Saturday January 14. Kathy at Discovery Park. The bicycle route to downtown Sacramento through Discovery Park is not available due to flooding. The solution is to get on I-5 at the Garden Highway, exiting at Richards Blvd, to cross the river.
Lisa Kaplan is the newly-elected city councilmember which means new people are selected to serve on various committees. The following went out to social media on Wednesday:
I picked up Carson and Avery after school. I was showing Carson some pictures I took of him at his basketball game. Charlie, under the table, laid his head on my lap – again, he won’t be left out.
Later that evening, a fierce game of basketball at St John the Evangelist.
First of all, it’s not raining today but rain is predicted for the next four days. The sun is out, a high of 64 degrees. A bike riding day for sure – my first of the new year. There are new bird houses at Hummingbird Park.
The day after I got back from Montana, I got right to work on a project with a deadline. I needed to get started because I wasn’t sure how to make it happen. I started with a stack of t-shirts on Thursday morning.
The goal was to use one shirt from each year that 50 Bikes for 50 Kids occurred to eventually make a wall hanging. By the end of the day, I had this arrangement:
On Friday I went to a great nearby quilting store, Fabric Garden, and bought two fabrics, a white to narrowly frame each piece and a basic black cotton called “grunge” in the color “little black dress.” I cut, sewed, and pressed for the rest of the afternoon and evening.
Saturday, a second trip to Fabric Garden to buy more fabric for the backing and binding. I made great progress only to be stalled by not having a big enough piece of batting. I bought the batting on Sunday and started the minimal quilting by machine – LOTS of pinning.
On Monday, I sewed on the binding, folded it over and hand stitched it on the reverse side. Done!
Next, I will deliver to Becky at Jibe – it’s a gift for Abbey Stumpf who brought the 50 Bikes for 50 Kids idea to Jibe and organized the event each year it happened. She now lives in Virginia with her husband and children.