Mastodon kayray.org —

Rockola ROCKS

June 2nd, 2007 — 11:06am

It’s Saturday morning. Last night was Rockola‘s long-awaited performance of the entire Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album, plus a set of other great Beatles songs. The show was fabulous. The 1,915-seat theater was pretty darn full, and the audience went absolutely NUTS for the show. I think 4 or 5 songs got standing ovations, and there was cheering and riotous applause for every song. Chloe and I sat in a box at the side, so it was easy for her to run backstage when necessary and also easy for Henry to run out from backstage and sit with us when he wasn’t performing or getting ready to perform.

The day leading up to the show was fairly stressful. I won’t go into details, but let’s say that that particular theater is not a happy place. Henry and I arrived about 2:30, and he was able to join in the rehearsal for most of his songs, and had a fine time listening to the band and playing with Celia. There were some orchestra kids that he enjoyed talking to, as well, especially the young fellow, about Henry’s age, who played the bells on Penny Lane and When I’m 64. I did small chores for the band and sat around and watched the kids, etc.

The show started a bit late, but I think that was a good thing because there were still people buying last-minute tickets and finding their seats right up until it started.

When the lights finally dimmed, the crowd went nuts. The band came on and the crowd went nuts again. They started with Revolution and it was a great choice to start with — super high energy, good hard rock. It really got the show off to a roaring start. Um.. highlights of the first set… Henry and Ceila danced during Ob-La-Di, which was the cutest thing ever. Henry played keyboard chords in Penny Lane. What else did they play… Strawberry Fields, Savoy Truffle (great big beefy horn parts played with gusto by the orchestra kids), Lady Madonna, a couple of earlier songs which rocked hard, etc. etc. I’ll probably think of more later.

Then there was a break, and then they came back on to do the Sgt. Pepper album. Henry and Celia held up “Applause” “Laugh” and “Cheer” signs during the first song to get the audience to provide those sound effects at the proper times. Henry NAILED the timing; I was very proud :) Everything went great. The audience just loved the harpist in She’s Leaving Home, and Celia’s big bass harmonica in Mister Kite. Henry’s Horse costume looked great when he came on to Dance the Waltz — he and Celia danced all around during that instrumental break, and there were a couple of other little girls with circusy outfits and streamers — it was a wonderful effect! The whole album went great, even the very difficult Within You Without You. For an encore they did The End, and Henry got to run on and play chords on his guitar and sing “LOVE YOU! LOVE YOU!” right into the mic. He was the happiest little boy in the whole world. He says doing the show was 99.99% fun, and the only un-fun part was being too hot in his Horse costume :) He even helped tear down the stage after the show before we left. He was very pleased to be able to help.

Thank you, Rockola! Rock on!

1 comment » | Blog

Just So

June 1st, 2007 — 9:35am

I’ve finished recording the Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling. As with all LibriVox audio books, you may download them for free, copy them, share them, whatever. Enjoy! I love these stories. I remember my sister reading them to me when I was very small. I confess that I’ve never liked The Sing-Song of Old Man Kangaroo, but the rest are wonderful.

Podcast subscribers, I’ll be sending this one out after The Story of the Middle Ages is finished.

Comment » | Audiobooks, Blog

Spreckles

May 31st, 2007 — 11:24pm

Dan and Henry and I drove down to the Spreckles theater in SD to help set up the Rockola show for tomorrow night. Well, Dan helped set up, I knitted, and Henry played and waited for a chance to practice his songs. Alas, there was a problem with the lights so everything was delayed and the band never did get to play. Henry was very disappointed, poor boy, but we hope there will be time for a run-through tomorrow before the show.

2 comments » | Blog

Horses and Penguins

May 30th, 2007 — 11:01pm

Henry was sick today, but by the time I put him to bed tonight he was feeling a lot better so we hope it will all be cleared up tomorrow. Um… what happened today.. I got my car washed! YAY! Now I can see out the windows and it’s all shiny and clean, inside and out. Also bought Henry two more pairs of his favorite shorts from Mervyn’s. The child is so skinny that I have to buy size 8 shorts and take them in two inches at the waist. Also did a huge grocery shopping, which Dan kindly carried in and up the stairs. Also created a horse costume for the Rockola show on Friday. I hope it’s horsey enough. Also cataloged the intriguingly-named Penguin Island, a solo read by Michael Sirois. It took two days to catalog. There are 62 files, and I changed my mind about the ID3 tag scheme so I downloaded them, re-did them all in iTunes, and then had to upload them, which took hours.

