The Salt Shaker ~ May 2025

Praises – Prescription discount for eyedrops; seeing God everywhere; remodel progress, slow but steady

Prayers – Weight loss, getting back in shape; roofer still needed; RV a/c, awning, leak(s), toilet seal

“The end of the matter; all has been heard.  Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the whole duty of man.  For God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil.”  Ecclesiastes 12:13-14 ESV

Hello to our followers, family, and friends:

Devotion Thought: Living by faith is uncomfortable when the answer to many of your questions involves a “just trust me on this” component. God asks His followers to rest in His plan, relinquishing control over seemingly critical parts of their lives, including the big things like jobs and health.

May was a month of travel including some out-of-state music, sight-seeing, and visiting family!  Before our adventures began John worked on repairing the center cross in front of Journey Church by fitting a new green-treated cross beam and torching it to match the other weathered crosses, and he also made some great potatoes for breakfast.  Connie did a bit of yard work with some monster ant hills, grass thistles, adding a rose trellis, turning/loosening the clay berm dirt, and planting a bag of wildflower seeds/mulch.  Connie started and John finished up reburying the front drain pipe, and we added a section so the back drain pipe ended in the culvert under the driveway.  While mowing John got something in his eye, it cleared up a bit the following day, but a visit to the eye doctors the next day found something still there along with a swollen oil gland; all was taken care of plus a week of steroid eye drops ($84 at Walmart but pharmacist found a discount price of $35).  Connie had another larger dizzy spell, possibly related to some heat stroke?  In general, she has learned to take it easy, not turn her neck in certain positions, get up slowly from bed, and others usually do not notice when little spells happen (including John).  

Musically, we were busy the first part of the month joining the Booneville Dulcimer Club for a practice, the Natchez Trace Visitor Center, and one nursing home.  As we left home for the nursing home program, we had a small lizard peeking his head up from the driver’s headlight area – he stayed with us at least 20 minutes until we met a semi-truck coming the opposite way at 55 mph!  We were involved with Sunday morning music at Journey Church and Cross Point Church before leaving the state, the monthly SALT seniors meeting at Journey Church, and one of the jam sessions in Iuka.  Connie rewrote a song, sorted and organized some of our old song files, and started working on making sound samples from our recordings for our web site.  Salty Strings received an invite from some Campers On Missions friends to entertain at their South Carolina gathering – that is what started our May adventures.    

We ordered slam latches from the RV parts department but when we stopped to get them, they wouldn’t work so we ordered the correct ones ($120 each) online to arrive the 9th.  Turns out on the 9th they arrived in Chicago (from Wentzville, Missouri), then went to Texas, and were in Memphis on the 12th so John taped up the hatches and latch areas for travel.  Travel preparation started a week early; the trailer hitch was put back in the truck, John avoided the rainy days getting just a few tools and things packed up, our mail was on hold, and mowing arrangements were made with one of our renters.

Our small-town post office is a blessing!  Connie called first thing Wednesday morning to find our slam latch order had arrived; we were able to pull off the road on our way by, pick up the package, and be on our way at 8:30 am May 13.  Traffic through Atlanta wasn’t bad and we arrived at a SOWER project for our overnight stay around 4 pm EST; a long, overcast day with a few rainy spots.  John got us parked, put on the new slam latches, and we had too many TV channels to choose from.  Travel day 2 is always harder, even though a much shorter day and no pressure, we arrived at the Western South Carolina Fairground (Aiken, SC), to a warm welcome, got parked and mostly set up, were treated to a Chinese Buffet dinner in town, and went to bed early.  John worked two mornings with the other volunteers putting up 1x12x12’ wood boards on the interior of a huge insulated metal building to be used for meeting areas at the fairground. 

Friday we tuned and practiced for our concert following a great lasagna meal, and Saturday we relaxed a bit before a potluck meal, followed by us leading a jam session.  We had to refresh our rusty memories for setting up our sound system for Friday night!  Saturday brought quite a few participants, Connie accompanied a singer and flute with our keyboard, and we had time to share 3 songs.  We met a few of these wonderful volunteers a year ago in Florida and it was so good to see them again and play along with a few of their songs.  The Campers on Missions gathering ended after church Sunday morning and we started planning for the rest of our travels, did some mending, passed our trailer key to a friend ‘just in case’ something happened while we were away, and enjoyed some evening fellowship.  When we returned May 29 to pick up our RV, we had a lazy day to get packed for the trip home, there were no leaks, we enjoyed another Chinese Buffet meal with our friends, and got our ‘tree’ passenger wrapped up for the trip in the shower this time. 

