Letchworth State Park

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FINALLY!  After talking, and planning, and postponing, and planning, and postponing… oh, all summer… Zan and I (and our husbands, and Peanut) finally made it for our much-anticipated hike at Letchworth State Park!  Letchworth is popularly known as “the Grand Canyon of the East” because of its spectacular gorges.  Having spent four years in Ithaca (go Big Red!) I love a good gorge.  So of course I was keen to see these.  Zan and I have been trying to make this hike happen since early July, but every time we managed to find a weekend that both our families were available, we would get hit with a threatening forecast.  Thunderstorms!  Lightening!  Showers!  Alien invasion!  Dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria!  So we’d call off the hike because none of us wanted any part of that… and then it’d end up beautiful.  Finally we had a Saturday when we were both free and the forecast was only a mildly disconcerting “30% chance of precipitation.”  So we decided to go for it.

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We picked a trail that led to the lower falls and we started getting views right away as we picked our way along the side of the gorge.

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Peanut entertained our group by singing “This Land is Your Land.”  I can’t make this stuff up.  It was adorable.

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Hubby loves his hiking poles.  They have come in handy on a number of hikes, including this one when the ground got a little more uneven than what you see here.  His center of gravity is off when he has Peanut in the backpack, so anything to help his balance is welcome.  He uses Black Diamond hiking poles, and so do I on more strenuous hikes.

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Before too long, we came to a staircase leading down into the gorge.  We pressed on for a few hundred yards, then doubled back and headed down.

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Caught in the act!  Bloggers document everything, you know.

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The further we got into the gorge, the more spectacular the views became.

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Zan captured a family picture for us.  Thanks, lady!

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Such a fun walk, with the nicest newlyweds in Buffalo!  Zan and Paul, let’s hike again soon.  How about a fall excursion to Zoar Valley?

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What’s your favorite state park?  I’m partial to the Adirondack Park myself, but Letchworth was pretty spectacular too!

Breathe

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Oh, my goodness.  How is it Labor Day already?  For one thing, where has the summer gone?  And for another… sorry I disappeared on y’all last week.  It’s been absolutely crazy around here – crazier than usual.  We wrapped up some work we were having done on our new house, I had three major work deadlines, and – oh, right – we moved.  It wasn’t as nuts as it could have been because we hired people to both pack and move us.  But still – it was nuts, and I wasn’t able to be around or help as much as I wanted to because I was so overwhelmed with big work projects that all came due at the same time.  (I got them all done, but it required an hour-long conference call on the one day of the week that I’d budgeted to be moving all day, and I had to go into work on Friday instead of working from home as I’d planned to because of technical difficulties with my remote access.  Still, it’s all done now and I can finally breathe – at least until the next onslaught.)

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So, we’re in our new house.  And loving it.  Air conditioning!  No sirens!  No garbage in the front lawn!  No bumping into each other if we both try to work in the kitchen at the same time!  It’s amazing.  My standards have really gone down over a year of living in the city, heh.  But we’re so glad to be moved at last.  Not settled – not by a long shot – there’s still a lot of unpacking to be done.  Still, we have time now and it feels great to be in our own space again.  I’m most excited to bake in the kitchen.  So far it’s just been thrown-together meals, but I’m looking forward to whipping up some gourmet treats as soon as I get a chance.  I’m thinking stone fruit compote and peach oat bread before the summer fruits are out of season.

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We’ve been trying to fit some fun in around the craziness.  Peanut got behind the wheel of Grandad’s convertible, so look out, drivers!

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And she had a great time playing “baby sea lion” in our new pool with Nana last weekend after her birthday party.  I’m hoping to get her in the water a few more times before we close the pool for the season.  One of my goals for the summer was to start teaching Peanut to swim.  I considered the best I could do on that front – since I knew we wouldn’t have the pool until August – to be getting her used to the idea in a setting where she could feel safe, so she could jettison any fear and get her little mind in a place where – maybe – winter swim lessons at the family YMCA near our house would be possible.  I think that’s definitely been achieved – Peanut has no fear whatsoever of the water.

