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Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

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Tuesday
Aug062002

sick






Jodi, Allison and I are all officially sick today. Allison's getting better, while Jodi's and my colds seem to be worse; at least this didn't happen until AFTER the convention. :-)

Quiet day today. Allison went to Fremont with Paul and Beckett and the twins, and Jodi is going out with various Muse's Muse friends for the next few days. I had lunch in the hotel restaurant, then slept for a couple hours.





Today's a sad anniversary for me; my brother Jim and his wife Diane died in a car accident nine years ago today. I've been trying not to think about it until I get back home, but of course I can't help it. Called my Dad, called Ruth.

When I got to the airport, I had a few hours to kill, so I found a small food court with a power outlet, plugged in my laptop and started catching up on my Blatherings. I'm pretty much caught up now. Good thing, too...I'm on the plane now and my computer's almost out of juice. When I get home, I plan to check my Market Watch column, upload all these Blatherings, then am going to sleep for a long time. My flight gets into Toronto at 6:16 a.m., and I'm taking the bus home. Hopefully I won't sleep past my stop.

Am going to try to sleep now, more tomorrow.




Today's Blatherpics:








Cora with some of the cold-coping supplies in our hotel room.



Paul, Allison and Beckett just before they left the hotel.

Monday
Aug052002

disneyland






When Jodi and I woke up on Monday morning, it was clear that we both had caught Allison's cold. The original plan was that we'd all go to Disneyland with Paul, Beckett, Scott, Amanda, and the kids. Jodi had several days' of work-related meetings to attend during the rest of the week, so she opted to stay at the hotel to rest and hopefully get over the cold as soon as possible. Allison was feeling somewhat better, but not well enough to go to Disneyland, so she decided to stay at the hotel as well. I wasn't feeling that great either, but figured that I was well enough to go. Besides, I was flying home the next day and knew I could crash as soon as I got back.





I got a ride with Paul and Beckett, and we hooked up with Scott and Amanda at The Grand Californian hotel in Disneyland. The parents had reserved a room there to use as a "kid central", away from the heat and noise of the park. Turned out that this was a VERY smart idea, since we ended up using the room for naps, lunch, breaks.

Paul put Casey down for a nap in the morning while the rest of us went out adventuring. We went on two rides: Jungle Cruise and Pirates of the Caribbean.





Both rides were similar in that you got in a boat and were taken on a tour of exhibits. In Jungle Cruise, you travelled through a (duh) jungle and saw tigers, elephants, hippos, natives. Zoe and Riley loved this (Paul was putting Casey down for a nap at the hotel). Pirates of Caribbean was a bit scarier for them since it took place in the dark. Zoe buried her face in Amanda's shoulder for a bit, then fell asleep. Riley buried his face in Beckett's shoulder at first, then started enjoying himself.





Thanks to the convenience of an advance line ticketing system, we never had to wait in line that long. Scott and Amanda were seasoned Disneyland users and had park passes; they acted as tour guides.

I can see appeal of these places, especially to families. There are tons of things for kids to look at and do, and Disneyland is especially kid-friendly. I got a kick out of seeing the children enjoy themselves, especially on the Jungle Cruise, and enjoyed chatting with Scott, Amanda, Beckett and Paul as we strolled through the park.





Mid-morning we took a break, and Amanda bought us mint juleps (VERY yummy) and Toll House chocolate chip cookies. We rested in the shade and sipped our juleps while a ragtime band played nearby and watched the Mark Twain paddle boat sail by. After our break, we headed back to the hotel to see how Paul and Casey were doing. Amanda had bought sandwich fixings as well as fruit, so we had lunch while the kids were changed, fed, rested.





Amanda put Zoe down for a nap in the afternoon while the rest of us continued wandering. The afternoon was much hotter, however, and Casey was feeling the effects of the heat much more quickly than the rest of us. After we picked up some Mickey Mouse ears for Allison and Jodi (embroidered with their names, of course), we decided to opt out of further rides, had a brief break in the refreshment area, and headed back to the hotel.