It seemed we had plenty of hot days throughout the month, wherever we were.  Thunderstorms and heavy rains a few times before our travels, with more severe Mississippi storms after we left.  The fairground in South Carolina was in the 80’s by 8-9 am and plenty of humidity!  South Carolina continued to have storms while we were away with lots of wind and rain.  Early mornings were nice for porch sitting in Virginia, in general not quite as humid but still hot, and only a bit of rain towards the end of our visit. 

It was a tough month for exercise with all the different schedules.  Connie determined to walk every other day while at the fairground and at our sons in Virginia, starting with 20 minutes then 30 minutes.  The fairgrounds were part field roads and part houses with a large white barking dog tied outside, a cat standing guard inside a fenced yard with a “beware of dogs” sign, and lots of plants including cactus, rabbit’s foot clover, wisteria with pods, and the pine cone graveyard.  Walking was harder in Virginia with all the hills.  We did some swimming earlier in the month and will have to do a lot more to lose the 5# we each gained during our travels. 

We had one date night in May and were able to attend both our churches before leaving, what a blessing to have friends and congregations praying for us.  In other news:  John researched a ‘free replacement window’ ad that led to a meeting with a huge price tag that we declined.  Connie tried one more time to print our mailed April newsletters in color, the printer is officially dead now, black and white photos are pretty ugly.  After some heavy rain we found a bedroom ceiling light was full of water (over Connie’s side of the bed) so we are keeping watch and trying to find this leak.  And, like everyone, there is always something else to fret about.  Our dining room awning went out and didn’t want to come back in (it did later in the day but we haven’t tried it since).  

May 20 found us back on the road headed to Fredericksburg, Virginia to be with family.  It was a great travel day, almost all on the interstate, 480 miles, 9.5 hours, with stops to add DEF and change drivers.  Along the way was a large thick group of blooming mimosa trees, a Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church, and the muddy brown Pee Dee River which we joked about.  Our almost 5-year-old granddaughter was with her mom at a birthday party so we had a bit of time with our 6-month-old granddaughter (first time in person) and son.  They have a wonderful place for us to stay!  There were lots of movies, teething baby rocking, puzzles with older granddaughter and grandpa, morning quiet reading or rocking time on the front porch, blowing bubbles, Sunday morning church, a very interesting bug on the porch, and walks through the now full subdivision.  We had a great Memorial Day breakfast brought in by our daughter-in-law’s family, along with some great fellowship and catching up since our last visit a year ago. 

The first morning in Virginia was cold and rainy, and Connie forgot to pack a jacket, her toothpaste, and hair brush!  So, a trip to Goodwill and Walmart was in order.  They live in a newer subdivision and it was time for the second coat of asphalt on the long, uphill driveway; the last four days of our trip we hiked up and down their front lawn to our vehicles.  We took their family out to Chick-fil-a for a belated anniversary lunch after stopping at the library (picked up lots of books for the older granddaughter, and a couple of free Christian books for us).  They took us along for a double birthday party with Mexican tacos, all the sides, Horta (Connie loves this pink milky drink), and a live band.  There were some pretty special meals for us as well – waffles, lots of bacon, brisket, grilled shrimp and salmon, Brussel sprouts, Korean BBQ with fried rice, and of course ice cream.  They made sure we had some things to do as well.  Connie’s task was to cut some glass for a broken double-sided picture frame; the first glass was too thick for the frame so there was a last-minute trip to Walmart purchasing two very cheap frames and cutting them to fit, it worked great.  John had several things including a trip to Lowe’s for ideas for wood for a wall frame in our son’s guitar room, helping put together yard maintenance items, and the must do trip to the coffee shop. 

