Purim was this past weekend. We continued the tradition started
last year of having "Esther's banquet" after the evening megillah reading
and Purimspiel -- adults-only, food, alcohol, study/discussion. This
year we had about 50 people, I think, up from last year, which is good
to see. Last year I had brought some homebrew along. I hadn't planned
to repeat that this year because there hadn't been a lot of takers -- but
then one of the rabbis, in announcing the event to the morning minyan,
said "and Monica's going to bring her homebrew, right?", so I shrugged and
did. I brought 12-year-old horilka (made with spiced brandy) and some
mead, and both were very popular. (They polished off most of a liter of
horilka! Last year they drank maybe a cup.) I haven't actually been
making stuff for the last decade or so; I guess I should queue up some
more horilka in the fall when cider is in season again. (The ingredients
in horilka are unprocessed cider, honey, brandy or vodka, spices, and time.
Thanks,
hlinspjalda!)
I talked with the vet today. The test of Baldur's liver function came
back normal. As we were discussing next steps (the ones that could
produce answers are dangerous), she asked me just what he eats. There's
dry food out all the time and its rate of consumption hasn't markedly
changed in recent months, but of course I don't know who eats how much.
Baldur has ready access, though. He gets tiny amounts of tuna and canned
food; basically he gets to lick the spoon when I feed such to Erik.
Baldur wolfed down half a can of food in about 15 minutes at the vet's
on Thursday, so my vet suggested giving him real amounts of canned food.
I've generally avoided that because it's unhealthy, but y'know, he's
17 years old now -- am I really worried about him picking up bad dietary
habits at this point? So I'll give that a try; he enthusiastically ate
most of a can of food today (between morning and evening), so we're
off and running.
I see that the post office wants to cut a day of mail delivery to save
costs. I don't mind the cut, but I think it would be much better for
us customers/taxpayers if they chose a day in the middle of the week,
say, Thursday, instead of choosing a schedule that sometimes means four
days between mail deliveries. I assume that giving up all their
Monday holidays isn't on the table. (There actually is a segue from
the previous item to this one: this morning I refilled a mail-order
prescription for Baldur.)
Dani recently ordered some Israeli CDs, and the MP3 tagging has been
strange. Two or three different two-disc sets tagged one disc in English
(transliteration) and one in Hebrew, for instance. Sometimes song titles
will be one way and performers the other. In one case we got gibberish,
presumably a unicode failure or something, and Dani typed stuff in by
hand. Any one of those cases wouldn't have surprised me, but mixing
it up on the same recording is bizarre.