Paul and Amanda went out to do more rides; Scott stayed back at the hotel to help Beckett with the three kids. I wasn't much use at that point; Allison's cold had finally caught up with me, and I was completely wiped. I lay down beside a still-snoozing Zoe and fell asleep.





My two objectives for the Disneyland visit had been to get my picture taken with Mickey Mouse and to buy a t-shirt. I didn't find Mickey, but Scott snapped a picture of me with Tweedledum (or Tweedledee, I couldn't tell). Paul bought me a Disneyland t-shirt while he was out with Amanda in the evening.

Thanks to Paul & Beckett and Scott & Amanda for the Disneyland visit!








Today's Blatherpics:













Me with Walt Disney food! Amanda bought us mint juleps and Toll House cookies.



Riley, Beckett and Casey, on the way to Disneyland.



Beckett and Amanda.



Beckett with Riley, Amanda with Zoë, and Scott. Paul is back
at the hotel making sure Casey gets a nap.



Paul with Riley.



Riley found the day to be pretty exciting.



So did Zoë.



Cora does Disneyland.

Sunday
Aug042002

conchord sunday






After pushing herself so hard yesterday for the concert, Allison crashed pretty hard today, and stayed in bed most of the time.

Jodi and I went for breakfast at the Clipper Cafe (hotel restaurant) and were soon joined by Joey Shoji, Tony Fabris, Jeff Bohnhoff, and Kathleen Sloan. Dessert: Krispy Kremes, courtesy Seanan (thanks, Seanan!) and Joey Shoji (who had asked Seanan to buy a dozen plain glazed KKs). They were still warm from the oven and were VERY yummy, better than the microwaved sample I had a while back in Port Elgin.

Jodi and I dropped by one of the open filks, where Jeff and Scott had traded guitars and were jamming, then sat in on the Windbourne filk circle. I had the opportunity to chat briefly with Karen Rodgers and Rilla Heslin, both very friendly as well as extremely talented. Wish we all lived closer; it would fun to jam with them sometime. Their version of Stan Rogers' "45 Years" made me teary-eyed, mainly because Lee and Barry Gold were singing along, obviously to each other.

I really enjoyed getting to know Lee and Barry a bit better - very cool people! Wish we had more of a chance to chat. They've been married 33 years!! I asked them what their one piece of advice is for staying happily married that long. Their answer: "Don't give up." :-)





Jodi and Callie Hills performed a really beautiful song in the second set of one-shots. After the one-shots was a performance by Jordan Mann and the Hodgetts Clan, which was actually three mini-concerts. Jordan was accompanied by Blake Hodgetts, who then performed his own set, and then accompanied Ash Productions (Angelica & Athrylis Sather Hodgetts).

Hearing Ash Productions for the first time was definitely a con highlight for me. These two are incredibly talented young women, the eldest of whom is fourteen. They're both good singers, they harmonize. They write their own lyrics, and their lyrics are good. All their songs appeared to be humourous parodies, and showed a much more sophisticated level of humour than you'd expect from youngsters that age.

There were several other extremely talented young filkers at this convention. If this is any indication of what we can expect to see from the next generation of filkers, I'm mightily encouraged.

After the concerts were the Kazoo Awards. Each kazoo award was a unique creation designed by David Okamura. Here's the award given to Urban Tapestry:





Comment from David: "I was wondering how to incorporate a tapestry-like decoration for your kazoo, and it wasn't until fairly late when I decided to have it
hang on a T-post. I took a photo from the Official Toronto website and
printed it on linen stationery paper for the right texture."

Several filkers had invited us out to dinner (thank you!) but Allison was pretty sick, so Jodi and I opted to have dinner at the hotel. Thanks to the Snyders and Kwinn/Gladney clan for keeping us company. We ordered in pizza; Allison slept through most of it, but came out somewhat groggily near the end of the evening to have a frozen fruit bar I had picked up in the hotel shop.