Our next adventure was a mini-vacation staying with our church friend’s sister and husband near the coast in Newport, North Carolina.  We had a leisurely travel day about half each interstate and highways.  It was quite a surprise to find beautiful black dirt, gold fields (wheat or barley?), tobacco fields, 2’ high corn fields, a cabbage field, and a row of large pine trees with about 4’ deep pine needle mulch at the base.  After some rain we arrived around 5, unloaded our things, and they treated us to a wonderful seafood dinner at a restaurant along the ‘sound.’  Our prayers were answered for dry weather the next day for sight-seeing.  We were driven on a tour of Morehead City, Beaufort (the Maritime Museum was closed, but a boat building shop was open and we toured a few shops, saw some beautiful flowers, received a free piece of fudge, and some great boats), Harker’s Island (some Canada geese with two goslings, the ferry to Cape Lookout lighthouse and Shackleford Banks where there are some wild horses was closed), and a local thrift shop where we purchased a book, frying pan, and wardrobe bag (they work great for our pillows) all for less than $5.  We attended a potluck and study at their church (Acts 16:20-25, shackles are not what we thought) meeting some more of God’s wonderful family!  We gained a back seat passenger for our trip home; they dug up a 5’ popcorn tree, bare roots wrapped up, for us to get back to our friends in MS.  After getting rained on at the fairground (SC) we black bagged and tied it to keep in as much moisture as possible until planted, now it’s up to God. 

We left mid-morning May 29 for our last travel day without the fifth-wheel.  (We hit 22 mpg average once!)  We took the long way heading east to catch the bridge to the Emerald Isle for glimpses of the water and beaches, the highway was 35-45 mph and it didn’t look that long on the map, then followed back highways to Interstate 20.  There were fields being prepped for planting, a few tobacco fields, and a peacock wandering about in someone’s yard.  John took over driving with a rainy start on the interstate near Florence, SC, then hit three windy drenching downpours along with rush-hour traffic around Columbia, SC.  We arrived, the rain quit for us to unload at 5:45pm, slightly frazzled to enjoy being back in our RV.  We had excellent accommodations while away, but there’s still no place like home.

May 31 we were back on the road headed to Mississippi.  We split the drive, going 244 miles to our overnight about 10 miles into Alabama (Heflin).  There were several slowdowns going through Atlanta, the roads seemed especially bumpy, we gained an hour getting back to CST, and it seemed we stopped every hour for fuel or bathroom breaks!  John chose this spot because they had a restaurant on site, thinking breakfast; wrong, it was called Damn Yankees, had an interesting owner (also manager of RV park), a bar, but some good pizza (to go) for our supper.  The next morning, Sunday, we met our neighbor overnight travelers, found they were Christian and we had prayer before leaving and encouraging each other.  Another 234 miles and we were home, June 1st.   All total May 13-June 1:  7 travel days, 2174 miles, 4 locations, and we’ll see how many days to get back to normal life!

Devotion Thought:  Most American adults believe that culture plays a role in establishing moral norms.  However, a majority also agrees that “the Bible provides us with absolute moral truths which are the same for all people in all situations, without exception.”  Absolute truth has its source in the Lord.  No human can think up or discover a new truth.  As you study and assimilate His Word into your life, you can count on the Holy Spirit to guide you in the truth.

Did you know:  Mother’s Day was held in Boston in 1872 at the suggestion of Julia Ward Howe, writer of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” But it was Anna Jarvis, daughter of a Methodist minister who made it a national event. During the Civil War, Anna’s mother organized Mother’s Day Work Clubs to care for wounded soldiers. She raised money for medicine, inspected bottled milk, improved sanitation, and hired women to care for families where mothers suffered from tuberculosis. In her mother’s honor, Anna persuaded her church to set aside the second Sunday in May, which was the anniversary of her mother’s death, as a day to appreciate all mothers. Anna organized a letter-writing campaign to establish a national Mother’s Day. President Woodrow Wilson then proclaimed the first national Mother’s Day as a “public expression of love and reverence for the mothers of our country.”

“And the Lord commanded us to do all these statutes, to fear the Lord our God, for our good always, that He might preserve us alive, as we are this day.  And it will be righteousness for us, if we are careful to do all this commandment before the Lord our God, as He has commanded us.”  Deuteronomy 6:24-25 ESV

Until next month – thanks for traveling with us!

