Saturday, October 31, 2015

The Saturday Six

One.
IT'S THE MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR!!!!!! Set those clocks back an hour tonight and get a whole extra hour of sleep in the morning. You can know we will be!! Goodbye, stinkin' DST. I might not complain about you on the blog as much as I used to, but I still don't like you!!

Two.


This article is both truly informative and truly hilarious. It covers the grammar rules for writing your last name on a Christmas card without using an apostrophe {which most people use but it's not grammatically correct}. I hesitated to put this on the Six, because somebody might be planning to send me a card and will now strike me from the list, fearing I will be hiding on Mo with a red pen editing their card. I WON'T!!!! This is merely a helpful guide. The comments, though...read those for a good time. Fight! Fight!

Three.


 Several years ago, I read a book written by a woman who faced an unexpected pregnancy. The book ripped me apart, because I was that baby in my family. I wrote some blog posts about it and many months later, discovered the author had found them and she left me a not-so-nice comment. I was sad I'd upset her, but I still get high blood pressure thinking about the delivery of her book. So when I found a link to this article by another mother facing an unexpected pregnancy, I was scared to click on it. But I did, and I'm so glad I did. Her words are laced with so much grace, and I appreciate the way she was able to blend honesty with kindness. I am so thankful for her approach, I can't help but share!

Four.
Did anyone else LOVE Trading Spaces as much as I did? I watched it every single week from the second season on until it ended. {Most memorable episode? The one where the woman hated the brown room. I loved that brown room, but she sure didn't!} Anyway. Found this article about where the designers and carpenters and hosts are now! 

Five.

 You've been so kind to read about our vacation this week - and we have just a couple more days of recap coming up, but I thought you might like to see the VIDEO we made as well. We did about a minute at each destination and some parts of it are pretty funny. {Like when we get sidetracked by something we just said and stop to talk about it.} Hope you enjoy!

Six.
I took a week of vacation from reading {when I was on vacation}, but now I'm back to reading and reviewing!

I asked to read Lauraine Snelling's newest novel, Streams of Mercy, mostly because I wanted to try something a little different in the fiction world.  Lauraine has written over 70 books, but I've not read any of them yet, so I figured it was high time I try a new {to me} author. I chose this one from the list because it had a different time period and historical background from what I normally lean toward, and I wanted to branch out a bit.

First let me give you the synopsis of the book. This is actually the third book in the Song of Blessing series, and it is set in North Dakota in the early 1900's. The little town of Blessing is getting back on its feet after an explosion destroyed the grain elevator and other buildings in town a year and a half prior. The citizens of Blessing are aching for spring after a hard North Dakota winter, and they work together to support each other as family. Anji Moen has just recently returned to her home in North Dakota from her husband's native Norway, where she lived with him and their children. After her husband's death, she brought the children home and finds herself wrestling with settling in, motherhood...and uninvited feelings for the minister in town. When a health crisis settles over the town and threatens lives of friends and strangers alike, Anji and Father Devlin find themselves wondering what the future holds for all of them.

I'll be honest...I struggled with this book. It's long {378 pages} and I was a good 100 pages in before the story captured me. Now, once it did, I was hooked. But that was a long wait to get to the capturing. And also in truth, I never did master the relationships between some of the people in the book. There are so many characters and so many relatives, and the names are heavily Norwegian, making it even harder to keep straight. To be fair, there is a family tree in the front of the book, but I didn't want to keep flipping back to it to keep everyone straight.

Maybe if I had read the first two books in the series, it would have been easier, but I finally gave up trying to keep the people straight and just tried to enjoy the story. There was also an infiltration of Norwegian words scattered throughout the conversations in the book, and while that was interesting on one hand, it sometimes distracted me from the story, because I had to stop for context clues.

The love story in the book was not as prominent as I anticipated it would be, which did not take away from the story itself, but it just surprised and disappointed me a little. I'm such a sucker for love stories. Given the ending of the book, I imagine a fourth story lurks somewhere down the road, and while I'm curious to know how some of the mysteries unravel, I'm not sure I will hunt down the fourth book to read it.

It's not that I didn't enjoy the story...I did. But I think I may have strayed a bit too far from what I enjoy in a novel's setting, so this one wasn't my most favorite I've ever read. Having said that, I do think Lauraine is a good storyteller and if the setting/historical aspects had perhaps been up my alley a bit more, and I'd read the previous books in the series first, I might feel differently about this one.