The end-of-con filk took place in the con suite. Jodi was starting to come down with Allison's cold symptoms so opted to go to bed early. I hung around for a while longer, mostly listened but did some flute-playing. Thanks to Bob ("Blars") Blarson for requesting something from me in the bardic circle; it gave me an opportunity to ask Callie to do some flute playing with me! She played on her bass flute; I played on regular. Earlier in the evening, I also had the opportunity to play with Callie, Blake on keyboard, and another flautist whose name I didn't know who played a wooden flute.

Fun to hear Leslie Fish perform a chocolate song she had written during the evening. Lots of great music, but I had to crash around 10 pm or so; I was dead tired after the weekend, plus my scratchy throat told me that I might be coming down with Allison's cold.




Today's Blatherpics:








Callie and Jodi do a one-shot.



Ash Productions.



Urban Tapestry Kazoo award.

Saturday
Aug032002

conchord friday/saturday






On Friday morning, we discovered from the hotel that our suite was ready, so we moved everything over. Very nice room! Two bathrooms, two rooms, a giant bed plus a pull-out couch, lots of space to practise in. We unpacked and then headed to the reception, which was also a CD launch of Nancy Louise Freeman's newest project, Blues For Dumuzi, which also features Jeff Bohnhoff, Debbie Baudoin, and Maya Bohnhoff. The album was produced by Jeff at Mystic Fig Studios; I'm really looking forward to listening to it.

The hotel had somehow double-booked programming in the original room scheduled for the reception, but the confusion was quickly sorted out and another room found. The concom had arranged a yummy spread of fruit, cheese and crackers, and Nancy's CD played as background music. I enjoyed catching up with filkers I haven't seen in a while, plus met some new people.

We also browsed through the program book and read the bio that Tom Jeffers and Dave Clement wrote for us. Thanks so much, Tom and Dave! :-) We'll get you for this, of course. I'll post the bio online sometime in the near future.





Partway through the reception, Allison, Jodi and I were told that we had to switch hotel rooms; apparently the hotel had given us the room meant for children's programming at the convention. We packed up our stuff and moved to a suite on the floor above. We had just finished unpacking again when Nick came to get us for a radio show interview.

The host, Warren James, of
Mike Hodel's Hour 25 was great, very easygoing. He also had one of the most radio-friendly voices I've ever heard. By radio-friendly, I mean that if you happened to hear this guy order his food in a restaurant, you'd know he was a radio personality. According to David Okamura, Warren is also a filk enthusiast, and you can find an interview with Karen Willson in the archives.

He also interviewed Nick Smith, Leslie Fish, Mary Creasey, Nancy Freeman, and Erwin "Filthy Pierre" Strauss (the Interfilk guest at Conchord). The show is supposed to be accessible online in a few weeks; I'll post the URL when I find out more. Allison, Jodi and I always vow not to giggle when we're interviewed, but inevitably we end up having too much fun. We still have fond memories of being interviewed by Tom Jeffers for his Winnipeg radio show. :-)

Dave Weingart had sent a copy of the Interfilk songbook to the hotel, by the way, for me to take around and try to get some of the West Coast interfilk signatures. Thanks so much for supporting Interfilk this way, Dave!





Allison had the beginnings of a sore throat on Friday night. When she woke up on Saturday, her sore throat had progressed into a full-blown cold. We were all pretty worried about how she'd do in our Guest of Honor concert later that night, so we decided it was probably best for Allison to get as much rest as she could in the afternoon, even if it meant having to miss some programming.

That's one of the advantages of being in a group, I find...if one of us gets sick during a guest gig, the other two can cover. In the eight years we've been together, this hasn't happened that often. I've been sick once, Jodi twice, Allison a few times.

I was pretty pleased with how our songwriting workshop went on Saturday morning. It's always a tricky thing, having a workshop like that when the attendees have such a wide range of experience and aptitudes.

