Pumpkin Carving Ideas!

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Monday Morning

Memo


October 23, 2023

Esperanza Estates

This Week in Esperanza Estates

Pickleball

7:00-9:00 am

Everyday

Pickleball Courts

Water Aerobics

8:30-9:30 a.m.

Mon, Wed & Fri

EE pool

Gardeners

8:30 a.m.

Tuesday

261 S. Napa

Thirsty Thursday

4:00 p.m.

Thursday

Ramada

 Neighborhood News

Gardeners

From Mary Harp


The Gardeners will meet 8:30 am Tuesday morning, October 24 at the Harp Residence at 261 S. Napa. We will start potting starts for the Gardeners' Plant Sale December 2.  Bring hand tools to plant and any starts or pots for potting (plastic pots are fine). New members are always welcome to join us. Call Rod Harp at 520.329.9103 with any questions.


Wanted from EE residents - your unwanted terracotta pots, yard art and small plants for our EE Garden Club sale on December 2. We can pick up donated items at your location. Contact Rod Harp at 520.329.9103

Thirsty Thursday....New Start Time 4 pm


We're having Thirsty Thursday, Esperanza Estates' Happy Hour, this week on Thursday, October 24, at the Ramada. With our bit cooler temps, we are moving the start time to 4 pm. This is a no-host event, so everyone brings their own beverages and maybe a snack to share. Most importantly, bring yourselves on over to the Ramada for a fun and friendly visit. Hope to see you there!

MARK YOUR CALENDARS!!

PUMPKIN CARVING CONTEST and HALLOWEEN POTLUCK!

From Dean and Robin Lockwood

robinodino@gmail.com


The Hospitality Committee WELCOMES you back to EE (if you were gone!), and we are ready to party with you!  We are hosting a Halloween event on Tuesday, October 31st at the Ramada. We are hoping residents of Esperanza Estates will participate in a PUMPKIN CARVING CONTEST to help us decorate! We ask that you carve the pumpkins AT HOME, and bring them, along with a delicious dish to share to our Halloween Pot Luck dinner. There will be “fabulous” prizes awarded for outstanding Pumpkin Carving!!! Of course, you may also dress up in your best Halloween costume, too, if you desire!


What: Halloween “Welcome Back to EE” Halloween Pot Luck Dinner

When: Tuesday, October 31

Time: 4:30 Happy Hour   5:00 Dinner


Special details: Bring a dish to share. Plates, utensils, napkins, beverages (wine, beer, water, soda) and dessert will be provided by the Hospitality committee. Also bring your entry for the PUMPKIN CARVING CONTEST! Feel free to wear your costumes!

Cost:  FREE

Hospitality Meeting

From Robin Lockwood


The Hospitality Committee will be holding our first meeting of the season on Tuesday, Nov. 2nd at 10 am. We will be planning our 2023 -2024 calendar of monthly events and looking for ideas for our Christmas event.


If you are new to EE and are interested in working with an energetic team that hosts monthly themed events based around fun meal gatherings at the Ramada, we would love to have you join us for this meeting! 


If you have any questions, please call Robin Lockwood at 612-618-5582.

Book Club

From Hugh Rhine


The EE Book Club November meeting is canceled...just too many conflicts! However, we will resume on December 14, 11:00 am, at the Ramada. The December book is Finding Chika by Mitch Albom, discussion will be led by Lynn Theder. Everyone is welcome...both girls and guys! Hope you can join us.


Book list:


December 14, Finding Chika by Mitch Albom, led by Lynn Theder

 

January 11, Fallen Leaves by Will Durant, led by Hugh Rhine

 

February 8, The Mitford Affair by Marie Benedict, led by Roberta Bower


March 14, Lady Tans Circle of Women by Lisa See, and led by Linda Sielken

Caring Connections

Food Donations

From Sandy LaVoi


Our EE Food Collection Shelf is at the Ramada, as we continue to deliver non-perishable food donations to the Community Food Bank. Thanks to everyone for your continued support. It's greatly appreciated.

Save Your Pull Tabs/Pop Tabs


We also collect aluminum can pull tabs/pop tabs at the Ramada and donate them to a local school who redeems them for money for school supplies and equipment. There is a collection can on the counter at the Ramada where you can drop them off. Thanks in advance for your contributions!

Good To Know

Six Things You May Not Know

About Pumpkins


Source: History.com Editors, October 2, 2023

https://www.history.com/news/pumpkin-facts-halloween-jack-o-lantern


In the United States, pumpkins go hand in hand with the fall holidays of Halloween and Thanksgiving. Harvested in October, this nutritious and versatile orange fruit features flowers, seeds and flesh that are edible and rich in vitamins. Pumpkin is used to make soups, desserts and breads, and many Americans include pumpkin pie in their Thanksgiving meals. 


Carving pumpkins into jack-o’-lanterns is a popular Halloween tradition that originated hundreds of years ago in Ireland. Back then, however, jack-o’-lanterns were made out of turnips or potatoes; it wasn’t until Irish immigrants arrived in America and discovered the pumpkin that a new Halloween ritual was born. Now pumpkins are commonly placed on stoops in the falls months, and get carved ahead of Halloween night. 


Here are six things you may not know about them.


1. From Central America to Global Gardens

Pumpkins are a member of the gourd family, which includes cucumbers, honeydew melons, cantaloupe, watermelons and zucchini. These plants are native to Central America and Mexico, but now grow on six continents—all but Antarctica.


2. Pioneer Crop

Indigenous North Americans have grown pumpkins for thousands of years—even before the cultivation of beans and corn.


3. The Etymology of a Gourd

The name pumpkin originated from the Greek word Pepõn, which means large melon. It was then nasalized by the French into "pompo”, which the English changed "pompon" to "Pumpion,” and so on until American settlers arrived at the word we use today.


4. Illinois: Pumpkin Capital

According to the 2017 U.S. Agriculture Census, Illinois is the largest producer of pumpkins in the United States. It harvests twice as many pumpkin acres as any of the other top-producing states.


5. Record-Breaking Gourds

The heaviest pumpkin was grown in Belgium in 2016 and weighed a whopping 2,624 pounds. The heaviest pumpkin in the U.S. was grown in New Hampshire in 2018 and weighed 2,528 pounds. The largest pumpkin pie ever baked was in Ohio in 2010. It weighed 3,699 pounds and was over 20 feet in diameter.


6. Timely Planting, Yearly Harvest

Pumpkin seeds should be planted between the last week of May and the middle of June. They take between 90 and 120 days to grow and are picked in October when they are bright orange in color. Their seeds can be saved to grow new pumpkins the next year.

Events

ON GOLDEN POND

Oct 27, 2023 - Nov 5, 2023

A play by The Santa Cruz Shoestring Players


This 1979 play by Ernest Thompson was adapted for the screen in 1981 starring Henry Fonda, Katharine Hepburn and Jane Fonda. The plot focuses on an aging couple Ethel and Norman Thayer, who spend each summer at their home on a lake called Golden Pond. During the year the story takes place, they are visited by daughter Chelsea with her fiancé Bill Ray and his son Billy Ray Jr. from whom Norman learns lessons about modern teenage awareness.           

Click here for more information about CPAC events


Click here: Community Events Calendar

Funny Bone

Source: John Nesavich

Source: Mark Porsisi Jokes

Source: Scary Halloween Images

Source: Ageing Gracefully Jokes

Please send your neighborhood pictures, jokes, suggestions, and comments to

Judy Hayes, jkhayes70@gmail.com, 720-201-9260 and

John Nesavich, jnesavich@gmail.com, 303-880-3261

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