Sunday, September 14, 2025

Days Spent

          My days of this past week, and your days have all been spent. I don’t know about you, but I can look back and see that I haven’t accomplished near as much as I wanted to. I haven’t painted anything, despite my desire to hold a paint brush again. I haven’t started a cutesy dragon doorstop for my little sister, despite my eagerness to bring that whimsy to life. The vision is there, clear in my mind, and my fingers are itching to get at it.

But more important than any of that is this: I haven’t spent as much time in God’s Word as I’ve longed to. I’ve felt the tug, the gentle nudge to open my Bible, to sit still, read, and listen. And yet, the days slipped by. I know His grace covers even the weeks when I fall short, but I don’t want to live in the margins of my faith, I want to dwell in the center of it. That is my goal. I want my creativity to flow from communion with God and not just ambition. I want my hands to work not only with purpose, but with praise. I dream of the day when I can make things and give them to God in person, just like when I was a little girl and made things to give to Momma. They were clumsy, but heartfelt and full of love. I want to lay my creations at His feet, not to impress Him, but to thank Him.

So maybe this week wasn’t what I hoped for. But it’s not wasted. Because even in the quiet ache of unmet goals, I’m reminded that God’s mercies are new every morning. And tomorrow, I’ll pick up the brush, make the clay, open the Word, and begin again.

I know you don’t come here expecting me to share my faith, but sometimes I feel compelled to speak it aloud. My hope is simply this. That something I say might plant a seed, stir a question, or spark a longing in you to know more, to turn your life over to God, just as I have.

I’m not perfect. Far from it. But I am forgiven. And when I stand before God on judgment day, I won’t be standing alone. Jesus Christ will be beside me, my advocate, my redeemer, my reason for hope.


So my days were spent. Two of them I was sitting here in front of my computer, writing of the exploits of me and my best old friend, Trish.

Poor Bondi. She’d get my attention and stand at the door. She doesn’t have to say a word, I know what she wants. She wants me to sit on the patio so she can sit in the sun.


She could go out on her own, and she does sometimes, but she usually wants me to be out there with her. I try to do that as much as I can because guess what?

“Winter’s coming?” you hazard a guess.

And you’re right. Winter’s coming and our patio sitting days are coming to an end.

Speaking of Bondi...

A couple of weeks ago she squeaked when I picked her up. I didn’t know what hurt her exactly, so I was more careful from then on when I picked her up.

Then last week I felt a dampness under her front leg when I picked her up. I looked and found the skin wet, red, and swollen. I didn’t know what it was so I took a picture and sent it to my big sister.

“It’s a hot spot. They’re painful and itchy,” Patti said. “Take her to the vet.”


I called the vet. “Wash it with Dawn and put Neosporin on it,” they told me.

I only did part of that. At night, before bed, I washed it gently with just warm water, dried it, and put Neosporin on it. I knew she’d soon crawl under the covers for the night and she wouldn’t lick the area.

Three days of this and it’s almost gone. 

          After two days in front of the computer, the next day, Wednesday, Mike had a checkup in Sayre. I took a few pictures.


          The corn is tall and it’ll soon be time to harvest it.


          The light poles in Towanda are wrapped in aqua and purple. Don’t ask me why.

          “Why, Peg?” you ask.

          I don’t know, that’s why.



          They go all out for Halloween.


         The cairns on the island in the Susquehanna have been rebuilt. Where there once was one, there are now several. 


          The nice thing about doctor’s appointments is it gives me time to read. I’d barrowed Life Flight by Lynette Eason from my online library, I was a little more than halfway through it, and it was going back in two days! I didn’t think I’d finish it so I put a hold on it. I couldn’t renew my loan because someone else was waiting for it. If I didn’t finish it in two days, it would be two weeks until I’d get it back. And it was just getting good!

          Because Mike likes to be early, I got quite a few pages read while we waited for him to be called. Yay, me!         

So now three of my days are gone. I’m acutely aware of the encroaching weekend and our upcoming visit. What would I have to talk about?! 

