Tartan Terrors Christmas Dec 20, 2008
December 16, 2008 by Faire News · Leave a Comment
Ontario, Canada Finding a a gift for someone who has everything is tough. I’ve found that making memories works really well. Go somewhere together, do something fun.
In Milton this weekend, you can do just that with the Tartan Terrors Christmas Celebration Dinner and Musical Theatre Event. If you’ve ever seen …
Enchanted Forest Renaissance Faire - Faire News for December 12-15, 2008
December 14, 2008 by Faire News · Leave a Comment
Texas Sorry about the really late notice but I just found a press release for the Enchanted Forest Renaissance Faire in Ingleside this weekend. Formerly known as the Ingleside Renaissance Faire, this is the 10th year that Ingleside Chamber of Commerce has hosted the event.
Get out to Live Oak Park …
Her Majesty’s Winter Renaissance Faire and High Court Dinner - Faire News for December 12-15, 2008
December 14, 2008 by Faire News · Leave a Comment
Wisconsin There’s an indoor faire in Madison this weekend. Her Majesty’s Winter Renaissance Faire and High Court Dinner, this weekend at the Whitney Square Mall, gives you a chance to bring out your winter Renaissance finery and enjoy a the company of like minded souls.
From the day’s entertainment to the …
Part of an Ostentation
December 10, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
7 December 2008
Day 2 of Dickens on the Strand and most of us are only barely recovered from Day 1 - part of the fun, I suppose.
I didn’t take as many photos on Day 2 as I did on Day 1 with only 248 making the cut; but once again I was faced with the challenge of what do I post? This is the one I settled on:

While it does not show the entire group of us, it shows enough to prove the incredible & imposing sight we can be. Some years back some other friends of ours, who flutter along the edges of this core clique, labelled us the Ostentation. I think, looking at the photo, that not a one of us can complain of the label, and in fact I think many of us take pride in the term.
In this photo from left to right, front to back we have:
Front Row: Ginger, Denise, Marita Beth (my wife), BJ (new this year) & Kat
Back Row: Allyson, Larry, Rod (also new this year) & George
A large number of our Ostentation are missing from the photo, sadly, but that certainly didn’t stop this little pose from being one of the most photographed things on the Strand this day. There must have been more than a dozen photographers stopping & shooting over a 5 or 6 minute period. I’m proud to be part of the beauty.
Cheers.
~KR (Written on 10 December 2008 )
Listening to:
From the Edge of the Deep Green Sea by The Cure
from Wish
Camera: Nikon D70
Exposure: 0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture: f/3.5
Focal Length: 28 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/6 EV
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS Windows
Larry
December 10, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
6 December 2008
Galveston has recovered from Ike sufficiently that the 35th annual Dickens on the Strand took place, albeit smaller & more intimate & shorter than normal. This is a weekend I look forward to every year because I get to play. I get to play with friends that I don’t see often enough. I get to play in a manner of playing that suits my sentiment and makes me happy.
On this particular Saturday of Dickens I took 348 photos (that made the cut). It was difficult to decide on which one to use as my Photo of the Day. I eventually settled on this one:
.
Larry is a dear friend that lives too far away in the hinterlands of North Milwaukee. In this photo, he epitomizes all that is good & great about Dickens on the Strand. And behind him, you can see the fuzzy colour of the hustle-bustle that is the festival.
Thanks Galveston Historical Foundation for providing us this festival.
Cheers.
~KR (Written on 10 December 2008 )
Listening to:
Don’t Let Me Die Still Wondering by Flogging Molly
from Within a Mile of Home
Camera: Nikon D70
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 200 mm
Exposure Bias: 0 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire
ISO Speed: 400
Software: picnik.com
Continuing on
December 5, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
My next sale is going to be the Butler Creek Bazaar at a school. I will be contributing one of my pieces to the raffle to support the school.
Probably a bowl, maybe a mug if I can get them through the kiln in time.
——
It always amazes me how few people recycle their own clay. While clay isn’t going to do anything while sitting in a dump (It IS clay, after all) it took a lot of effort to get that clay out of the earth in the first place and then to you. Besides which it cost you money to get that clay… isn’t it worth a little effort to put that clay to use?
Oh, well. More free scraps for me then!
Peaches, 12 years young
December 4, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment

