OBX Trip 2015: DC Day 1

At last, at last, at last I have some travel to recap!  We hadn’t been on a “real” vacation (read: of a week or more) since 2011.  There have been weekend getaways here and there, but never enough time to really get away and unplug.  So this was long overdue, and I swore all vacation long that I will never let this much time go by, ever again, without getting away.  It’s just too important for our family’s well-being!  Prepare for a loooooooong post.

Anyway, we had a very special trip planned for this summer.  My parents recently celebrated their fortieth wedding anniversary, and they wanted a trip in which we would all come together on the Outer Banks – Hatteras Island, specifically – in North Carolina.  Hatteras was our favorite vacation destination when my brother and I were kids, and we went almost every year, for a week, starting when my brother was only two years old.  Now I have the two-year-old, and my brother is grown and married, and it felt like such a great opportunity to come full circle.  But before we get there, we have to get there!  Steve and I talked about it and decided that the drive from Buffalo to North Carolina was simply too far to do in one shot with two tinies, and we had to break it up.  And what better place to break up the drive than DC, our old home base?  We headed down a few days before we were expected in OBX and took the opportunity to see friends and visit some of our old favorite haunts.  This was the first time we had been back since we moved away two years ago, and this visit also felt long overdue.

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We rolled into DC just around dinner time on Thursday evening, and lucky for us we had plans to eat at one of our very favorite DC spots – our friend Stephen’s house!  Stephen lived in Switzerland for years and he makes killer fondue.  Stephen was one of Steve’s co-workers in DC, and he often hosted the gang at his house for fondue nights.  When Steve told him that we would be in town, he immediately suggested fondue and we, of COURSE, agreed.

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This crew, more than any others, were the closest thing we had to family in DC.  I know Steve loves this group so much, and I love them too.  Although I didn’t work with them, they always made me feel so welcome at happy hours, dinners, and get-togethers – and that was the case with all of the other spouses and significant others, too.  Between the core group of coworkers and all the husbands, wives and sig-os, we are a pretty big, loud, and I think FUN, group.  People have come and gone over the years – we’ve lost one to Las Vegas, one to Seattle, and of course our family has moved too.  And there are a few who are still in the DC area but have moved on to other jobs.  But when we all get together, it’s as if no time has passed.  I miss them so much.

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Between this group and some of my other friends, there have been six babies born in DC since we left – all girls!  (I joked that, had we stayed, Nugget probably would have been a girl too.)  So “meeting the new baby girls” became the unofficial theme of the weekend, and I couldn’t have been more excited to both snuggle those other new babies and introduce my own little guy to some of my favorite people.

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(I did snap plenty of pictures of the other little cuties, but I’m sure you will understand – I’m not sharing pictures of any kids but my own.)

On the way back from dinner we drove by some of DC’s most beautiful spots all lit up.  (Please pardon the grainy snapped-from-a-moving-car pics.)

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On Friday morning we woke up excited to revisit some of our favorite spots.  After a quick breakfast at our hotel (we chose not to subject any of our friends – many of whom graciously offered to host us – to our noisy children this time) we headed out to Steve’s favorite place in DC – the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum!

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We’ve taken Peanut here in the past, but she was just a little baby.  Steve was excited to share it with her now that she can enjoy and experience more.

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Nugget enjoyed checking out the people and the sights, too.

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Peanut is apparently really into planes lately.  Steve kept trying to steer her toward the space exploration parts of the museum, but she insisted on returning to the planes over and over.  Like mother, like daughter!  (Newer friends: I love airplanes – although I’m actually a nervous flier – and used to work in the airline industry.)

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The Spirit of St. Louis! And an early American Airlines bird.

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Peanut had a ball.  She basically went insane in the museum.  At one point I tried to sit her down in a group of children to listen to a story and she popped up and started running in circles and shouting “Gaga! Gaga! Gaga!”  She pretty much lost the ability to speak English, ha.

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After Air & Space we meandered out onto the Mall.

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The Washington Monument is looking great!  Last time I saw it, it was covered in scaffolding – repairs from the 2011 earthquake (that was a frightening day – I was up on the eighth floor of an office building, getting ready to defend a deposition, when the entire building started to rock; we thought it was a terrorist attack).  But…

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Now my beloved Capitol Dome was covered in scaffolds!  Sigh.  Someday I’ll get back here and see all of my favorite spots at their best.

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Our next stop was my favorite museum – the National Gallery of Art!