So… again… sorry for disappearing.  I had really hoped to have some posts pre-scheduled for last week, but we’ve been so busy I didn’t even have time to do that.  I do have some good posts coming up, though, including a recap of my fourth (!) half marathon, a visit to Letchworth State Park with Zan and Paul (we finally made it!), reflections on raising a reader, and more good stuff.  Stay tuned!

Party Like A Nut

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Look at this big girl!  I still can’t believe that this baby is two years old.  And that we’ve made it through another year of parenthood!  Fist bumps all around!  Obviously, we celebrated with a party.  It was a pretty small affair – just Peanut’s grandparents and one of her friends from Stroller Strides – everyone else was traveling or hosting their own gatherings; such is the plight of a summer baby.  But we had a good time nonetheless!

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We went back and forth over what to do for Peanut’s party – the zoo? aquarium? children’s museum? pool party at the new house? playground near the old house? – and eventually settled on Chestnut Ridge Park, one of our favorite outdoor spaces.  Hubby took charge of booking a shelter and found one right next to a playground.  We knew Peanut would be thrilled with that, so we jumped on the idea.  Peanut had a blast playing on the playground while she waited for her friend to arrive.

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After Peanut’s little buddy arrived and had a chance to do some playing himself, we headed back to the shelter for a picnic and some birthday cake.  Peanut even blew out her own candle!  (Or the wind did it – but we’re giving Peanut the credit.)  We also opened some of her presents gradually throughout the day – she’s incredibly slow about it, I think because she’s still confused about being allowed to rip paper for once.  And because she always gets plenty of books, and whenever she opens a new book she demands that we read it immediately:

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(Having to read every book as soon as it’s opened does gum up the gift-opening works considerably.  But whatever, it’s fun.)

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(Yes, Peanut is wearing two different outfits at her party.  She started out the party in the sweet coral dress and immediately got it soaking wet rolling around in dewy grass.  She’s definitely two!)

Happy birthday again, little lovely!  I hope you had a fantastic time at your party… if the squeals of delight were any indication, I’d say you did. 

Peanut is TWO!

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Woo-hoo!  Guess who’s TWO!?!?!?!

We celebrated Peanut’s second birthday yesterday and wow, how time flies.  In some ways I’m amazed that it’s already been two whole years since we welcomed our tiny preemie princess into the world (two months early).  But in other ways, it feels like she’s been with us forever.

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Peanut at two is packing a ton of personality into a tiny package.  She’s incredibly verbal (well, what do you expect with two lawyers for parents?) and can tell you exactly what she’s thinking and what she wants.  Oh, and she does.  It makes for some pretty hilarious conversations, because she can carry on a conversation now and she’s quite the chatterbox.  And if she tells you what she wants and doesn’t get it… well, we hear about that, too.  Such is life with a two-year-old.

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Really, though, Peanut is an incredibly good kid.  She’s full of energy and fun and sweetness and silliness.  She’s starting to develop a sense of humor, and it’s pretty juvenile… even for a toddler.  Recently, at Stroller Strides, one of the moms was sharing a story about potty-training her little guy.  He was asking to go inside and use the bathroom, but she had her hands full with his little sister, so she told little dude to “pee in the grass.”  Well, Peanut got a huge kick out of the idea of peeing in the grass.  She started laughing hysterically and repeating, “I pee in the grass!  I pee in the grass!”  Twenty minutes into the workout she was still spontaneously bursting into laughter and shouting “I pee in the grass!”  That was weeks ago and she still cracks up every now and again at the idea.  It completely shocked Aunt Grace and Grandma while they were feeding her lunch one day.  (Aunt Grace, sorry we didn’t warn you ahead of time.  And sorry that Grandma blamed you for Peanut’s crude sense of humor.)