We just watched the season finale of House, which ended exactly as I predicted. Oh, House, what will we do without for you the next few months?

Comment » | Blog

Variety Show

May 29th, 2007 — 11:01pm

Busy day, many errands, many places to go and things to do. Bought more of Dan’s favorite shorts. Tonight was the Variety Show at Bayshore. Henry performed a karate kata, and very nicely, too. A few minutes after we got home he came down with a raging sore throat, poor child.

Comment » | Blog

Signs

May 28th, 2007 — 11:04pm

Henry and I went to Chloe’s house so he could practice with Bob for the show and so we could help out. Chloe and I made signs that the kids will hold up during Sgt Pepper, to cue the audience for applause and laughter and cheers. We printed out the letters in giant font, traced them onto the sign boards, and then colored them in with paint pens. We had to go back out for more pens because it took a LOT of ink (or whatever is in those pens). Also helped Bob straighten out the charts for Within You Without You, which had some messed-up rhythm in places, but we figured it out. We had a GREAT time seeing them!

I left my second, in-progress Wishbone Sock there, though. Grr. So I started another pair with the leftover Marra — I’m sure there’s enough if I make them shorter.

Comment » | Blog

Story of the Middle Ages, ch. 3, 4, 5

May 28th, 2007 — 8:31am

Three more chapters of The Story of the Middle Ages:
03 – The Wanderings of the West-Goths
04 – End of the Western Empire
05 – The Growth of the Christian Church

Comment » | Audiobooks, Blog

Alexandria Helena Hixenbaugh

May 26th, 2007 — 4:19pm

EDIT: June 1, 2007 — Helena is home, safe and sound!

Have you seen Helena?

Alexandria Helena Hixenbaugh

She’s the daughter of a local homeschooling family. We don’t know her personally, but friends of hers attend Henry’s little charter school. She disappeared from her home one week ago. Her family is frantic. Please help find her!

More info here:
http://www.findhelena.info

Updates on the Search for Alexandria Helena Hixenbaugh

Alexandria has made contact with her best friend by phone. We believe based on her conversation with the friend and other leads that she is still in the greater San Diego area, perhaps even still in Escondido.

At this point all media coverage has been shut down because she is runaway – not an abducted child. Amber alerts post only for known abduction cases of children. We are still working to get some media coverage – if you have any resources in this area we would greatly appreciate your contacting us via our email: Find@cox.net

May 26, 2007

As of May 26, 2007- she has been missing for a full week. We want her home with us – safe – with the family that loves her unconditionally. If you know her whereabouts please communicate to her that we want her home. She is not in trouble for running away. Running away is a sign that we need to talk – that there are issues, we as a family need to work through. We are willing – we are waiting with open arms for her return home….Please help us find Helena.

Comment » | Blog

a boring post

May 25th, 2007 — 11:11am

Woke up with a bit of a sore throat, stuffy head, and gunky eyes, so I lay around knitting and watching movies and doing LibriVox admin work all day. And played a bit of WoW, too. Felwood is a horrible place, though it’s a bit better now that they’ve added another flight point. Another vendor or two would be nice, Bliz!

The wishbone socks are coming along nicely — turned the second heel and am working my way up the leg.

Comment » | Blog

Nice blog post!

May 23rd, 2007 — 8:47am

Give me humans. Give me LibriVox!

Thanks, Edward :)

Comment » | Audiobooks, Blog

The Fair!

May 22nd, 2007 — 11:13am

After Henry’s classes this afternoon we drove down to Del Mar to deliver our entries to the fairgrounds. In previous years we’ve gotten there earlier and it’s always really crowded. We got there about, oh, 5:30 or so (traffic was amazingly good for rush hour) and there were no lines! We were able to just breeze in and out again. We’re very excited about the fair! I’m exhibiting my Shell-Pattern Socks and Henry’s exhibiting his Knitted Cuff.

