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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

monthly roundup

End of summer, start of school: August round-up

September 1, 2021

Friends, how in the name of all that is good and holy did August pass us by? It is now September and I don’t know how to feel. In August, we returned from vacation, endured hotter-than-Hades temperatures, and prepped for the return to work and school (and then went to work and school), so our round-up of things we did, ate, watched and read feels a little bit lesser this month, but there were still some big things (like one of our family turned a birthday age that ends in “zero”).

Here’s a look at our month!

What We Did

Long’s Park Summer Music series: We only made it to two concerts because of weather and/or other commitments, but we enjoyed them both. The Paul Thorn Band was unexpectedly delightful (our kids hated it; it was blues/country/southern rock … whatevs), and Vanessa Collier who plays a mean sax and steel guitar. What I appreciated most about Collier’s concert was that there was so much instrumental I had time to let my mind just wander. 

Paul Thorn Band
Vanessa Collier

We squeezed in some friend visits with people we hadn’t seen in person for months or more than a year. I went to one friend’s house and we had a nice catch-up. Then we were able to finally get together with friends who headed back to their mission assignment in Kenya. Our plan with them was to meet for ice cream, but it stormed that night and the place we picked wasn’t open for dine-in, so we pivoted and met back at our house and dug into our personal ice cream stash. (We almost always have an ice cream stash.) It was good to be together.

Hiking! We went to Steinman Run Nature Preserve for a nearly 3-mile loop hike. It was another hot day so we tried to get out early. We were home by 11. It was muddy and buggy and the kids were cranky but it was a beautiful walk through the woods, along a stream (which we crossed several times), up and down some gentle hills. My mind needed it for clarity.

My happy place, even when my people aren’t always happy to be there

More hiking! Our last summer hike with people from our church. This time we went to Climbers Run, which our family had hiked a few months’ back. (I fell in the creek, remember?) We did a lot of rock scampering and got our feet wet in the creek A LOT, met new people and had a great time. This one was particularly fun because we were all looking out for each other and each other’s kids as we scrambled over the rocks. It felt like an unintentional team-building exercise.

I joined a new book club, also associated with our church, and we had an outdoor in-person meeting to discuss Such A Fun Age (I finished this book on vacation.) I had a great time with this sassy, smart group of women and look forward to sticking with them through the fall and winter and beyond.

School supply shopping. Online, again because it’s honestly easier that way. Plus, it’s exciting to receive packages!

Back-to-school night for our last year of elementary. Our son met his teachers for the year. We saw some of our previous teachers, which was a treat. It was nice to be back in the school and getting a sense of what the year will be like.

Celebrated Phil’s 40th birthday. His birthday fell on a Friday, a work day, and our daughter baked some treats for him to take to his co-workers. The kids and I shopped at Building Character for some gifts that he opened later in the weekend. Two days after his birthday, we picked up Popeye’s chicken for dinner and watched Phil’s favorite movie (see below). Would we have done things differently in a post-Covid or pre-Covid world? Perhaps.

First Day(s) of School. We made it. And we were tired. The end.

6th grader
8th grader
Perpetual middle schooler

Book sale. Our son started school on a Monday, and our daughter was involved in orientation for seventh-graders (as an eighth-grade leader), so I took myself to the library’s ginormous used book sale. Friends, I was there for three hours, scouring books and standing in line to pay for said books. I walked out with 19 books for $50, a good deal if you ask me.

Some of these books are recent releases

A highlight of the outing was how I came into possession of one of the books. I’m on a mission to collect all the books in the Outlander series (hardback or the larger paperbacks if I can find them) and while I had already snapped up a small paperback of one book in the series, I caught a glimpse of a larger paperback of one of the books I needed. But, it was already in the stack of a couple of guys packing all their finds into boxes. I suspected they were booksellers and I desperately wanted to approach them but felt weird about asking for something they hadn’t yet purchased but were intending to make money off of. I circled them for a few minutes, watching out of the corner of my eye, then I walked to the other side of the room and looked at more books. Then, I went back and just got up the nerve to talk to them. I told them what I wanted and half-offered to pay them, but one of the guys said they could part with it. So, I asked where they were from and it turns out they’re from a popular bookstore in Harrisburg that I’ve been wanting to go to. I told them this, and that I follow them on Instagram, and we chatted a bit about what a visit there would look like. Now, I’m even more motivated to patronize this bookstore.

