AdvenTURE at Riversleigh Manor

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2008 Adventure Calendar

You are invited to join everyone at Riversleigh Manor where the 2008 AdvenTURE Calendar is being created. This virtual Advent Calendar will be launched on December 1 and will live at the Soul Food Cafe.

For the duration of this calendar Soul Food Community members who have Word Press accounts will be able to engage and participate in Sibyl's Christmas Festivities on Sibyl's Christmas Blog, a blog container which has been operating since members took up residence in the lead up to the annual Soul Food Calendar.

Once the calendar opens you will come to know Riversleigh. You will meet the housekeeper,Ebony Wilder, staff members who help maintain the estate and a cast of fascinating characters who have accepted Sibyl's invitation to stay for the holiday season.

In the spirit of ancient timesthe usual order of the year will be suspended: grudges and quarrels forgotten; wars interrupted or postponed. Businesses, courts, schools will be closed. Rich and poor will become equal, slaves will be served by masters, children will head the family. Cross-dressing and masquerades, merriment of all kinds will prevail. A mock queen -- the Lady of Misrule -- will be crowned. Candles and lamps will chase away the spirits of darkness.

During the 12 days of Christmas, naughty pirate women will roam freely on the earth's surface. They are known more for their practical joking than any real harm--braiding horse's tails, souring milk, putting out the home fire in a particularly indelicate manner.

In other words, it will a Dionysian fun fest and residents will be able to interact at Riversleigh Manor.

And then, just when you think you have had more fun than you can cope with, along comes the twelfth night. At midnight, on the Twelfth Night, in January 2009, a group will leave Riversleigh, while the moon is low, will set out on another adventure with le Enchanteur, that shape shifter who helps pilgrims seeking adventure find adventure and a whole lot more.