Comment » | Blog

Busy Monday

May 21st, 2007 — 10:31pm

8:30am woke up, more or less, checked email, glanced at LibriVox, checked google reader
9:00am made breakfast smoothie for Dan, did chores, etc.
9:30am shower
9:45am left for dr. appt (endocrinologist, 6mo checkup)
10:00am Dr.
11:00am got blood drawn at lab
11:05am raced home, Henry and his dad were waiting for me
11:15am, chatted with Henry about the weekend, did dishes together
11:30am WoW
12:00 left for Science club in Encinitas
12:20 dropped Henry at Science Club, raced back to Oceanside to do errands
12:45 bank
1:00 vitamin store for iron supplements for me
1:10 grocery shopping at Trader Joe’s
1:45 quick lunch in car – veggie sushi from Trader Joe’s
2:00 drove back to Encinitas
2:30-2:55 waited for Science Club to end
3:15 home, lay down for half an hour to rest, read email, check LV again
3:45-5:00 piano students
5:00 ate yogurt
5:15 left for Karate
5:30-6:30 watched karate class, worked on second Wishbone Sock (got lots of compliments)
6:45 home, Henry helped me make dinner. Hawaiian marinated beef, steamed broccoli, ciabatta bread, cheese
7:30 helped Henry rehearse for Talent Show
8:00-9:00 read Martian Chronicles and Dragonflight to Henry for bedtime
9:30 heated up dinner for Dan
10:00 went up to say goodnight to Henry one more time, told him he could keep reading till 10:30
10:30 wrote blog, waited for Bob to call back

No time to record today, bah. Maybe tomorrow!

Comment » | Blog

Podcast Update

May 20th, 2007 — 10:40pm

Well, I’m a bit behind here :) I’ve already podcast up through section 40 of the poetry book. It’s silly for me to paste all those links here when you can just go download them directly from the librivox catalog page:
Poems Every Child Should Know.

I just sent this message out in my podcast feed: Message from Kara

So — on to another book! It’s time for some more children’s history — a really great book called The Story of the Middle Ages, by Samuel B. Harding. The wonderful Lisa of http://mainlesson.com send me a reprint of this book to read from, which was a real treat, as I usually read off my laptop screen which is never as nice as holding a real book in my hands. I suggest you buy your own copy from mainlesson so your kids can read along while they listen. :)

Here are the first three chapters (now you’re actually AHEAD of the podcast subscribers!):
00 – Introduction
01 – The Ancient Germans
02 – Breaking the Frontier

Enjoy!

Comment » | Audiobooks, Blog

Wishbone Socks

May 19th, 2007 — 10:05pm

wishbone socks

Wishbone Socks, by Kara
Yarn: Regia Cotton (wool/cotton/nylon) (Two balls)
Needles: Brittany Birch 2.0mm

Gauge: 8st/inch in stockinette

To fit a very slender foot and leg. (If you need to make them bigger, buy another ball of yarn. For an extra inch of width, increase toe to 64 stitches, then remember that you’ve got 4 extra stitches on bottom of foot; the other 4 on the top of foot, one in each purl column, so purl columns are 4, 3, 3, 4. You might also want to inc 8 stitches at calf instead of 4. Distribute stitches logically.)

Cast on 16 st. using Judy’s Magic Cast-on. (8 st. on each needle)

Make a toe.

(if you need more specific instructions:
Divide evenly onto four needles.
Needle 1: k1, m1, k to end of needle.
Needle 2: k to last st, m1, k1.
Needle 3: k1, m1, k to end.
Needle 4: k to last st, m1, k1.)

Continue increasing every round until you have 32 stitches, then alternate plain rounds and inc. rounds until you have 56 st.

Rounds begin at needle 1 (side leg).

Needles 1 & 2 (28 st. total): p1, work 3 reps Wishbone Cable, p3
Needles 3 & 4 (28 st. total): k across.

wishbone cable
(Blodges represent purl sts, blank squares are knit. Cable crossing occurs on row four — diagram should make it obvious what to do)

18 reps of cable pattern, then make short-row heel. For the first sock, I used the short-row heel from Summer 2007 Interweave Knits, but I’m not very happy with it. I think the No-Holes one might be better: No-Holes Short Row Heels

When you’re working in the round again, add a single rep of the cable pattern on the back of the leg.
So 56 st. total on four needles:
Front of leg: Needles 1 & 2: p1, 3 reps cable pattern, p3 (divide somewhere convenient)(28st)
Back of leg: Needles 3 & 4: k9, cable pattern, p2, k9 (divide somewhere convenient)(28st)

Work 9 reps of cable pattern.

