In the morning, we got onto dealing with the
potatoes and coleslaw, and while we were doing that Christin and Rick
arrived. They're staying in a caravan parked outside the garage. Christin is Cindy’s younger
sister (one of several) and they’d driven from California, taking some fourteen
hours with a bit of a sleep at some point.
They’re a great pair: she’s lively and funny and full of beans. Rick seems laconic at first, but like
all the others he’s full of stories and humour, though he takes more time about
the telling. Christin
chipped in and helped with the coleslaw sorting-out the moment she
arrived.
In the afternoon we went to the shops again and
the three blokes (Ben, Rick and I ) initially went into Wal-Mart with the
women, but later on went for a drive around Nampa by ourselves. It just seems to go on and on, and it would
be pretty much impossible without a car.
There don’t seem to be any buses either, so I don’t know how people
without cars get on. We had kind of
gone out to see what the place had in the way of ‘tourist’ attractions, but all
there seems to be - and no doubt we’re wrong - is retail and more retail and
bigger retail.
Anyway, home for dinner. Meals here lean towards Mexican-style food, with chilli beans and tacos and ground beef (something like the equivalent of mince) and things like Bell peppers (our capsicums) and Jalapeños (pronounced halapeños). This last item is another pepper, but dangerously hot if you happen to get the right one in the batch. I refrained.
Everyone was up fairly sharply to get to the rehearsal at nine this morning. It’s the first time the household has really
been up early since we’ve been here.
Chris normally
gets up at 5.30 am and goes to work early and gets home early after a ten hour
day. So he's finding these late starts a bit disorientating, I think.
We're expecting upwards of 200 guests to the reception. Hopefully there'll be enough food (us Crowls always like to have more than enough, just in case - it's one of our traits.)
I slept very badly last night - took ages to
get to sleep, and then woke early. Not
enough exercise and too much strolling round shops - getting ‘shopping legs’ as Cindy called them in the process. Chris reckoned it’s a world wide phenomenon:
women enjoying shopping; men not. (I think more that we tend to go into a shop to get something, not just browse. Although that does happen: in my case in a bookshop, in the case of other men in shops like Cabela's.)
Chris is a brilliant hobby furniture-maker, (his
job is carpentry) but he also does a lot of other bloke things like diving and fishing and so on. Anyway, he dives in the local river every
year and collects all the stuff that people lose in the river, or throw away
for some reason. He’s got a collection
of sunglasses, and has picked up all sorts of other things, including
laptops! Last night Ben fitted two
memory cards that had gone into the river into the two laptops we’ve got
here. Both Dom and mine were struggling
with memory (and ours with having far too much loading at start-up) After a bit of jiggling, both of them
worked, so both the computers are running a good deal better.
We went to the wedding rehearsal this morning: for me it was a bit chaotic with the young people clowning around. The minister was very pleasant - a little
fellow called Harold (I think) - and very patient. Perhaps he’s used to young people these days
being so all-over-the-place at the rehearsal.
Liz’s grandparents were there (Cindy’s father and his second wife). It's their second marriage in each case, and they met at the Sacramento Opera where both of them sang in the chorus. So we had something in common.
I’m supposed to be reading a Psalm at the wedding service. I hadn’t heard about it till
this morning, and so checked up on the Psalm that I was supposed to read - Psalm 45 - and found that while it had some connections with the wedding ceremony, it also talked about the groom shooting his enemies with arrows. Decided there might be a better Psalm to try and eventually we went for Psalm 130, a psalm I know well and enjoy reading.
I thought I might have to play the piano at the service too, because the church organist wasn't available. However, a friend is happy to do it, and so that relieves me of that duty.
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