John and Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry

Contact Information:
Mail:  John & Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry
30A Hwy 367, Burnsville, MS  38833

Phone – John 909-336-8910 or Connie 909-336-8912
Email – SaltyStrings@hotmail.com
Facebook – Salty Strings Music Ministry
Web site – SaltyStrings.com

ONLINE DONATIONS via PayPal through our web site

TRAVEL PLANS AND UPCOMING LOCATIONS
** June-July – Mississippi, remodel work, music
** August 1-21 – SOWER Project, Union Grove, WI; friends and family
** August ?-September – Clinton, Illinois area, family, volunteer work, friends, music
** September – Hopeful visits Litchfield, Carlinville, Macomb, IL and Kirksville, MO

The Salt Shaker ~ April 2025

Praises – God is good all the time!  Progress with our addition, visiting friends, new music friends, physical strength to keep working

Prayers – New color printer for CD’s and newsletter, motivation, roofer, RV repairs and air conditioning, safe travels

“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance.  Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.”    James 1:2-4 NIV

Hello to our family, friends, and followers:

April brought some interesting weather; thunder storms, gusty winds, heavy rain, dark skies, tornado watches, and one tornado warning.  Our rental family and us spent a couple of hours on the addition porch waiting and watching; the entry to the shelter was flooded and slick with mud.  Getting that to drain properly is now on our list of repairs needed!  Most of our nights were in the 60’s and days upper 70’s and some 80’s.  We found attic heat was coming into the multi-purpose room (where the beam was added and closet supports removed) and spread a tarp over the attic floor to seal it up a bit.  It will be a while before we get to rebuilding that area.

Salty Strings had a full month again with a few additions.  April started with the SALT senior meeting.  We were with the Booneville Dulcimer Club for two practice evenings and four programs; one of the care facilities added their Memory Ward this month where part of the group played for about 14 residents.  Connie had several hours of practice with the organ for Easter songs, and there were many more hours together for all the church worship.  We also participated in a twice-a-month jam session with lots of other musicians and music genres.  We had fun, even though it was a ‘live’ event (everyone was on video) and they were set up for standing performers.

As we prepare for travel in May our focus shifted to some postponed RV needs.  John checked the bedroom a/c unit and sealed around the bath fan early in the month.  With a few heavy rains we found the leak continues; we’re still puzzled where the leak really is!  Mid-month there were a series of problems – a vent cover on the roof is missing (patched up with a cool whip container), the slam latch to the water compartment broke, 2 days later a latch on the other side broke, the a/c won’t work at all on low, and the living room a/c started doing the same thing (not an emergency since they are working on high).  Parts were ordered, the latches won’t work, and more latches were ordered, hopefully arriving in time to install before we leave.    

Early in the month Connie had lots of work on our taxes, our first year to have to file in Mississippi as well as a full year as landlords.  Once they were mailed off (on the 14th!) there was paperwork to file away and notes to be made for next year.  She also finished up our newsletter, just a bit late, with a sickly printer and lots of help from John.  There were four songs Connie arranged and worked out, three for the Booneville Dulcimer Club (Ashokan Farewell, Wild Mountain Thyme, and the chorus for Down In My Heart) and the theme song for the Campers On Mission gathering in May; she enjoyed the challenges and time spent on something ‘fun.’  She also did some ‘not so professional’ phone recordings with the keyboard in multiple speeds to help John with a mandolin song.  There were a few cooking experiments, including chiclet noodles thinking it might be faster rather than rolling and cutting.  The harp, long neglected, even came out of its corner for a few hours!

Most of our April ‘work’ was in the addition.  Connie washed most of the old exterior siding wall and did a lot of painting – primer and finish paint (ceiling boards, trim boards, and walls), and put all the wall electric covers back on.  John found two adjoining windows were a bit uneven and fixed the sill plates.  He also did lots of cutting, fitting, and putting up various trim.  Connie was brave, once, getting on top of the spa to help put up a long ceiling board.  Our roof person has not been by to fix the roof leak yet, so we still have ceiling to install, but it is good to see real progress and that our planning is looking good!