On the first Wednesday after school started, when the rest of us were occupied at our various schools, Phil took himself on a birthday birding adventure to Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Delaware.

He left before dawn to make the two-hour drive, stopped at a little diner called Helen’s Famous Sausage House for breakfast, then spent hours at the refuge doing what he loves at his own pace without interruption. (The rest of us are not always as patient or quiet when it comes to birding.) He saw dozens of herons, an owl, a spoonbill, and marsh wrens. (He was also covered in mosquito bites and had to swat biting flies constantly.) But he loved it, and I loved that we could gift him that time.

Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge/Photo by Phil Bartelt

A new friend turned 40 and I was invited to help celebrate at a local restaurant. A small group of us sat outside, eating, drinking and talking for hours, and it was an honor to be included.

What We Ate

TV dinners! Our kids had never had the pleasure of eating these, so on the night we arrived back from vacation, we went to the store for some staples and these for dinner. We wanted them to have a glimpse of our childhoods. I cheated, though, and picked out a healthier option that would not have been available in my childhood.

During one of our Sunday nights at Long’s Park, when our daughter was at a training for school, we grabbed takeout from Wegman’s: sushi for the boys, a beef on weck and potato salad for me, along with desserts: cookies and brownies.

On our last Wednesday before school started, it rained, so we ate ice cream in. Phil had purchased Dolcezza gelato from Whole Foods. We tried three flavors: stracciatella (chocolate chip), mascarpone and berries, tramantona (dulce de leche).

For Phil’s birthday: Popeye’s chicken (a variety of chicken and sides; they were out of biscuits!) and a cannoli cake. On the day of his birthday, we got cupcakes from Lancaster Cupcake.

For biscuits’ sake, can we get COVID under control?

Every year we do a back-to-school takeout or eat-out meal to celebrate the return to the school year. This year, the kids wanted Beast Burgers, a product of one of their favorite YouTubers. (Yes, we supported a YouTube millionaire with our back-to-school dinner.) This was my first ghost kitchen concept–Beast Burgers are made in existing restaurants according to the Beast Burger recipes. They weren’t too bad.

Beast Burger and some kind of loaded fries

This amazing chicken pot pie at Annie Bailey’s for the birthday party.

Yum.

What We Watched

The Olympics. Especially after we got back from vacation.

Virgin River. I finished season 2 and jumped right into season 3, finishing it in just a couple of days. And now I need a support group. Fortunately for me, there are 20-plus books in the series, so that’ll keep me busy till next year.

Falcon and The Winter Soldier. So good.

The Cook of Castamar. I saw this period drama on Netflix and was intrigued. I didn’t realize it was originally in Spanish, dubbed over in English, so I tried different combinations of languages and subtitles and realized the easiest one for my eyes and sanity is to listen to the Spanish audio while watching the English subtitles. When the mouths and sounds don’t match, it bothers me and I have a hard time concentrating. So, if I stick with this one, I’ll be doing a lot of reading and not much else. (I now have two episodes left. It hooked me. Also, some publishing company needs to get on an English translation of the book, stat!)

Crazy Rich Asians. After reading the book, I checked the movie out from the library. It was okay. I liked the book better.

Grace and Frankie, season 7. I was on this the day after it dropped. This show makes me laugh so much. But they only released four episodes because that’s what they had available before COVID hit. So, I must wait a little longer.

LegoMasters. More stunningly creative with each episode.

Upload. This series gets more interesting the more episodes we watch.

Loki. Um, what? It’s good, and my mind is confused.

Kim’s Convenience. Still working our way through the seasons.

Berry Gordy’s The Last Dragon. This is one of Phil’s favorite movies and he popped it in on the Sunday night we celebrated his birthday at home. It is … strange.