** Thanks, Bethany House, for sending a copy of this book my way to read and review. The opinions are all my own. *
*

Friday, October 30, 2015

Coffee Roasting and Other Adventures

We left Virginia Beach on Tuesday morning - about 7 - after saying a sad goodbye to Mark and Lynnette and our friends Belle and Charlie. :(
We should have known, when it took us over an hour to get out of the city {because of rush hour} that it wasn't going to be QUITE the smooth driving day we had coming out for vacation. Our first destination of the day was in Westminster, Maryland, which was about a five hour drive. In those five hours, we were delayed for rush hour, an accident, and a wrong turn in Washington DC {of all places}.
It was our first time to be in Maryland together, and this is the best I could do for a welcome sign, as the ACTUAL welcome sign was around a curve, behind some trees, and I caught it out of my peripheral vision as I was sailing past.
But we made it to Westminster, a small college town, and the purpose of our visit was to stop by Furnace Hills Coffee to see how roasting is done. I learned about Furnace Hills Coffee when I was working at WBCL. I interviewed the owner, Dave Baldwin, about the story of the place, which employs people with disabilities, including Dave's daughter, Erin. I was so intrigued by the story and by the whole idea of coffee roasting {because of course!} that I wanted to see it for myself when I realized we were going to be in the area!
{Can we pause to talk about WHY Ryan thought this was a good day to wear a Colts shirt? In Maryland? We did receive some icy treatment for that. Not from the nice coffee folks though.}

So we'd never seen coffee roasting in action before, and we were fascinated. Furnace Hills has three roasters, and they were all going while we were there. 
 It's a tiny roasting company, but they keep busy, and Dave was kind to explain the process to us - from the time the beans arrive in their burlap sacks until they're roasted and ready to go!

We learned a little about the blends, from the soldier's blend that is a big seller because Gettysburg is nearby to Erin's breakfast blend...we learned how they work and why they're so good! {And we sampled some!}

And then we had a photo taken with the whole gang working that day!

They recommended a little cafe in town for lunch, so we went there. It was delicious, but Ryan's Colts shirt didn't go over well. LOL!!

We had to get back on the road after lunch, because we still had five more hours to go!! We drove on up through Pennsylvania into New York, and man, were the trees ever pretty as we went!
{PS - Pennsylvania, could you spring for larger signs? I almost missed it!!!}


Sunsets in the mountains sure are pretty!

We arrived at our destination after dark - a hotel in Mt. Morris, New York. We were pooped from driving and ready to rest - because the next day was going to be a very big day!

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Cape Henry

Last Monday was our last day in Virginia Beach, and we took it easy that morning {again}. Lynnette and I did a little shopping at Cato, and it's possible the capsule wardrobe grew in that outing. After lunch, Mark and Lynnette took us to see one of my favorite things: lightouses!!

There are two lighthouses at Fort Story, and we were able to climb one of them: the Cape Henry Lighthouse. 

The Cape Henry Lighthouse is located at the "First Landing," where the Jamestown settlers arrived. It is said to be one of the oldest surviving lighthouses in the US, dating back to the late 1700's. It looks out over the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean, and my goodness, did we ever have a magnificent day to explore it.

 It was 191 steps from the ground up to the base of the lighthouse and then up to the top of the lighthouse.

Did I mention I'm petrified of heights, and I'm claustrophobic?
But I made it to the top, and the view was spectacular!
And as you know, what goes up must come down.
Made it! All 191 steps and the scary ladder included!
And after our lighthouse tour, we looked at some of the other memorials at the First Landing site.

Ryan recreated one....
We looked out over the water one more time...


 And then it was time to say goodbye {to the lighthouses}.
 We spent the rest of the afternoon shopping...


And then Mark and Lynnette took us to Bubba's for seafood. Ryan wanted real, fresh seafood. And it was, indeed, delicious. Even I liked it!
And then....we went to their favorite coffee shop: Cafe Moka. It was delightful.
And so was our last day in Virginia Beach. :( We spent one more night at Mark and Lynnette's, and we were sad to say goodbye to them when early morning arrived.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Walking through Williamsburg

For our Sunday in Virginia Beach, we visited Mark and Lynnette's church, and after church, they took us to Colonial Williamsburg, about an hour from where they live.

{PS: Here was our church look. Since I took a picture, I thought I should post it.}

Anyway, on the way to Williamsburg, we had lunch at a place Mark and Lynnette wanted to show us: Taste. And it was indeed tasty!
After lunch...on to Williamsburg we drove.

If you don't know, Williamsburg used to be the capital of Virginia, and the Colonial area preserves the 18th century appearance and is complete with a cast of people who recreate life in that time and pieces of history for an interesting way of learning about American history. You can purchase tickets to tour buildings in the city, but we didn't do that. We just walked the streets and observed the history and the beauty! Peek into our day?

A stunning church still in use today:

Ryan REALLY wanted this hat. I think it looks striking on him. LOL!!
This was more our style:
Character in action on the streets of Colonial Williamsburg:
Thank goodness coffee existed in colonial times! {Although I doubt it was served with little cardboard cozies.}
Photo opp!!!
Ryan's new friend.
A couple of in-character boys playing in the street:
Recreating an Olan Mills type pose. HA!!
This is as much as we get into tree climbing:
I lost some weight.
How many are in this picture??
Sunset. Stunning.
And on our way home...a stop for pizza, followed by the Colts game on TV! It was a truly beautiful day. I was so thankful!