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Peanut is very much an outdoor girl and loves her time spent playing in the fresh air.  Most evenings when I come home from work, Nana and Peanut are outside enjoying some water play or tossing a beach ball around in the driveway.  (Another reason I’m so excited to move.  Peanut needs a real backyard!)

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She’s also still Mommy’s Little Bookworm.  She’ll now hand us books and say “Read book, please!”  Melts my heart every time.  And of course she knows that Mommy will always be happy to read a book to her.  Always, little girl.

 

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As far as looks are concerned, we still hear most frequently that she looks just like me.  I take that as a compliment, because I think Peanut is the most beautiful kid on the planet!  I’m honored to resemble her even a little bit.  In reality, Daddy is definitely in there too, as are Auntie Em and Aunt Grace.  I can actually see her aunts come out more and more every day.  But more than anyone else, she looks like herself.

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I still can’t believe she’s a bona fide two-year-old.  She seems so big – walking and talking and having opinions – yet she’s still such a baby.  I’ll always see my tiny little baby girl in her, never more so than when she’s sleeping on her tummy with her thumb in her mouth.  Pure sweetness.  I could watch her snuggle like this for hours.

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Peanut at TWO!

Likes: BOOKS, of course!  Especially Fancy Nancy and anything by Dr. Seuss.  Also enjoys the playground; running around in the park; wearing her bathing suit (“Ballerina!  Dance like ballerina!”); splashing in the bathtub; eating fruit, cheese and olives; watching “Winnie Pooh” videos on YouTube; going to the aquarium to visit the sea lions; seeing her friends at Stroller Strides; bathroom humor; pushing stuffed animals around in her play stroller; singing along with the Sound of Music soundtrack (she can do the entire “Do Re Mi” song – not kidding – even “So Do La Fa Mi Do Re”) and Broadway show tunes (favorites include “Jesus Christ Superstar” and “Defying Gravity”); anything to do with Disney’s “Frozen” but especially “Let it Go” and the scenes with Olaf the snowman; when Mommy and Daddy come home from work; and so much more… she’s just such a happy, spirited kid.

Dislikes: Men, with the exception of Daddy and her grandfathers, and our realtor, funnily enough – but all other guys are persona non grata until she gets used to them; sitting in her high chair and eating when she’d rather be running around; going out to eat (same issue); and Mo Willems books, oddly.

Milestones:  So much has happened this year, I don’t know that I can begin to recap all of Peanut’s milestones.  She said her first word at twelve months and is now talking up a storm, in full sentences.  (At her eighteen-month well child visit, the pediatrician said he’d like her to be able to say five or six words.  We pulled out our list of Peanut’s words, which – at the time – was in the seventies and included several sentences.)  She walked a little late but is now running all over the place and climbing on the furniture.  Other fun milestones this year included a move to Buffalo, her first trip to Canada, her first two Adirondack high peaks, and her first time visiting our family’s lake house.

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Quirks:  As I said above, she’s got a pretty crude sense of humor, even for a toddler.  She also loves other people’s cell phones.  I got her a cell phone of her own, but it’s not a real phone – it’s a V-tech toy phone.  So, obviously, she prefers anyone else’s phone to hers… although she will use her phone to take selfies.  That’s right.  She takes selfies.

Mommy and Daddy have NAMES?  When Peanut talks on the phone, more often than not she starts out her “conversation” by announcing, “Hello!  Jaclyn and Steve!”  We think she picked this up during a stretch of a few weeks in which we conducted a lot of speaker-phone conversations with our realtor.  But she doesn’t actually know who “Jaclyn and Steve” are, or even necessarily that they are people.  If we ask her to point to Mommy or Daddy, she points right to the correct parent.  If we ask her to point to Jaclyn or Steve, she stares at us blankly.  We’re pretty sure she thinks “Jaclyn and Steve!” is some kind of telephone greeting.

