Terrible Horrible

Yesterday was a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day, just like Alexander had in the Judith Viorst book that was one of my son’s favorite books when he was little. The only difference — and it is significant — is that Alexander actually had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day. He woke up with chewing gum in his hair, he tripped over things, he didn’t get a prize from his cereal box, his dentist found a cavity in his mouth, and so forth. You get it. He had a bad day.

I actually didn’t have a bad day, but was incredibly crabby nonetheless. The last time I cried as often for no apparent reason, I was 12 years old and my mom desperately explained the female reproductive process to me figuring I was going to get my period any second. Bill didn’t try explaining the facts of life to me; he just went up into our bedroom, closed the door, and worked on replacing drywall where the window installers had removed it, humming loudly.

I finally owned up to my crabbiness in the afternoon when I was reading my daily Nextdoor post. Many of you might recognize that Nextdoor is a nationwide social networking site for neighborhoods. Its goal, I think, is to allow courteous discussions among neighbors, including restaurant recommendations, recommendations for services such as plumbers and painters, alerts as to issues in the neighborhood, and so forth. At least once a day — and usually more — I receive a Nextdoor feed with interesting information.

I mostly like Nextdoor. It has been useful to me on a number of occasions. One day when I was in AZ, I got a Nextdoor alert that there was a water main break in our Denver neighborhood. Upon closer inspection, I realized it was right in front of our house. I was able to alert friends and family, who checked to make sure our house was not impacted. That’s pretty cool, considering I was 900 miles away.

I have also used it to obtain recommendations on such things as hair stylists and house painters. Two thumbs up!

Yesterday, I got a notice from a Nextdoor neighbor that shots had been heard at 2 o’clock yesterday morning in our ‘hood. Have you ever played Pixie Stix? You know, the game where you pull out plastic sticks from a pile one-by-one until finally the pile collapses. Well, the Nextdoor notice about gunshots was that final plastic stick.

Why-oh-why do people hear gunshots so often in our neighborhood? It’s reported on Nextdoor so frequently that you would think we live on the south side of Chicago with Bad, Bad Leroy Brown. And why does everyone else hear them and I never do? Me, whose sleep pattern is so messed up these days that I hear when my neighbor flushes her toilet!

Well, practically.

The fact that I was so very annoyed by this poor woman’s concern that she heard gunshots (which I’m convinced was not gunshots but simply fireworks given that things always seem worse at night) demonstrates just how cranky I was yesterday. It rather brought me to my senses.

Here’s what I did. I looked at these photos…..

…..and then I turned on television and watched Midsommer Murders.

And I felt better.

Today is a good day.

Grandkids in a Pear Tree

When we bought our Denver house back in 1992, we had a pear tree, a cherry tree, and three apple trees in our back yard, and a decorative crabapple tree in our front yard. The cherry tree had to be cut down quite soon after we moved in because it was dying. The crabapple tree was sacrificed shortly after simply because Bill got tired of having to pick up little useless crabapples from the ground.  However, the other trees have been quite healthy, until this year when it became apparent that one of our three apple trees looks to be quite sickly. I’m hoping we can save it, but it might have to go.

Some years we have pears and apples and some years we don’t. I think it often has something to do with how and if the trees were pollinated. Often it is a direct result of the trees blossoming and then a winter storm killing the flowers.

I will be perfectly honest: neither Bill nor I are ever very sad when the trees don’t bear fruit. It’s hard to keep up with the harvesting, and more apples and pears end up on the ground becoming sour than are ever actually picked and used.

This year we knew we were going to get fruit. The trees were bursting with blossoms this past spring and we didn’t have the typical late freeze. All summer long I have watched our trees — and particularly the pear tree — grow fruit. Week by week, the fruit got larger. Cole, in particular, loved checking out the apples and pears every time he came to visit to see if they were ready to eat. His little teeth nearly fell out in July when he tried hard to bite into a pear.

Finally, about a week ago, he pronounced the fruit ready to eat. He proudly displayed the apples he had picked, with bites out of each. I admitted that they looked ready.

I never have trouble figuring out what to do with the apples. I have a wonderful recipe for an apple cake that was one of my mother’s favorites which I included in this blog post.

