Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Update

Some of you may recall a certain sloshball incident... Well it's been just over three years since that fateful day, and here's what my leg looks like now:


Significantly improved, but still significantly scarred.

Monday, August 19, 2013

My Other Home

So I'm so behind in blogging that three months later I'm getting around to writing about going to St. Louis for Little Brother's college graduation.  It was mostly a really nice trip, and I'm always happy to go to St. Louis.  I love St. Louis.  I loved my time there.  It's such an under-rated city.  Little brother still lives there, along with Dad's side of the family, and one of my college roommates.  I can't wait to back for Wedding #3 in December!

I mostly took photos of family and graduation stuff, so not a whole lot to share, but here are a couple shots.

Ted Drewes.  Amazingness in a cup.  It's right on Route 66, and it's pretty much a St. Louis icon.  Grandpa (mom's dad, who lives in Connecticut, not dad's dad who lives in St. Louis) thought it was crowded.  The crowd that night hardly counted as a crowd.  After a Cardinals' game it's nothing short of a mob scene.  Ted Drewes is an essential stop on every trip to StL.


Those of you who have lived in mid-town St. Louis may recognize this UFO-like building.  Though you may not, as it is now far more classily (Yep, made that one up.  Standing by it.) occupied than when I was in college.  At that point it was a Del Taco.  And I never once in 4 years ate there.  It was a shady, shady place.  Now the university has bought the apartments behind it, and it's much more respectably occupied by a Starbucks and a Chipotle.  The flying saucer has come so far.


Time for a tangent.  My dorm freshman year was directly across the street from the above flying saucer, somewhat separate from the rest of campus.  The road was a really busy road, and we were just south of a large and apparently confusing intersection.  Accidents happened all the time.  The former Del Taco makes me think of one of the dumbest accidents I've ever seen, which happened right in front of it.  There's a light there, and a school bus - you know, giant, bright yellow vehicle - was stopped at the red light.  I was walking up the street towards campus when I heard a crash behind me, and I turned around to find a vehicle had rear ended the stopped school bus.  I don't really remember, but I think it was a jeep.  It's entire front end was smashed into the back of the bus.  We're not talking little fender bender from somebody creeping forward at the red light.  How do you miss the GIANT YELLOW BUS stopped in front of you??

At commencement all the faculty in their academic regalia process in before the students.  Check out the guy in the middle of the photo below.  It's Dumbledore!  Apparently he teaches at my old college - he didn't die in Book 6 after all!  After the ceremony we were chatting with a professor (actually a Jesuit priest who lived in the same dorm I did my freshman year) who was a contemporary of my parents when they were all students at this same college.  Dad asked him who Dumbledore was (literally, that's exactly what he said), and this professor thought about it for a few minutes, and said he teaches in the theology department.  On that description alone, he knew exactly who he was.  Priceless.


While in St. Louis I got to hang out with my college roommate (the bride in Wedding #3 this year - and I'm seriously excited for that wedding!), and she and her fiance just got the cutest little puppy.  He's adorable, and super photogenic.



I just love St. Louis.  Only 4 1/2 months until I get to go back!

Friday, August 16, 2013

Happy birthday Little Sister!

Today is Little Sister's 19th birthday!  I will take this occasion to suggest that you browse through the Little Sister label to relive some of her finest moments, which are obviously documented on my blog. :)



Happy birthday, Little Sister!


Thursday, August 15, 2013

Wedding #1

So I last left off the 4th of July weekend/wedding/stomach bug saga with the hike up Mt Greylock and heading to Gloucester for Amy's wedding in a puke-free state.  This was wedding #1 for the year, with weddings #2 (my other Amy, in Ohio in October) and #3 (my other college roommate, in St. Louis after Christmas) later this year.

We got to Glouchester around lunch time, and were able to relax for a while before the wedding.  Unfortunately it was about 95 degrees with 95% humidity (and I'm really only just barely exaggerating - it was awful).  The wedding was outdoors in late afternoon.  I literally had sweat running down my legs.  The ceremony was very nice, and it was really neat how they wove their love of travel throughout the ceremony and the reception.

They had the best food I've ever seen at a wedding.  They had a salsa bar and sangria during the cocktail hour.  Dinner was three stations from three countries.  New Zealand (where they met) was a lamb roast with the most delicious mashed potatoes I've ever had.  Italy was classic pasta and antipasto.  Greece was pita and hummus...and stuff I don't remember...because I only ate about 3 bites of dinner before feeling so miserably sick again.

