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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

monthly roundup

The shortest month gave us the chance to get away: a February round-up

March 3, 2022

The shortest month of the year always seems like a blink, so I’m glad we were able to pack it with some fun. During President’s Day Weekend, we took a short trip to the beach, our first-ever school year weekend getaway thanks to Phil’s new work schedule.

So, this month, some of the categories will have a special section of What We (Did, Ate, Watched, Read) … On Our Getaway. Let’s get to it!

What We Did On Our Getaway

Months ago, we had hoped our getaway would be to a city like New York or D.C. but with COVID cases being high when we started our planning, we opted for something less metropolitan and took ourselves to the beach for the weekend. Destination: Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. We do not often go to the beach in the summer because we have other summer plans, so this was our chance to see the ocean for the first time in years. (It didn’t disappoint.)

Phil planned our weekend because I have decision fatigue right now. And he’d been to a couple of places in Delaware in the fall that he wanted to show us. Our first stop was a Trader Joe’s in Delaware. We don’t have one nearby and we thought that would give us some unique grocery options for our condo meals. (It did. Our family has been introduced to cookie butter and now we will never be the same.) Then we stopped for “brunch” at Helen’s Sausage House. (More on this later.) Our first adventure stop was Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge.

It was a slightly overcast day, and I was obsessed with the lighting.

Phil took himself to this refuge for his birthday in August. He is big into birding, and I just want to be outside and away from people.

I couldn’t pass up this picture.

This was perfect. We spent more than 3 hours driving through the refuge, and getting out to hike (sorry, they were “short walks”; our son has less opposition to them if they are walks rather than hikes).

Heron on the left. I could have watched it all day.

One path led to an old tree that mesmerized me with its root system.

There’s a story here

That same path passes some ruins for a World War 2 era radio headquarters building. Our daughter is a WW2 nerd and loved it. 

Until this exact moment, she was griping about having to go for another walk.

It was so refreshing to be outside. We climbed two towers, which was monumental for me. Usually I’m a little bit woozy climbing to the top of things on windy days but I felt perfectly secure. I credit my anxiety and blood pressure meds for doing their jobs.

The light of the day was perfect for pictures, and I could probably post them all here, but you might get bored. Just know that it is well worth the drive if you are within driving distance and into birds and outdoor things.

By the time we got to the condo it was dinner time. After dinner we played two games of Sushi Go and one game of Clue.

The living/dining/kitchen area of the VRBO we rented

The next day, Saturday, we went to Cape Henlopen State Park to walk the Point, a stretch of the Delaware seashore where the Delaware Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean. It’s not open to walk during the summer because it’s a nesting ground. It took us an hour but we walked next to the ocean with the wind stinging our faces and the waves crashing around us. I’ve never felt so alive.

We saw horseshoe crab carcasses and thousands of shells, a couple of lighthouses and the wreckage of a 19th century ship that’s just stuck in the water near the beach with some informational signage.

Tangible history makes my heart beat faster and spurs my imagination

After our walk, we stopped at the nature center to look at a few aquarium and reptile exhibits.

Then it was on to Fort Miles, which is also in the park. It was a World War 2 base. First, we went to the observation tower and climbed the spiral staircase to the very tope. Amazing views and still low anxiety on my part. I’m so proud of myself!

View on the way up
Proof I made it to the top

We walked around the rest of the site and into the museum. Our son is obsessed with cannons and large guns.

I don’t know what this obsession of his means …

One of the large guns that was on the USS Missouri when the Japanese surrounded lives at the historical slte. The museum also has a piece of the USS Arizona from Pearl Harbor. (Another trip, another time.)

Our after-lunch adventure was to downtown or city center Rehoboth. I wanted to visit Browseabout Books (we did; we bought books).

To only call this place a “bookstore” is a limited description; so much stuff!

We also walked a portion of the boardwalk. This was the busiest area we’d encountered on our entire weekend, so it was a little bit overwhelming.

Rehoboth Beach, Delaware

But we found a Zoltar! And explained to the kids why that was important.

I am NOT making a wish on that thing! Is the cord plugged in? I can’t tell!

The next day was our travel day back to Lancaster.

What We Did The Rest of the Month

Jigsaw puzzle. We had an early dismissal on a Friday because icy conditions were forecasted so I opened up a Travel the World puzzle to torture myself (with dreams of travel; the puzzle wasn’t hard). 

Someday, I’ll be ready to travel again

More basketball games. More wins. Our son is a beast under the basket, and we’re just so proud of his effort on the court. We had a tough loss to end the season. (Playoffs were technically in March, so you’ll have to wait to find out about that!)