It’s the pears that stump me every single year. Here’s why: I have learned from trial and error and my BFF Google that you don’t wait until they are ripe to harvest pears. By that time, they have fallen to the ground and been consumed by squirrels or other four-or -six legged (or more) critters. Instead, you have to figure out exactly when it is time to pick them, then store them in a cool, dry spot and let them ripen in the box.

Despite knowing all of the above, I never have quite gotten it right. The closest I came was one year when I was able to make a batch of pear butter (which has a consistency of applesauce so I am wholly unclear as to why it isn’t referred to as pearsauce) from pears that had fallen on the ground but not yet been spotted by other critters. Every other year one of two things has happened: 1) the pears have rotted on the tree; or 2) I picked them, put them in a box, set the pears in the basement for ripening, and forgot about them until June.

This year, however, the McLain kids came over to help us harvest the pears…..

In their Sunday-Go-to-Meetin’ Clothes, nonetheless. I was pretty strict. The big ones go in the box; the little ones get tossed in the garbage…..

 

Maggie Faith, being a little one herself, suffered a broken heart about the little ones’ fate.

We didn’t quite complete the job, it being 90 degrees and all. But we got a few in the box, and I picked enough apples to make an apple crisp.

Fall is in the air.

Saturday Smile: I Am Ready For Some Football

When the universe is in alignment, August is a good time to be a sports fan. We are lucky here in Colorado because not only are the Broncos back on the field, but the Rockies are coming on strong late in the season. It’s fun to see some good baseball, but when football season begins, I smile BIG.

I admit to nearly tearing up the other day when I heard Cris Collinsworth’s voice during a Sunday night football from sheer football joy. The Broncos have had an inconsistent preseason and our local announcers have made me cringe. Good ol’ Brian Griese in last night’s game: “Everyone knows Emmanuel Sanders is a better football player when he’s involved in the game.” As opposed to when he’s sitting at home eating tacos and drinking beer?

Nevertheless, I’m ready for football!

Have a great weekend.

Friday Book Whimsy: Two Girls Down

In Two Girls Down, author Louisa Luna introduces a new series — or at least I hope it becomes a series — featuring a strong, determined private investigator named Alice Vega who specializes in finding lost children.

She is called upon following the apparent kidnapping of two young sisters from a Pennsylvania shopping mall after being left alone in a car for a few minutes while the mother runs in to make a purchase. The mother is a blue collar worker who finds the wheels of justice don’t necessarily turn as quickly when you’re lower income, especially when your small town’s police department is up to its neck in heroin and meth cases.  To make working with the police a bit easier, Vega convinces Max Caplan — a former policeman who resigned amidst a scandal — to help her find the two missing girls.

While pedophilia is rampant in this story, there is never a point where I felt uncomfortable or thought the author was being gratuitous. She told her story without the need for graphic details.

I found the main characters to be complex, interesting, and likable, despite numerous flaws. Cap is the divorced father of a teenaged girl, which makes him even more determined to find the missing girls. Should this become a series, I hope his daughter has a strong presence because I found her to be eminently interesting.

At first, it appears that Cap and Vega will have an antagonistic relationship; however, it isn’t long before each develops a grudging respect for the other. While there was only a hint of their apparent chemistry, the two detectives will make a formidable duo should the author decide to continue the series.

A good start, and a compelling read by a new writer in the popular genre of thrillers.

Here is a link to the book.

Thursday Thoughts

Getting Into the 80s Groove
One of the conversations Bec and I had while traveling to and from Nebraska last week was one in which I admitted to her that I didn’t understand a country song that is popular and played regularly right now on most country stations. The song is by Jake Owen, and it’s called I Was Jack (You Were Diane)Who in the heck are Jack and Diane? I asked her. She looked at me with barely-contained horror, and said it referred to that song by John Mellencamp. You know. THAT song. Well, I’m afraid I had never heard of that song. In 1982, John Mellencamp — who was then known as John Cougar — wrote and recorded a song called Jack & Diane. It’s considered by the Recording Industry Association of America to be one of the “songs of the century.” And I’d never heard of it. My apologies. I sort of missed that decade. In 1982, I was busy with a two-year-old, a full-time job, and an unhappy marriage. I barely remember Fleetwood Mac. But Bec issued a challenge in an email yesterday: Since you taught yourself to like whiskey, it’s now time to learn more about John Mellencamp. So I am setting out to learn all about John Mellencamp. I’ve already learned that he was also known as John Cougar, and I know that Keith Urban wrote a song about John Cougar. If I can learn to listen to John Mellencamp while drinking whiskey, that might be even better.

