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Last post I told you where we went in April for a reenactment.  Now it’s time to talk a little bit about the whole experience.

Since I had no suitable uniform for the 1790’s, Ken suggested that he and I become British sailors as members of a landing party of the invasion force. The only named vessel that we found listed as part of the flotilla was the HMS Prince of Wales, so that became our ship.

Lined up for review

You can see that we made good use of the ship’s sea chest, the only place that a sailor can go to upgrade his wardrobe when his clothing wears out. Here, we are in parade formation on the Plaza de Armas, waiting to be addressed by the mayor of San Juan.

That was one of the stops on our Friday evening parade through the streets of Old San Juan; to drum up a little interest in the event, so to speak.  After all, how many times do you see groups of eighty or so uniformed men marching through your city accompanied by bagpipe and drum, with a group of scraggly sailors bringing up the rear singing sea shanties?  Not often, I’ll bet.

Jan, Ken, Charleen and I were amused with Friday night’s parade, because it pretty closely followed the route we had taken earlier in the day when we wandered the city as tourists in 18th century clothing.  By the end of the evening though, we were some pretty tired reenactors from having walked around town twice.  And then we realized that we had to walk back to the barracks, all the way on the other side of the Old Town!

Needless to say, Saturday morning we caught the tram from San Christobal to El Morro, rather than make the march once again.  Besides, somebody had to be there to get this shot of the forces marching up…

Marching up to El Morro

Saturday was scheduled to be a day of demonstrations and education on 18th century history and warfare for the public visiting El Morro.  There would be no battle reenactment because El Morro is under the jurisdiction of the National Parks Service, and their rules do not permit line-facing-line firing of weapons.

The firing demonstration, which included the three pounder was scheduled for the afternoon, which left us with some time to take a picture or two.

In a Captain Morgan mood

Hold onto that hat

Did you notice Charleen’s hat?  Hard to miss, isn’t it?  Traffic stopping is a very apt description, because we had cars stop on the road to take her  picture!  Charleen worked very hard on getting the style of the late 1790’s right, and she got it right in spectacular fashion!

We’re going back!

Last April, we took a little trip to the tropics, and now we’re going back to the land of palm trees and warm ocean breezes.  That sounds really good now, as I look out the window and see the snow coming down like the next Ice Age has arrived

On the plaza

Oh yes, we liked the climate,

View of the inlet

but even more we liked the people.

Start of the March of Dimes Walk-a-thon

Was this a cruise, with food and drink available 24 hours a day?  No, although meals were provided.

Was it an all-inclusive resort vacation, filled with adventures and fun?  Well, not quite…

The barracks of San Cristobal

No, Jan, Ken, Charleen and I were in the tropics for a reenactment, and a little bit of vacation and sightseeing.  The destination was Old San Juan, Puerto Rico and the reason was the reenactment of the 1797 Siege of San Juan.

We first heard about this event a few years ago from a member of the 3rd Cuirassiers.  He told us about how very friendly the Puerto Ricans were, and how very proud they were of their country and its history.  He also mentioned that the lodging for the reenactment was to be provided in the barracks of Castillo San Christobal, a part of the four hundred year old fortifications around the Old City.

Troopers on the parapets

For me, one of the real draws for this event was the chance to take part in a reenactment on the actual historic site of the event that I was reenacting. That we were going to be in a tropical paradise at the same time was just icing on that cake.

One thing we can say about the last few months, is that it has been a very busy time.  Zero to sixty started around the middle of October, when we took our midterm in Java Programming, and left that night for the Pumpkin Festival at OBV.  Hours of fun later, we were back home and beginning to work on the final project in Java, a Hangman game.

Hours and hours of fun and frustration later, we completed the project just in time to begin studying for our final exam.  The same night that we took the final, we left again for an overnight stop with Ken and Jan before heading out in the morning for OBV to create a Colonial Christmas.   The day was much the same as last year, except we did not have to play fireman, and we stayed overnight in Bedford on Saturday.  Added fun and thrills on Sunday was the early morning ice storm that left the hills of central Pennsylvania slick enough to to stop traffic for a few hours.  Since we still had to pack up the house from the program on Saturday night, the ice did not affect our ride home, it just made the ride to the village a little white -knuckled. When  we got home on Sunday, there was the moment of relief that school was over and we could get on with preparations for the holidays…

“What do ya mean there’s less than two weeks before the holidays?!”

Fall brings the ripening of pumpkins and that can only lead to one thing, pumpkin festivals!  The crisp air, the crackling of dried leaves, the smell of cider, they’re all part of the fun.

Last Friday, after our mid-term exam, we drove down to Warren on the first leg of our journey to Old Bedford Village to help with the village’s pumpkin festival. The plan was for Jan and Charleen to occupy the basket weaver’s shop on Saturday and Sunday and demonstrate basket weaving for the public.  Ken was to occupy the cobbler’s shop and show off his leather working skills, and your happy narrator was to assist in the operation of the trebuchet.

What’s a trebuchet, you ask?  Well, way back in the 12th and 13th century, the trebuchet was the high-tech weapon for breaching castle walls.   The modern trebuchet is used to destroy pumpkins by flinging them out into a field.  What’s the point of that?  None, really, other than to see how far they will fly and how far they spatter when they hit the ground.

There was plenty to spatter on Saturday, it was raining in the morning as we got on the road at quarter to five, and it never stopped.  The pumpkins were soaked, the trebuchet was soaked, and the field was a muddy mire.  God, it was fun!

