Sunday Calories

scone

A daisy a day keeps sanity at bay.

Took my bike on the Silver Strand Bikeway with the intention of going to the Ferry Landing in Coronado, but didn’t quite make it – okay I probably only went halfway. I rode through the small opening of the fence by the bathrooms of the park and pedaled my bike along the beach of the inlet and by the informational signs, the birds, and the jackrabbits. I stopped at the beach to collect shells. I got to watch the bay police pull over a jet ski driver for causing a wake in a swim zone. I had a runner pass me for the third time.

sctwo

reflections on the bend

As I was walking back to my bike a lady asks, “Are those rubber boots that look like cowboy boots or are those real?” I smiled and told her they are real and she thought that was, “so cute.” I thanked her and told her to have a good day. I smiled the rest of the way home as I tried to keep up with a tandem couple in black pants and orange shirts in front of me. I only lost ground when I turned off the bike path to go home. I thank them for the little ‘kick in the butt’ so to speak to help me burn these Sunday calories.

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cover a bit of the old with some of the new

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looking inland

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a step back in the same direction

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It’s good luck to have a jackrabbit cross your path.

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Standing there, with my boots on the sand.

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just a midday stop

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Ceremony of W.O.L.F.

pianolady

One of God’s sheep, more so the little lamb’s parents, were prepared to have her reborn through Christ. This would inspire them to invite me to my second baptism. The first one I went to was back in 2008 and there was a road trip involved. This event would only need eleven miles, one way, to be traversed to attend.  I agreed to go for many reasons. Dan invited me and he’s a great friend, Bibi invited me to the church and the reception, and I’m not one to turn down an experience – one with photo opportunities and food.

Bibi’s daughter, Lexi, is the one getting baptized. She will be three this year and can still be a bit moody. I thought this would be something to see. I got dressed and went over to Dan’s house to find a ride to the chapel on NAS North Island since Caleb wasn’t home from work yet. I rode with Ritchie and Mike, Lexi’s uncles, and we had no problem getting on base with my dependent ID instead of having to wait for the guard to look one of them up on the guest list.

Wyatt - eight years old

Wyatt – eight years old

I sat in the second pew. The first had Lexi’s parents, Bibi and Shaun; her older brother Wyatt; Mike, the uncle and godfather; Karen, Bibi’s best friend and the godmother; Dan’s son Ivan with his wife Trinity and their kids Danny (Wyatt’s age) and Stephanie who sat in the second pew with Ritchie; me; Dan and his wife Yoli and her sister Maria; Dan’s daughter-in-law Lily and her daughters Ruby (Lexi’s age) and Alexandria who is a month old; and the neighbors Don and Kathy from across the street.

I didn’t know I was getting tricked into a whole service. I was a bit surprised at first by the full parking lot – wondering if they invited all the extended family as we made our way inside. Come to find out, the chapel was having their regular Saturday night service. Where I come from Catholics have church on Sunday mornings and Wednesday nights. If you want to get together on other days you do it at a member’s house. I was glad I had come dressed for the occasion – a dress and cowboy boots – instead of jeans or pajamas.

altar

The priest came over before the service started to let the parents and godparents know what to do while up in front of everyone. Lexi seemed like she would be less than cooperative. She gets this frightened look on her face and death grips whatever is in reach when she asks to be put upside-down and gets put too far sideways. She also didn’t want some old guy putting water on her pretty hairdo. I don’t blame her. I wouldn’t want to be in that situation either.

I haven’t been to church in years. My brother-in-laws wedding was in November 2009 and it has been even longer since I went to Catholic Mass, so I was a little lost on some of the traditional hymns and congregational responses, but I was able to stand, sit, and kneel with the rest of them. The time came and most of the front pew joined the priest near the holy water – to cleanse and give life; oil of catechumen (one not yet initiated) – to give strength against evil; Chrism  oil – olive oil (used for nourishment, light, medicine) and fragrance; and a paschal candle – to keep the flame of faith alive; with little Lexi in her white dress – a sign of acceptance and dignity.

congregation

I filmed the duration of the ceremony – priest: blesses the water; invites the congregation to profess their faith; asks a lot of questions with the answer, “I do”; pours water over Lexi for the father, son, and holy spirit; wipes most the water from her hair and face; anoints her with Chrism oil on her forehead; mentions her white garment as he touches it; Mike lights the candle; then the priest touches her ears so she may hear Jesus speak and her mouth so she may proclaim his faith. He invites the church to welcome its newest member and the candle is blown out.

