Today Travalon and I didn't have to get up and going with any speed because we had already gone to Mass last night. Eventually we went to Immaculate Heart in Monona so I could check out this "lava rosary," and we got there while 10:30 Mass was going on. I felt like a kid in a candy store, checking out all those beautiful rosaries and chaplets. There was a young girl also looking at the rosaries, and I asked who I paid, but she had no idea. Then a guy wrote what he took on a clipboard and left a $20 bill under the clip, so I took the lava rosary, wrote that I had taken it, and left my own $20 bill under the clip. I got to choose a rosary bag, so (being a sucker for Irish stuff) I took the white one with shamrocks on it, although the Milwaukee Bucks one was very tempting. Here is the rosary made of lava rock.

The problem was that I also wanted a St. Michael chaplet, but the kit (including booklet and bag) was another $20, and I was out of cash but there was no indication of who we would make a check out to. Travalon, that prince among men, knew where there was a branch of our credit union very close by, so we got some more cash, and I got the kit. It also includes a keychain!
We drove out to Sauk as I prayed the lava rosary, and we ate brunch overlooking the river at the new restaurant where the Blue Spoon Diner used to be.

Lots of birds were singing, and we were all using the Merlin app to identify them. It was so idyllic there, but eventually we got going and walked on the mountain bike trails between the VFW Park and the dam, trying to find the small apple tree. We found it, but it's past its peak and only had a few blossoms left on it. At the dam I sat on the sand of the beach and watched pelicans bobbing in the water and flying overhead. Travalon took photos which I will post soon. Our next stop was the Nature Conservancy land with cacti on it in Spring Green, so we took scenic Highway 60 out there. The bluffs are so beautiful with the bright green fresh leaves of spring on all the trees. We took a 20-minute walk looking at all the little wildflowers in the prairie, then we went to Acadia Bookstore for iced coffee. I had a monster cookie, which is like every kind of cookie combined: oatmeal, peanut butter, chocolate chip, and M&M. It was practically a meal unto itself. Then I walked over to the crystal store and bought four crystals.

They are labradorite, I can't remember the light green one, peacock ore, and a small piece of agate that looks like a tiny, snow-covered mountain. It's so charming in real life - this photo doesn't do any of them justice. The peacock ore is iridescent blue and green and purple.
We drove back to Madison, stopping by Marion Lake in Mazomanie on the way and then Dunn's Marsh, where we saw three egrets, a blue heron, and some geese. We went to Mercado Marimar and got some plantain chips for Anna Banana II's party at Rich's house. Rich made ravioli, Jilly Moose made cabbage salad, Kathbert made rosemary carrots, Cecil Markovitch brought garlic bread, Anna Banana II brought chocolates and cooked beets, and the guy who makes fabulous desserts brought an apple butterscotch pie and a carrot cake. His son was there too, and R Van the Terrible, and the Dairyman's Daughter brought the harp she had made at a workshop.

It was supposed to be tuned to a C major scale, and she asked if I could help her tune it, so I checked the top string and it was just a touch flat. I tried to tighten it a little bit, but it was getting flatter, and then the string came out completely. I said Kathbert could fix it, but she was busy cooking, so I don't think it ever got fixed. Argh! I didn't mean to wreck her harp! She said there is another workshop in July if I wanted to make my own harp, so that's something to consider. Of course, I need another musical instrument like I need another rosary, but I've never had a lava rosary nor a harp. It's tempting.