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I stopped by to visit Ginevra de Benci – the only da Vinci in the USA – and then headed straight for the French Impressionists.  Monet is my absolute favorite.

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(^Been there!)

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Some garden inspiration?  Maybe in my next house.

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This is my favorite Monet painting.  I had a poster version in my bedroom as a teenager.

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Of course, we also visited the Degas paintings for Peanut.  She loved the ballerinas.

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After a busy morning, we’d earned a fabulous lunch.  And there is no more fabulous lunch spot than…

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Teaism!  We walked over to the Penn Quarter location.  I used to eat lunch at this location all. the. time. when I worked for the federal government.

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Steve ordered a bento box and I had the most ridiculous tea-cured salmon sandwich ever.  This thing was gigantic.  Don’t ask me how, but I managed to eat the entire thing while holding a squirming baby.  I also got a side of tomato-mint salad, which I will be recreating at home, and a Salty Oat cookie.  I was too full for the cookie, so it went to waste – sadly.  Steve sipped on a ginger limeade and I had Zhenzhou Pearls.  It was all delicious.

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We spent the afternoon walking around Georgetown, trying to walk off the gigantic lunch and make room for a special dinner.  We did treat ourselves to some macarons, though.

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(Lavender vanilla.  Oh, yes.)

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From Georgetown we headed to Dupont Circle – my other old work neighborhood – and puttered around while we waited for our dinner date.  First we stopped by my old office and introduced Nugget to my former co-workers; it was so wonderful to see them all again.  I miss them too much.  Then…

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When in Dupont, you must visit Kramerbooks!  This was my favorite DC bookstore, and I used to eat at Afterwords, the attached cafe, quite often.  (Didn’t happen on this trip, sadly.  Something for next time.)

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While Nugget and I wandered around checking out the offerings, Peanut and Steve parked it and read selections from the children’s section.

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Finally it was time to head to dinner – at Pizzeria Paradiso!

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This was our favorite DC pizza, and I haven’t found its equal anywhere.  We usually frequented the Old Town Alexandria location, but the friend we were meeting requested that we meet in the city instead and so we gladly headed for the original Dupont location.

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I attempted to get a picture of Peanut in front of this DC map, but she was not in the mood to cooperate.  (And yes, this is all the same day, although Peanut is wearing a different outfit.)

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Oh, well.  Olives!

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We studied the menu intently…

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And ultimately decided on a Margherita pizza.  (Hubby ordered a beer – I don’t know what – and I had my favorite sparkling lemonade, which I could totally drink every day.)

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Even better than the pizza (which was amazing, don’t get me wrong) was the company – my best friend from law school, Carly, and her husband and new baby (girl, obviously)!  I know Nugget loved snuggling up in Carly’s arms.

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It was a perfect way to end a perfect day.  I just wish we lived closer and could see these people and sights all the time.  But we made the most of our limited time there.  Coming up soon – day two of our DC fun!

Reading Round-Up: July 2015

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Reading is my oldest and favorite hobby.  I literally can’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t love to curl up with a good book.  Here are my reads for July, 2015

The Elephant Whisperer, by Lawrence Anthony My mom recommended this memoir by the owner of an African game reserve who saved a “rogue” herd of elephants and created an incredible bond with the creatures in the process.  It was wonderful.  I laughed.  I cried.  I priced African safari vacations.  I’ve always liked elephants (although I never considered them my very favorite animals, #whales4lyfe) but after reading Anthony’s memoir I have a new appreciation for their intelligence and magnificence.

Orchard House: How a Neglected Garden Taught One Family to Grow, by Tara Austen Weaver – Hmmmmm.  I had mixed feelings about this one.  There were certain things I loved – the descriptions of life in Seattle, and the luscious pages Weaver devotes to discussing the garden she is growing with her mother.  But I found myself frustrated when the author became petulant.  I could give many examples, but the hissy fit she threw when her sister-in-law told her that her nieces could not come eat strawberries at the last minute because they had swim lessons was particularly silly.  And her relationship with her mother was strange.  For instance, when her mother broke her back and a family friend/doctor told Weaver that Mom would need “a lot of nurturing” Weaver’s first thought was “But who will nurture me?”  Ummmmm, nobody?  You’re a grown woman, for goodness sake!  Get a grip!  Sigh.  Still recommended because of the garden descriptions, which were truly beautiful.

