Let me add that ALL these are suggestions are very helpful. Thank you!
Among most helpful: 1) Knowing that this isn't necessarily an isolated newby problem but may reflect the age of our gear (approach the age of my body), and 2) folks have ways of dealing with it. As a newby with LF, I was intimidated by it, and just figured to figure it out later and switched the lens board/lens combo for one that hadn't come loose. Coming loose may have had something to do with the colder outside temp and some minute measure of contraction relative to the warmth of the house and time of year when i originally set the lenses on the lens boards (late spring).
I have a LF lens wrench, but hadn't figured on needing it in the field. Combination of cold temps and 1st time struggles made adaptation on the fly a bit tougher than it might have been as the sun was beginning to set. Can tell for sure that there's a real reason folks prefer folding LF cameras to my classic monorail as my photography backpack just ain't up to the job, and fortunately I had only about 20 yards to lug the stuff. Barely room for the camera let alone a lens hood contraption (which I need btw if I'm ever going to take shots at cloer angles to the sunlight).
One thing that continues to amaze me is the shift from a hobby where dirt was king to the point where we cooked it in an oven for use in modeling mountains (art of model railroading) to photography where we become clean freaks, and freak out at the dust and sand getting on our gear, in our darkrooms and on to a negative. Great thing about LF is it makes EVERY smaller format seem amazingly "easy" to set up and shoot.
BUT that said, I like the idea of spending more time to set up a landscape shot and get it the way you want without the compulsion to shoot just to finish a roll. Long ways to go before I know what I'm doing as a beginner, I'm far from the point where I want to mess with all the real strengths of a view camera, bellows adjustments, that S-thing, etc. as at this point I'm just trying to establish the routine of getting a shot and developing it in a new-to-me format. One step at a time. Thanks for all your help and encouragement.