Bibi tells me that Lexi did so well because she was promised M&Ms – the power of sugar and chocolate. The collection plates make their rounds before we are offered to make  peace with each other by sharing a handshake or a hug. I wish this could take place more often outside of church. Then it’s time for the holiest part of mass – communion. We kneel while the priest turns bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ and offers them to God. I could’ve gotten in line with the rest of the church, but 1) I hadn’t been to confession since my last mortal sin, 2) I don’t believe in the hocus pocus,  and 3) I didn’t observe the Eucharistic fast, but I’m not censured from the church or mentally deranged – that’s good.

priest

There was some more singing, the Lord’s Prayer – which I thought I knew, but the Catholic’s version comes with some lines from the priest, another prayer, and then we were sent forth to spread God’s word. I rode back with Ritchie and Stephanie while Bibi stayed behind to get pictures with the priest. Shawn had left after the baptism – like Dan would’ve liked to do because he believes more in the bible than all this hullabaloo. I enjoyed sitting there watching the altar boy pick his nose and being able to take part in a ceremony that so many others in the world strongly believe in.

When I left the house at 4:00 pm I had texted Caleb where I would be. He replied at 6:00 pm that the base guard didn’t know where the chapel was so he had gone home. I walked across the street to get him at 6:30 and then to Bibi’s house where they were serving seven-layer dip with chips, beef enchiladas, Spanish rice, refried beans, yummy potato salad, and apple and berry pastries. Dessert was pineapple upside-down cake and M&Ms. I got handed Alexandria as all the girls – cousins to aunts to grandma to friends – took their turn. She’s about four weeks old and only six pounds – easier to carry and feed.

Ruby - 2.5 years old

Ruby – two and a half years old

She fell asleep in my arms with her eyes half-open and was moved to the couch where she could stretch out. The conversations lasted until 8:30 pm when people started to realize what time it was – some have kids, some have work, and Don wanted to watch football stats since Robin Hood had been the background film for the evening. We helped clean up, took a couple of plates of leftovers, and walked home. I got my socks off before I realized I had left my camera over there. I quickly put my boots back on and ran across the street. Shawn must’ve heard me coming because he met me at the door with camera in hand.

This may just be another day of going to church and eating food with family for these Catholics, but for me it was a special moment into their traditions and another chance for me to be surrounded by loving family as we talk about killing zombies, hunting rabbits, and scaring children. We talked about shoes, lipstick, and babies. We talked about Christmas, travel, languages, military, and moving. We talked about living on the corner near traffic, a convenience store, and a bus route – and people wonder why we didn’t buy this place. Thank you Dan and Bibi for the invitation.

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Zero to Hero: Day One

Introduce yourself! Publish a “who I am and  why I’m here” post.

Me on the back of Uncle Ed's Harley in May 2013

Me on the back of Uncle Ed’s Harley in May 2013

When I started blogging in December 2011 my blog was a mixed bag, not that it still isn’t today, but I’ve found over the years that my blog is more about traveling than anything else. This could be because I spent most of last year doing so and need to divide my time more equally amongst other activities that I enjoy like writing 175,600 words, driving over 19,000 miles, reading 25 books totaling 7,232 pages, and knitting my first pair of socks.

I bicycled all over San Diego, hiked to the mountain tops in San Diego County, opened my home to eleven couchsurfers from as far away as Europe and China, and went to two new countries with Caleb. We returned to Dry Tortugas, spent my birthday at Niagara Falls and I spent lots of time talking, eating, running, hiking, biking, and driving with family. My little brother came to visit and there are other family and friends I haven’t seen in one to four years or more that I will try to see before I move to Bahrain at the end of March.

I’m still all the things on my About Page. Some days I’m better at being those things and some months I leave them lacking my creative input. I have also realized over my blogging life that I love to make lists that are everlasting. As one thing gets crossed off I add three more. I like to think that I’m being productive and getting things accomplished. I know I am. Sometimes that takes a few minutes and other times it takes months or years. I hope my blog is something that lasts another 40 years and gets better with age.

Posted in Birthday, Books, Camping, Cycling, Events, Family, Fiber Arts, Friends, Hiking, History, Holidays, Inspiration, Motorcycle, People, Photography, Places, Travel | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

How Did I Bring In the New Year?

orange

eight rows in

I started out the day with some blogging and knitting. I’m working on a pair of orange socks with a design on them. Caleb continued to work on the pants he is knitting for me and then gave the dogs some steak – a raw treat. Dan comes over and asks if we would like to go to a family party later – of course, otherwise we had planned to stay at home in our jammies. I didn’t feel like paying $120 cover charge for live music and champagne at midnight in downtown San Diego.

