1. For as long as I've been conscious and as far back as my memory reaches, the Donnie and Rosie Rinaldi family members have always been present in my life. Dad and Donnie were born a month apart and grew up in Kellogg at the same time. They both went to Lewiston's North Idaho College of Education (a.k.a. Tiger Tech). Mom was there, too, and graduated from N.I.C.E. Donnie and Dad worked at the Zinc Plant for several years at the same time. Our families visited each other. I remember in the 1990s, especially as Dad's health worsened, Donnie was an especially caring friend for Dad, tender with Mom, and helped out with different tasks around our house. I'll always remember that, as a way to thank Donnie for his kindness and assistance, Mom and Dad always tried to have a bottle of MacNaughton Canadian Whiskey on hand for Donnie when he came to visit and Donnie always enjoyed a smash.
Donnie and Rosie's oldest son, Vince, and I were baseball and basketball teammates. Their daughter Deni and I are the same age. We "co-starred" in our kindergarten pageant at the end of the school year. Deni played Mother Goose and I played her faithful, ever-present cat.
Deni and I walked together, side by side, by choice, in the procession and recession at our 1972 Kellogg High School graduation ceremony.
Donnie was 94 when he died on December 18, 2024.
This morning was his funeral at 11:00 at St. Rita's Catholic Church here in Kellogg, the church where Donnie and Rosie celebrated Mass and were active members for decades.
2. Family and friends from the Silver Valley and well beyond filled the church for the funeral, a solemn, dignified Mass combining grief and joy, the grief of Donnie no longer being with us and the joy of the promise of eternal life.
Afterward, the Elks Club hosted a luncheon and reception and attendees packed the room.
I have to be cautious about being in packed rooms -- especially ones like at the Elks with a fairly low ceiling, so I left after about ten minutes and joined Jake, Craig King, Bucky, Debbie, and Dood at the nearly empty Longshot Saloon. I strolled in and didn't actually see Dood, a disappointment -- he and Bucky and Debbie left shortly after I arrived and I didn't get to visit with them.
I did, however, have a great session with Jake and Craig.
After some high quality yakkin', we headed back to the Elks and I could tell the crowd was shrinking.
All the same, I took a seat along a wall on the edge of the party.
Shelley Church, Don Knott's sister, pulled up a chair next to me and we had a great conversation about life after Don and reminisced about good times we had with Don over the course of his life.
3. Eventually the crowd shrunk some more and I could see that no one was visiting with Rosie, so I scooted over to her table and we entered into a wonderful conversation and, before long, Christy joined us.
This mighty day also had a running (or should I say a flying) drama going on.
Deni (Mother Goose!) had booked a flight to Spokane, due to arrive on Friday. It included a flight out of Atlanta.
Winter storms paralyzed Atlanta on Friday.
Deni waited and waited and waited and then waited some more to depart from Atlanta and finally flew out on Saturday, not in time for her father's funeral Mass, but in time to land in Spokane, rent a car, and rocket to the Elks around mid-afternoon and be reunited with her family and to see those of us who were still at the reception.
I had at least two, maybe three, superb conversations with Deni, met her son Aaron, and Deni and I made tentative plans to possibly see each other back in the West later in the summer of '25.
I gave Carol a ride home a while earlier and it was after 5 o'clock when Christy and I bade the reception farewell and I drove us back home.
What a day.
What a sad and joyful day, a day of loss and uplifting reunions.