******
Calf increase:

M1 on either side of both 9-st columns of stockinette as follows: When you reach the first 9-st column of stockinette, k1, m1, k7, m1, k1. Repeat when you reach the second 9-stitch column of stockinette. (4 new st – 60st total)
******

Work 9 more reps of cable pattern, then work 18 rounds k1p1 ribbing and finish off with a stretchy cast-off. I used a grafted cast-off.

wishbone socks beginning

wishbone socks

wishbone socks

wishbone socks

10 comments » | Blog, Free Patterns, Handmade

more socks

May 19th, 2007 — 9:27pm

“Child’s First Sock in Shell Pattern” from Knitting Vintage Socks, by Nancy Bush. Jawoll sock yarn, skinny little needles (maybe 1.25mm?), 64st around, my size. I’m going to enter these in the Fair this summer. I finished the knitting months ago and hid them away in my drawer so they’d still be in good condition for the Fair. Finally blocked them yesterday :) When the Fair is over (July 5) I’ll finally get to wear them.

socks

socks

5 comments » | Blog, Handmade

reader.google.com

May 19th, 2007 — 10:28am

Yes, I know google is taking over the world, but their stuff is just so nice and easy to use… I’ve tried many an rss reader and always give up pretty quickly. But reader.google.com just WORKS.

Also, I’ve added Favorite Socks: 25 Timeless Designs from Interweave to my wishlist, in case anyone wants to know :)

4 comments » | Blog, Books, Tech

Tooth prize

May 18th, 2007 — 8:26pm

Henry had a dental check-up/cleaning today — no cavities! So we made a little trip to the bookstore for a treat, and I bought him the Dragonriders of Pern trilogy, all in one volume.

Then we came home, worked on subtracting decimals for a while, did chores, and then played WoW for a while. And then I drove him to his dad’s house in San Diego — 2.5 hour round trip, bleah.

Tonight Dan and I watched the new Northanger Abbey, which was just delightful. Great cast, great screenplay, great costuming. I wish it had been longer, though :) I can hardly wait until it’s released on DVD! I hope they have some interviews with the cast and everything.

And then we watched Quiz Show, another great movie!

2 comments » | Blog

Happy Birthday!

May 16th, 2007 — 8:11pm

Happy Birthday, dear Dan :)

I made a peanut-butter/chocolate pie for The Birthday Treat — peanut-butter/cream-cheese on the bottom, chocolate pudding on the top. It’s pretty good, though I’m not a pudding fan. I think it could be improved by substituting some other form of chocolate for the top layer, preferably DARK. Oooo… maybe I could pour a layer of melted dark chocolate into the crust, then put the pb/cc layer on top of that, the swirl come chocolate syrup on top…

Also made chicken parm this morning, so all I had to do was heat it up and make pasta after karate. This afternoon, H and I quested in the Un’Goro crater and had a lot of fun — it’s a great zone, tons of fun quests in a not-too-huge area.

Comment » | Blog

three more audio books

May 15th, 2007 — 8:41pm

Busy morning — karate, then many many errands (groceries, shipping packages, etc). Henry and I got home around noon, did the morning chores, and then played WoW together for a couple of hours. He helped me with the Heart of Mok quest and we did Mai’Zoth together, then took a break so he could do some math and I could do some librivox work. Cataloged three new audio books today:

Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson, selected and read by Becky

The Advance of Science in the Last Half-Century, by T.H. Huxley, a solo by Jo

The Handy Cyclopedia of Things Worth Knowing, by Joseph Trienens
, a delightfully dated collaborative work read by many fine readers

That makes 21 new works so far in May! Haven’t done any recording myself in the last few days but I’ill probably manage to get some recording done tomorrow or Thursday. More than halfway through with A Room with a View, and only, I think, 12 more of the ghastly Letters :)

6 comments » | Audiobooks, Blog

North & South

May 13th, 2007 — 5:52pm

We recently began a collaborative recording of Elizabeth Gaskell’s North & South. I recorded the first chapter, went looking to see if there was a good movie version of the book, and discovered that the BBC did a four-part miniseries in 2004. Dan and I just finished watching it. It was truly excellent. As in Wives & Daughters, Gaskell creates three-dimensional, believable characters — not a villain or one-dimensional hero to be found, just people, ordinary people. The screen play is excellent, the costuming beautiful, every detail accurate and vivid. Superb acting from the entire cast. Bravo, BBC!

If you’re a fan of the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice or Wives & Daughters, you’ll love this one. Here’s a link to the DVDs on Amazon:
North & South

Find the reviews and scroll down to the one titled “Top Twelve Reasons N&S Is a Ten”. It’s all true.

Comment » | Blog

Back to top