Instead we went to Dan’s at 6:30 pm after I took some selfies as a reminder of what my face looked like at the end of this year. We were gifted with some Butterfinger bars and I asked to borrow two books I saw sitting on the table – Angela’s Ashes, a Pulitzer Prize winner, and Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea. I grabbed my camera, no sweater, and headed to the truck we were going in. Me in the backseat between Dan and Caleb holding the cheap beer and his two sons in the front, Mike and Ritchie with the cookies.

steak

Piggy’s steak face

Mike started out like he was in Drivers Ed but soon was taking random turns, tried to take an off-ramp at 60 mph when the speed limit sign said 25 mph, and almost hit a truck parked in the exit lane. We arrived safely and thanked the spirits (that we would soon be drinking) that we would now live until the next year. Inside, the table is covered with cookies and empty liquor bottles. They are being poured into a large storage container with carbonated and colored beverages and cans of lemonade tea.

Ritchie has never tried this concoction before and is quick to get a cup in the mix. Ivan, whose party we are at, has to take away the tub so he can finish adding fresh pineapple, cantaloupe, oranges, and lemons. We wait for the ice, but can only wait so long. We refill our cups and make our way to the snack table that is now filled with burnt empanadas, mini crescent dogs, mini pizza bagels – all things I won’t eat, and cheese sticks and Chex party mix – that I do eat and share platefuls with Caleb and Ritchie.

Selfie of the Year!

Selfie of the Year!

There’s a large fire in the pit in the backyard thanks to Caleb. As more people show up we will move our chairs closer to the heat. This will inspire some people to make s’mores and others to go inside the warmth of the house and take shots of fireball and buttery nipples. While the kids were outside beating the crap out of a piñata some of the adults were inside laughing, drinking, and kissing. Back outside I will make sure Caleb is not playing with the fire too much as the hostess is worried that he will burn all the hair on his arms and face. Then I will put a piñata hat on him that doesn’t last long with the staples poking him.

The kids had been inside playing video games but had made their way back to the trampoline where I decided to go. I gave my camera to Caleb, took off my boots, and Mike unzipped the protective fence so I could climb in. The kids had a blast being bounced around by me, but I soon realized I had more alcohol in me than my brain was willing to recognize – thank goodness for sugar and fried foods. I climbed out before retasting anything and joined the mellow drunks by the fire before making my way to the Green Machine – a tricycle with rear steering.

through the mouth of last year

through the mouth of last year

Later the space in front of the food would be turned into the singles’ dance floor while the rest of us sat around the fire making adult jokes and crude remarks and alcohol related statements. When we got the five-minute warning I was surprised to see that kids were still running around. I don’t remember making it that long when I was their age but they might have cheated by taking a nap earlier – I never did. Midnight seemed to last only a second. There were no fireworks, ball drops, or explosions of any kind.

After the couples got their kiss out of the way the hugs began to go around. It reminded me of church as a child when we were told to hug our neighbor or the people sharing our pew – a way to come together and make it easier to share confessions. It felt great to be surrounded by friends, some that consider us family, and to be so happy – even those that weren’t drinking and had kids wearing them out. Then the brut champagne was flowing forth into any ready glass. I didn’t like the taste and neither did everyone else I shared my glass with, but we had fun thinking it gross together.

Please remove the tab before use.

Please remove the tab before use.

I made my way to the bathroom and Ritchie was in there with the door open. I guess he couldn’t decide if he had to pee or not, but I wasn’t about to go with him in there, door open or not, so we just hung out until we were joined by Caleb and two young men aged 18 and 22. We were laughing so hard when Dan walked up wondering if this was how the parties of the new year were going to be held from now on. Then I remembered that I had to pee, so I made my way to the walk-in closet with toilet/sink and shelf space attachment.

The party started to lose momentum, so we took some more pictures and left at 1:00 am after others that had already gone. Dan would drive us home with Mike in the front seat. I was stuck between Caleb and Ritchie with each of them holding one of my hands. When we got home we were offered to come inside and kill zombies but I wanted to get to sleep to make use of the first day of the year. I had to go back across the street to get my phone out of the backseat. I had brought it to call my mom and had forgotten to during all the fun, but her phone wasn’t working last night.

