Personally, I think the easy way out would have been to say nothing about the issue at all, but time seems to have proven the shadowy Mr Rumpf at least partially correct and only a month after he wrote the issue really does seem dead. I had reckoned the community was not ready for the idea of alcohol at a public event, so imagine my surprise when, about an hour or so before this month's “Fun Friday”, we ran into Wilma McClung and were told a beer garden was on the program once again.
After a leisurely dinner at Jack Mason's, I was more inclined toward a quiet nap on the back porch, but civic duty called and, collecting our camp chairs from the car, Carolinita and I headed up Ridgeway for our fair share of the beer-soaked debauchery.

Wilma said that Mercer would be playing and, as we approached, there on the stage stood a man I immediately recognized, though until that moment I did not have a name to go with the face. One of the more charming – or perhaps maddening – aspects of small-town life is that everyone knows everyone, at least by sight. You simply cannot go about your business in a place this size without seeing, and being seen, by the same folks, over and over again. There are people here that I have waved-at every few days or so for years, without ever knowing their names.
An excellent case in point is Mercer Johnson, who lives within spitting distance of here. I have known him for years, but unfortunately only as “that carpenter guy”. Little did I know that he was also a drummer in the Silverbacks, the band that entertained us that Friday.

All in all, it was a pleasant evening, despite the constant threat of rain. The crowd was not excessive, but genuinely seemed to enjoy themselves. There were hot dogs and ice cream for sale. We set up our chairs near the top of the bank plaza, with a clear view of both the stage and the beer garden.

That fellow in the purple shirt is our mayor, Mr Don Carter, caught here by our candid photographer in mid-debauch. Originally, C and I were sitting more or less to ourselves, but we were soon joined by the McClungs and other neighbors, at least one of whom had only just moved to our street. I saw Butch Reid there, owner of the Antique Mall, in Lexington. We noted how well our neighborhood was represented at the event and then he proceeded to rap me for missing the 105th-birthday bash for the Masonic Theatre, 4th of July weekend. He had a point.
With all due respect to Buck Rumpf, his concerns do not seem well-founded, at least not in retrospect. The crowd I saw was entirely peaceable and family-friendly. There were children and parents with little ones in strollers everywhere one looked. There were probably more people outside the beer garden than in it, but I am certain that the only thing that might have kept people away was the threat of rain – and rain it did, though thankfully not until nearly 9:00 and the end of the show.
The next “Fun Friday” is August 27th and we are looking forward to it.
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