What We Read

The Weight of Memory by Shawn Smucker. Shawn is a friend, therefore, I trust him with the book journey. For a good chunk of this book, I dreaded moving forward, afraid he was going to lead me somewhere I didn’t want to go. But I also HAD TO keep reading because his storytelling is just that good. I ended up having mixed feelings about the book, but it’s a worthwhile read and I’ll probably re-read at a later date.

South by Ernest Shackleton. My final book for the Read Around the World challenge. It was super technical in spots and not always interesting but there were enough nuggets of wisdom and adventure to keep me reading. 

Dragon Overnight. The fourth book in the Upside-Down Magic series. A read-aloud at bedtime.

Say No to the Duke by Eloisa James. This was a “candy” kind of read for me. I had read a couple of heavier books that left me feeling weighed down, so I picked this one off my shelf. Once upon a time, I would have called it “trashy romance,” but that’s just rude. Yes, it’s a romance, and yes it’s one of THOSE books, but it served its purpose giving me a fun distraction for a day or so. It was not as good as the Bridgerton novels I’ve read, but that’s not to say it wasn’t enjoyable. I don’t know if I’ll pick up more from this author or series or not.

Untamed by Glennon Doyle. I think I underlined something on every page. Doyle’s books are always more about self-work than self-help, and after reading this one I made my own list of things that are easy responses to my feelings (binging Netflix, eating ice cream, scrolling social media endlessly) and things that are hard but are more beneficial. It’s good to see it on paper.

Beartown by Fredrik Backman. Un. For. Get. Able. I honestly don’t care what Backman writes about, his words are mesmerizing. This one’s about hockey but also about the things that bring us together and the things that drive us apart.

Spy Camp by Stuart Gibbs. Next up the Spy School series as a bedtime read-aloud. I really like Korman’s writing style.

China Rich Girlfriend by Kevin Kwan. A good follow-up to Crazy Rich Asians. I like these characters and the cultural education these stories provide.

Well, that’s all for August. See you in September!

Filed Under: monthly roundup Tagged With: 40th birthday, back to school, book sale, end of summer, hiking

Making the most of the middle month of summer

July 31, 2021

Well, it’s already round-up time again, although I’ll admit that I cut this one a little bit short because we headed out on vacation, and that will, I hope, be worthy of a separate post all about our road trip from Pennsylvania to Illinois and back with a bunch of stops in between. Until then, please enjoy this overview of our monthly action, eating, watching and reading.

What We Did

Early in the month, we attended a community fireworks celebration at our local baseball stadium. A bank in the area sponsored the free event. We ate some snack-y foods and drank sodas and beer while waiting for the show. It was a satisfying outing for the Fourth, and a way to test our anxiety about larger public gatherings. We might try to see a baseball game this summer now that we’ve been to the stadium when it’s full.

Apparently our son is in a making-faces phase.

Then, we celebrated the Fourth of July with our friend David. It was a two-months’ late celebration of our birthdays (he and I have our birthdays on the same day in May but we weren’t all fully vaccinated yet and school was still in session). He came over and hung out and we ate food. (See the What We Ate section for specifics.)

July gave us more catch-up time. We had friends over for a short hangout/lunch. The kids played games, the moms talked, and it was a lovely time of catching up.

They brought me these gorgeous flowers when they arrived!

And we hiked with church friends up to Eagle Rock, a moderate uphill climb at one of the nearby state gamelands.

The kids and I also attended a launch party for my friend Shawn’s new book, The Weight of Memory, at the beautiful creekside home of a friend of his. It was a fun night of celebrating creativity.

We went to the drive-in to see Black Widow. Since we’re all caught up on Marvel movies as a family, we thought this was a good way to see the newest release. It rained for close to half the movie which meant we were trapped inside a steamy car, wiping down the windshield. It’s been probably 20 years since Phil or I went to a drive-in movie. (There was a drive-in theater 10 minutes from where we grew up, so we went all.the.time as kids and youths.) Cars are different. People are different. (Sorta rude sometimes.) But it was a good experience.