Caleb on the Green Machine

Caleb on the Green Machine

The Morning After: We woke up late. We rode our bikes around Otay Valley by a lake, a nursery, a scarecrow, and spray painted bridge supports. We went to the store and bought mangoes 4-for-$1 and some oats and sunflower seeds to make waffles inspired by Sherri. Caleb tried just stirring the ingredients first and found it better to blend them into a batter. I added peanut butter, homemade apple butter (thanks to Terri), agave syrup, and fresh-cut mangoes on to the one I had.

It was smaller than Caleb usually makes them but more filling. We agree that their name should be changed to 12-hour Waffles because that’s how long they live in your stomach – and I’m not complaining. They are healthy and delicious and I see more of them in my future. After brunch Dan came over to gift me a pair of Tony Lama cowboy boots that are about half a size too big – nothing some thick socks and short walks can’t fix. I took them around the block with the dogs and can’t remember why I stopped wearing boots.

a fire into the future

a fire into the future

As we walked we saw our neighbors cleaning and exercising their resolutions. I read a study that said of the 49% of people who make resolutions 75% of them will make it past the first two weeks. I wish them luck in all their quitting and falling and losing and spending. Back home Caleb made potato salad while I caught up with my mom. We hadn’t talked in five weeks so a 98 minute conversation was in order. Off the phone with her and onto blogging I deleted, and reformatted, my SD card with pictures on it before downloading them onto my computer. Happy New Years to you all!

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Meeting Jutta

blues

I woke up early with a smile on my face. This trip was going so well and today I had the hopes of meeting Jutta, my grandmother-in-law from Germany. She’s Caroline’s mom and has come to the States for the last ten years or so for weeks at a time – to make her plane ticket worth the cost. Until I was 25 my dad was scared of me – like most parents are of shitty diapers, but they change it somehow. This was how our relationship went until I was invited with him and the wife on a trip to D.C. in 2009 – I was only 23.

Not being around in my daily life and sometimes being absent for years made him nervous of how I might’ve turned out. Even though my mom was there every day she worries just as much. Whether it was that or just poor scheduling on both ends I hadn’t been able to meet her yet, but I had seen pictures of her all over the U.S. I had heard how my dad gave her a hard time and how she tried harder. She broke her hip in March 2013, but I couldn’t tell when I saw her. Anyways… I’m getting ahead of myself. Back to the hotel.

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We are on the highway heading south towards Tuzigoot National Monument and get to watch the sky change from a bluish-gray to shades of salmon pink, hot yellow, fiery orange with a purple tinge to a light blue sky with clouds that look like they have been smeared on a canvas.  I wish it hadn’t been so early and I would’ve paid more attention to my location. We could’ve driven through Sedona. Instead I will have to be happy with the sign on the highway – Drive Hammered, Get Nailed – short and catchy.

The visitor center looks simple enough, but is full of artifacts that tie us to the past and make us confront the future with what we are doing in the present. I wonder how long it took them to make the tips for their arrows, the bowls for their food and water, their yucca fiber sandals and polychrome straps, and their stone and shell jewelry. They seemed to have plenty of beautiful supplies to work with and just the majestic landscape to do it in – though it may be hard to think about that now with the mining damage in the distance.

In their day all they could see were prairie grasses, running water, short shrubbery, other dwellings, and mountains for miles. Luckily all that is still here – just not as much of it and there are also roads, hot air balloons, trucks, helicopters, and plenty of houses. Outside to the left is a trail that leads to the ruins – the camouflage ones that we didn’t see when we parked. I guess I’m not as observant as I thought. The structures here were built over a period of three centuries and over 700 years ago and parts of it still seem sturdy enough.

blurpot

I’d rather live in a community that has to have the walls of its homes and city redone every half millennium than in a society that feels the need to replace houses and businesses every forty years because of mold, asbestos, lead, etc. What’s left of the rooms is now grass and dirt with a water drainage system, to protect from more erosion now that most of the dwellings are roofless, and evidence of where they ground their grain and then cooked it. Back out the way we came and two minutes north will have us at the exit for Montezuma Castle National Monument – some backtracking, but still going south.

There’s a short road that loops around the western half of the park – without crossing the river, and leaving us with a short peaceful walk to the abandoned homes built into caverns on the rock face. This park invites us, by signs posted, to bring our pets along – rather than leave them to die in the car in Arizona’s typical 113 degree day – but since people have coats on we figure they will be fine with the windows down and away from the other larger dogs that are having fun sniffing all over the path.

