic.  So far, it is helping and no side effects.

I raked the lower pasture under another big oak and Mo loaded up the last of the leaves for our last visit to the leaf dump.  There are leaves in the flower beds we never managed to get up before the rains started in earnest, but not enough to cause any real problems until we can get them up in late winter when the sun eventually shines once again.  Mo mowed the pasture one last time on November 18.

Thanksgiving was approaching and this year it was my turn to have the entire family here for the holiday dinner.  I decided to set up the “Christmas” village before Thanksgiving.  Who says the winter scenes in the bookcases can’t be a Thanksgiving Village.

This year we actually had our family dinner on Thursday, the real Thanksgiving Day!  Melody and Robert drove down from Brownsville. Her children, Axel and Xavier drove in their own car along with Axel’s partner, Py.  Daughter Deborah drove from Shady Cove, and Maryruth and Gerald drove the long distance between our house and theirs, a short mile.  Maryruth and I laughed about all the years we drove to each other’s homes for Thanksgiving celebrations when we were young and often those trips were hundreds of miles.

Grandson Xavier, Daughter Melody, Grandson Axel

A favorite photo of Robert and Mo

Maryruth and Gerald, and Mattie who adores Gerald

Xavier and Deborah

You would never know it from this face, but Mo and I LOVE Robert’s deviled eggs, a holiday tradition.  I had to include the photo so you could see all the pies on the counter, the appetizers and the table set ready for dinner. 

The last photo here is a fun little thing from Py, who brought a Polaroid camera to the gathering.  The photo is tiny and grainy, but so much fun.  I haven’t seen a Polaroid shot like this in yeas.


13 comments:

  1. Erin commented on the wordpress version of this blog: Erin commented on 11-30-2021 November Journal

    A very busy November indeed. Glad to hear you finally found a doc in Grants Pass that can treat and monitor you. Looking forward to reading about December. Happy 2022!

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  2. Don't know how you do all those leaves and all those rakings and bagging and carrying them off. Luckily none of the trees in the farm yard are oaks ( Maples, paulownias, dogwoods redbuds, and crepe myrtle) so I can put the leaves in all the beds to break down and provide nutrients.

    Looks like a wonderful Thanksgiving. Your place always looks so festive and beautiful. So glad you could all get together.

    How do you leave the Moho without winterizing at all unless you never have any below 32 temperatures for extended periods of time?

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    1. Couple of answers here for you, Sherry:  First of all, we don't bag the leaves.  Mo uses the little trailer that she pulls with the lawnmower to haul them up to the bigger dump trailer.  We never bag them.  The trailer we take to the dump holds about 2 cubic yards of smashed down leaves.  Second, we have an RV shed we built specifically for the MoHo.  It was the main reason we bought this property, so we could build something to store the MoHo in over the winter.  Mo plugs it in, inside the building, in addition to putting a small space heater inside the rig, set on low, but high enough to keep it at around 40 degrees.  It usually doesn't drop much below 30 degrees F here, and if it does, Mo double checks the little heater and inside temperature of the MoHo in case she needs to up the setting.

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  3. Thank you so much for such a kind comment, Judy. "Thank you so much for your blog this year. I have added new places to my list for us to explore, learned something new about plants/leaves/rocks, and enjoyed your photos. I wish I could take such inspiring photos. You have entertained your readers and refreshed our daily lives. "

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  4. Another Wordpress friend posted this comment:
    Love the deviled egg photo. That kitchen looks so inviting! I can smell the pies through my computer screen

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  5. Great family and friends photos, Sue. I feel for you with the oak leaves. We have the small oval kind, I think they are Live Oaks. I don’t think those leaves will ever, ever break down! And they have a little pointy tips on the end as well. Luckily, ours just fall onto a bed of stone and we consider it “nature“.

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    1. Oh yes, I remember those blue oak or interior live oak leaves from my years in the Mother Lode! Sticky pokey things for sure. At least ours are somewhat soft and not poky. Our oaks are California Black Oaks, which grow at an elevation higher than where you are...up into the Sierra above 3,000 feet or so. I was so surprised to find out that the California Black Oaks are native as far north as Eugene in parts of Oregon. They shine so brilliantly in the fall in the mountains. Leaves on the ground are nice sometimes in the right places.

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  6. Great blog post. Love the photos. Super glad I'm not the one raking those leaves!

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  7. That's a lot of leaves! Glad to hear you have found a physician closer to home and the new meds are working. Loved your Thanksgiving photos! We had to rake leaves as teenagers and Dad would never let all the leaves fall before raking. So, we raked leaves several times every fall. I don't like trees with leaves in my yard! The aspen leaves in Montana fall but blow away before we come back in the spring.

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    1. We rake as the leaves are falling took Janna. If we waited until the end of the fall it would be December and be raining, and the piles would be ridiculously thick and unmanageable. I know, because one year before we moved here, we waited. Big Big Mistake! The photos in this post were taken after the first raking, accumulating for the few days we were away at the coast.

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  8. Good news about your specialist, glad you able to find pain relief. Your Thanksgiving looks so festive and delicious! Your home is so lovely for such a gathering.
    Oak trees are wonderful but not sure how we would have cleared our two acres without a raking attachment to our riding mower. I am impressed that you hand rake!
    Hope you find a solution to your leak so your travels can continue. -9 here in MNas I write this, so no RV travels here.

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    1. A raking attachment would be nice, but our acre has a lot of little ins and outs and different areas where it wouldn't work very well. Only the lower 1/3 of the property is pasture grass. I do remember those great huge lawns in Minnesota when we traveled there in 2010 on our cross country trip. As we drove along the highway there were just acres and acres of lawn and every one of those big yards had someone on a riding mower! I don't have an email or blog profile for you, Liz, so can't answer you in person as I like to do. I know folks don't usually return to this blog to see answers. Ah well...Maybe sometime.

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