

FIESTADE _ Garden, London district known for diamond trading HATTON _ de los Muertos, Halloween-like tradition in Mexico held from November 1st to 2nd DIA _ cup, traditional cocktail drink associated with Wimbledon PIMMS _ boys and girls, traditional Wimbledon roles BALL _ Be the Same hit song by Camila Cabello that won an iHeartRadio award in 2019 NEVER _ Moore (contradictory guy?) LES Yak butter _ (traditional Tibetan drink) TEA World capital with traditional water puppet shows for tourists HANOI Words that contradict what preceded them SAIDNOONEEVER Word that may precede "tradition" or "surgeon" ORAL With 1-Down, tradition for the married couple at a wedding reception FIRST Where the tradition of shaking hands as a greeting originated GREECE Where a bell starts a Wall St. We think SCOT is the possible answer on this clue.Ĭrossword clues for Traditional bagpipe player Clue Answer Traditional bagpipe player SCOT _-school (bit traditional) OLD _-Hamantash Debate (University of Chicago tradition) LATKE _ Sunday, traditional day of rest during the Wimbledon tournament that was stopped in 2022 MIDDLE _ Shui Chinese traditional practice FENG _ shrimp (type of food whose name seems self-contradictory) JUMBO _ pouring German New Year's Eve tradition that's meant to predict one's future LEAD _ Paksha, Halloween-like tradition in India held during the fifth month of the Hindu calendar PITRU _ on the shelf (Christmas tradition) ELF _ mess (traditional English dessert) ETON _ las Natitas, Halloween-like tradition in Bolivia held on November 8th: 2 wds.

This answers first letter of which starts with S and can be found at the end of T. The crossword clue possible answer is available in 4 letters. This pipe playing can be heard throughout his neighborhood and across the tracks in Park Forest.This crossword clue Traditional bagpipe player was discovered last seen in the at the NewsDay Crossword. So these daily performances have been a great way to stay in shape, so to speak.” “Plus, if you put your pipes down for awhile and don’t play you feel it in your lungs and whole body when you pick them up again. There are regular fans of all ages (literally, between newborn and 90+!) and the occasional walker or jogger who comes through and isn’t quite sure what to make of it. “Breaking ‘the record’ was all good fun, but after that I kept playing pretty much every day except Sundays and Bad Air Days because it’s now a neighborhood thing, and it keeps me going as well. Too bad – this was more exciting than the usual news stories! The Chronicle reporter was contacted but never followed up. And I did just that in August, and we had a celebration with some champagne and a bit of whisky.

I was only up to about 90 at the time, so Brad egged me on to ‘break the record’ and get to 112. “About four months later the Chronicle reported that the SF piper (who I’ve known for many years, by the way) decided that he had ‘run out of tunes,’ so he stopped his evening performance after 111 days. Our neighbors enjoyed it and came out to listen, so I kept going. “Brad suggested I do the same, so I started up the following week. “In March, my neighbor Brad Miller pointed out that the San Francisco Chronicle had profiled a piper in San Francisco who, at the beginning of shelter-in-place, started playing a few tunes on his balcony every evening,” says Ken. The group has not been able to gather since the pandemic began nor travel or enter competitions.īut pipers need to keep playing, and Ken is now giving 30 minutes concerts in his Felton Gables neighborhood every day but Sunday at 5:00 pm. Today Ken runs the bagpipe band he grew up in, The Prince Charles Pipe Band. I hadn’t thought about it before, but said sure.” “He and some of his band mates were concerned that people weren’t teaching younger people about piping and drumming. “My father played in a bagpipe band in San Francisco,” explains Ken, who grew up in Marin County. Menlo Park resident Ken Sutherland first picked up a set of bagpipes when he was 11 years old. Ken Sutherland cheers his Menlo Park neighborhood by playing the bagpipes