The Night-Night Posse:  We finally caved in and started letting her take a toy to bed.  It’s a suffocation risk for babies, but when she turned about eighteen months we decided she was old enough and she started taking Pup to bed.  Orange Kitty joined them soon, and was soon followed by Peter Rabbit.  Now the Night-Night Posse, as we call them, has grown to include – in addition to the original three – Diamond the Sea Lion, Zoey the Harbor Seal, Izzie Lizzie Alligator, Goodnight Moon Bunny, Winnie the Pooh, and a bunny lovie that doesn’t have a formal name yet but seems to answer to both “Easter Bunny” and “Steve.”

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Not to sound like a broken record, and I know I’m her mom and all so I’m biased, but this kid. is. amazing.  She’s smart and funny, affectionate, curious, sweet, and so very loving.  Recently she started giving kisses, as if she wasn’t melting our hearts enough just by existing.  Oh, she has her moments – all toddlers do.  We’ve had the occasional tantrum episode (who teaches kids to lay down on the floor and kick? it seems to be some sort of innate toddler instinct) but most of the time she’s pure sunshine.  I think I got pretty much the greatest kid in the world.  And now I’ll stop gushing (even though Nana is probably the only person who made it to the end of this long post, hi Nana!).

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Happy second birthday, little Peanut.  Mommy and Daddy love you more than words can say.

Erie County Fair 2014

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I’m getting behind on these summer family fun activities.  Here’s one from a couple of weeks ago: the Erie County Fair!

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We got to the fair early and spent most of our time with the animals.  We headed first to see the cows, and in a corner of the cow barn was an incubator with a dozen or so adorable chicks.  They were standing in their food and proving that chicks and toddlers are not so different.

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Peanut desperately wanted to pet the cows, but she couldn’t reach from her perch in the kid carrier.  Poor Peanut.

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At one point, the family – including the in-laws, who joined us for the fair – wandered into the rabbit barn.  I couldn’t stand the smell so I made a hasty exit, and stumbled upon the Shetland Ponies!  I may or may not have immediately Instagrammed them and then wandered around humming “bye bye L’il Sebastian…” #5000candlesinthewind.

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Then we found our way to the llama show!  We saw one llama win a blue ribbon for… llama-ing, or whatever llamas do.  I wanted to hang around and find out if it was a competitive thing or if all the llamas got blue ribbons for participation like in kindergarten, but the rest of the family was moving on.

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Oh.  Hello there.

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Peanut has a book called The Littlest Llama, which has been a favorite of hers since forever, so of course we walked around the llama barn trying to find the littlest one.  I thought this guy might be, but hubby and Peanut spotted a couple who were even smaller.

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Of course, the fair wouldn’t be the fair without fair food.  I was starving and had a dish of curly fries and some smoked turkey with bbq sauce.  (It was supposed to be a sandwich, but I didn’t want the bread so I ordered it without.  The guy in the bbq truck said, incredulously, “just a dish of meat?”  I’m pretty sure he would have asked me out had I not had a ring on my finger.)  We also hit up the tiger show and the kettle corn stand, but sadly I’m out of pictures.

Until next year, Erie County Fair!

Have you ever been to the county fair where you live?  This is the second time I’ve been to the Erie County Fair, but I’ve never been to any other.

Years Of Painterly Skies At Dawn

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This post has been a long time in the works, and I can’t even tell you how happy I am to share the news that I am going home.  No, not to Old Dominion.  To a new home!  After months of searching, countless houses visited, four rejected offers, and umpteen sleepless nights, we’ve finally bought a house.  We closed on Wednesday, we’re having some work done this week and next, and we plan to move in by the end of the month.