Sibyl Riversleigh - image courtesy of Lori Gloyd

2008 Advent - The Rookery

The Rookery - 2008 Advent Calendar 

The Rookery Home Base
This is the home page for the Soul Food Cafe Rookery. During December 2008 you will see birds arriving to nest in the boughs of this tree. Each 'bird' is a valued member of the Soul Food Cafe Rookery, an online writing group for artists and writers from around the world.
Day 1 Riversleigh Manor House
Ravens will arrive at Riversleigh Manor and stay with Sibyl Riversleigh for the holiday season. Learn all about this unique Manor House.
Day 2 Meet Kerry Vincent
Kerry E. Vincent is a lifelong student of the creative process. She has been hooked on creative writing since the first grade, when her teacher enthused, "Kerry has talent - and a very big imagination!"
Day 3 Meet Gail Kavanagh
Come out to the Gypsy Camp under the apple trees at Riversleigh Manor and take a seat around the campfire. There are a couple of plump hens turning on the spit, and plenty of roast potatoes nestling in the ashes.
Day 4 Meet Lori Gloyd
Lori Gloyd is a fourth-generation Californian and grew up in the Los Angeles area where the multicultural diversity and eclectic sensibilities of the area influenced her development as a photographer, writer, and artist.
Day 5 Meet Imogen Crest
Seeking balance from the busy corporate world, Monika Roleff became Imogen Crest, the Hermit, under the influence of Heather Blakey, Enchanteur extraordinaire and webmistress of Soul Food Cafe.
Day 6 Meet Alexis Lozano
I'm a girl who has grown up and lived in a world of words. Numbers make no sense to me, the only counting I actually enjoy doing is counting how many books I already have or how many books I want to read.
Day 7 Meet Cheshire D. Smith
Cheshire D. Smith and D.Q. Jones are pen names of a Pacific Northwest writer/artist who stumbled across Soul Food Café while browsing the web one day and later jumped down the rabbit-hole of blogging. As in all good fiction, her characters soon took charge of the story and she has been following them around ever since.
Day 8 Meet Jill Sullivan
Jill Sullivan is a visual artist who works in various media including textiles, paint, print, book arts and who has also, since joining the Soul Food Café at the beginning of 2008, started to experiment with the written form.
Day 9 Meet Anita Marie Moscoso
As you spend some time exploring what is inside of my jars you might consider a story I wrote about myself- fiction of course and a woman who I met once- in a story of course.
Day 10 Meet Jane Wolfinbarger
She Wolf was born when I screwed up my courage and asked to join an on-line group I had been lurking on the edges of for several years - Soul Food Café.
Day 11 Meet Carol Abel
Traveller, British by birth but living in continental Europe, is in her mid fifties. She recently opted for early retirement and dreams of creating full time.
Day 12 Meet Manon de Forcier
Nurse in real life and mother of three school-aged children, a few years before she turned 40, Manon had no other choice to embrace her "shouting and undeniable" artistic side.
Day 13 Saint Lucia Brings Light
Everything stops in the Rookery as Saint Lucia and a big raven bring come bearing light.
Day 14 Meet Stephanie Hansen
Currently Stephanie is working on the largest creative project of her life: figuring out how to survive and thrive after the loss of her children, her second family. Her visual art and writing helps her with that equally sad and exciting but monumental task.
Day 15 Meet Megan Warren
I found the Soul Food Cafe and Heather Blakey in 2000 after the death of my son. Writing and artwork was my salvation. It kept me going through those dark times. I have made many lifelong friends met in the cafe. I may not be as frequent a visitor as I once was, but being amongst the ravens in the cafe is where I belong.
Day 16 Meet Fran Sbrocchi
A Canadian octogenarian, Fran grew up on the edge of the far north, went to a tiny country school, became a teacher, her childhood ambition for she had counted her teacher's thirteen pairs of shoes. She taught in small schools for a few years and left for the west coast of Canada the year the snow fell higher than telephone poles.
Day 17 Meet Vi Jones
Vi is an author and a poet. She is deeply involved in photography and is excited by the possibilities presented by the digital age. She has recently taken up digital painting. Several years ago, she discovered the Soul Food Cafe and through it has added several new creative dimensions to her life.
Day 18 Meet Thalia
Thalia is everything from a magical-divine child riding Pegasus to an overweight crone with backaches. She can range from a sea turtle to an eagle, from a mother to a Tudor Shakespearean, from a mermaid to a warrior to a squirrel.
Day 19 Meet Gwen Myers
My 'new life' began in September 2003, when I called my mother from Oregon, and begged to come home. There were no possibilities or future for me in Oregon. So, heavily burdened and sore wounded of mind, heart and spirit, I returned to Arizona.
Day 20 Meet Barbara Banta
Barbara follows the trail of life's wanderings with enthusiam and curiosity. Recently retired from 20 years in her local public library, she now looks forward to returning to art, her first love. She may dabble in water colors, but generally she favors the dry mediums, pencil, charcoal and pastels. Portraiture is her favorite subject.
Day 21 Meet Karen Roberts
Karen Roberts is a writer and artist living in Kansas, USA, who also happens to work as a Nurse Practitioner. She stumbled on to Soul Food a few years ago and first toured Lemuria with Le Enchanteur in 2005. Since then she has been in and out of the kingdom, and finds it to be a magical place of infinite welcome and possibility.
Day 22 Meet Priscilla
Priscilla is a small ambassador of goodwill who set out from Australia in 2007. Since her departure she has stayed in the United States, Europe, Turkey and Asia with members of the Rookery and has bought joy to everyone who has had her stay with them. After a brief trip back to Australia she returned to the United States and is currenting residing in Arizona.
Day 23 Meet Heather Blakey
The Soul Food Cafe and Heather Blakey somehow merge together. Soul Food is in its eighth year now. It is primarily a site to promote writing as a daily practice and it is full of tantalizing creative stimuli to tempt any writer or artist who is interested in perfecting the craft.
DAy 24 Twas The Night Before Christmas
The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow
Gave the lustre of mid-day to objects below.
When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,
But eight shining black ravens, emerging from the rear
Christmas Day Greetings from Ravens
It is Christmas Day and the Soul Food Ravens gather around the Christmas Tree to listen to some favourite tales. Some will climb into bed, with boxes of chocolates and big bottles of port, and drift off reading the adventures of others of their kin. Others will dream of stepping through the portal again and leaving for more adventures on the twelfth night.

The Setting And Hostess 

This year the Calendar is set at Riversleigh Manor and your hostess is Lady Sibyl Riversleigh.

The Allelujiah Choir 

Sibyl Riversleigh is the Choir Master and the Soul Food Community have formed a choir. It is this choir who will be featured during the 25 day Advent Celebration at Soul Food.

Join the Festivities at Riversleigh 

A crowd have gathered at Riversleigh manor and are living in right through December and in to the New Year. On the Twelfth Night a group will set out, through the Murmuring Woods to engage in another journey with Enchanteur. The persistent call of the Wild Mother is too hard to resist. You only need to have an account with Word Press and you can be signed in to join the festivities at Riversleigh.