Stop Growing Up
My grandkids are growing up too darn fast. Yesterday Kaiya turned 10. T-E-N!!!!! How can she be getting older when I’m staying the same age?…..Found It
Before we left for Nebraska, I spent an hour or so with Dagny and Maggie Faith geocaching in our neighborhood. We were looking for a specific cache not far from our house. Alas, though we spent a full hour hunting, we were completely unable to locate the treasure. However, while sitting around our hotel room in Columbus last Friday, wondering what to do, I absent-mindedly began looking to see if there were any geocaches nearby. Lo, and behold! There were two within a half-mile walk. So I dragged Bec along with me and I am happy to say I found two out of two. I felt a bit vindicated…..

CAN’t Help Myself
Due to miscommunication, last week when Dagny and I made pies, both Jll and I bought packages of frozen cherries. We only used a couple of bags, so I had plenty left. Not being particular fans of cherries, I wasn’t sure what to do with the remaining cherries, but only knew that they were taking up precious space in my smallish freezer. Voila! I made cherry jam, which I took over to the McLains, who are lovers of All Things Cherry. I didn’t wait around to see if it was any good…..

Boom Boom Boom
As I am writing this blog post, a crew from Pella is installing new windows on the front of our house. We put in new windows in the back of our house a number of years ago, and finally decided to finish the job. Here is the before picture…..

The “after” picture is still to come.

Ciao.

The Swedish Village in Nebraska

Last Friday when Bec and I were in Columbus on our nostalgia tour,  we were somewhat at loose ends. We had driven around the town the night before, seeing all the things we wanted to see. That takes no more than an hour because Columbus ain’t that big. We had eaten lunch at Glur’s Tavern, its claim to fame being that it’s the oldest continuously operating bar in Nebraska. We drove up 13th Street and down 14th Street to replicate the activities of our youth, when we probably did that same thing about a cajillion times. Unlike the days of our youth, we didn’t see anyone we knew.

“What do you wanna do?” I asked Bec.

“I don’t know,” she replied. “What do you wanna do?”

“I don’t know,” I answered. “What do you wanna do?

Jen saved us by FaceTiming us about that time. Thank heavens.

“Here’s what you need to do,” she ordered us, er, suggested to us. “Drive to Stromsburg.”

Where?

Stromsburg, Nebraska, is about 35 miles north of Columbus. Despite its close proximity, neither Bec nor I had ever visited the unofficial Swedish capital of Nebraska. I know for a fact, however, that there were folks from Stromsburg who made their way on a regular basis to Columbus to buy their bread at Gloor’s Bakery back in the day. I know this because the reason Jen knows about Stromsburg is that a very good friend of hers (who also lives in Fort Collins) was born and reared there, and her family did exactly that. Small world.

Jen promised us it would be worth the drive. If nothing else, she insisted there was a very good coffee shop in the town center. I frankly doubted it, having seen the dismal cafes that most small towns feature. Still, see above. We had nothing else to do.

The drive is pretty if you like that sort of scenery (which I do). There are lots of fields of corn and soybeans with a silo or two thrown in. Very Willa Cather-like. I’m waiting to see Antonia Shimerda (of My Antonia) running across the field, except that she’s Bohemian and not Swedish…..

Anyway, it wasn’t hard to find the town center because the entire village is only about one square mile. But its outside appearance surprised me…..

…..and its indoor appearance astounded me….

It was clear that this was not your typical midwestern farm town coffee shop. It was quiet, and Bec and I enjoyed our lattes and even did a bit of gift shopping. The proprietor was a pleasant young woman who had grown up in Stromsburg. She encouraged us to walk around the town square and visit some of the other shops.

We did just that. We stopped at the small grocery store and took note that it had nearly everything a body could want, but just not 175 brands of each. There were a handful of shoppers in the store.

After perusing the market, we went next door to The Apothecary which plays double-duty as a gift store and the town’s pharmacy. Bec purchased a couple of items, and as we went to pay, we struck up a conversation with the proprietor/pharmacist, a woman by the name of Marsha Yungdahl. The story she told us is quite remarkable.