I had to eat my ice cream fast before it melted

I had lunch with a couple of work friends. Way back in May, I had ordered some end-of-year gifts for two of my co-workers and the shipping was delayed until after school was already out. Then with vacations and such, we finally found a time to get together for lunch. It was a fun time of catching up.

As a family, we hiked the Turkey Hill Trail near the Susquehanna River. It was more than 6 miles on a steamy summer day. And it was labeled as strenuous. (It was not wrong.)

Just a sample of the uphill part of the trail

We almost ran out of water. We had to rest in the shade in the last two miles so those of us sensitive to heat did not succumb to its pressures. But overall it was a great hike! Beautiful and challenging with varied terrain and lots of good views. We hiked a ridge line, crossed a creek (no one fell in this time) and walked through a wildflower field.

So pretty

Phil saw a bunch of birds, including an indigo bunting, which was one he’d never seen before. We looked at it through the scope and it was brilliantly blue. We haven’t had a lot of hiking opportunities this summer compared to last summer, so we’re trying to make them count. Despite some whining, complaining and mild fighting (all part of the hiking process these days, I think) we all really enjoyed this hike.

I love a ridgeline river view

Haircuts! Daughter and I went a little bit shorter for the rest of summer.

Summer hair, do care

Long’s Park Summer Music Series! We missed the first one of the return to summer concerts because we were at the drive-in, but we made sure to make it to the next one. Maggie Rose and Them Vibes performed. According to our son, “This band is A LOT.”

Them Vibes … a fun show

He wasn’t wrong, and I wasn’t informed that there would be a ’70s costume contest. The music was amazing, though, and I didn’t realize how much I missed hearing it live with crowds of other people. (Outdoor crowds. I’m still not an indoor crowds person.) A lovely Sunday evening.

Vacation prep. Going on vacation is so much work. It’s worth it, but it’s so much work!

This is what happens when you leave a teenager alone in the snack aisle

What We Ate

Mac and cheese pizza. Our son has added to his weekly menu rotation. I under-seasoned this, so next time, I’ll adjust that part of it. Otherwise, it wasn’t too bad.

We used boxed mac and cheese for the topping

For our Fourth of July gathering: baby back ribs, creamy potato salad, grilled zucchini, and, of course, cake.

Ribs, potato salad, grilled zucchini
I almost forgot to take a picture of the cake

Breakfast at Gracie’s on West Main. Phil took me out for a breakfast date on a Wednesday when we couldn’t go to the woods because of appointments and a heat advisory. I had the Gracie’s breakfast: two eggs, bacon, home fries, a slice of toast and a slice of banana bread. Phil had the chili hash. We ordered banana bread to take home for the children because we’re nice like that. (And as the kids were putting away dishes, a glass broke and they cleaned it all up with a little direction from us.)

There is no bad choice at Gracie’s

Ice cream. We hit our Wednesdays hard on the ice cream trail. First up was Pine View Dairy, which has the best waffle cones in the county, hands-down; our choices for flavors were: butter brickle, strawberry cheesecake, triple dark chocolate and chocolate chip cookie dough.

Strawberry cheesecake

Then it was Oregon Dairy. But it was so hot we had to eat these so fast, plus we’d gotten double scoops because this was “dinner” after our hike and late lunch. We were a mess by the time it was over. Flavor choices (we each had two different ones): cashew raspberry and cookie monster; unicorn and rainbow sherbet; coconut almond fudge and salted caramel truffle; chocolate fudge brownie and chocolate marshmallow. The waffle cones were just meh. I think we would have enjoyed this more if we hadn’t had to inhale them.

An ice cream crime was committed

Finally, we went back to Good Life because they had sweet corn ice cream available and our son really wanted to try it. So, that’s what he had: sweet corn ice cream sprinkled with Old Bay; other flavors we ate: fresh mint with oreos mixed in; raspberry with butter cream and brownies mixed in; blueberry with graham cracker crumbs and pecans. It’s hard to top Good Life for us because of the overall quality of what we eat there.