Axe-throwing! I went out with some book club friends to a movie (see below) and axe-throwing afterward.

Our “coach” thought we all worked together; he was not expecting me to answer “book club” when asked how we knew each other.

It was more fun than I thought it would be, and I landed two bullseyes in the half hour we were throwing. Would do again!

My son wanted me to hit one bullseye. Imagine his surprise when I hit two!

Our daughter volunteered with a group from school to help with a local fire company’s ox roast fundraiser.

Super Bowl parties. Our son went to one; the rest of us went to another.

Yahtzee with family via FaceTime. I love board games via video call.

This was a legitimate Yahtzee, not a staged picture.

What We Ate On Our Getaway

On the way to Rehoboth, we stopped at Helen’s Sausage House, this little restaurant Phil came across in his research for his fall day trip.

Phil took this picture back in August when he stopped here

It’s the kind of place that stays in its lane and does it really well. We had numerous single sausages with egg and cheese on a roll, a bacon/egg/cheese sandwich, and a bacon sandwich.

We sat in the parking lot of a rest area to eat these. No regrets.

Simple and delicious. If you’re ever passing through Delaware before noon, look it up.

Our dinner at the condo was three kinds of ravioli from Trader Joes: lobster, cauliflower-cheese and mushroom truffle. We also had a Mediterranean salad and bread with garlic butter.

Our first breakfast of the getaway started with decaf Trader Joe’s single-use coffees (because that was the easy thing to buy for my coffee needs) and frozen Belgian waffles topped with the aforementioned cookie butter, whipped cream and fresh raspberries and blackberries.

Mmm…breakfast

Lunch was a smorgasbord of frozen fried foods (hey! we’re on vacation!): mozzarella sticks, chicken nuggets, mac and cheese bites and Impossible nuggets (which I liked better than chicken nuggets) alone with a jalapeño sauce for dipping. That was spicy!

We planned for dinner out on Saturday night and Phil enjoys Dogfish Head beer, so we headed to the brewery in Rehoboth. Our wait was close to 45 minutes, but we listened to live music as we ate. Again, too much food, but whatever. Pickle chips, “dog pile” nachos (tortilla chips slathered in beer chili, spinach and artichoke dip and other nacho toppings) and pretzel bites for appetizers.

Spinach-artichoke dip on nachos? It works.

The kids both had burgers.

That’s a burger!

Phil and I split a crab dip pizza.

So good.

There were leftovers.

Our Sunday breakfast was another smorgasbord: hash browns, vanilla bean scones, iced raspberry danish, pancake bread and yogurt.

We stopped for lunch in Middletown, Delaware, at a place called Capriotti’s which boasts the greatest sandwich in America. It’s called The Bobbie and has turkey, stuffing, and cranberry sauce on it.

Greatest sandwich in America? Debatable.

I ate it and didn’t hate it, but saying it’s the greatest might be a stretch. Other sandwiches consumed: capastrami; roast beef with cole slaw, provolone and thousand island; chicken parm cheesesteak.

What We Ate the Rest of the Month

You guessed it! Soups! Hubbard squash soup (hubbard squash is a giant grayish looking squash with a dark orange middle); potato leek soup; creamy mushroom soup; chicken tortilla soup. 

Chicken tortilla soup topped with tortilla strips

On the Olympic Opening Ceremony night, we ordered takeout from Chili Szechuan, a local Chinese restaurant inside an Asian market. We like to have food that represents the country where the Olympics are being held, and this was a good choice (thanks Reddit!) for Chinese food that was not the completely Americanized version.

Noodles from the Chinese restaurant

Ice cream for breakfast for National Eat Ice Cream for Breakfast Day on Feb. 5. Waffles with ice cream and sauces and fruit and other toppings.

Ice cream for breakfast? You don’t have to ask me twice!

Popeye’s. This was our Valentine’s Day meal after a long week of work for both Phil and me.

White chocolate truffles and custard creams (cookies). Our daughter made these from her Harry Potter cookbook for the Super Bowl party we attended.

What We Watched

Winter Olympics! All day every day. This was our viewing on our getaway as well.

Redeeming Love. I have A LOT of thoughts and feelings about this that may be too long for this particular space. I’ve read this book twice, and many of my feelings and beliefs have changed since the last time I read it, so I was skeptical about the movie. I liked it, though, and I will write more about why this was so difficult for me.

Maybe we don’t take the best selfies, but we do have a lot of fun.