The first part of the workshop was an open discussion of a variety of songwriting topics, such as finding inspiration, the songwriting process (lyrics or music first?), collaboration. Then we worked on the practical exercise: writing a song that we could all perform in the Urban Tapestry Guest of Honor Concert!

First Allison, Jodi and I taught them the chorus of a song I had written called "If Everyone Ate Some Chocolate" as well as a sample verse to give an idea of the lyric scansion. Then everyone split up into groups to write part of the song for 20 minutes, after which we got back together and decided on the order of the verses (and a bridge, which one group had written), and rehearsed the whole thing a few times.





After a quick lunch and getting ready for the Totally Tasteless and Tacky Review, we headed down to the main concert room to listen to the Special Guest, Throwing Toasters (Grant Bacciocco). Very entertaining fellow with some great songs.

Many thanks to Jeff Bohnhoff, Nick Smith and Paul Kwinn for helping us perform Library Boy as our contribution to the TTTR. Jeff Bohnhoff played guitar with me; on whim, I had asked him to play along during a quick rehearsal. JeffB is an AMAZING guitarist, for those of you who don't know. He picked up the not-too-complicated chord structure of Library Boy with no difficulty and started adding some very cool twiddles and stuff to my basic rhythm guitar part. I was so excited I started jumping up and down.

Nick Smith played the part of the Library Boy, while Jodi did the torch song bit. Since I never DID see what they were doing during the song because I was concentrating on my guitar part, I will have to rely on the reports of an onlooker for a description of what happened. I only know that Jodi started the song looking very demure and dowdy, and then gradually got more and more torchy (took down her hair, threw off her shawl, took off her glasses, etc.). Near the end of the song, Paul Kwinn played the part of a security guard that Nick finally calls in to try dragging Jodi offstage.





Allison had to go crash in our room in the afternoon. Jodi and I had been asked by Devon Black, the wonderful Con Suite Goddess, if we could sing "Rumours About Redheads" for her. This was a song that Jodi, Rand and I had written as a surprise for Allison a while back, and I had sent it in to be included in the Conchord songbook (without Allison's knowledge, of course). Devon had travelled about 400 miles to do the con suite, and had to ask a scheduling favour from her boss at a brand-new job to do it. Thank you, Devon!!

After that, we went to check out the one shots. I held Zoë while Scott and Amanda performed their now infamous "Rudy" (yes, they brought the fish). Zoë clapped her hands and jumped up and down on my lap. The afternoon concerts were by Lynn Gold and the Interfilk guest, Erwin "Filthy Pierre" Strauss. I had never met Erwin before and was a bit nervous by the "Filthy Pierre" nickname...would I feel like leaving the room every time he sang? Turns out the nickname had origins in college, and didn't really have anything to do with being filthy. We had a chance to chat with him on Friday night; he's a nice fellow, very friendly.

Erwin's concert was unique in that he had a projector screen set up and had all his lyrics on slides, so that the audience could sing along on everything if they wanted.





We opted to have dinner in our room because Allison still wasn't feeling well and because we wanted to have enough time to warm up and do sound checks before our concert.

To Jodi's and my relief, Allison and her voice were fine for the concert. The afternoon of rest and the Dayquil helped, I think. My personal highlight of the concert was when our songwriting partipants came up to perform "If Everyone Ate Some Chocolate" with us; some people in the audience waved their imaginary lighters in the air (initiated by Jane Mailander), and the whole room ended up participating on the chorus, which was very cool. Then David Okamura started dangling a Hershey's Kiss in front of the audience. Additional comment from David: "That was too much temptation for those sitting behind me. While I was distracted by a femme fatale, Barney Evans grabbed the chocolate and made off, with me in hot pursuit brandishing a chair over my head. (He never did return that Hersey's.) ;-)"

Here are the lyrics to the song.

The other highlight of the concert was chatting with someone from the audience who was attending her first filk convention.

Many thanks also to Scott Snyder and Joey Shoji for helping us during the concert (Scott for "California Dreamin'" and Joey for "Star Sisters").