The house is outside the city, which makes us very happy.  Our experiment in urban living over the past year has taught us that we are not city people.  True, I loved living in Foggy Bottom for my first two years of law school, and we lived in some fairly urban parts of Arlington (although, as a hilarious rule, Arlington thinks it’s more urban than it actually is) but for where we are in our lives now, the city just doesn’t work.  We hoped that our walkable urban Buffalo neighborhood would be kid-friendly, but it hasn’t been – even with the playground just a few blocks away, the constant noise and the confined spaces have been tough on little Peanut.  As they have on all of us.  I’ve been getting progressively more down on our house, our neighborhood, and our urban environment in general, and I’m ready for wide-open spaces and friendly neighbors.

So we’re moving to the country.  I won’t say exactly where, but I will say that we lucked into finding a house in a lovely rural area that somehow also manages a decent commute.  We won’t have to spend much more time in the car than we do now, fighting city traffic.  And we’ll have several acres for Peanut to explore, a pool where she can learn to swim, a fabulous kitchen where I can enjoy baking again, and a big, rambling house with great bones that’s just waiting for our updates and personal touches.

I can’t wait.  I can’t wait to wake up to birdsong instead of sirens.  To run down country roads and stargaze in our backyard under velvety skies unmarred by city lights.  To float in the pool in our private backyard all summer, and snowshoe around the nearby town park all winter.  To plant an herb garden and grow tomatoes in the abundant light.  To drink my tea in the mornings on the cozy back porch (maybe we’ll get a swing!).  To experience “years of painterly skies at dawn,” a line from The Cloister Walk – a book I recently finished – that perfectly sums up the gifts I hope country life will give our family.

I’ve never lived in a rural area before.  I grew up a suburban kid and have bounced back and forth from suburb to city to suburb to city.  This is a new departure for us and we think it’s going to be great.

I can’t wait to go home!

The Summer List: Update

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I’ve been busy, busy re-learning a lesson that I’m just now starting to remember from my childhood.  Summers in the northeast are short, and you have to make the most of them while they last.  We’ve been packing every weekend with fun – special family outings, one half marathon (so far), one trip, and plenty of the usual (Stroller Strides, neighborhood walks, cold drinks at the pub a block from our house, playground fun, you name it).  And of course, I’ve been making progress on my summer list.

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Done!  Here’s my race recap from the Fifty Yard Finish.  Complete with flashy new PR – 2:24:30, 13 minutes faster than my last half!

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  • Attend the wedding of one of hubby’s oldest friends on July 4th.

Done, and what fun to celebrate with the bride and groom, who are in for a lifetime of happiness together.

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  • At least one day at my parents’ lake house.

It was marvelous and blissful.  The only downer to the day was that it was so windy it was actually too breezy to take Peanut out on the boat.  Next time.

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Done!  Climbing Cascade and Porter was an incredible experience.  Everyone should have the chance to see the world from atop one of the ADK 46.

I didn’t blog about this, but we went and we enjoyed it immensely.  Supporting local artists is one of my favorite ways to anchor myself to a place, and we bought a few things – some gifts for family members for various occasions, and a couple of odds and ends for our house.

Working on this.  We have been trying to arrange a hike with our friends Zan and Paul, but we keep getting rained out.  One of these days, we’ll make it there.

Yummmmmmmmmm.  I now need to visit Joe’s Crab Shack, like, immediately.

Planning is underway.  We’ve got a date, time and location, and invitations should go out soon.

On a sort-of-indefinite hiatus.  I haven’t been able to run – it’s been a perfect storm keeping me off the roads.  Although it will be disappointing, I’m almost 100% sure I’ll be deferring to the 2015 race.

Went back last weekend and explored some of the trails we hadn’t gotten to see last time – such a lovely, relaxing way to spend a morning.

It has been a busy summer so far, for sure.  But we’ve enjoyed every moment, and we’ll keep enjoying every moment that we have it.  August is looking like a very busy month, but we’ll be sure to make plenty of time for family fun as long as the nice weather lasts.  How about you – how are you enjoying your summer?