The next day, Mike had an appointment to get the oil changed in the car.

“Let’s have lunch at Sam’s Club,” I suggested. “I like their hot dogs and we can share a slice of pizza.”

We had let our Sam’s Club membership expire because we just didn’t buy that many things from there. But they let you buy lunch at the food court without a card.

I didn’t take any pictures on the way down.

At the dealership, I found a comfortable chair, had my travel cup of coffee, and settled in to read while we waited. 

I read quite a few more pages while we waited. I was nearing the end. The last hundred pages are the most exciting, don’cha think?

After the oil change, we head back to Sam’s Club for the hot dog and pizza I’d been looking forward to.

The first thing off was the missing cash register, it was gone from the spot where I used to place my order. I wandered over to the pick-up counter.

“Where do I order?” I asked.

“You have to order over there,” the guy said, pointing toward the self-checkout lanes. “There’s a register just for food.”

I thanked him and queued up behind two gals who were deep in deliberation. It took them forever to decide. While I waited, I studied the machine and noticed something important: no slot for cash. Card only. That was okay. I was only using a card.

When it was finally my turn, the screen lit up with a cheerful directive: TO GET STARTED, INSERT YOUR SAM’S CLUB CARD.

          So much for that. No more lunch at Sam’s if you’re not a member.

          “Do you want to join again?” Mike asked.

          “No. We just don’t use it enough.”

          We went on down the road and I had a lunch that I’ve never had before.

          “What’s that?” you wanna know.

          I ordered two of the snack wraps at McDonald’s. One with ranch sauce and one with their new Special Edition Gold Sauce. I really like the Gold Sauce, better than the ranch,  and that’s what I’ll get if I have a chance to have another one.

          I ate half of it before I thought I might want to tell you about it.


On the way out of town, stopped at a red light, I took a picture of these.

New England Asters. They’re also called Fall Aster and Purple Daisy.

          In folk medicine the flowers were brewed into a tea for respiratory issues like coughs, colds, and asthma, or made into a poultice as an antiseptic to soothe rashes. The roots were chewed or steeped as a digestive stimulant.  

          In folklore, it’s said that the aster sprang from the tears of the Greek goddess Asterea, who wept when she couldn’t see stars in the sky. Where her tears fell, asters bloomed. So they’re not just flowers, they’re star-born symbols of longing and hope.


          At another red light, I got a picture of roses.


          And we got stopped yet again at another red light before we were out of town. This time I took this picture.


          “Why did she use a glamour shot?” I asked Mike. “Do you think people will go to her because she’s pretty?” 

          “I don’t know.”

          “Well, personally, it would instill more confidence in me if she had her hair back and her doctor’s coat on.”

          But, hey. That’s just me. 

          It really is starting to look a lot like fall. Besides the asters blooming, the trees on the way up the mountain to our place are starting to change color.      

          Speaking of asters...

The New England Aster is easy to identify because of its size and vibrant purple color. I can also ID the Calico Aster easily — which I don’t have a picture of this week. I think this one is the Smooth Aster. It’s not as large as the New England and has a lavender color.


          Once we were home from having the oil changed, I made a fresh cup of coffee, got my e-reader, and spent the rest of the afternoon on the patio. Not only did Bondi get some time in the sunshine, I finished my book!

          Yay, me! 

          I’ve had to stop putting my jelly feeder out. The bees have taken it over and the birds won’t come with the bees there.  

    

          The hydrangea are putting on their fall colors.


          The milkweed is sending out its seeds. 


          Saturday was recycle day.

          “Can you go by yourself?” Mike asked. “I’m going to help Lou.”

          You may remember that Lou and his friend Mick, bought Charlie Cheshire’s old house and are in the process of remodeling it. Mick is doing most of the inside work, while Lou is doing the landscaping. He’s taking down dead trees and taking out the over-grown bushes.

          “I can,” I assured Mike. But it’s hard to take pictures while I’m driving, I almost added, but didn’t. I thought about leaving my camera home while I took the recyclables down since I am NOT allowed to take pictures while I’m driving.

