That was so beautiful…and I almost wept when I heard you say that it isn’t Thanksgiving here. I feel the same way, Thanksgiving is the one holiday I miss the most now that I live in the UK. Just knowing that my whole family is getting together make me happy and sad. I just can’t manage to do anything here because it just wouldn’t feel the same…the same with the 4th of July! I’ll have to arrange a vacation home for those days in a year or too….right now Christmas is a priority.
I’ve just discovered your wonderful podcast and am listening to them all in order as I work on a dreadful policy-governance manual page-layout project in the middle of a heatwave in Washington DC.
Thanksgiving has always been my favorite day — well, favorite holiday. The day before is my absolute favorite day of the year. Listening to this made me thankful for all the Thanksgivings I’ve had: from traditional with 20 people to the day-late in mourning, to my daughter’s first when I passed the 100% homemade tradition on to her. Thank you so much. I will listen to this again in 5 months, and will tuck the print-out of your essay in with my grandmother’s cajun eggplant-rice dressing recipe (what Louisiana folks serve instead of mashed potatoes) to be handed down.
I only just subscribed to your podcast two days ago, and I’m making my way through from the beginning–it is excellent!
This episode, Snow Day, was so beautiful, I think you’ve won my everlasting love as a result. I, like others, cried when I listened to it. Thanksgiving coincides with my birthday quite often, so it’s my favorite holiday, and the idea of finding a moment that feels like Thanksgiving even when it isn’t Thanksgiving–beautiful.
I listened to this podcast just last week, the day before Thanksgiving. The words stayed with me all Thanksgiving morning as I recognized the hush and quiet streets even here in Hollywood, CA. Your essay lent a recognized magic to Thanksgiving that I had previously taken for granted. I know this will always be remembered each year and, with Arlo Guthrie’s Alices Restaurant, will be a traditional listn.
Thank you.
Being a novice to podcasting, I thought I’d start at the beginning of yours and just listened to this podcast over the weekend (June 2, 2007). Although it isn’t the Thanksgiving season, the music by Alison Crowe was hauntingly beautiful. I had never heard this Christmas Carol before and I looked it up on the web.
Your podcasts are wonderful! Thank you for continuing.
I recently found out about podcasting and this was the first podcast sight I was given by a friend. So I started at the beginning and was trully touched by your snow day episode it trully blessed my heart.
I haven’t been able to keep up with your podcasts for a long time and really wanted to catch up. But I didn’t want to start where I left off, so to speak, so I decided to start from the beginning again. And I enjoy it so much! And the time is just right since you started podcasting almost exactly two years ago. I’ve just litseden to “A Snow Day” and I love it. It’s so beautiful. And it’s the perfect episode for today, because it’s been snowing here in Stockholm all day. I’m at the office and decided to set aside this day for cleaning up my desk which has been very messy the last couple of months. And I hate that. So today I’m tidying my desk, watching the snow fall, listening to Cast On and drinking hot chocolate. Perfect.
[...] And how I was listening to Cast On and catching up there right now. Well, I’d listened to Episode 1.5 yesterday and was thrilled at hearing Allison Crowe’s In the Bleak Midwinter, but not [...]
[...] catch up. If you don’t fancy knitting, the let me induce you to at least download and listen to Episode 1.5. It’s about a snowy day and all you have to do is close your eyes and listen. It’s a [...]
Hi! Here it is Oct 14th 2009 and I found your podcast. I am starting from the beginning and just listened to the 2005 Thanksgiving podcast.. It touched my heart very much.. Something that you recorded 4 years ago is still affecting people today… I have 4 years of podcasts to catch up on and that is going to be a joy.
Beautiful, just beautiful. So good I had to stop and have a quiet muse afterwards.
That was a truly wonderful piece of radio, by half way through tears were pouring down my face but I couldn’t tear myself away to get a tissue.
And In The Bleak Midwinter is my absolute favourite carol.
This was simply lovely.
Thank you.
Thank you for that. Beautiful.
That was so beautiful…and I almost wept when I heard you say that it isn’t Thanksgiving here. I feel the same way, Thanksgiving is the one holiday I miss the most now that I live in the UK. Just knowing that my whole family is getting together make me happy and sad. I just can’t manage to do anything here because it just wouldn’t feel the same…the same with the 4th of July! I’ll have to arrange a vacation home for those days in a year or too….right now Christmas is a priority.
I’ve just discovered your wonderful podcast and am listening to them all in order as I work on a dreadful policy-governance manual page-layout project in the middle of a heatwave in Washington DC.
Thanksgiving has always been my favorite day — well, favorite holiday. The day before is my absolute favorite day of the year. Listening to this made me thankful for all the Thanksgivings I’ve had: from traditional with 20 people to the day-late in mourning, to my daughter’s first when I passed the 100% homemade tradition on to her. Thank you so much. I will listen to this again in 5 months, and will tuck the print-out of your essay in with my grandmother’s cajun eggplant-rice dressing recipe (what Louisiana folks serve instead of mashed potatoes) to be handed down.
I only just subscribed to your podcast two days ago, and I’m making my way through from the beginning–it is excellent!
This episode, Snow Day, was so beautiful, I think you’ve won my everlasting love as a result. I, like others, cried when I listened to it. Thanksgiving coincides with my birthday quite often, so it’s my favorite holiday, and the idea of finding a moment that feels like Thanksgiving even when it isn’t Thanksgiving–beautiful.
I listened to this podcast just last week, the day before Thanksgiving. The words stayed with me all Thanksgiving morning as I recognized the hush and quiet streets even here in Hollywood, CA. Your essay lent a recognized magic to Thanksgiving that I had previously taken for granted. I know this will always be remembered each year and, with Arlo Guthrie’s Alices Restaurant, will be a traditional listn.
Thank you.
Being a novice to podcasting, I thought I’d start at the beginning of yours and just listened to this podcast over the weekend (June 2, 2007). Although it isn’t the Thanksgiving season, the music by Alison Crowe was hauntingly beautiful. I had never heard this Christmas Carol before and I looked it up on the web.
Your podcasts are wonderful! Thank you for continuing.
I recently found out about podcasting and this was the first podcast sight I was given by a friend. So I started at the beginning and was trully touched by your snow day episode it trully blessed my heart.
Thank you
I haven’t been able to keep up with your podcasts for a long time and really wanted to catch up. But I didn’t want to start where I left off, so to speak, so I decided to start from the beginning again. And I enjoy it so much! And the time is just right since you started podcasting almost exactly two years ago. I’ve just litseden to “A Snow Day” and I love it. It’s so beautiful. And it’s the perfect episode for today, because it’s been snowing here in Stockholm all day. I’m at the office and decided to set aside this day for cleaning up my desk which has been very messy the last couple of months. And I hate that. So today I’m tidying my desk, watching the snow fall, listening to Cast On and drinking hot chocolate. Perfect.
[...] And how I was listening to Cast On and catching up there right now. Well, I’d listened to Episode 1.5 yesterday and was thrilled at hearing Allison Crowe’s In the Bleak Midwinter, but not [...]
I wish it snowed here!
Very poignant and touching.
[...] catch up. If you don’t fancy knitting, the let me induce you to at least download and listen to Episode 1.5. It’s about a snowy day and all you have to do is close your eyes and listen. It’s a [...]
Hi! Here it is Oct 14th 2009 and I found your podcast. I am starting from the beginning and just listened to the 2005 Thanksgiving podcast.. It touched my heart very much.. Something that you recorded 4 years ago is still affecting people today… I have 4 years of podcasts to catch up on and that is going to be a joy.
Thanks!!!!
Lori in Columbus Ohio