Weekend in an Instagram

I always seem to take more photos and use Instagram more on the weekends – I guess weekend moments are just better for preserving.  (And no one, least of all me, wants to see picture after picture of my computer keyboard or morning Earl Grey.)  We had a fun, relaxing weekend and I snapped quite a few pictures, so I thought I’d share.

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On Saturday we went for a hike at Knox Farm again.  It was supposed to be grey but it turned out a beautiful day.  We wandered through the wooded trails and anytime we came to a fork, we let Peanut direct us which way to go.  Miraculously, despite leaving navigation up to a 23-month-old, we didn’t get lost.

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Beautiful blue skies.  Peanut must have been remembering her last hike, because she kept shouting “High peak!”  Not quite, kid, not quite.

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One of my favorite things about Knox Farm is all the birdhouses they have around.  Not only do they attract some beautiful birds (I saw a gorgeous yellow-and-black one on Saturday, making me wish again that I was a birder… but I have enough hobbies) but they’re just sweet scenery in their own rights.

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After the hike we headed into East Aurora to sample the wings at Bar-Bill.  One of hubby’s co-workers promised us that Bar-Bill had the best wings in WNY (which means the best wings in the world).  After some reflection, hubby decided that he agrees.  Personally, I still prefer Duff’s.  The wings at Bar-Bill were a little too saucy for my preference – Duff’s makes them drier, which I like better.  I also wasn’t overly impressed with the service at Bar-Bill.  We were the first people to sit down and order during the lunch hour, and multiple other tables got their meals before we did.  When you’re ravenous from a hike and you have an almost-2-year-old with you (Peanut is a good kid, but all toddlers are ticking time bombs in restaurants) you notice when a table that sat down 20 minutes after you gets their food first, and you don’t appreciate it.  I’m willing to make allowances for an obviously busy restaurant, but this one wasn’t busy at all – other than a few guys drinking at the bar, we were the only people inside when we placed our order.  I did, however, much prefer Bar-Bill’s fries to Duff’s, so that’s something.

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Speaking of eating, we’re working on teaching Peanut to use utensils.  We should have done this a long time ago and I admit it’s my fault she can’t use them yet.  It’s so much faster and tidier to feed her myself.  But she needs to learn.  She seems to have inherited her mother’s appreciation for efficiency, though, and since she’s already mastered eating with her fingers, she thinks that spoons are for the birds.

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Sunday was a relaxing day at home that we spent just hanging out…

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Hosting a small group of furry friends for brunch…

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And snuggling.  Perfect.

How was your weekend?

Taste of Buffalo 2014

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The Taste of Buffalo is a giant food festival downtown and one of the most hotly-anticipated events all year, in which area restaurants, cafes and food vendors gather to promote their businesses by sharing their best dishes.  Hubby and I attended in 2007, when we happened to be visiting the area on just the right weekend, and we had a blast – so we knew we were going to make a point of attending this year.  We invited my father-in-law along (would you believe he’d never been before?!).

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We arrived early, just as things were starting to get going.  The crowd of restaurants represented included everything from local institutions like Nick Charlap’s Ice Cream, to new-on-the-scene trendy spots like Merge (a vegetarian restaurant I’m dying to try, and having tasted their kale salad at Taste only makes me more eager to get there for dinner) and even a few chains like Applebee’s and Gordon Biersch.

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Almost immediately, we spotted a familiar green vehicle – Lloyd’s Taco Truck!  If I had a nickel for every time I’d seen Lloyd’s parked near my office and walked by it because I didn’t “feel like tacos” I could treat myself to an entire plate’s worth.  Since I’d been meaning to try it for so long, we made a beeline for the truck.  (And it was a good thing we were early, because when we walked by Lloyd’s on the way out, it was completely mobbed.)

