4 FOCUS - NOVEMBER 2018 Family Owned by John, Karen, Colleen, Jeff and Felicity Where the Spirit of Gardening Lives Open every day: Nov. 9-6, Dec. 9-5 Quality beyond Compare BeautifulChristmas PlanterstoChooseFrom Fresh Greens Fresh Holly Table Centre Pieces Christmas Décor Fresh Wreaths Fresh Garland & Swag Christmas Trees Magnolia Leaves Premade or make your own Outdoor or Indoor Holiday Planters Poinsettias (12 colours to choose from) 905-985-2672 • 1431 Hwy. 7A, Port Perry www.centurygreenhouses.com WE HAVE ALL YOU NEED! Commons, the annual Rotary Club dinner for seniors, the Port Perry Ribfest, Culture Days, and a Sunday children’s concert at the library – to name but a few. The DUKES have a repertoire of over 200 songs, and they tailor their play list to the events and themes. There are many good singers in the group, but you don’t have to be a singer to be a member. One lady does a great Patsy Cline cover. Sometimes the DUKES change the lyrics to a tune to make a parody to fit the occasion. Yes, they do Christmas songs and children’s songs too. Stompin’ Tom’s The Hockey Song is always a crowd pleaser. A sister group, which formed out of students who took ukulele lessons at the Latcham Centre is going to perform at the Armistice Luncheon at the Latcham Centre on November 7. The menu is a typi- cal wartime meal, with stew, bread, and a WW1 cake made without dairy or eggs. It’s like a fruitcake with lots of raisins, says Linda, baked with non-perishable ingredients, which would have been available in the trenches. Andy and Linda won’t be making music that day though. Linda is helping to cook the meal and Andy is assigned the task of peeling potatoes. “We try to do a variety of things in our retirement,” Linda says, nam- ing pickleball as another favourite activity. They also love to travel, and they have joined in with ukulele groups around the world, including Australia, England and the United States. Andy was browsing in a music store in Fort Meyers, Florida, one day when he struck up a conversa- tion with a lady who was looking at ukuleles. The next thing they knew, they were invited to a jam session in a church hall. Ukulele playing is popular inter- nationally, and widely taught in schools these days, as opposed to the guitar or the recorder, Andy noted. The founders of the DUKES also enjoy getting together with their grown kids and grandkids to all sing and play ukuleles. The motto on their website dukesukuleleklub.com says it all: “A great group of people who love to play ukes, sing, and have a few laughs together.” by Lynn Campbell, Focus on Scugog The Dukes (continued from page 3)