I felt so awful that I had to go back to the room - Boyfriend was so super sweet and came with me, abandoning his dinner.  Neither of us could believe how distended my stomach was.  Boyfriend zipped me into my dress with no difficulty, even with a bit of room to spare.  Plenty of room to be comfortable.  By time we got back to the room I could barely breathe in the dress.  The weird thing was, without actually getting sick sick, about an hour later I felt ok.  Not good, but good enough to go back and get some more for Boyfriend to eat and at least say goodnight to Amy.  While Boyfriend had some dessert (pavlova! so much better than cake!) I gradually felt better and better.  I can't explain it, but I wasn't complaining.  We would up staying for the rest of the reception, though we skipped the after party.

Believe it or not, the stomach woes weren't over.  Boyfriend woke up sick the next morning.  It was pretty crummy timing since we had to drive back to Pennsylvania that day.  He stayed behind while I went to brunch, and fortunately he survived the drive home without being sick (in my still quite new car!).  By Monday he felt tolerable, and back to normal by Tuesday.

It was definitely an up and down holiday weekend, but the wedding was lovely and fun.  Amy's one of my oldest friends, and her mom's been one of my extra moms for ages.  Amy was a year ahead of my in school, and I met her playing softball in the town summer league.  I believe we introduced ourselves when I slid into her at second base. :)  There were a couple of years where we played year round, with indoor practice at a the batting cages during the winter.  After winter practices we always went back to her house for ice cream and Dawson's Creek (yep, judge away).  My senior year when Amy had gone away to school, I still went over to her parents' house on Wednesday nights for ice cream and Dawson's Creek.  I can't tell you how happy it made me to see Amy so happy.  In every photo I took of Amy she had a giant, beaming smile.  I actually I tear up a little every time I think about how completely happy she is and seeing that enormous smile on her face. :)






Wednesday, August 14, 2013

New lens!

I got a new lens to play with today!  I've been hemming and hawing over a 50 mm f/1.4 lens for ages now.  I almost pulled the trigger after Christmas and didn't.  Honestly I don't really remember why, obviously financial, but I don't remember what it specifically was.  Maybe wanting to pay off student loans (down to about $1200! so close!)  Boyfriend and I are taking a big trip next month, and I really wanted this lens for that trip.  Seems appropriate since it was another trip that motivated buying my DSLR in the first place.  I've only spent a few minutes playing with it in my apartment, but I can already see a huge difference in low-light photos with the wider aperture.  Yay new toys!

Friday, July 26, 2013

July Hike

The day after the 4th of July (the third anniversary of this) we hiked the Appalachian Trail up to the summit of Mt. Greylock, the highest peak in Massachusetts at 3491 feet.  We started from Route 2 on the north side of the mountain, and hiked 6 very steep miles up to the top and 6 very steep miles back down.  Unfortunately, it was even more hot, humid, and buggy than when we hiked another section of the AT in June.  And hiking on an almost empty stomach after certainly didn't help matters.  It took embarrassingly long, but we made it through the 12 miles.  The 6 miles of trail added to the 15 miles we've done in Pennsylvania bring us to 0.96% of the 2180 miles of the Appalachian Trail.  Woohoo! The next hike is sure to put us over 1%!

After living in Tucson, 3500 feet seems like a really small mountain, but hikes around Tucson also didn't start well under 1000 feet.  Even if it was "only" 3500 ft, the views from the top of Mt. Greylock were beautiful.








Thursday, July 25, 2013

Don't read this while eating lunch.

I mentioned a few weeks ago that we were going camping over the 4th of July holiday...and well...it could have gone better.  We camped at Clarksburg State Park in northwestern Massachusetts, and planned to hike the section of the Appalachian Trail between the summit of Mt Greylock and the Massachusetts-Vermont state line - about 20 miles total hiking.

We drove up the morning of the 4th, uneventful, easy enough drive.  We had planned to set up camp, have some lunch, then go hike from Route 2 in North Adams to the state line, which would be 8 miles round trip with a fair amount of elevation gain, but not a ton.  When we sat down for lunch, I felt kind of off, not bad, just not quite right.  We ate lunch and decided that we were too tired to hike, and really wanted to be able to hike to the summit of Mt. Greylock the next day.  So we went to Mass MOCA, a contemporary art museum in the area instead.  

That's where things deteriorated.  I actually really liked the museum - and I usually just think contemporary art is either weird or not art.  But my stomach was not happy.  I kept feeling more and more bloated, like my stomach was painfully distended.  Eventually it was just too much and I got sick.  Yeah, that kind of sick.  Thankfully I made it to a restroom - fortunately an unoccupied, single toilet restroom.  The short-lived upside was that I instantly felt better, so we continued to go through the museum.  But it only took about 20 minutes to feel miserable and distended again.

