Here’s the back story:
Christine Cecchetti and the Eastman Recreation folks donated the leftover evergreen boughs that Maintenance had harvested from the forest for the annual holiday wreath making workshops. Diane Cameron and Bob Munson wrestled two huge tarps full of the greenery into their cars and wrestled them out and dumped them in Diane’s side yard. Then it snowed. Then it rained. A lot! I feared that the boughs would be broken and wet, but by some Christmas miracle, they came through dry and looking as fresh as new. The lesson learned was that huge bundles of boughs should not be moved in vehicles as small and inaccessible as cars. Vice President Betsy Fowler asked her friend and neighbor Merritt Cavanaugh if he’d be willing to help transport the green in his pick up truck, and he readily agreed :-)
The next problem came from the AgraWool which is an environmentally conscious alternative to floral foam blocks. It consists of basalt rock spun into fibers. The volunteer group of Kristina Cole, Diane Cameron, Anke Clews, Sue Johnson, Ilene Ladd, Nancy Menton, and Suzie Weiss took on the task of using serrated knives to cut the blocks of AgraWool into a size they could squeeze into the mugs. Before long, a mist of tiny fibers filled the air and caused the volunteers to cough. You know what they say about ‘no good deed….' I remembered seeing a container of masks in the entranceway so could at least give them some measure of relief. Not one of them gave up until all 140 mugs were filled, watered, and ready to go. What an amazing bunch of women.
The final glitch which was the least troublesome came the morning of the event when I stopped at the club’s storage unit to pick up the GGC sign and some boxes only to discover that the lock was frozen shut. Thank goodness we set up all the mugs and decorations the day before.
Rather than tell you the rest of the story, I’ll let the pictures show the results despite a few stumbling blocks. It was all worth it in the end.