Cheers for ice cream

Pattypan pizzas. I went out to the garden one afternoon and discovered our squash plant had been BUSY. So I pivoted on our dinner plans and made these personal pattypan pizzas. Our son, who last year was not a big fan of squash, ate it and liked it.

Pizza on a squash

Kenyan braised collards and meat. This was just something different to use up some of our garden produce.

Internet recipe for the win

Popcorn and ice cream and snow cones at the drive-in.

Pattypan squash stuffed with pork and rice, topped with parmesan. I get asked a lot what we do with the pattypan squash. Here is exhibit B.

Pattypan stuffed with pork and rice

What We Watched

When Calls the Heart. I finished season 8. That’s all I’m going to say about that.

All the Bright Places. Apparently I was in a YA mood after finishing the book Not If I Save You First, so I watched the movie version of the book I’d read with my book club last school year. 

Falcon and the Winter Soldier. This is our Saturday night show but we spent a couple of Saturdays outside the house, so we got back on track. I love the banter.

Kim’s Convenience. A solid comedy choice for nights when we don’t have a lot of time to invest in a show.

Fresh Fried and Crispy. We checked out one episode of this and learned about some new foods we’d like to try if ever we’re in St. Louis. But the show overall feels overproduced and maybe for the TikTok/Youtube viewer. I don’t know if we’ll go back to this.

Upload. So much yes. We watched one episode and it’s good.

Legomasters. Every week, the creativity leaves me in awe, and I’m 100 percent sure I don’t have the patience for epic Lego builds.

Love and Friendship, a movie adaptation of a Jane Austen story, Lady Susan, I’d never heard of. It had some funny moments.

Black Widow. Amazing. I can’t wait to rewatch so we can fully appreciate the storyline without thunderstorm interruption.

Virgin River. I had to start a new series for me in the evenings after I’m done working and taking care of people for the day. I got to episode 2 and realized this was based on a book series! My TBR pile keeps growing. There’s only a 6-month wait for the first book on the library’s digital book app.

Rick Steves’ Europe. Our favorite travel show with Debra and David Rixon is no longer included with Amazon Prime, so to get our travel fix, we have to look elsewhere. We watched one episode with Rick Steves about the Austrian and Italian Alps. Do I want to take a cable car to the top of a mountain? Yes. Would I be anxious about the whole thing? Also, yes.

Nailed It! The kids and I finished the current season.

The Olympics.

What We Read

Not If I Save You First by Ally Carter. A recommendation from the middle school librarian, and a perfect choice for my North America selection for the Read Around the World Challenge.

Spy School by Stuart Gibbs. Another read-aloud at bedtime. Hilarious. And page-turning.

South by Ernest Shackleton. I’m obsessed with this real-life exploration adventure and I need a book set in Antarctica for my Read Around the World challenge. Written in the explorer’s own words, it’s sometimes technical but also fascinating.

On the Way to the Wedding by Julia Quinn. The final Bridgerton book. (Except there’s a prequel, I think, and some bonus epilogues I haven’t read.) My favorite of all the books. Now to wait (not so patiently) for Netflix to catch up.

Found by Margaret Peterson Haddix. Of course, I finish this one and immediately want to read the next one. I’m having a problem with starting a bunch of series and getting overwhelmed by wanting to finish them all.

A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman. Maybe my favorite read of the whole year so far. I love One and his grumpy nature, and the way the story builds is just brilliant: slow at the start, drawing you in until you realize what’s happening, then everything goes NOT according to the main character’s plan and you can’t stop reading. This is on my all-time favorites list. (Now maybe I should actually make that list.)

Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan. I was overwhelmed by this one at first because there is an extensive family tree at the beginning of the book, but once I was invested in the characters, the lineage didn’t matter so much, and I couldn’t put it down. This one checks the box for Asia for my Read Around the World challenge for the library’s summer reading program.

The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende. My pick for South America on the Read Around the World challenge. It’s a slower pace than what I usually read but beautiful so far. 

Filed Under: monthly roundup, Summer Tagged With: family hiking, Fourth of July, summer break

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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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