Sunday, July 13, 2014

More Details Forthcoming


I'll let images and captions summarize the past couple of days . . .


We stayed at site 351. Friends were at 353 and 354.

Site 351
Our neighbors at 353 and 354.
Four Hikes: Shades of Death, Hawk Falls (not seen on map), Boulder Field, and Hickory Run Trail.

Some waterfalls along Shades of Death
Sam along Shades of Death

Footbridge along Hickory Run Trail.
The parking lot that time forgot, for a picnic area that time forgot.
More details forthcoming.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

And now . . . a cynical post

My post for yesterday written today was pretty positive. Heck, it was a positive day. But today was more normal. We didn't leave Lansdale. Okay, we ventured one mile into Hatfield Township. Okay, and Sam got to go to a movie at Movie Tavern. And that's in Collegeville. But I didn't leave Lansdale. Except to eat lunch in Hatfield Township.

But it was still a neat day.

Caroline, of course, was excited to have me all to herself for a few hours while Sam went to the theater. Please note the similarities between the picture she drew of us and the picture the waitress took of us on our date to Spatola's Pizza.


I'm a bit embarrassed that Caroline and I polished off more than half an order of breadsticks and one half of whole pizza. It took ridiculous willpower to pry myself off the couch upon our return home and go the pool. However, it would have taken more commendable willpower to actually stop at one slice of sausage pizza, which I didn't. 


Our neighbor's optimistic impression of the value of improvements to her home isn't necessarily paying off. 

Told you I'm in a cynical mood. "Price Reduced." Haven't had a chance to confer with my neighbor about the implications of this on the house I'll probably never sell. 
Told you I was in a bit of a cynical mood. 

The garden is growing nicely. Too bad the damn birds are eating the strawberries. It seems as if there is no year without at least one failed crop. 


My dinner for the kids was lousy. At the last moment I decided to stay at home rather than mooch off my parents. I cooked the kids fried chicken thighs, mashed potatoes (made with margarine . . . we're out of butter), and peas. It's funny: I normally do the cooking, so I can't blame Sherry's absence on this poor meal. But I'm a worse cook when she's not around. Fried chicken thighs? Why didn't I just get a box of Banquet nuggets? 

My other dumb move was running 3 miles today. Not that running in and of itself is a bad idea. But I was on my feet for hours and traversed about 3 miles on foot yesterday. So now my left ankle / lower calf is stiff as anything. Oh well. At least I'm considered a "Green" rather than "Orange" runner on Nike's Nike+ app. 

So, here's the lesson: wait until you're approaching 40 before becoming a runner. Then get motivated to have a new color on your phone's app because you've run 150 miles without any training or conditioning then pull a muscle that hasn't been so challenged in nearly four decades and . . . voila, look like an old man walking down the steps of your home. Geesh. 

I did get to the pool two times today. That was nice. 

On a final note, when I go to bed I'll fall asleep, and somewhere in that 6.5 hours that I'm slumbering will pass the halfway mark of my wife's journey to Australia. As I said to her in our most recent phone call: we're happiest when she's home, though we're doing our best to make it happy while she's gone. We're eager to see her next weekend. 



The Post I Should've Written Yesterday

Though I had the courage and bravery to travel to New York with friends and many, many kids (1:2 adult:kid ratio) yesterday, I lacked the energy to more fully report on what we did.

Upon arriving in New York we walked from Penn Station to the Highline:


I've been inspired by the great children's book The Curious Garden to check out the Highline for sometime. The park meanders along an abandoned subway line for more than a mile. Approximately one railway gauge is set aside for foot traffic, the rest is dedicated to flowers. Occasionally there is an observation deck through which passersby can look down a street or . . .



up an avenue.


To me and my friends on the trip, it was stunning. The park meandered through tall apartment buildings, some new, some old. Occasionally, where there had been a siding or a station, there would be grass areas. It doesn't seem suitable for jogging. I think the awesomeness of it was lost on the kids. (However, awesomeness is often lost on kids. They're kids. At some point, they'll get how awesome of an experience they're having.

I never ventured into the area of town down near the southern terminus of the Highline. So I was surprised when we ended up at Chelsea Market. I guess one could call it an upscale, Manhattan version of the Reading Terminal Market. A New Yorker, however, would probably just curse at Philly's precious market. The men's bathrooms, I think, were built from old refrigerator rooms. They were really, really cool.


After a pit stop at Chelsea Market we made our way to the Lower East Side's Tenement Museum.


I was impressed by the Tenement Museum. I'll be back. Here's why: It's not a museum where one wanders looking at stuff. It's about telling stories. Stories that are parts of tours. We participated on one that was geared for kids. There are others about everyday living, shopkeeping, etc. But we decided to play it safe and take the "Meet Victoria" tour, where the kids got to interact with a first-person interpreter portraying a 13-year-old Greek in 1916 Manhattan. As a teacher and dad, I was impressed by the deliberate engagement of the proctor with the kids and the obvious attempts to make the kids feel like they were in a story. The acting was good. The history was very sound. The history nut in me appreciated sitting in a century-old tenement building, of sitting in a bed that was like the one that was shared by Victoria's two cousins. The history nut in me would've liked to have seen more stuff (i.e. just walk through the floor above) but . . .