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We ordered a chicken taco to share and a half order of krazy korn.  (Hubby doesn’t like corn on the cob – and he had just put away a slider on his own – so the corn was just for me and I didn’t want to fill up on one station, even an amazing station like Lloyd’s.)  The chicken taco was absolutely delicious, but the corn blew me away – rubbed with a chili butter, drizzled with secret sauce and sprinkled liberally with queso and cilantro, it was pretty much the best thing I’ve eaten in months.  Now I’m furious with myself for walking past Lloyd’s so many times, always headed for someplace not as good, and I have vowed that every time I see the green truck in my neighborhood, I will get a krazy korn and a taco.  Lloyd’s was the highlight of the 2014 Taste for me.

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We made our way from station to station, tasting seafood mac ‘n cheese (good, but hubby said my homemade mac ‘n cheese is better), Bavarian pretzels, steamed crabs from Joe’s Crab Shack (another highlight, and now on our list to visit as soon as humanly possible), and even…

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WINE!  Hubby and F-I-L each had a glass (hubby had sparkling, F-I-L had raspberry rose) and I went for three one-ounce samples so I could taste more.  We had just changed a soaking wet diaper in the grass, so we figured we deserved it.  We then headed back for a second pass, this time at the desserts.  We tried a few different things, but the raspberry Chardonnay ice cream (wish I could remember the vendor) was the best.  We left feeling just a bit overstuffed, but very happy with our morning.

If you’re in Buffalo, did you attend the Taste this year?  What was your favorite part?  If you’re elsewhere, does your city have a similar food festival?  We used to go to Taste of Ithaca when we were at Cornell, but we never made it to any food festivals in D.C.

A Day By The Lake

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For months I’ve been looking forward to a nice (warm!) summer day at my parents’ lake house.  We live five hours away, so we couldn’t just hop over there anytime like my family did when I was growing up – so now it’s a special treat to spend a day or two there in a summer.  When we received an invitation to a wedding on the fourth of July, in central Massachusetts, I knew that it was a perfect chance to build a day at the lake into the trip.  We arrived in Albany on July 3rd and left Peanut with my parents while we drove to the wedding in the afternoon on the fourth.  We left early in the morning on the fifth and headed straight to the lake, where Peanut and my parents were having lunch when we got there.  I was so glad to be there, I immediately ran down to the waterfront and snapped a picture of one of my favorite views (above).

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I was also glad to see my little girl.  I missed her!  She was having so much fun playing in the grass on the terrace.  It was amazing to see her discovering a place where I’ve been coming since before I can remember.

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She was, however, sorely in need of a nap, so we put her down and then hung out in Adirondack chairs on the terrace, chatting about the wedding and watching my dad windsurf.  (That’s him above.)  After awhile, I went down to sit on the dock and drink in the views.

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It was just  a leeeeeeetle bit breezy.

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When Peanut woke up, she got some quality time in playing with Nana and Grandad and some of my extended family members (they have a place right next door, and we all mill about on our adjoining waterfront).  Then we got some more visitors!

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Nana has been feeding these ducklings all spring, in hopes that they would make her a regular stop on their daily tours – so that when Peanut arrived they would come over for a visit.  We rushed to the waterfront with stale bread for them.

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Peanut didn’t quite get the concept.  Whenever my mom handed her a piece of bread, she batted it away and it would land somewhere else on the dock.  But she loved watching the ducks snap up the pieces of bread that the rest of us were throwing.

Lake 10

The wind had been blowing hard all day and – instead of calming like it usually does – was actually picking up as the afternoon wore on to evening.  So we decided to eat dinner indoors.  My dad grilled chicken and made sandwiches on ciabatta rolls, with rosemary aoli – yum.  Peanut was too excited to eat and spent the dinner hour carrying these two lanterns around the living room in some sort of adorable toddler reenactment of Paul Revere’s ride.  We headed back to our beds for the night after dinner, because we had an early alarm and a big adventure planned for the next day – so check back here on Friday for that.

How did you spend your Fourth of July weekends?