The Book of Speculation, by Erika Swyler – It’s probably a result of too much hype, but this magical realism story of a family of “drowning circus mermaids” didn’t wow me.  I predicted the twist a mile away and the story never really grabbed me.  A disappointment, because it’s been getting raves on other book blogs.  Maybe I just expected too much.

American Ghost: A Family’s Haunted Past in the Desert Southwest, by Hannah Nordhaus – Meh.  Another underwhelming one.  I was intrigued by the beginning, which describes a “haunting” at a Santa Fe hotel – the ghost being Nordhaus’s ancestor Julia.  But the book ended up being far more an exploration of Nordhaus’s German roots and her family’s settlement in New Mexico, and less about spooky stuff, which was what I wanted.  It was short, so I pushed through, but goodness.  I’m not even that interested in my own ancestors, let alone a stranger’s.

Summer Sisters, by Judy Blume – Read this one for Kerry’s BlumeAlong, and enjoyed it very much.  It was a re-read and I loved diving back into the story of the complicated friendship between Caitlin and Vix.  Full review here.

The Millionaire and the Bard: Henry Folger’s Obsessive Hunt for Shakespeare’s First Folio, by Andrea Mays – Loved this one!  Mays takes what could be a dry subject – Henry Folger’s rare book-collecting hobby and the building of the Folger Shakespeare Library – and turns it into a thrilling chase.  There were times I was quite literally on the edge of my seat, wondering if Folger would score a particularly coveted First Folio, and how much it would cost him.  He wasn’t the richest or most powerful rare book collector working at the time, but he was the most single-mindedly devoted to Shakespeare, and that set him apart.  A great read.

Doomsday Book (Oxford Time Travel #1), by Connie Willis – The first of my vacation books!  Oxford, in the mid-2000s, is home to a collection of time-traveling historians (!), including Kivrin Engle, who focuses on the Middle Ages.  When Kivrin determines to travel back to 1320, her mentor, Mr. Dunworthy, is extremely worried.  His worries prove well-founded when a crisis in present-day threatens to strand Kivrin in the past.  I predicted a couple of the twists, but still loved the ride. Time travel books are one of my weaknesses, and I had so much fun with this one.

Brown Girl Dreaming, by Jacqueline Woodson – I probably should have taken my time, so as to really enjoy it, but I couldn’t put down this free verse memoir of Woodson’s childhood in Civil Rights era South Carolina and Brooklyn.  The poems were beautiful and moving, and I immediately decided to buy a copy, because I can see myself reading it over and over.

The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo – Even after finishing this one, I still can’t decide if it’s brilliant or bonkers, inspired or insane.  I think it might be a little of both.  Kondo’s method for “tidying up” (read: decluttering) makes a certain degree of sense (ask yourself if you really love something; if the answer’s no, get rid of it), but her conviction that “stuff” has “feelings” came off as completely loony tunes.  I will be applying some of her decluttering tips.  I will not be congratulating my socks on a job well done at the end of the day.

Nine books!  Not too shabby.  I’d hoped for more, since we were on vacation (with extra baby-holding arms available) for a chunk of the month, but I’m pretty pleased with what I did get read.  Not every book was a winner, but I’m making steady progress toward finishing up my absurd library stack, and that’s a good thing.  I have exciting reading plans for August – a few more library books I’m pumped about, and some Jane Austen for Roof Beam Reader’s Austen in August event.  Can’t wait to dig in!

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? (August 3, 2015)

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Hey, friends. Soooooooo… I have a confession to make. Last week, when I said we’d spent the weekend hanging out with old friends? What I failed to mention was that we did said hanging out in DC, on our way to the Outer Banks for a family vacation. And that the reading I was hoping to get in would be done with my toes buried in the sand!  (As longtime readers know, I don’t like to broadcast when we are out of town, either together or individually. I have been posting pictures on my private Instagram account, but that’s it.)

Anyway, we are easing back into reality now. It was a sun-drenched week on the beach and I definitely still wish I was staring at the crashing North Carolina surf. And while I read less on this trip than I did on similar trips before kiddos, I did get a lot of reading done – a surprising amount, really, considering the two tinies. I finished up DOOMSDAY BOOK, BROWN GIRL DREAMING, and THE LIFE-CHANGING MAGIC OF TIDYING UP, and started CROSSING TO SAFETY and my pick for Roofbeam Reader’s Austen in August event: LOVE AND FREINDSHIP (Jane’s juvenilia). Further progress on both is expected this week.

And  with that, I’m off to sort through pictures and imagine myself back on the beach. Vacation recap posts begin on Friday!