There were several meals out early in the month with our visiting camper as he prepared to move on in his music ministry.  We had an evening farewell so he could leave early the next morning.  We continued Friday date nights, once with our Journey Church friends before attending a Passion Play in Corinth, MS.  One date night we enjoyed pizza at one of the homes where we were able to sit on their deck as we ate and watched the cat and crows stand off for the pizza crusts tossed into the yard.  We were treated to a great Sunday buffet in New Albany, MS after church with friends, just one of many blessings God continues to provide.  We enjoyed eating at Jack’s for our Anniversary and tax completion celebration (on the 14th).  The last day of the month we enjoyed a quiet evening out where we discussed our May travel plans and semi-planned for the rest of the year.

In addition to our swimming, we occasionally walked around the driveway or up the road a bit, once with a neighbor dog following; all dependent on how stiff we were by evening.  We haven’t received our replacement floor mat but we are getting a bit better at staying in the center as we swim.  We noticed that there was a leak when using the swim spa, the end with the heater and pumps, and John was able to tighten the connection a bit by hand.  A week later it started leaking again, this time he used the screw driver to get the connection clamp tighter, and so far, no leaks. Swimming was not as consistent this month because of plywood sheets on top to work on the ceiling.   

For more relaxing activities:  walks in the woods, guitar playing (almost has his regrown thumb nail trained out of its curve), and picking up sticks around the yard so he can start mowing again.  There were several trips to the woods making more paths and going along the boundary markers while keeping an eye on the tree cutters on our neighbor’s land.  It has been quite the experience to hear trees sawed (a huge machine can catch 3-5 trees and saw them near the ground) and stacked for transport as well as looking through the trees to cleared land.  They have remained off our property so far, but we will only have a few trees left to our south once they finish.  John has been making the arrangements for our trip east for some music and a visit to see our newest granddaughter and family.  We had one smokey fire in our fire pit and are waiting for a good time to have a hot dog roast with friends and our renters.

We discovered all eggs are not equal – we helped put candy in 5,000 plastic eggs for an Easter Egg Hunt.  It was a great time of fellowship, goofing around, and we even figured out how to get Dum-Dums into the eggs!  All four Sundays in April we were leading worship at Journey Community Church. We chose to use the church organ for all the songs Easter Sunday, meaning John stretched his voice limits many times! Palm Sunday evening was the feet washing, Wednesday evenings found us back in Revelation most nights, and there was an evening hymn sing with the church pianist and Connie.

We’ve had a few calls and fixes this month from our mobile home renters – mice and microwaves.  John spent some time inside, outside, and under plugging holes (expanding foam with steel wool) and spraying rodent deterrent.  We worked together getting the old microwave down, finding the wall studs and a hidden GFCI plug, stabilizing the electric range plug, and getting the new shelf unit fastened to the wall.  In the meantime, the renters used our little blue microwave on their counter.  John spent several days designing, finding wood, cutting, fitting, glueing, and adding several coats of spray finish.  Holes were pre-drilled for easy assembly and a light was added after mounting – a beautiful job and a larger microwave!  

John was sick (stuffy head, sinus, headaches, very tired) April 2-6.  Then Connie caught whatever bug he had for a week.  That slowed us both down and the after effects included another two weeks of feeling worn out.  It seems when we finally get in a groove or schedule, something always comes around to knock us off course; we just don’t bounce back as quickly as when we were younger!

Devotional quotes for April: 

  • The best route to higher ground only comes by climbing up through the valleys.
  • Corrie ten Boom once said, “If you look at the world, you’ll be distressed.  If you look within, you’ll be depressed.  If you look at God, you’ll be at rest.”
  • Don’t tell God how big your problem is, tell your problem how big God is.
  • What is over your head is still under Jesus’ feet.

Jesus speaking: “Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the living one.  I died, and behold I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of Death and Hades.”  (Revelation 1:17b-18 ESV)  “For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.” (2 Timothy 1:7 ESV)

Tune in again next month for our progress and ministry update!

John and Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry


Contact Information:
Mail:  John & Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry
30A Hwy 367
Burnsville, MS  38833


Phone – John 909-336-8910 or Connie 909-336-8912
Email – SaltyStrings@hotmail.com
Facebook – Salty Strings Music Ministry
Web site – SaltyStrings.com

ONLINE DONATIONS via PayPal through our web site

TRAVEL PLANS AND UPCOMING LOCATIONS
** May 13-early June – Aiken, SC and Fredericksburg, VA for music and family
** August-September – Illinois/Wisconsin, volunteer work, music, family, and friends

The Salt Shaker ~ February 2025

Praises – Time to rest and renew, thanks for your prayers-March 6 renters moving in, God’s timing in all things!

