I have been thinking for a long time about replacing our kitchen table with a larger, less decrepit, and more washable one, and I had gotten so far as to reject the idea of building a table, and to save up funds for a new used table, and even to write a time to go shopping for it on the calendar.
Then we all got sick, and there were a lot of church activities and things going on, and around the time we were mostly recovered, my husband called and said his boss had a table he was giving away.
He gave me the measurements over the phone, and it was just the size I was looking for.
After various exertions, he got it home and we got it into the house. The chairs came with it, but they are definitely oversize for the room and I am mostly using our old chairs with it.
The table itself is just about as big as will fit there. When fully opened, the fridge door comes within an inch of the table. I am not above taking my drawknife and shaving some wood off the table legs and the bench I made before, to gain an inch or two. The fridge could be moved back a couple of inches also. Happily, none of those things are necessary.
Theoretically, we can all squeeze in around it, if enough of the smaller children sit on the bench--which hasn't happened yet.
Another thing I did recently was to unravel a finger-crocheted chenille scarf that I had been given some years back, and re-crochet it into a little mat for a chair seat. The colors go well with our living room, and it is good to have the scarf being used more.
I have been somewhat surprised to notice that I have not been doing much crafting at all during this sabbatical. Just more music, more puzzles, and more reading. I did get a bunch of mending done as I've been watching movies with the elder children.
At one of the church activities, I was talking with an older couple from another church, and it turns out that they were homeschoolers back in the Eighties, before homeschooling was explicitly allowed by law in Minnesota. They said they had to keep a low profile, and that friends of theirs were investigated by the state. Later on, one of the larger homeschool co-ops started up, and they were involved in that.
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