it was back to “des voitures ordinaires”…and ongoing attempts
to free up the steering in the ’45* which, with advice from Matt at Seret Speed and Custom
and Scott Zoog’s Dremel expertise seems to have been accomplished around the time Linda was in the air on her way to Denver to check in on fabrication of the 20′ tall “Wayfinding”
and attend her opening at Robischon Gallery In the interim I kept myself entertained with trips
to Kaiser and rides against the winds of April as well as celebrating the Inkies’ actual
fifth birthday for which they were not only treated salmon treats but took it upon themselves
to devour my Friday night chicken, leaving me with leftover salmon on a salad. Which was fine…even more so as nobody threw up any of the raw poultry.
Oh well…dogs, present and past.
An apparitional Saturday ensued, L. came home,
elated but weary, in time for Chue-Chee salmon at Mai Thai across the street and by morning
was sufficiently recovered from her adventures to finally walk Cosmos again, to his considerable
Delight.
*Note proximity of steering linkage to exhaust manifold.
I’m sure you were overjoyed. There was no birthday vomit From the Inkies. That is certainly a relief. LINDA‘s show looked massive with 85 pieces shown in the pictures. I hope it was a success. The work looked beautiful.
Those 85 pieces are everything the gallery has on hand; I changed the link to reflect what’s actually in the show.
nice to hear Linda is up and running
Well walking, anyway…