That’s really all that needs said, so here’s a few pictures to illustrate.

A wet trebuchet

Cocked and ready

Launch under way

Pretty much the most fun as you can have while dressed in wool!

Like a zip file, there’s been a lot compressed into this summer so far. And not necessarily all of it was reenacting. There have been some encampments, but with school on two nights a week, involving homework for each class, and a program to write for each week, there hasn’t been time to do more than a walk-in to an event on a Saturday or Sunday. Taking college classes in the summer is so wrong on so many levels, but it has to be done, if we ever want to finish before it’s time to retire.

And believe me, we both want to finish as soon as possible. It’s the “possible” that’s hampering us. Based on the homework load from this summer, and looking ahead at what we hope to accomplish by next spring, we’ve already cut the fall term back to one class.

What has to be done this fall and winter that will make it im-“possible” to take more than one course? In a nutshell, clothing. More reenactor clothing. More heavy dresses to make the closet bar sag. More coats and pants for me. You might ask, “Why do you need more clothing?”

The answer can be found on my Flickr page. Can you figure out where we’re headed next April? Let me know.

Christmas is a special season, and even in colonial America, families traveled to be together for the holidays. That was the premise for our occupation of the Kegg – Blasko house in Old Bedford Village on the second Saturday in December, 2008.

Ken, Janet, Charleen and I had been asked to participate in the village’s Old Fashioned Christmas Evening. The goal was to educate and entertain the public as they wandered from warmly lit house to warmly lit house. Light in the window

Our basic storyline was that Charleen and I had traveled from Philadelphia to the Bedford area so that she could visit her sister, Jan, who had moved to the frontier with her trader/trapper husband.

A lot of planning went into trying to create the right atmosphere for the house. We decided that the smells of the holiday would make the most impact. Ken envisaged the boughs of pine around the house and rosemary and bay on the tables to freshen the air. Charleen wanted to have the smells of cooking greet the public. I found her a simple recipe for “Poor Man’s Fruitcake” that seemed like it would fit the bill. In true hope and a prayer fashion, we did not have a chance to make it before the program.

The day started early, with an eight a.m. departure from Jan and Ken’s house, because we knew that there was a lot preparation needed to get the house ready for our guests. We were bringing all the decorations, and all the baking and preparation items, and even water for washing the dirty dishes, so the back of the mini-van was solidly stuffed. We arrived at the village around noon, and immediately began getting the boxes and bags and clothing into the house.

The van was just about empty when Steve from the village walked up looking very agitated and distressed. He blurted out that “the octagon schoolhouse is on fire.” We grabbed buckets and kettles and started at a run up “Fremont Street”. When we got to the schoolhouse, it was apparent that we couldn’t do much about the fire itself, except hope that the Bedford Fire Department arrived soon. The fire was at the top of the roof, twenty feet above our heads, where the vent for the pot bellied stove came through the roof. What we could do was save the contents of the building, bringing them outside to save them from smoke and water damage. The fire department showed up soon after, and the building was saved with only minimal damage.

We still had much to do, Jan was making cookies for the evening, Charleen, the fruitcakes. Ken and I were making pine roping, decorating the tree, and making small logs out of big ones, to keep the baking fires hot and the cabin warm. We also put some cider with mulling spices near the fire to help warm us from the inside as well.

By three thirty the house was looking festive and the smells from all the spices conjured up all the pleasant memories of holidays at Grandma’s. Dining table is ready

However, Grandma wasn’t cooking, so while Jan and Ken went into town to bring back something for dinner, Charleen and I retired upstairs to change into the clothes for the evening. While toasty warmness reigned downstairs by the fire, upstairs was quite a bit cooler and sliding into a linen shirt that was just a few degrees short of frozen was no small feat. Thank goodness that the natural fabrics pick up body heat quickly.

Five o’clock and showtime were rapidly approaching by the time we finished dinner. Ken and Jan barely had time to change into their togs before the first wave of public crossed over the bridge into the village. From then until the nine o’clock closing it was non-stop.

I don’t think we could have scripted the evening any better. Charleen played the rich, spoiled sister to Jan’s hard-worked-but-happy backwoods character. Charleen made sure to let her sister know that everything that she had brought over the mountains was done so at “great expense”. That was a line that was heard throughout the night. So much so that the public was finishing Charleen’s sentences for her with it.

Me, I played the solicitor from Philadelphia who had made this trip grudgingly, because my wife had no doubt nagged me into it. It was an annoyance to my character to be stranded in the wilderness away from my law practice, and forced to deal with the uneducated trapper who was my brother-in-law.

For all concerned it was a successful event. For Roger, Two fine young men it was 788 paying guests through the gate. For the public it was an experience of the past, heightened by the smells of the holidays. For the four of us, it was another event pulled off “at great expense” at least at the expense of sleep — we had to drive back home after a long and very busy day — Jan was scheduled to play for church on Sunday morning.

There are ideas for posts banging around in my head, but they just won’t stay together long enough to get onto the page. I know part of it is I just haven’t sat down with the keyboard and started typing. I’ve had the time, just not the motivation.

I want to write about the Colonial Christmas at Old Bedford Village and the sheer lunacy of driving four hours to get there, setting up the house for the program, spending four hours interacting with the public, packing up and driving four hours home all in the same day.

I want to write about the Rosaryville event back in October. The Hundred Years of Fashion and what it took to put that on.

Then there’s more recent news, like going back to college, twenty two years after getting my degree.

All of this wants to be told. I just need to call the muse and start dictating. Do they still do that?

Flickr Photos