So life continues. We had the first pillowcase dress class today and it was fun. Great story: I finally finished the first model for the dress, having picked a pillowcase that I figured would be an attention getter and a good motivator. It’s a scene with mountain peaks in the background and trees with quilts hanging on clothes lines. Looked like Oregon to me, and the words Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show was on one of the banners.
I took a chance and Googled it. Sure ‘nuf – there IS a Sister’s Outdoor Quilt Show (Sisters, Oregon not all that far from where Brett lives) and I had the pillowcase that had been designed for their thirtieth anniversary! Mom was a quilter and this was beginning to have the feel of synchronicity. I wrote to the e-mail address, let them know their pillow case had made it all the way to Uganda and was being used in a project to teach village women how to sew. I received an immediate reply – and get this – one of the members of their quilting group works with a co-op of women in Eastern UGANDA making quilts and handcrafts. She collects them, sells them at their annual quilt show and sends the proceeds back to Uganda! The planet is shrinking. As if this is not interesting enough, I wrote back to Brett’s girl friend’s mother (who spearheaded the pillowcase project resulting in 150 pillowcases) had just returned from a weekend trip to Sisters, Oregon and a friend of a friend has joined Peace Corps and is headed to – yep – Uganda! Flat Earth indeed. So that’s the story of the day and I don’t think I can top that for coincidence and connectivity.
Totally unrelated to any of this: take a look at the moth I found on my front porch a few days ago. Took me a few days to identify it because it’s not native to Uganda, but comes from Sudan. No wonder it looked exhausted. It’s a Madagascar Moth and has a resting wingspan of 5 inches! I was so excited I took a picture and showed my Ugandan friends in the hope they would know how to identify it. They thought it absolutely hysterical that anyone would take a picture of a moth and even care about the name. I was told “we don’t have time for that stuff,” and thought that was pretty sad. But here it is for your viewing pleasure.
I’m lucky to have discovered this before the new clutch of chickens descended onto my front porch. Seems they like pecking for bugs that live under the papyrus door mat. Heard these rather suspicious crunching-lurking sounds at my front door a few mornings ago and it sounded like someone hanging around and kinda freaked me out. To my great relief, a big rooster and his three lady friends were just breakfasting alfresco.
And on that note, I’m getting to bed, because no doubt that same bird will start crowing early as is befitting of any self-respecting rooster.