In May 2005, I received a phone call from someone who had found my phone number on the Greyhounds of Fairhaven website. The caller said she knew of a Greyhound whose owners were going to have her put down if someone didn’t take her immediately as she had reportedly bitten one of their children. According to the caller, the people had gotten PJ, the Greyhound, from someone who’d had her as a pet for a while, but her former owner didn’t want her back. This person had received PJ from yet a different person or maybe a couple - her history got a bit fuzzy at this point.
When you adopt a Greyhound from an adoption group, you sign a contract that says you will return the dog to the adoption agency if you ever have to get rid of it, so the agency can find a new home for the dog. This is done because the agencies want to make sure that Greyhounds go to good homes, ones that are educated about the needs and idiosyncrasies of Greyhounds (prey drive, sensitivity to anesthesia, etc.) If PJ had originally come from an adoption agency, her original owners had broken their contract by giving her away, and it was likely that she had been in at least two homes (possibly more) that knew nothing about Greyhounds.
Greyhounds of Fairhaven is not a rescue group (we promote Greyhound adoption), but I figured I would get PJ out of peril and then get her to an adoption group that could find a home for her. I wouldn’t be able to keep her because we already had four Greyhounds and we didn’t want another dog. Besides, since we do so much work with the public through Greyhounds of Fairhaven, we couldn’t have a dog that wasn’t good with children.
I contacted PJ’s owners and told them I was on my way to pick her up. When I arrived, the poor girl was locked outside in an unlandscaped backyard (just plain dirt - no trees or bushes or grass) in 103-degree heat. The owners opened the back door and in crept a beautiful, shy, white-faced brindle girl. She let me pet her while I talked to the owners about what had happened between her and the child. PJ had been given to the family by an acquaintance. They knew nothing about Greyhounds and, apparently, not much about dogs in general. They thought it was perfectly all right to leave their two young children unsupervised with PJ. One of the children had fallen on her while she was asleep, startling her. She came up snapping and scratched the child’s cheek. Not exactly a “bite” after all.
I explained to the owners that Greyhounds live their racing lives in crates; they are not used to being touched when they are sleeping, so PJ’s reaction was hardly surprising. In fact, any breed of dog might do the same thing if startled awake by someone falling on them. The owners acknowledged that they’d been mistaken in leaving their children alone with PJ, but they still wanted her gone because she clearly couldn’t be trusted around children any longer. Okay. If they said so…
I loaded PJ into my van and headed home. On the way, I had to stop at a friend’s house. He had several Greyhounds, so I brought PJ in to meet them. She was scared and wouldn’t go anywhere near them. I was not reassured by this reaction - what was she going to do when I got her home to my four Greys? As it turned out, she was scared of them, too, but I took my time and introduced them slowly, and PJ finally relaxed enough to let them check her out. She was still very leery of them, but at least I didn’t need to keep them separated.
PJ had a microchip tag on her collar, so I called the number on the tag and was told that her chip was registered to Arizona Adopt a Greyhound (AAGI). I called AAGI and found out that PJ, whose racing name was PJ’s Jackie Why, had been adopted out in late 1999, just after she’d turned three years old. AAGI hadn’t heard anything about her in the ensuing five-and-a-half years, but they would be happy to take her back and find a good home for her. Unfortunately, they had no foster home openings at the time. Could I keep her for a week or so?
“Of course!” says I, secure in the knowledge that this would be a short-term thing since there was no way we could keep such a shy girl. All of our dogs had to be friendly and outgoing, and get along with people and other Greyhounds due to all of our promotional work.
And then, three days later, something amazing happened. Shy PJ turned into friendly, loving, outgoing PJ. Not only that, but she displaced BJ, the alpha dog of our pack. BJ happily let PJ have the position; BJ had never really wanted it anyway, having been left top dog when our former alpha, Ebony, died two years earlier. BJ had no trouble being the alpha’s lieutenant, but she’d never been comfortable as the boss.
Here are a few pictures we took of PJ a few days after I “rescued” her and she came out of her shell:

Relaxing with a rawhide

PJ, aka “Ears”

PJ in her favorite position - the dead cockroach
So PJ was no longer afraid of our dogs or shy around us, and (of course) we were falling in love with her. Maybe we could keep her after all. But we still needed to find out if she’d be all right with the public and with other dogs.
As luck would have it, my parents were coming to visit, and they would be staying at a campground in the mountains. We decided to take PJ with us when we visited them to see how she reacted with them, their dog, and anyone we met at the campground.
Of course, she did wonderfully - with my parents, with their dog, with all of the strangers she met, even with a couple of Greyhounds that were camping with their people.
We figure that during whatever happened in the six years between PJ’s initial adoption and the day I picked her up, she forgot she was a Greyhound, and she needed some time with other Greyhounds to remember.

PJ at the campground

PJ cuddled in my lap. (It was cold in the mountains, thus the coat.)

