OCTOBER 24, Saturday, 9 a.m. – Couchwood. Leaving—again--for a week at Eureka Springs
by way of Beebe to pick up b-f-f Dot. To hit Hwy 65, we cut across Hwy 64 to
Conway, stopping in Clinton to “sell” a book, then to Marshall for gas. After a
must-stop at Ferguson’s for coffee and a huge cinnamon roll, we rolled into
Eureka Springs around 3 p.m. One more leg down the twists-and-turns of Scenic
Highway 62 to Spring Street--our home for the next week.
We settled into our suites, Dot in Spring Garden at
the Main House of Dairy Hollow; moi
in Muse 1 of 505, the Usonion house in the Frank Lloyd Wright style.
Dot went out with her daughter and granddaughter. They had driven over from Edmond, Oklahoma, to see their mom and grandmother since they hadn’t been able to visit Dot on her recent birthday.
Dot went out with her daughter and granddaughter. They had driven over from Edmond, Oklahoma, to see their mom and grandmother since they hadn’t been able to visit Dot on her recent birthday.
OCTOBER 25 Sunday. The trio invited me to join them
for brunch at Myrtie Mae’s restaurant, after which Linda and Amy headed back
west. Dot and I worked separately on our writing goals—her’s was to write a new
chapter every day. Mine was to finish last week’s Halloween column, finish “Dazey’s
Dilemma,” a short story-in-progress, and to begin on a possible memoir inspired
by May Sarton’s “Coming Into Eighty.” I would tentatively call mine “Edging
Past Eighty.”
OCTOBER
26, Monday. We met the other residents, Cynthia from Springfield, Judi from
Cincinnati, and a new writer from D. C. a young, Jewish man who worked at the
Library of Congress.
At 7
p.m., a Haymaker poetry critique session was scheduled across town. At 9:30, the
8 poets who had--as one guy said, “tortured” (critiqued) each other’s work--“limped
away” to rest for the “onslaught” of a second session the next morning. All our
poems were equally discussed, dissected or divided. Fun, fun, fun!
OCTOBER
27, Tuesday, 8:30 a.m. The poets met at the Forest Hill Restaurant, and then to
the Express Inn for another session. The glassed-in breakfast room jutting out
from the building had served as a meeting place for several years and most of
the group lodged at the Inn. I began the meeting with a “lesson,” or “sharing,”
called “Genesis of a Poem.” Then we sparred through another poem from each.
At
noon, we traveled to Sparky’s, fortifying ourselves for the final afternoon
session. After it ended at 4 p.m., we hugged and kissed those friends we won’t
see again until spring.
OCTOBER
28, Wednesday. I revised the Haymaker-critiqued poems as per suggestions, then
returned to Dazey. Rain fell gently, confining us to our rooms. Looking out my
window, I noticed . . . “a squirrel/ up and down the wet pine . . . sometimes/
lost in the grayness”.
OCTOBER
29, Thursday. We struggled to get enough internet access to check our email. We
later discovered that the entire town went down that night. But at 1 p.m., we
left for our flea-marketing excursion. First, to the Purple House, the
hospital’s thrift shop. Then to The “doggie” store—the Humane Society’s thrift
store, then to the Barn Shoppes.
At
dinner, we discovered the cook’s faux pas:
She served pork. Ahron had to go without meat.
OCTOBER
30, Friday. The last full day. Judi left early, we were leaving tomorrow,
Cynthia, on Monday, but Ahron had two more weeks of residency. Dot and I spent
two hours at the last flea market, the Echo, whose merchandise is all donated,
and whose monies go to the free medical clinic.
OCTOBER
31. We left at 10, stopped in Marshall for lunch and ice cream, then pulled
into Beebe at 3, into Benton at 4. It was a thoroughly wonderful week. The two
cats even “spoke” to me after leaving them with only an every-other-day
check-in.
May
November be full of inspiring nuggets for you.
4 comments:
Thanks for sharing...enjoyed YOUR trip! It is getting cold here and possibly will freeze here tonight. Nice to go writing with you while the house is already asleep!
A good memory of a wonderful trip.
Sounds like a great week with a little bit of everything that makes you happy: friends, old and new; poetry group, flea markets, and writing.
Thanks, girls, for reading and commenting. Indeed, it WAS a fantastic week. Can't wait until April when I go again. xoxo
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