Nancy Louise Freeman's concert was after ours. GREAT concert; it made me even more excited about listening to her new album. My favourite song in the set was one about being a fangirl. Jeff Bohnhoff accompanied her on some of the songs.

The Interfilk auction was fun to attend. Our interfilk package was bought by Kathleen. Tom and Dave had contributed a unique Urban Tapestry t-shirt which was bought by Jeff Bohnhoff (I'll have my revenge, Tom and Dave...you too, Jeff! :-)).

Saturday's open filk was great. Allison, Jodi and I decided to attend the regular open filk rather than join the Bawdy song circle; as much as we enjoyed the TTTR, bawdy just isn't our thing. There are some very funny songs in the Bawdy Song Circle, of course, but inevitably there are one or two songs that just make me outright uncomfortable.

One of my personal highlights at the Saturday open filk was hearing Jeff Bohnhoff sing in public for the first time! He usually plays guitar while his wife Maya sings ("Why would anyone want to listen to me when they could listen to Maya?"). For me, Jeff's decision to try singing in public embodies the spirit of the filk community so well...people being encouraged to sing and/or perform in public who normally wouldn't. I know I would never have started singing if it hadn't been for Allison and Jodi, and encouragement of other filkers.

After Allison and then Jodi went to crash in our hotel room, I knew I couldn't perform anymore Urban Tapestry material, but I just enjoyed listening.

The atmosphere in that late Saturday night filk was wonderful, had achieved the special chemistry that open filks strive for, with everyone taking turns without bickering or competing, supporting and encouraging newcomers and shy types, just revelling in the sharing of each other's music. I especially enjoyed hearing so many filkers I had never met before, new songs I had never heard.

Around 3 a.m., I was still enjoying myself too much to be tired, but I realized that if I didn't go to bed soon I'd suffer the consequences the next day, so reluctantly left the filk room to get some sleep.




Today's Blatherpics:










Allison feeding Casey and Riley Kwinn. Allison had been staying with Beckett and Paul in Fremont for the week before Conchord.



Jeff Bohnhoff, Jodi, Allison, and Nancy Louise Freeman, at Conchord's Friday night reception and Nancy's CD launch.



Scott Snyder on stage, about to help us with California Dreamin', the first song in our concert.



Registration desk at Conchord, with Devon Black and Nick Smith.



Warren James interviewing Nick Smith for "Mike Hodel's Hour 25".

Friday
Aug022002

higginbotham park






Yesterday morning Amanda, Zoë, Jodi and I went for a walk/run in Higginbotham Park, a gorgeous paved walk through a forest along a ravine. The breeze was scented with rosemary and eucalyptus, and the heat of the day had not yet set in; it was perfect walking weather. Partway through the walk, I went for a short run.

When we got back, I fed Zoë some mashed banana while waiting for the shower. Amanda makes most of her baby food from scratch, which amazes me.





While Amanda and Zoë went to a relatives' birthday party in the afternoon, Scott, Jodi and I played some music and chatted, then walked to downtown Claremont (about a mile walk), browsed shops, had lunch at Danson's, a diner that Scott used to frequent a lot when he was younger. I ordered a turkey sandwich which was fantastic but way huge. I could only eat half. Great potato salad, too, yum. Walked back home where we had some relaxing quiet time.





After dinner at a nearby salad and soup place, we drove to Van Nuys, about an hour away. We checked in, got settled in our rooms, then Scott and Amanda and Zoë (who are in the room next to us!) came over and we hung out and chatted for about an hour before they went to bed. I'm typing this at around 10:30 pm on Thursday night. Allison, Paul, Beckett and the twins are due to arrive here around 1 or 2 p.m.

Looking forward to the official start of the convention tonight!








Today's Blatherpics:









Cora posing with a prickly pear cactus during our walk/run this morning.



Me feeding Zoë after getting back.



Scott rocking his daughter to sleep.



Amanda tests out a child carrier backpack at Target.