There were GAMES!
Welcome to my Album of Photographs and Memories of Travel, practicing Medicine, culinary Experiments, and other Exploits.
Wednesday, August 4, 2021
To the victor
Tuesday, August 3, 2021
Up, up, and far away
On what would have been my paternal grandfather's 97th birthday, we drove to a public park to shoot off homemade model rockets.
Monday, August 2, 2021
Home Sweet Away From Home: Lake Anna
For the last several summers, my father's side of the family gathered in a lake house in Virginia. Being more centrally located than Smith Mountain Lake [2019 blog post], we chose Lake Anna again [2020 blog post]. This time the Baltimore and Charlotte families stayed in one large house, while the Pittsburgh and Annapolis crew had a smaller cabin, and the Plano duo found a spacious condo nearby. The "party house" had no water access and a Jacuzzi we forgot to use. The cabin was set on a long narrow parcel of land with a tree-lined driveway to reach it and a long path and wooden staircase down to a two-level deck and the water. The condo looked out over the lake and one of the dams. Although a stomach bug knocked some of us out temporarily, and gravity knocked grandmother over, the head CT was normal, and nobody got horribly sunburned this time.
We did all of our favorite family activities: swimming, boating, fishing, playing games, doing puzzles, multiple grocery store trips to support cooking and eating, shooting off model rockets, seeing sites, visiting wineries or cideries, hiking, watching movies, making s'mores, drinking adult beverages, talking, and even crafting. The weather was beautiful, and it only really rained on us while trying to load the car to leave on the last morning.
Next up: 3...2...1...
Wednesday, July 21, 2021
Happy Birthday to Us!
These cool cats celebrated their birthdays this past weekend!
DH reached a milestone birthday this year, and I originally wanted to have an open house/birthday party, but...pandemic. And he didn't want a Zoom party. So we just dragged out the celebration(s).
Friday night after dinner, we opened the cards and gifts that had already arrived while enjoying the Dairy Queen ice cream cake I had gone 20 minutes out of my way to pick up on my way home from work (Dear Husband's request). Thank you to family and friends near and far for thinking of us!
Saturday was his actual birthday. That evening I had arranged seats in the upper deck of PNC Park to watch the Mets play the Pirates. It was an unseasonably cool and wet night for FOUR HOURS of baseball, the first three of which were excruciating to watch in a stadium whose outfield bleachers were wall-to-wall New Yorkers, not to mention the Mets fans scattered throughout the other sections. The Pirates kept trying to rally with two outs. Finally, in the 8th inning they got on the board with 5 runs, and although the Mets earned an insurance run in the top of the 9th to go up 7-5, and in the bottom of the 9th the home team's star batter struck out looking on a full count with the bases loaded and one man out, the catcher came up to bat...and hit a walk-off grand slam! There was pandemonium! Fireworks! A long spontaneous ovation! Do I know how to pick 'em, or what? Sometime after 11pm the official fireworks began, and we discovered that I had chosen exactly the wrong seats for a good view of them. Ah well. It's still a night we will remember.
Sunday after church we went out to lunch with a friend at a place where the street had been blocked off to provide outdoor seating. Monday was my birthday and a partial work day for me, on either side of an hour-long massage. In the evening we went out for our first fancy, indoor dinner since the pandemic began. We were hoping to be seated in the gorgeous main dining room of The Grand Concourse, but given the small volume early on a weeknight were put in the side room overlooking the Allegheny Trail, the Monongahela River, and the Smithfield Bridge. It was just okay, given the price.
Afterwards we rode the Monongahela Incline up to Mt. Washington, since we'd only ever ridden the other incline (Duquesne). We walked along Grandview Drive and sat for a while looking at the city, but due to the wildfire smoke from Canada, everything was hazy and orange. Finally, on Tuesday we had an after-work pool party at some friends' house, just the four of us (and some cake). For our second pandemic birthdays, they were pretty good. Thank you for thinking of us!
Sunday, July 18, 2021
TSPGH: In miniature
Dear Husband and I recently took an evening walk after dinner. The night was surprisingly mild for July. Because the sun had not set yet, we decided to walk through the grounds of the Frick House. Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919) and his wife, Adelaide Howard Childs Frick (1859-1931), lived at "Clayton" from 1883 until 1905, when for business reasons they mostly relocated to New York City. (Frick had fallen out with Andrew Carnegie over labor relations at the steelworks.) Today the mansion is open for tours (currently under renovations), the garage holds old cars, and there is a small separate art museum; the "big Frick" is in the Big Apple.
The greenhouse--which looks like a smaller version of the Phipps Botanical Garden--was open the evening we were there. It holds a variety of common and exotic plants. Next door is the red-brick "Playhouse." Now the site of staff offices, it was a small house with child-sized furniture where the Frick children could practice their future social roles: Helen (1884-1984) invited other girls to tea, and Childs (1883-1965) drilled the neighborhood boys in military-style exercises. (It was the Gilded Age/Age of Empires; he went on to become a naturalist.)
I just hope that when it is safe again, we can attend Summer Fridays at the Frick--free, live lawn concerts to which you could bring a picnic or buy from food trucks. We never went as often as we wanted to or should have, and with the end of residency in June 2020, I had been looking forward to many evenings in a lawn chair, watching other people's kids while listening to good music. One more thing that COVID stole, and something we will miss about living in this neighborhood if we successfully purchase a house next spring.
Friday, July 2, 2021
Friday on the move again
Monday we traveled to the Pocono Mountains. Tuesday we rafted the Lehigh River. Wednesday we explored Scranton's rail history (part 2). Thursday we ventured out cautiously in the rain.
Friday morning, fed and packed, we hit the road south to Harrisburg. Destination: the National Civil War Museum. A private museum that opened on the top of a reservoir hill overlooking the state capital in 2001, it claims to be the only one in the country to present an unbiased view of the conflict, its causes, and its human tolls. You can see it was cloudy when we arrived, and it tried to rain on us while we ate a picnic lunch under a tree toward the end of our visit.
Thursday, July 1, 2021
Thursday in the rain
Suffering from cabin fever by lunchtime, we scouted out a local restaurant near a state park, so we could hike during a break in the showers. Although the internet promised us the joint was open, all in-person evidence was to the contrary, so we found a different café one little town over. Unfortunately, they took so long to serve us that it was raining again by the time we had eaten. The afternoon was spent much like the morning, but with Wimbledon tennis in the background. When the precipitation let up again after dinner, we hopped in the car and headed to the nearest trail. Bad Google directions aside, we took a short walk to a beautiful vista overlooking the misty Lehigh River Gorge.
Of course it resumed drizzling while we were on our way back to the car. Below is a "fairy glen" of ferns. Ferns really owned the place. From the hiking map we learned that that Hickory Run State Park had once been half-covered by a glacier, which left a boulder field, and its melt had carved a deep river canyon. The rocky path was made of crumbling red sandstone, and above us many different birds chattered and chirped (reportedly 6 kinds of warbler!). Next time we want to explore the “Shades of Death” trail, which is supposed to have beautiful rhododendron bushes and nothing at all to do with dying (anymore--maybe the earliest settlers had it rough). Back at the cabin, it was too wet to make a fire for s’mores, so we popped some microwave popcorn and introduced Dear Husband to the original [sic--only] Charlie and the Chocolate Factory movie with Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka.


















































