Yesterday I had to work on campus, which is unusual for a Tuesday, but we have so much to do to prepare for the upcoming semester. (Though it hasn't escaped my attention that I'm the only one on the team who has to be on campus every day this week...) Then my Irish teacher picked me up from the Killer Building, and we met another woman from the Shamrock Club in the parking lot of a big box store. We were running a little behind because of the rush hour traffic, but it didn't matter because the picnic was in full swing when we got to the outdoor theater, with lots of other Shamrock Club members and some of the actors from the play. There was an acoustic band playing Crosby, Stills, and Nash, which didn't seem to have anything to do with the play, the story of five spinster sisters in Ireland in the 30's. The narrator was the illegitimate child of the youngest sister, and parts of the story were hilarious, but ultimately things did not go too smoothly for the sisters, or their brother, a priest who had worked in Uganda for years until he started "going native." We certainly had a beautiful evening for an outdoor play, complete with a full "super moon" shining above. Here is a photo of the stage.
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These photos were taken along the Minnesota north shore between Duluth and the Canadian border. The first couple pics of the lake and the bird were right from the balcony of our lodge in Tofte. The gorge pics of the Onion River were taken on a walk I took 1/4 mile down the road from our lodge, where I also took pics of the views from a state wayside which is up on a ridge. The first beach and island pics along with the lighthouse are at Split Rock Lighthouse State Park. The first waterfall, High Falls, was on a hike at Tettagouche State Park. The red rocky beach was the Iona State Research area, and the pics of the bigger waterfall, also called High Falls was at Grand Portage State Park, just a mile across the river from the Canadian border- across the river on the other pic are the woods of Ontario. Also the Native American signs with the animal pics are in the language of a regional tribe, although I cant remember its name.
The natural throne was also at Split Rock Lighthouse SP
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