Kim’s Convenience. We finished it. It was not a satisfying ending like Schitt’s Creek, but overall it was a series that made me laugh and think and laugh some more.

Big. After seeing the Zoltar machine on Rehoboth Beach, we told the kids about this movie and watched it with them. We had to fast forward through one scene because 1980s PG is a whole different rating system!

Murderville. Netflix. Will Arnett and guest “detectives” who have no script, improv-ing the whole thing. Pretty hilarious.

The news. Because of the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

What We Read

Books I finished:

The Most Spectacular Restaurant in the World: The Twin Towers, Windows on the World, and the Rebirth of New York by Tom Roston. While my husband was browsing the cookbook section of the library and I was waiting for him, this title grabbed my attention. It was an overall interesting history of how one restaurant came to be in New York City. The chapters detailing the night before 9/11 and the morning of were chilling. 

Never Leave Me by Jody Hedlund. A time-crossing, the second in a series. Hedlund’s books always grip from the beginning and I easily get lost in the worlds and stories she creates. I love that she wrote a time-crossing series.

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. At times overwhelming and intense. Still, there was a beauty about the story. Although it’s overall kind of sad. I don’t yet know all my feelings about this book. But I’m glad I read it.  This is one line that I can’t forget: “And isn’t the whole point of things–beautiful things–that they connect you to some larger beauty?”

Books finished with the kids:

Spy School Secret Service by Stuart Gibbs. We laugh and react so much while we’re reading this series.

Books in progress:

I Am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban by Malala Yousafzai. I’ve been slowly reading this one on my lunch break at work, and while I was familiar with Malala’s story on a surface level, I had no idea what life was like for her under the Taliban.

Atlas of the Heart by Brene Brown. For book club. I’m lukewarm on this book. Sometimes I love what the chapters are bringing and sometimes I don’t. It can be a lot to digest all at once.

How to Love the World: Poems of Gratitude and Hope. I took this one on our getaway and read a few poems at various times.

Phil’s books:

An Elderly Lady is Up to No Good by Helene Tursten. He’s on a mystery kick right now.

Filed Under: Delaware, monthly roundup, Travel Tagged With: board games, bombay hook national wildlife refuge, cape henlopen state park, helen's famous sausage house, ice cream fro breakfast day, redeeming love movie, rehoboth beach, weekend getaway

We stayed in a lot and it shows: a January round-up

February 2, 2022

January is for hibernating. That’s my assessment of the first month of 2022 for our family. It feels like we hunkered down, stayed in, watched shows and movies, and read books. I mean, I have no complaints. Our monthly round-up of What We Did, What We Ate, What We Watched and What We Read is heavy on basketball, soups and movies/TV shows. 

What We Did

New Year’s Day 2022 feels like four years ago. Since we were all home and it was a Saturday, we played a couple of board games. For Christmas, Phil had bought the family Forbidden Island. It was fun, but also a little stressful. The island is sinking and you have to work together to save artifacts/relics and get off the island. Fun, though. We also played our new favorite card game, Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza. But our hands hurt from all the slapping on the table.

A fun work-together game but it’s a little bit anxiety-inducing

We had one legitimate snow day in January. I put together this puzzle after an hour-plus of shoveling outside with my son.

The aptly titled “Snow Day” puzzle

Our Saturdays are full of youth rec basketball. There were several wins and one tough loss. We are becoming THOSE parents who cheer loudly and sometimes vocalize our discontent. 

But on one Saturday, our daughter got to participate in a county band event and we watched her concert later that day. It was moving to be in the audience for live band music again.

Ours is the redhead with the flute

We got our first ever parking ticket in downtown Lancaster. We were minutes late upping our parking time on the app, but the truth is, I’m glad it happened. I’ve been freaked out about getting a parking ticket my whole life basically because I wasn’t sure how expensive they were. Parking in general gives me anxiety. (Will we get towed?) It wasn’t as expensive as I thought and while I don’t want to repeat it, I know now I can survive it.

Uno on FaceTime with family. It’s a highlight of our weekend calls when we get to play games via video.

During the mid-month snow storm, Phil and I had plans to go out to dinner with friends. We had rescheduled a couple of times due to Covid or Covid-like symptoms, so we kept our date and drove through the city while it snowed looking for a place that was open. (See below). It was a fun, refreshing time.

Phil started playing Wordle and eventually all four of us joined him. It’s a daily family conversation.

And at church, Phil and I made our debut in the nursery/toddler room as volunteers. So far, we’re having fun, but I’m quickly realizing that I might be getting too old to be down on the floor with kids all the time. (Or maybe I just need to stretch more.)