Prayers – Getting scaffolding (on sale?), music ministry, recording and getting songs online

“Yours, O Lord, is the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory, and the majesty.  Everything in the heavens and on earth is yours, O Lord, and this is your kingdom.  We adore you as the one who is over all things.  Wealth and honor come from you alone, for you rule over everything.  Power and might are in your hand, and at your discretion people are made great and given strength.  O our God, we thank you and praise your glorious name!”  New Living Translation, 1 Chronicles 29:11-13

Hello to our family, friends, and followers:

We continued at Friendship Bible Church the first Sunday in February then moved to Keystone Heights Christian Church for the rest of the month, finding a smaller congregation with great interactive Sunday School, Bible-based messages, and communion every Sunday.  They have a Wednesday night fellowship meal (the pastor is a retired Army chef) and message which we attended on roast beef night with a study of the 4th commandment, remember the Sabbath.  We invited our fellow volunteers to attend with us for a special guest gospel music service and had three couples come along.  Our Sunday church drive always included a stop for a few grocery needs at Winn Dixie as we drive by, then a restful afternoon with a nap for John.  We will miss our new friends! 

There were a few excursions during our week between volunteer ‘projects’ and more planned for the end of the month before traveling to our home base.  The first was to Kanapaha Botanical Gardens in Gainesville on a beautiful partly sunny Wednesday morning.  They have a 1 mile and ½ mile trail that loops through various types of vegetation.  We spent over 2 hours enjoying a lazy morning, seeing our first cardinals of the year, turtles, squirrels, koi (which John had to feed), our first butterfly of the year, and a fingernail plant.  We had hoped to see some hummingbirds, but not much was blooming and January’s cold weather killed the tops of some plants; it was still a great place and not busy.  We had a Chinese lunch, visited a Guitar Center, and (of course) did our shopping. 

The next day we travelled to St. Augustine to find parking first then the restrooms at Lightner Museum.  This is a huge collection of ‘gilded age’ museum pieces (cut glass, big wheeled bicycles, furniture, and lots more) in the former Hotel Alcazar resort, finished in 1888 complete with saunas, massage parlor, and huge pool that is now a restaurant.  After several hours of meandering, we stopped at the Metro Diner finding great food at reasonable prices for our late lunch.  We continued down the Atlantic coast stopping at Jungle Hut Park, a public beach where we relaxed in the partly sunny 77-degree afternoon breeze and spotted dolphins, gulls, cormorants, and a pelican flying.  John walked and found a few shells to bring home and Connie was able to get her kite flying and had to walk in the salty surf before leaving.

Connie saw the hawk again on the electric lines and finally saw a pair of sandhill cranes flying over our RV – they were squawking at each other in flight, sounding almost like honking geese.  We were able to be an encouragement to the camp Director and office Registrar over breakfast one morning.  Our laundry facilities here were great, except for the night after our project ended when all 4 washers/dryers were in use along with a window air conditioner.  The breaker kept tripping, our 2 loads of laundry were started 3 times before the cycles finally completed and clothes were moved to the dryers (third time is a charm?)!  We retrieved them, nice and warm, at 9:30pm far too tired to get them all folded.  Warning alert – we learned when something is too good to be true online to pass it by.  We tried both of our credit cards to make an order; thankfully our companies flagged the charge and denied them, but it led to one account being closed and waiting for a new account/card to be delivered.  On work days we were up at 6am, weekends (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday) we managed a few times to sleep-in till after 8, and once John said ‘no thinking until noon’ when we needed to start making plans for our travel back to Mississippi!

February near Gainesville, Florida was unpredictable, just like everywhere else this year!  We had highs of 52 and 82, lows of 30 and 65.  There were sunny days allowing a bit of sun bathing, foggy mornings, dark clouds with wind and heavy rain, misty foggy nights, and heavy dew mornings.  We found our occasional leak drips around our bathroom ceiling fan moved and are now collecting in the nearby light fixture, meaning John will have to get up on the roof with a caulk gun soon.