Once upon a time there was a man who grew up in the small Nebraska town of Stromsburg. As so often happens, he went away to school, planning never to return. He made a considerable amount of money doing whatever it was that he did. But the thing is, he DID return, along with his wife and family, eager to bring up his children in a safe, small-town environment with good schools and nice people.

He didn’t just return, however. He made it his mission to revive the town. He poured money into improvements, and — perhaps even more important — he talked other townsfolk into helping spruce up the village. In the years since he’s returned to Stromsburg, the town has transformed. There is a health clinic, a dentist and doctor, a butcher in the grocery store who appeals to people from as far away as Lincoln, an extremely progressive elementary school, and a bed-and-breakfast. When I asked Ms. Yungdahl where people go to do their big grocery shop, she seemed surprised. “Why, they mostly shop next door,” she said.

As for Ms. Yungdahl, her story is quite similar. She met her husband in Pharmacy School at the University of Nebraska. He grew up in Stromsburg and never intended to return. Until they did. Why? To raise their family in a safe environment near to grandparents.

And that says it all…..

Susie Reichmuth and Marsha Yungdahl are happy residents of Stromsburg, Nebraska.

You might remember that Jen and I just visited Pawhuska, Oklahoma, where The Pioneer Woman Ree Drummond and her husband are almost single-handedly revitalizing the town. In that post, I expressed my concern that when her brand is no longer popular, the town might suffer. It feels to me that Stromsburg is a bit more organic, and less likely to suffer such a fate.

At any rate, Bec and I felt quite proud of ourselves for having discovered such a hidden treasure in the cornfields of Nebraska.

Oh, and thanks Jen.

There’s a First Time For Everything

You might remember that I said this was going to be the summer during which my motto was When was the last time you did something for the first time? (Thanks Darius Rucker.) The fact of the matter is that I’m having a bit of triuble keeping up with everything that’s going on, and that reality looks to remain the same for the next while.

Bec left yesterday morning. Bill and I stood on the stoop waving and singing On the Road Again until such time as we realized that she was setting up her GPS and making sure that her tunes would play and she wasn’t going to be on the road again for a bit of time. We finally got tired and went inside. An hour later her car was gone, so I guess she was finally on the road again.

During her stay, she drove back and forth from Denver to Fort Collins so many times that TSA likely had her on their radar. We made trips to Estes Park and Nebraska while she was here, leaving Bill to fend for himself. I called him one night while in Nebraska and he told me he was at the cigar shop. I called the next night and he said he was at the cigar shop. Did you go home? I asked him. Something tells me he doesn’t miss me a lot when I’m gone. We saw lots of these…..

We celebrated Dagny’s birthday and watched in absolute amazement as Dagny flew the drone we gave for her birthday like an aviation master. TSA should be watching Dagny instead of Bec…..

In preparation for the end of summer, Bec cooked us up an old-fashioned shrimp boil. Alastair was eager to help….

We watched the kids go back to school. In fact, yesterday I took Cole to school and met his teacher. But not before we had lunch at McDonalds…..

This afternoon, Bill and I will meet with the nurse with whom we will be working on his clinical research trial over the next few months — actually, for the next couple of years. For two hours today and two hours tomorrow, we will be learning how to fill his syringes with the medication and will get a lesson on inserting the line from him to the pump. She will be our BFF, because we will meet with her twice a week for the length of the trial. Next week we meet with the doctor again, and the person in charge of the research trial in his office will spend several hours going over the enormous bag of accoutrement With which we will become very familiar over the next couple of years. Pray for us. I am willing to admit that I’m nervous. Bill is his usual calm and positive self.

Oh, and in case we are bored, on Wednesday a crew will come into our house and begin installing new windows. I’m sure the nurse will be happy about training us with pounding going on in the background.

I guess you could say I am living up to my vow to do something for the first time. Several somethings, in fact.

Mountain Moments

It’s become a tradition of sorts. Bec comes to Colorado each year for a few weeks in the summer to escape the exhausting heat of AZ. And each year, Bec and Jen and I spend a long weekend in Estes Park as part of the itinerary. It’s a tribute to our childhood during which our family vacationed in this village just outside of Rocky Mountain National Park almost every summer of our formative years. But more than that, it’s a chance to escape the busyness of our lives and sit in a comfortable chair by a rushing creek with a glass of wine and talk. And laugh. And cry. And make confessions. And laugh at our confessions.

