5TH OF JULY
Patriotic prepping |
My husband and I are the kind of couple who throw a good
party every twenty years or so. Our last
rewarding bash was not quite two decades ago – I remember a Poetry Party held
one cold October night at the dawning of the 21st century where the
guests made up haiku from words printed on wine corks and we recited our
favorite life-changing poems around the fire.
My high-school-aged daughter and her best friend donned berets and
served appetizers along with French accents. That was a keeper.
Flowers from a friend's garden |
Now that
marriage has extended our small family, however, the possibilities have
expanded for gathering people who share not just friendships but kinships. It’s a good feeling. Since my husband and our son-in-law have
birthdays very close to each other and those birthdays share a national
holiday, it seemed crazy not to take advantage of that synchronicity and hold
an Independence Day bash in the garden.
F.S. & K.S. take advantage of the shade |
The number
of factors that cannot be controlled at any outdoor summer gathering were
legion, of course: the heat, the weather
(thunderstorms always a possibility), the insects, the tendency of people to
burn, the tendency of certain neighbors in Traveler's Joy (the ones in the beaten-down trailer on Shagbark) to pop open the hoods of their car trunks and demonstrate the
power of their giant speakers to visiting friends, and so on.
T.T., N.B., L.V.P. & C.T. (Birthday Boy) submit to gamma rays from the Sword of Valor wielded by Birthday Wizard (F.V.P.) |
We tried to plan for all these eventualities
as best we could, my husband erecting canopies and an oscillating mister for
relief from heat and the southern sun (or downpours,if needed), iced drinks in
volume, and earnest prayers that the Shagbark noisemaker be otherwise engaged. He was, and the weather came through for us
with the balmiest, most beautiful July day anyone could remember experiencing
in the Carolinas.
T.T. in vintage hat |
M.S. and P.S. enjoy the music |
All that work in the
garden paid off, despite the early heat and low rainfall that choked off bloom
production. If nothing else it was green, and the private corners tucked
under shade trees and rigged with hammocks proved as inviting for our guests as
I had hoped they would be.
Chillin' |
Best of all,
you could sit anywhere in the garden and hear the bluegrass band play ‘Ruby.’
If music be the food of love, play on.
If music be the food of love, play on.
Joe Sutton and the Rock Springs Bluegrass Band provide the vibe |
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