The Stanford Sierra Camp photographer took a good photo of the four us this summer by impersonating a raisin, trying to talk. Everyone knows raisins can’t talk, so he squinched up his face and made a high-pitched whining noise, instead. His face turned bright red and I thought his head might possibly explode. We all thought it was funny, as you can see.
Perhaps you’ll want to try this at your next family photoshoot. I can’t guarantee you’ll have the same results.
We went to Stanford Sierra Camp over the week of the 4th of July. We’ll go next year too, and the year after that, if all goes according to plan, then we’ll have the opportunity to "stop out" for a year, without losing our place for the following year. The food is excellent there and the staff, accommodating. It takes place at Fallen Leaf Lake, which is close to Lake Tahoe.
We went to Hawaii in March, and back and forth to San Francisco and Yosemite various times during the year. During the summer, Cole (8) and Owen (5) were involved in day camps in Palo Altopirate camp, tennis camp, dragons and dinosaurs camp. Cole made a nice catch in a baseball game. He’s in a kid’s gymnastics program at Stanford. Owen started Kindergarten, played soccer, and liked to have me read Harry Potter to him, until it got too scary (midway through Volume 3, The Prisoner of Azkaban). Gloria managed all the household affairs. We got a dog, a golden retriever puppy, and named her Pearl. Thane made good progress on a math problem he was working on and created a web site about it, although it’s probably not as fascinating to you as it is to him (I take the majestic third person in recounting this). Cole had a first gymnastics meet in Petaluma. He’s in third grade at Walter Hays Elementary, with Owen. Sometimes they ride their scooters to school together.
We still have Norbert and Sophie, our cats, although we don’t see quite so much of them. They’re hiding from the dog.
We remodeled our kitchen. It turned out very nicely, although the project took a bit longer than expected (7 months) as we waited for the concrete countertops to be poured and installed. The wall dividing our kitchen from our dining room is gone, and we added a sliding glass door to the courtyard.
We got rid of our TV.
Thane’s mother died of cancer at home on 3 October 2003 in Kearney, Nebraska, cared for to the last moment by Thane’s father Vern. She was born 27 September 1935. So we continue, without her.
Thane, Gloria, Cole, and Owen
2341 Tasso Street
Palo Alto, California 94301
650 321 4816
www.plambeck.org
Postscript: Gloria says this letter is “too short and choppyyou go on for three paragraphs about Stanford Sierra Camp, and then it’s just `X did this, Y did that.’ ” I replied, “why should I write something longer if I can say it in fewer words?” On the other hand, I did just go back and put in some more stuff, so this isn’t quite what she read in the first draft. What do you think?