Thursday, July 6, 2023
Not Just a Kernel of Truth
Wednesday, July 5, 2023
Pick of the Season
Oh summer vacation and its choice choices!
Today I spent my morning playing pickleball and my afternoon picking vegetables in my garden. Maybe next I'll pick a movie to see tomorrow.
Tuesday, July 4, 2023
Rings a Bell
After seeing the trailer yesterday for the latest Mission Impossible movie, Heidi declared that we should watch the previous six before catching the seventh on July 12. Why not? I thought, but as I searched our streaming options, I proposed that we watch number six first, and then work our way backward.
"I don't think we've seen that one," I said, "so there's that."
Heidi agreed, and as we watched the opening scene, I was certain I was right: there was nothing familiar about the primitive cabin Ethan Hunt was holed up in, or the messenger who came to his door. And I undoubtedly did not recall any of the exchanged codewords or the mission description on the reel-to-reel tape which predictably self-destructed in five seconds.
But when, in the next scene, the deal for three orbs full of plutonium went sideways because Hunt would not sacrifice a member of his team, a tiny neuron in the back of my memory fired, and by the time Angela Bassett and Henry Cavill were on screen, I knew we had seen the movie, and I even recalled several vital details about the plot.
Soon I was recalling a hot summer day, and a third person with us at the theater, but when and who? Conveniently, my movie theater rewards membership keeps a record of all the movies I have seen in their theaters, and it didn't take much to scroll back several years to July 30, 2018, when we saw the movie at noon. Next, I clicked through the archive of this very blog to find that it was Josh who went with us. He was still living in the area, and having a flare-up of his chronic IBS, so we got him to come to stay with us for a week so that we could nurse him back to health.
I think I dozed off not long after that, secure in my refreshed five-year-old memories, but a little bored by the movie whose novelty had been negated.
Monday, July 3, 2023
Been Away Awhile
I struggled to manage my expectations as I slid into my swanky recliner seat in the Dolby-equipped theater. We were there to see the new Indiana Jones movie, but first, of course, there were the trailers. In the next 15 minutes or so we saw Tom Cruise destroy a train that he had built for just that purpose, Captain Marvel and a couple of her colleagues destroy several things, and lots of horror previews, replete with screams and jump scares. Each trailer boomed through the theater, shaking our seats.
"It's soooo loud!" I shouted to Heidi, who was sitting next to me.
"It's the movies, Babe," she answered with a smile and returned her attention to the screen.
Sunday, July 2, 2023
Recovery Time
So often I have heard people sigh some variation of, "Oof! I need a vacation from my vacation!"
I know what they mean: anytime we take an extra day or two during the school year to get away for some fun, coming back, without the downtime that a weekend usually offers, can be brutal.
I thought about that this morning on our first day home from our recent vacation. As we walked to the farmer's market, the whole day stretched before us-- heck! more like the whole week, if not the whole summer-- and I sure was grateful.
Saturday, July 1, 2023
And So It Grows
The clouds were heavy and thunder rumbled as I spun the numbers on the garden gate's lock this afternoon. In the first hours home from a summer vacation there are always a couple of must-dos, pet the cats, open the mail, unpack my part of the travel supplies (downstairs and the kitchen), and check on the garden.
This time of year, being away is always a thrilling balance between worrying about the well-being of the plants and being eager to see what growth there has been in the time we've been gone. Today was a particularly rewarding check-in: I harvested a quart of green beans, a couple of zucchini and a yellow squash, and 10 cherry tomatoes. In addition, I clipped a pretty bouquet of purple coneflower, orange mini sunflowers, and red zinnia.
As the first fat drops of the impending thunderstorm began to fall, I hastened to the gate, grateful for both the crops in my hands and the rain that was about to nourish my garden.
Friday, June 30, 2023
Happy Trails
I confess my hopes were not high when we set off from the parking lot of Cacapon Statepark and up some stone steps to the head of the 1.5-mile Ridge Trail, described as a moderate loop by the WVDNR. Maybe I was thinking that last year at this time we were hiking up Gorham Mountain in Acadia National Park, winding up through a balsam wood to granite ledges where we could stop to admire the ocean view. Then we were even lucky enough to snag a few of the earliest blueberries ripening on the low bushes that lined the trail.
But as I set foot on the first sandy steps of this ridge trail, I noticed a few familiar shrubs along the way to the granite step-ups. "These look like blueberries," I said.
"They are blueberries!" Treat replied and turned around to show the little wild blueberry he held in his hand. As we climbed up the rocky ridge, the deciduous trees gave way to pines and the blueberries became more plentiful. We filled an empty bottle while a little stream gurgled below us, and while it wasn't Maine? I sure could not complain.