PJ, too adorable for words
Well, that clinched it. We were going to keep PJ, but we still needed to change one thing about her: Her name. Having a BJ and a PJ was way too confusing. Since BJ was here first, she got to keep her name. Thus PJ became Peaches, one of the Greyhounds of Fairhaven, promoting Greyhound adoption at Renaissance faires throughout the southwest United States.
Peaches “roaching” at the San Diego Renaissance Faire

Peaches, the vicious child-biter

Peaches: “Hey, why is everything upside-down?”
Today, 04 Dec 2008, is Peaches’ twelfth birthday. But that’s not the really important thing; after all, there are quite a few twelve year old Greyhounds.
What’s really special about Peaches is that last Friday (28 Nov 2008) was her one-year post-amputation anniversary. You see, in November 2007, Peaches was diagnosed with osteosarcoma - bone cancer. Osteosarcoma has no real cure; the only way to fight it is to remove the affected limb and, if one chooses, follow the amputation with chemotherapy.
On 28 Nov 2007, Peaches had her rear right leg amputated. Sometime that night, when the night-duty vet techs were supposed to be watching her, Peaches fell and broke her tail about five inches from the base. No one noticed the break until the techs took her out of her cage the following morning and returned her to the vet. It was a very bad compound fracture and there was no way to save the tail. So, on 29 Nov 2007, Peaches had her tail amputated to a five-inch-long stub. Poor girl.

Back home after her amputations - not feeling very good.

A few days later, feeling better.
The funny thing is, Peaches was more upset about losing her tail than she was about losing her leg. More than once we caught her glaring at her tail stub, yet she never seemed upset about her leg.
Despite missing her tail, Peaches bounced back fast from her surgeries, and breezed through six chemotherapy sessions.

A missing leg and tail doesn’t interfere with snoozing…

…or with Peaches’ favorite position.
The missing leg and tail also hasn’t interfered with Peaches’ status as the alpha dog of the pack, a position she took back as soon as she got home.

Peaches and BJ, her “lieutenant”
BJ and Peaches

BJ and Peaches

Peaches and BJ
Missing a leg also hasn’t stopped Peaches from having fun with her pack - particularly our two crazy play-boys, Captain Jack Sparrow (white ticked Greyhound) and Sergei (the Borzoi).







Playing with Jack, Sergei, and visitor Mija, the hairless PIO.
During her convalescence, Peaches learned that she could bark if she needed help with something. Since then, she has perfected her barking technique and uses it to get pets or simply get us to talk to her. At Renaissance faires, if someone pets her for a long time and then stops, she barks at them. Quite often, she manages to get people who have left her side to come back and pet her more.

A cute little Peachy bark

A serious Peaches bark

Barking at the Arizona Renaissance Festival
Of course, having only three legs gets Peaches a lot of extra attention at Renaissance faires, since everyone feels sorry for her. We keep warning all of the children that she’s a vicious child-eater, but no one seems to believe us. I wonder why that is…

Peaches, the Easter Greyhound

Peaches: “Hmm, this one looks tasty.”



A kiss from Queen Beatrice

Licking her lips in preparation for eating a couple of small children.

Peaches: “Nice pets. Maybe I won’t eat this one.”

A kiss from “the one that got away.”
As you can see, Peaches is completely unreliable around children and needs constant supervision. No, really. She’s a vicious killer. She eats several small children a day…
…and she really needs to learn how to relax.
Happy birthday, Peaches! Here’s to many more years of beating osteosarcoma.
Final Day Coat
December 4, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
30 November 2008
The final day of TRF, the last huzzah. And what a day it was. Although the sales were down year-over-year, the attendance and moral were way up. Especially the last few weeks. And the weather was just simply too good to be true for the vast majority of the event. That included the final day. On this final day of TRF, Marita Beth and I strolled out of the shop for a short while visiting with people that we wouldn’t see again for many months and I, skillfully, maneuvered her toward a shop where I intended to buy her a coat if they had any left in her size. They did. It fit. She pranced and danced in it the rest of the day.
This is my wife wearing her new coat

standing next to Randy who was sitting as a stand in for Old Father Christmas.
That’s my mug on the armwing with the logo of my shop East Wind Games on it.
Cheers.
~KR (Written on 4 December 2008 )
Listening to:
Young Liars by TV on the Radio
from Young Liars
Camera: Nikon D70
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 98 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/6 EV
Flash: Flash did not fire
ISO Speed: 200
Woman in Blue
December 3, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
29 November 2008

I write about my wife a lot saying "MB did this," or "my wife and I did that" or similar. But, there aren’t that many photos of her here. Mostly, I think, because she’s critical of her own appearance (aren’t most women?) and likely wouldn’t approve of most photos. However, this is the smiling face I go to sleep with every night and wake up to every morning. The woman of my dreams.
Cheers.
~KR (Written on 3 December 2008 )
Listening to:
Betty Lou’s Gettin’ Out Tonight by Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band
from Nine Tonight
Camera: Nikon D70
Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 135 mm
Exposure Bias: 0/6 EV
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS Windows
Rose Drinks a Beer on Friday
December 3, 2008 by The Crier · Leave a Comment
28 November 2008
I put this together for the challenge, but it appears I’m a couple of hours too late. Oh well, here’s a second faire mosaic.

This is my dear friend, Rose, of Iris & Rose (Wild & Thorny). During their shows folk often buy them beers…sometimes with the challenge to "chug them." This was one of those times. ![]()
Cheers.
~KR (Written on 3 December 2008 )
Listening to:
It’s Showtime by David Lee Roth
from A Little Ain’t Enough
