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Five Spectacular AdvenTURE Calendars 

Get in to the Advent mood. Make sure to take the time to dip back in to the past and enjoy the five previous Soul Food Cafe Advent Calendars. Everyone agrees that they are very special.

History of the Advent Calendar 

source: About Com Collectibles

Some form of the Advent Calendar has been around and used for more than 150 years and becomes increasingly popular every year.

The origin of the calendar, like so many of our Christmas traditions, started in Germany in the 19th century. Different methods of counting down the days to the celebration of Christmas were used.

Drawing a chalk line to mark off the days, later lighting a candle every night or putting up small religious pictures marked each day until Christmas. The first printed calendar was produced by Gerhard Lang in Germany. When he was a child, his mother attached little candies to a piece of cardboard and each day Gerhard would take one off. His first (printed) calendar consisted of miniature colored pictures that would be attached to a piece of cardboard each day in December. Later Advent calendars were made with little doors to open on each day. The child might find a small piece of candy, a Christmas picture, a religious picture or a bible verse.

The German calendars were sold until World War II, at which time production was stopped due to the war shortages. After the war, the production of calendars resumed in 1946 by Richard Selmer. Selmer credits President Eisenhower with helping the tradition grow in the United States during his term of office. A newspaper article at the time showed the Eisenhower grandchildren with The Little Town Advent calendar. His company still produces calendars today and can be ordered online. Check out the online museum to see some of their early designs.

The first Advent calendars were based on 24 days with Christmas Eve as the last night to either put up a picture or take a candy. Today, the traditional German calendars still show 24 days, but in the United States, it's not uncommon to also find ones with 25 days -- the last opening to occur on Christmas Day.

Advent Calendars can be found everywhere Christmas is celebrated and have been made with many different themes. There are permanent ones with little drawers that are opened every day, felt pieces to decorate a tree, religious icons behind the different doors and lots of pop-culture/character Advent calendars. The traditional ones are still a paper/cardboard piece with a small treasure behind the doors. The treasures can range from a beautiful miniature religious picture, perhaps a little wooden toy or even a piece of candy (sure to cause problems when there is more than one child in the household).

In our family we have a tradition that dates back to 1969, when I found a wooden tree Advent Calendar. There are painted wooden ornaments and each day another ornament is chosen to be added to the tree. On Christmas day, the star tree topper is finally added. The tree has grown a little shabby and the ornaments are getting tattered, but it's still a tradition looked forward to every December.

It's not to late to start a tradition like this for your family, one that will become a real treasure in the years to come.

Bronner's Advent Calendars 

The origin of the Advent Calendar can be traced back to the 19th century. Religious families made a chalk line for every day in December until Christmas Eve. The families also tacked little pictures, one for each day in December, on the wall.
Bronner's Advent Calendars
Advent calendars are a wonderful and fun way to keep track of how many days are left until Christmas. Originally, the advent calendar was created in the 1800's, and families used chalk to draw a line to represent each day from the first until the 25th of December. In 1851, the first handmade Advent calendar was created. Before this, the markings representing each passing day were usually drawn on a door. Another alternative was to hang a small picture on the wall for every day in December.

While some of the first Advent calendars made were actually clocks, a man by the name of Later Lang published the first actual calendar to be printed. Originally, it had small pictures that could be applied to the calendar as each day passed. Eventually in 1908, the Advent calendar came with little windows that could be opened as each day passed with a different picture behind each window. To entice children to participate in using the calendars, eventually a small piece of chocolate was included behind each of the windows. The chocolate was molded into holiday shapes such as bells, trees, or gifts. Eventually Advent calendars were sold at drugstores all over the United States, and were especially popular in the late 1950s-1960s.

Today, Advent calendars are still sold at Christmas time. They can come in just about any theme from religious to snowmen and Santa Claus. The calendars are a fun way for the whole family to count down to the big day, and teach us patience and steadfastness. They are fairly inexpensive and are a wonderful way to anticipate the arrival of Christmas day.

A Traditional Advent Calendar 

'Twas the Night Before Christmas Advent Calendar

Amazon Price: $7.95 (as of 12/25/2009) Buy Now

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by heatherblakey

Heather Blakey, is the creative mixologist, the artistic midwife and purveyor of creative stimuli who built The Soul Food Cafe from scratch. Heather i... (more)

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