3points

Inside is a timeline comparing the settlement of this area with other major events around the world. Before the common era this land had nomads and mammoths, then 700 years later came villages and trading until the mysterious disappearance of the Sinagua. The Spanish came in the 16th century and left the area alone for over 200 years until the Americans headed west. In 1906 President Roosevelt approved the preservation of the park and in 1937 the acreage was doubled to offer additional protection.

Outside, at a table, is a man showing the gathering crowd his selection of bone flutes. It’s amazing to hear him play and now I think I should’ve bought one, but I have a b-flat clarinet at home that I’m still relearning how to play after I stopped in high school so many years ago. I’m glad I was able to hang on to it. Music is good for the soul whether from an instrument or software program, whether on stage or your neighbor’s porch, or whether at a park or recording studio – it’s the sound of our people, our history, our skills, our love.

I’m glad that someone is playing music here. It makes the place and occasion seem all the more special. Of course I want to get a ladder and go up and inside. I want to grind grains and drink from the river and watch the leaves blow in the tops of the trees. I want to run barefoot among the leaves and try the honey from the comb the bees built in the cave. I want to sit around and laugh with friends and weave or paint pottery. I suppose most of these things I could do if I were allowed off the path and had brought some art supplies. I can still imagine – and oh how great it is.

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Visitors used to be allowed up, but rangers soon noticed how quickly all those footsteps and curious hands could damage the alcoves and cavates, so today there is a model that shows what might have been in the different rooms for sleeping, food preparation, and storage. As we leave this park we are only 75 minutes away from my dad’s house. Part of me wants to surprise him, but the other part knows it’s nearing lunch and his mother-in-law is in town and they may not be home.

It’s a good thing I called. Caroline and Jutta were getting ready to go the art museum – the one Caroline wasn’t looking forward to because she really wanted to go to the new Butterfly Wonderland exhibit, but the line had been too long yesterday. And my dad was on his way to pick up Joe, his employee at PSOIH, so they could get some work done during a fast food lunch. The girls waited on us, I said hi to my dad on his way in and our way out the door, and we were on our way to see some winged arthropods.

fuzzywing

I let Caleb out of the car to get in what seemed like an extremely long line, but by the time we parked in the dirt lot in the back and joined him up front he had already bought one military ticket and three regular priced tickets forgetting to get Jutta’s senior discount. Everything but the floors are covered with butterflies – ornaments on the tree, cutouts on the ceiling, and framed ones on the walls. We join the end of the line and at first I want to speak slowly in front of Jutta so she has a better chance of understanding, but Caroline seems to be talking quicker than usual. If Jutta wants a translation, she knows to ask for it.

We try not to get too carried away reading about the different species, their migration patterns, their lifespans, and that they are cold-blooded and need the sun’s warmth on their wings for flight because we could quickly lose our spot in line as a family tries to form a second line beside/ in front of us. There is some beautiful butterfly art and I would love to make one at home, but I’ve only come across maybe a sixth of what they have displayed lying on the ground dead. I will have to start small.

Fifteen minutes of waiting earns us the next seat in the theater. We are told about the atrium’s beginnings and how the founders want to do more for the environment by educating the people who live here about the other animals that need this space too. The 3D film is twenty minutes long about the migration of the Monarch butterfly from Mexico to Canada and back each year. It had some macro footage of eggs being lain, cocoons being made, and wings being spread for the first time. I would love to have that up-close of an experience… and I will be given the chance in the next room.

hangnyelo

Along the wall is a chrysalis viewing case. Once you get past the phones, tablets, and cameras you can see cocoons of shiny black, bright yellow with black spots, brown, neon green, light yellow, reflective silver, old papery leaf looking, midnight green shell shaped, little spiky air puffs, a hairball cigar, and green speckled with yellow. Out of these ‘changing closets’ come striped, spotted, thin, wet, fuzzy, and colorful wings. Some will hang on for a while, others climb the walls, and some choose to explore the mossy floor.

Next is the main attraction – America’s largest butterfly atrium. Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens holds the name for largest conservatory. We get to go through an air-tight door so that in case some do get in the door they don’t escape fully – better for them to eat flowers in here than the exhaust fumes in the parking lot. The brochure tells us that there are over a thousand butterflies inside. To that I don’t disagree, but I only spot twenty different species landing on shirts, dusters, leaves, apples, walls, flowers, signs, necks, vents, dirt, the sidewalk, and the netting on the ceiling.