In February there were many volunteers and a lot was accomplished.  John and others were able to complete the plumbing connections for bathrooms and kitchen (inside and under) at the old chapel addition, dig to locate the cause flooding in the hotel, repair barn door rollers, help with a cement landing pad for stairs, scrap and caulk more ceiling from the scaffold, repair picnic tables, rejuvenate three kitchen marker boards, and add solar light caps to posts.  Connie and other ladies did a lot of painting – crawl space and ramp trim rails, ceiling and window trim, repainted and added an arrow to an office sign, dorm room interior doors, an assortment of outside chairs including a few rockers and gliders, and finished the girls bath house window trim.  The camp was very appreciative and treated their staff and all of us volunteers to a lunch of grilled steak our last week! 

February was another busy month with our music ministry.  We coordinated two more music jam nights (had two flutes playing duets) with finger food once and a potluck the last time.  John’s birthday included the potluck jam!  We signed up for a 25-minute slot at the local music store open mic night; it was different and a lot of fun listening to other musicians as well.  We led one devotion this month and had a lot of practice time.  We were able to work with another couple allowing them to try guitar, auto harp, and dulcimer; he is blind and wants to learn an instrument.  They had fun and will likely own a dulcimer in the future.  We were very encouraged and, after some printer and ink delays, were able to make up 14 of our ‘Tis a Gift CDs to give to staff and volunteers that wanted to “take us home” with them. 

We are getting older, and that includes being more accident prone along with just plain stupid stuff!  We were both tired and stiff a few times this month.  Two of our SOWER couples backed their trucks into a tree (no, not us and they chose different trees) causing John to get a tree bark sliver under his nail.  John has used his hearing aids all month and they have really helped!  He will see the audiologist with a few questions once we’re back.  Connie slacked off on her morning exercises and finally got started again, it helps but it is so easy to get out of the habit.  She had a few slightly dizzy spells toward the end of the month and didn’t work one day after some tunnel vision turned into a migraine headache – she needs to remember to drink lots of water!  Connie woke one Sunday morning with some pain across the back of her right hand like the tendons were sore.  It got worse overnight, was slightly swollen the next morning, and there was no strength.  How is it that we know what to tell others what to do when they get aches and pains, then neglect to apply it to ourselves?  That evening John asked if she had used ice; that worked and by the end of the next day her hand was working fine.

After almost ten years Connie now considers herself a southern girl.  Although still not comfortable above mid-70’s, sadly she has to put on socks and shoes when it’s in the low-50’s!  She didn’t get much done on our taxes but did finish the 33×33 baby blanket and started a modified pattern dish cloth scrubby.  We had lots of February fellowship including a few camp fires, men’s and ladies Bible studies on Tuesday morning, a Valentine’s Day breakfast, a game night where Connie came in 2nd place twice, star gazing, and attending another Thursday music bingo night to use up our free appetizer coupons before we leave in March.  There were three nearby SOWER couples that brought over ice cream, toured our camp, provided lots of fellowship, and Connie got 4 ant bites.  John was able to practice outside quite a bit, watched the Super Bowl Game with others here at camp, washed the truck (lots of pollen here), and accompanied Connie to our camp beach for some sun rather than driving back to the coast.

It was a great two months in Florida – reuniting with some old friends and making lots of new friends; encouraging others and being encouraged.  The camp has used some great materials and color palates that gave us new ideas to finish up our addition.  We look forward to a visit to a teaching zoo and our drive back home in March to get our own project finished up! 

“Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight.  Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account.”  Hebrews 4:13 New International Version

Please keep us in your prayers . . . and THANKS for traveling with us!

John and Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry

Contact Information:
Mail:  John & Connie Nicholas
Salty Strings Music Ministry
30A Hwy 367Burnsville, MS  38833


Phone – John 909-336-8910 or Connie 909-336-8912
Email – SaltyStrings@hotmail.com
Facebook – Salty Strings Music Ministry
Web site – SaltyStrings.com

ONLINE DONATIONS via PayPal through our web site

TRAVEL PLANS AND UPCOMING LOCATIONS

  • March 5-8 Traveling, Mississippi home base for a few months
  • May 14-early June – Aiken, SC and Fredericksburg, VA for music and family
  • Future plans include Illinois and Wisconsin; volunteer work, visits to friends and family