We headed back to the campsite and hung out - I managed to nap for a bit.  I could barely choke down a graham cracker or sit next to Boyfriend while he ate dinner.  The smell of his dinner was just awful.  After dinner he suggested that perhaps going for a walk around the campgrounds would make me feel better.  Well we got about three-quarters of the way around the loop before I was spectacularly sick on the side of the road.  Fortunately not in anybody's campsite, and hopefully it was dark enough that people couldn't really see (even though there was no doubt that more than one campsite of people could hear).

I felt tolerable overnight, but was ready to kill the large group of middle school age kids a few campsites over.  They occupied about 4 campsites, and at midnight they were still yelling back and forth between campsites and shrieking over who knows what.  Quiet hours started at 10.  I was pissed.  I got up around midnight to go to the restroom, and Boyfriend thought I was getting up to yell at the hoodlums.  I really, really seriously considered it.  But I didn't really want to go wandering in the dark feeling like crap.  Man it would have been so satisfying to tell those brats off though!

The next morning I actually felt decent, before and after breakfast, so we went hiking.  I'll blog about the hike in another post, but I made it through (very slowly) despite the lack of food the day before.  Anyway, everything was good on the stomach-issues front all day, and the hoodlums were gone the next night, so yay, at least one good day of camping.

Saturday morning we headed east to Amy's wedding, but that's a story for another day.  Unfortunately the stomach woes weren't over...

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

June Hike

We just managed to squeeze in a June hike on the last day of the month.  We did the 9 miles of the Appalachian Trail north of the section we did in April.  It's a nice, easy section, that's entirely flat and then downhill when you hike north.  The downside is that the day we hiked, it was hot with about 1000000% humidity.  I just dripped sweat the entire time.  But the worst part was the bugs.  I spent the entire 9 miles constantly swatting bugs away from my face.  The creek at the end of the hike was absolutely beautiful though, and the water was wonderfully COLD!






Thursday, July 4, 2013

Last college cookie package!

Little brother graduated from college!  More on that and my trip to St. Louis for his graduation in another post, but for now, cookies!  I usually sent him cookies once per semester or so, so this was his last college package of cookies.  (Though hopefully I'll get around to sending him a belated batch for his birthday, because I know he enjoys them, and he's skinny enough to eat them in unlimited quantities.)  He requested "letter" cookies...I think he was grading general physics labs at the time... :)  I don't have letter cookie cutters, but this is what I came up with.  I thought they were pretty awesome.



P.S. Happy 4th of July!  Boyfriend and I are off camping in western Massachusetts before heading to Amy's wedding.  Hopefully I'll still be on a blogging kick when we get back and you'll get to hear about it!

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Pennsylvania for the Win

Pennsylvania has the best town names.  On the way back from camping over Memorial Day weekend we drove through Virginville, PA.



For the record, Virginville is 45 miles from Intercourse.



Alternatively you can swing through Blue Ball, PA - just a few miles out of your way. :)


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Wedding Cookies

At the beginning of May I went home for a weekend to go to Amy's bridal shower.  It was a surprise, and the bride was actually surprised!  Woohoo!  I made these super fun cookies - some more lingerie cookies and some adorable bride and groom cookies.






So excited for Amy's wedding in July!  They're having a mini world tour of food, and you know I like food. :)

Monday, July 1, 2013

It's a Russian nesting screwdriver!







How neat is that!?


Friday, June 28, 2013

May Hike

Over Memorial Day weekend we went camping and hiking at Lackawanna State Park.  Holy $&!# was it cold overnight!  It was nice during the day, but overnight it was in the 30s, just barely above freezing.  We could see our breath when we went to bed.  A while ago we ordered a big 6 person tent so we could lazy man camp with the comfort of an air mattress.  While it was way more comfortable, sleeping pads and mummy bags would have been a lot warmer.  We hiked several miles around the perimeter of the lake and then some.  Lackawanna is a great park with lots to do beyond hiking - boating, fishing, and swimming (though oddly in a lake-side pool rather than the lake itself...).













Thursday, June 27, 2013

Bizarre (and a bit irritating)

If you're going to be so formal as to call me Dr. [My-last-name] and identify yourself as Ms. [Her-last-name], why are you calling me "honey" 30 seconds later???

Easter Tradition

Some of you (imaginary readers) may be familiar with the Easter Pinata tradition that my classmates/friends and I started in grad school.  Well, the pinata has come to the east coast.  I brought a cute little blue and white cow pinata, and all the little cousins had a blast with it.




Over the past year or so, I've also gotten more into using royal icing to decorate cookies, and I made some cute chick and egg cookies.






When Boyfriend and I got back to Lancaster, we had some fun with the peeps my aunt gave us in the Easter basket she so nicely made for us. :)