The kids learned. The kids are likely to remember.

I'm a bit ticked they didn't permit photography inside. My only complaint.

I love this picture of me with the kids outside the museum.



Here's one of the whole brood we ushered through Manhattan.


It's at times nerve-rattling to shepherd kids through New York. I admit to being a bit uneasy near Penn Station, where there is so much pedestrian traffic as well as outside the Delancey station (the Lower East Side is still a bit rough around the edges). But I thrill off the rush of leading kids through such an incomprehensibly big thing like New York City. Our friends' children were, I think, a little bit amazed at the size of it all. And they didn't even get to the crown jewels like Empire State, Central Park, One Liberty Tower. In fact, we spent most of our time in areas of the city I had never touched before.

I'm eager to get up there again . . . with my family, with these friends, with other friends, with my dad. In fact, my dad and I spent some time today discussing his time in New York, when he was stationed on Staten Island in the early 1950s. One day he walked from the Battery all the way up to Times Square along Broad. That's more than four miles!



Sounds like a trip I ought to add to my bucket list. But I don't know if I'll do that with six kids. Even six kids who were as well behaved as these six were yesterday.

And that's the post I should've written last night.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Time for an adventure

I took the risk today of a) taking two kids to New York City without my wife and b) traveling with some friends whose kids had never been to the city. Some observations:

The Highline is an awesome park







The Tenement Museum (though expensive) is a great place to take kids


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

It felt really, really close to a normal day . . .

Today was my second day enlisting the services of a babysitter. It's fantastic. It permitted me to take a run that was a bit excessive . . .



. . . and it permitted me to get to band practice this evening. We worked pretty heavily on a real guilty pleasure piece of music, "MacArthur Park." There's nothing subtle about that song.

The kids and I made our second trip to the library this summer. Sam has already burned through a Diary of a Wimpy Kid volume, so we had to pick up another. Also, Caroline likes to pick out a book and read it through right there in the library. I also picked up a literary classic to read to the kids, How to Eat Fried Worms, and The Curious Garden, the book inspiring us to go to New York tomorrow with some friends.

We had a brief pool visit today (cut short by thunderstorms). But my son declared it the greatest 15-minute trip to the pool ever. Perhaps that's because he ran into two girls from school at the pool. Funny, he didn't bother much with Caroline and I after finding them.

After the pool we spent a bit of time reading books while petting dogs, and then playing with said dogs, at my brother's house.


The kids and I also finished a film, Hook. The kids enjoyed it, despite the clumsy story telling and slightly over-burdened plot line. It makes me realize we need to borrow the classic book from the library and read it as it was meant to be read. Unfortunately, Peter Pan was checked out.

Final note: we still haven't eaten dinner at home since Sherry left. Our neighbor invited us over for roast beast tonight. It's been a blessing. Sure, it's easier not having to make and clean up from a dinner. Moreover, dinner is when I'm likely to miss Sherry the most, so it's easier sharing a meal with someone else. Gets our mind off the woman we love on the other side of the world.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Monday, July 7

When I was younger, turning away from Independence Day meant the summer was mostly over. In this short summer, July 4 marked the mid point of the summer's beginning. Today, July 7, also marked the first weekday, it seems, since Sherry has left.

So far, flying solo hasn't been too hard. But that's because I've had some great help, namely:

friends who spelled me for a few hours today during a birthday party to which my son was invited. Also, friends have seen to it that I have yet to prepare a dinner at home for the kids. We've been guests every evening at some house since Sherry's departure.

coincidental timing that brought my neighbor's granddaughter down this way just in time for Sherry's departure . . . a granddaughter who is a great babysitter.

not having to report for work at all while my wife is gone.

family who is close enough by to lend assistance and provide diversions. My mom, for instance, came by for breakfast today.

Not that it's all a bed of roses. I did make the kids slave away in a hot minivan to clean it out. And it surprisingly looks better.



Sam might have had the best day of his summer so far. He spent two hours at a birthday party featuring the Game Truck. Then a few more at the home of some friends. When he returned, all he could do was sit and pet the cat.


Sunday, July 6, 2014

Sunday in the Pew

So, I returned to church for the first time in a few weeks. A series of events, some related to friends, or family, or laziness, conspired to keep me away for nearly a month. But the kids and I got to church (nearly) on time today, and I enjoyed being in the pew with them. Especially since I got this gem of a drawing from Caroline.

Please understand that her spelling is at times creative. In writing "dog" she was really writing "dong." The drawing, therefore, is of a church.

Writing and drawing while in church is a tradition with the kids. We make one another drawings and crossword puzzles. Today we were somewhat prolific.


After church we had a late breakfast at a restaurant that is becoming my new favorite in the area, The Metropolitan. I had one of their specials: egg white turkey sausage sliders. They tasted too good to be truly healthy. Their good taste made up, almost, for the half-hearted effort one of my children, she shall remain nameless, made at her breakfast. I was more forgiving of the other child given the mammoth size of the pancakes he was served.


Back to drawing. Caroline had a really neat picture later in the afternoon.


Good times at home, at the pool, and with some friends today. Signing off.