I’m not complaining and neither is anyone else. Kids aren’t hungry or tired, but they sure don’t want to leave – and neither do the adults. It’s really humid in there and my nose is telling me that I’m starting to sweat, but no one cares as they point and smile and pose and try to get the butterflies to land on them – hand, head, or shoulder – everyone is happy. There’s so much excitement in the room. Once you’ve seen one side of the wings you want to see the other. Some match, but others are so contrasting – an epitome of natural art.

flyleaf

As we start to wind down from all the fluttering we take some time to watch the koi swim in their pond – complete with waterfall. Then we watch the boys squat beside it and stick their hands in trying to pet, and try to catch, the fish swimming by. The boys don’t fall in and the fish get away. Time to take some pictures of us sitting on the pond wall and Caroline takes some of Caleb and I in a large metal butterfly chair. Then it’s out of the rainforest experience, into the room with the mirror to check for escapee butterflies, by the café, and onto ants, bees, rainbow fishes, and round rays.

After mother and daughter get their hands wet in the pool in the middle of the aquarium room it’s time to look in the gift shop for something cute, and easily packable, to take back to the granddaughter, Katharina, in Germany. I noticed a shirt about a cricket eating the skin it sheds, and other crazy insect facts, but they didn’t have it in my size. There are butterfly lunch boxes, electric fans, magnets, flags, hats, chairs, games, and posters. I wouldn’t have minded taking home the tall multi-colored leaf lamp I saw, along with a few other items. I love the fun, colorful, and educational items they have for sale.

I started getting hungry an hour before we left – and I was grateful for the appetite with the lunch destination that Caroline had in mind. She knew of another Wildflower Bread Co. location that happened to have the sweet potato sandwich on the menu – the same one we had back in September – with a different salad. We shared that with cups of blackberry orange lemonade and Georgia peach with whipped cream. And for a sweet that would be eaten later we got a chocolate chip scone.

redbutter

Back at the house and there is one person that’s not family there – that person must go. I ride with my dad to drop Joe off at his house. His car is the one parked outside that doesn’t work for whatever reason. I’m only grateful to have my dad’s attention back, even if momentarily between traffic and picking up coffees, on this short visit. The attention will be less and the visit longer than planned. With the five of us back together we spend hours learning, laughing, singing, and knitting. I enjoy watching my dad and Caleb get along so well while grateful to witness Jutta and Caroline singing together.

Dinner will be at the Cheesecake Factory. We hadn’t planned on staying this long, but we had the time, and I didn’t feel like driving home at 6:30 pm even though the only traffic on the road would be border patrol, drunks, and late shift workers. So to the shop of the cakes that are cheesy we went to spend a gift card that Caroline got from work. It was such a happy evening – some of us skipping, and smiling, and the four of them holding hands – and all wearing blue shirts. Caroline will braid my dad’s long beard while we wait to be seated at a booth.

My dad orders drinks for the ladies – a flying gorilla for the mother-in-law, a mojito for the wife, and a mango something for the daughter. The men will stick with water. My dad orders steak and an asparagus salad. The rest of us will share a warm asparagus salad, fresh kale salad, avocado egg rolls, tomato and basil flatbread, and garlic noodles with mushrooms and asparagus. When ready for dessert we set up our plates and silverware in an artistic manner. I’m proud of Caleb’s creativity.

Caleb, me, and Jutta at Butterfly Wonderland

Caleb, me, and Jutta at Butterfly Wonderland – photo by Caroline

My dad’s favorite used to be a slice of their Oreo cheesecake and now him and the wife indulge in a pineapple upside-down cake. Caleb and I will get a slice too, but it doesn’t seem to matter the sugar levels as the elderly and the employed will be the first to bed leaving father and daughter up to chat and giggle – no more laughing out loud after 11:00 pm as it may disturb the neighbors and all the people passed out around us. Jutta let me know it was ok to shake and yell at her in the middle of the night if I caught her snoring, but I would’ve had to wake up first – which I would not do until morning.

Upon rising, we were able to get five people in the toilet – not all at once, and two dogs walked before going to breakfast at U.S. Egg where Caleb would bring up Gebran – a man he works with who just happens to share his last name with the owner of our dining choice. If there is any relation it is prior to 1881 when part of the family went into the food business and the other into government work. To complement my eggs Benedict and my dad’s charm we had a nice and humorous waitress. It was a dine – pick up your dogs – give us hugs – and drive home kind of day. We made it back at 3:00 pm.

Posted in Animals, Art, Education, Family, Food, History, Photography, Travel | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment