This is a catch up post. After the museum Friday, we went down to the Canvas, which in addition to its First Friday exhibit of Magil Pratt's Miniatures, a bunch of which had red sold stickers on, also had a pottery sale and we got a couple of little bowls to give us a little bit more in our minimalist Juneau household. I also ran into someone I know from Juneau who lived in the house where we're living. Our basement apartment was already here when she was a child.
Then down the block to the Silverbow where an exhibit of pictures sponsored by the Juneau Homeless Coalition. Here's Gail, Lance, Teri, and Gil.
Scott Ciambor's Zen caught my eye. This wall had landscapes of the homeless. Here, under a bridge.
We ended our art crawl with dinner at Silverbow.
Our friend Sharman was down from Anchorage last weekend and in the four days she was here, we ran into her three different times before we met her for dinner with her Juneau friends last Sunday.
Last night we had dinner with the Juneau friends who live three blocks down the hill in a wonderful ol house with high ceilings, wood trim, and lots of green plants, and, last night, lit candles.
A delicious dinner with good folks and cats.
Today, I took a lazy run over the bridge to Douglas to get this picture I missed last week when I discovered - at this spot - that my credit card was missing. Grey and drizzly, but still a great view back toward Juneau.
And then I stopped at the Foodland on the way home and as I came out there was someone feeding the ravens. Not sure this is a good idea.
And as I made it to the stairs up the hill I ran into Lisa Demer, the ADN reporter who's in town for three weeks replacing Sean Cockerham.
Tonight we're headed to dinner with people we've never met, but I met their daughter a while back - a former Peace Corps volunteer whose parents, she told me were volunteers in Thailand 1967-69, the same time I was there. The teacher Joan volunteers with gave her a note with their phone number and a message they wanted us over for dinner. Small, small world. But no, I didn't know them in Thailand, but they did know one of the people in my group who was near them.
The bread is almost done in the oven, the Saints are up by fourteen with just a few minutes to go, and we need to go pretty soon.
Looks like you're having fun in Juneau. Isn't it a great town?
ReplyDeleteI taught in Juneau last year and blogs like this remind me how I miss Juneau. There is a bit of a chance that I will return next year.
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