What We Ate

New Year’s Day lunch is always full of snacks per Phil’s family tradition. There were lots of chippy dippy kinds of things. We also had pork and sauerkraut for dinner, a PA Dutch tradition that we don’t mind at all.

Pork and sauerkraut is winter comfort food

Soups, soups and more soups. Here are some of the soups we made and ate this month. (Some I forgot to take a picture of because I was so eager to eat them!) We had French onion soup from the Harry Potter cookbook; carrot, mushroom barley soup; Irish stew with turnips and carrots; pork chili; and Scottish “stovies” for Burns night.

The barley mushroom carrot soup
Irish stew

On our dinner date with friends, we ended up at Queen Street Bistro because it was the only place we could find that was open. I had a crab melt that was meaty and delicious. Phil had a mushroom pizza and an ahi tuna appetizer.

Crickets. Yes, crickets. A couple of our classes at school read a book about eating insects and the teacher who leads our class bought some cricket flour online to make cookies. She came to school on a Monday with choco-chirpies (chocolate chip cookies made with cricket flour). Honestly, they tasted like chocolate chip cookies. It was a fun day watching our students try something new.

What We Watched

The New Year’s Day tradition for Phil’s family continues with a watching of The Tournament of Roses parade. 

Usually we’re more of a shows kind of family, but we watched a bunch of movies this month. Our son had heard about Ron’s Gone Wrong, so we watched that. It is one of those happy-sad movies. We cashed in some digital credits to rent Free Guy. Uh-mazing. I can’t stop thinking about this idea that we can be more than spectators in our lives. Then we jumped on the Encanto bandwagon and it is worth the hype. And we finally watched Eternals. Unpopular opinion? I didn’t hate it. I thought I was going to hate it because I had heard some bad reviews, but I’m considering rewatching just to catch all the threads. Yes, it’s a long movie (we watched it over two nights), but I enjoyed it.

Some of our family shows we watched together: Supermarket Sweep, the new one with Leslie Jones as host and Welcome to Earth hosted by Will Smith.

Phil and I are watching Around the World in 80 Days on Masterpiece PBS. (David Tennant as Phileas Fogg?Yes please.). We’re also trying to finish Kim’s Convenience so we can move on to other comedies. We logged another episode of The World According to Jeff Goldblum, too. And weekly, as long as there are episodes, we watch SNL clips.

We watched a couple of documentaries, too. Storm Lake is PBS documentary about a family-run newspaper in western Iowa that won a Pulitzer Prize. It reminded me of my journalism days. 

And we’re halfway through a four-part docuseries on Netflix called This is a Robbery: The World’s Biggest Art Heist. It’s an intense look at the robbery of the Isabelle Stewart Gardner Gallery in Boston, Mass., in 1990, an as-of-yet unsolved crime. I’m sort of obsessed.

And one afternoon, I watched A Castle for Christmas. Yes, I watched this in January, weeks after Christmas was over. But it was on my list for Christmas movies to watch and I never got to it. Cary Elwes with a Scottish accent was something I didn’t know I needed in my life.

What We Read

Reading out loud with the kids: more Spy School books by Stuart Gibbs! We finished Spy Ski School and are about halfway through Spy School Secret Service. We will read every book in this series.

Phil finished a book! (I’m not being mean. This is just a rare event because of his limited leisure time and reading speed.) His book was Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala. He saw it on a list of the top books of the year in the mystery category as voted by Goodreads users. There are more books coming in the series, and he’s really looking forward to them.

Books I finished: Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone by Diana Gabaldon. The long-awaited ninth book in the Outlander series. I started it over Christmas break and finished it about halfway through January. When I first started reading the Outlander books, I was borrowing them from the library and rushing to finish them in two weeks or less in case they couldn’t be renewed. I was glad to be able to take my time with this one.

The Talented Miss Farwell by Emily Gray Tedrowe. Loosely based on the Rita Crundwell decades-long crime against my hometown. 

The Long Way Home by Louise Penny. The next Inspector Gamache book. Was not my favorite.

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie. My first Agatha Christie read! And definitely not my last.

Books in progress: 

Truman. Yep. I went back to it. But not for long. I need to finish it just to be done with it, but it puts me to sleep right now.

Atlas of the Heart by Brené Brown. Book club pick for the winter session. I have mixed feelings already. Stay tuned.

Filed Under: monthly roundup Tagged With: board games, hibernating, january happenings, soups

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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