Oh, and swat bees and douse ourselves with spray to fend off mosquitoes and watch various kinds of wildlife make their way through the motel grounds. This year it was wild turkeys….

We have several Must-Dos when we are in Estes. One, of course, is to visit the taffy shop……

Don’t worry. I actually left some for others to buy.

One night each year we eat dinner at a long-time Estes Park restaurant called the Dunraven Inn. The restaurant features Italian food, and sort of specializes — randomly, perhaps — in seafood.

This year, Jen invited a friend of hers to enjoy dinner with us. Bec and I stewed a bit about whether or not Jen’s friend Karma would be put off by our sense of humor and — quite frankly — our love of good food and wine and great martinis. As it happens, we needn’t have worried, as Karma could have been one of the sisters for all anyone knew. Well, except that she is very tall and has the figure of a fashion model. But other than that…..

Here am I, enjoying my food and delicious martini and NOT looking like a fashion model…..

Our server, though quite congenial, wasn’t stellar. He made up for his incompetence (and quiet speaking voice) with a good attitude. We thought he said his name was Bill, and called him by that name for a good while. Finally, towards the end of the meal, he admitted his name was NOT Bill. “But my brother’s name is Bill,” he added happily. And then proceeded to take several pictures of us, including this one….

As I said, he made up for his shortcomings with good cheer.

Another tradition we have adopted is our annual visit to Cinnamon’s — a bakery featuring the most delicious cinnamon rolls one can imagine. And there is no need to point out that all of our traditions seem to include food. Anyhoo, the proprietor of Cinnamon’s is a retired baker from somewhere in the midwest (Kansas? Missouri?) who lives with his family in Estes. The bakery offers a very limited number of choices — pecan rolls, gluten-free blueberry muffins, one type of fruit roll, and, of course, cinnamon rolls. There is really no need to look further than the cinnamon roll, and most people don’t. The hours during the summer, according to their signage, are “7:30 – 10 or when sold out.” The day we went, I got into line at 7:15…..

…..and brought cinnamon rolls back to the room. When we drove past the restaurant at 8:30, the SOLD OUT sign was already out.

I’m happy to tell you that we do have one tradition that does not involve food. We try our best to walk around Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park. It isn’t always possible, as Bear Lake is the tipping-off point for many popular hikes so parking is often unavailable. This year, Bec and I found a spot Sunday afternoon around 4, and had just enough time to take a lap around the lake that was one of our mother’s favorites…..

Our time in Estes Park is always one of my most special memories of each year.

Saturday Smile: It Was Worth the Drive

Bec and I got in the car Thursday morning and proceeded to drive seven hours or so to the town in eastern Nebraska in which we were born, spent our formative years, and learned right from wrong. We spent much of yesterday driving around Columbus and the surrounding outskirts reminiscing about our childhood and noting how where we grew up and with whom we grew up formed who we are.

We ate two nights in a row at Husker House, where we celebrated numerous birthdays and other notable events. Both meals were outstanding. Friday night was special because we dined with some of our cousins from our mom’s side. Good folks all…..

Though it was a quick trip, it was worth the drive, and it made me smile.

Have a good weekend.

Thursday Thoughts

Let the Good Times Roll
After the previous days’ posts, I felt you should be told of the outcome of all of our baking. We were lucky that there were some rolls left by dinnertime Tuesday because everytime I looked, one or the other of the kids was snitching a roll…..

As For Pie….
Dagny couldn’t make up her mind, so she chose a piece of peach pie and a piece of cherry pie…..

As for Alastair, he likes a little pie with his whipped cream. Well, maybe a lot of pie….

School Daze
Kaiya, Mylee, and Cole are the first of our grandkids to go back to school. Their school district starts a bit earlier and lets out a bit earlier than the Denver Public Schools. The kids looked darling in their back-to-school attire. I hope those teachers are ready for Mr. Cole…..

Ragin’ Cajun
I have been hankering for a seafood boil. Tuesday night, when I mentioned it to Alastair, his eyes lit up like a Christmas tree. I’m in, he stated emphatically. So last night we filled our big turkey fryer with boiling water, and Bec prepared a shrimp boil for a gang of nine. It was delicious!…..

Cornhuskers
As you read this blog, Bec and I will likely be flying down I-80, heading towards our old hometown of Columbus, Nebraska. It will be a quick trip, with just enough time to have dinner with a few of our cousins.

Ciao.