          I can stop the car if I want to take a picture, I told myself and picked the camera up on my way out the door.

          Boy! Am I glad I did!

          I took the dirt back roads for a good part of the way. A doe crossed the road in front of me. I slowed. On my left was this handsome guy with two more does. No other cars were in sight so I stopped right there in the middle of the road. They didn’t run so I was able to get several shots.


          Let’s end this week with more pictures that I took on my solitary trip to the recycle station.







          Oh wait!

          I forgot!

          I have one more story to tell you!         

          I was working on my computer early in the week, I told you that. Bondi was in the bed by my desk. I was so intent on my writing that I never saw her slip out of bed.

          Suddenly, I heard the little cries of distress.

          I was startled and confused, not only by the sound, but I don’t know what was making it. I glanced at the birds, but they were fine. Then I saw Bondi. She was under the bird cages sniffing around the sweeper that sat nearby in the broom closet.

          That’s when it clicked. That’s when I knew the cries were that of a mouse. He must’ve come out to feed on the seeds the birds drop and Bondi saw him. My mighty mouse-hunter must’ve gotten a hold of the mouse but didn’t kill it. When she dropped him, he bolted.

          I got out of my seat, turned on the light in the closet, and started moving stuff around. We never did find the mouse.

          I baited a spring trap with peanut butter and tucked it under the bird cages. Then I flattened a cardboard box and rigged it into a makeshift barrier, just enough to keep the dogs from getting their noses snapped.

That night, I was in bed when I heard the trap go off. A sharp snap, then a strange rhythmic sound of wood striking wood. I lay there, listening. I figured the mouse, caught but not yet dead, was thrashing around, knocking the trap against the baseboard in its final moments.

          The next morning, I went to empty the trap — but it was gone! I searched everywhere. I’ve got two theories. One: the cat got to it first and carried off his prize to dine in private. The other, and more likely theory, is the mouse only had a foot or tail caught, and the rattling I heard was him dragging the trap into an unfinished section of wall in the broom closet.

Either way, I’ll find the trap again or I won’t.

 

Now let’s call it done!

And remember — more than anything, you’re all in my heart.

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Two Weeks

           It’s been two weeks.

Did you miss me?

“I did. I look forward to your letter blog every week,” my beautiful little sister said. “As soon as it comes in I sit down and read it.”

The reason why I didn’t visit with you last week is my best old friend, Trish from West Virginia, came for a two-week visit. It’s been a couple of years since she’s been here and I was so looking forward to her visit. We were expecting her around six, Saturday evening two weeks ago and it was ten-ish before she pulled into the driveway. Her nine hour trip took fourteen hours.

“Why is that? Construction tie-ups?” you guess.

Nope. She gets tired and needs to pull over and rest or nap for a bit. I think we can all agree that that’s better than driving tired.

We didn’t go a lot of places while Trish was here. The first place we went was to the Wyoming County Fair. I was telling Trish that the church ladies sell haluski as well as my favorite pierogies.

“I don’t know what that is,” Trish said.

 “It’s a cabbage and noodle dish. I’ve never tried it but I know Steph, my neighbor, loves it.”

She was looking forward to trying it.

The first day of the fair is free entry for seniors. It’s also Claverack Day, the day our electric company gives us twenty dollars off our bill and thirty dollars in food vouchers to sign up for their yearly meeting. That would be our first stop.

          The day of the fair rolls around and I check the internet to see if they open at ten or eleven.

          Surprise! It didn’t open until two in the afternoon! We left the house so we’d be there when the fair opened and the traffic to enter the fairgrounds was already backing up.



           I saw how full the parking area was and knew we’d have quite a hike just to get to the main gate.

          “Let’s see if they’ll let us park in the handicapped area,” I said.

          Mike pulled up to the guy directing traffic and hit the button to lower my window.

          “Can we park in the handicapped area?” I asked. “We have a lady with us who can’t walk so far.”

          They waved us through to the reserved handicapped parking.

          We weren’t very far inside the fairgrounds when I see people getting in a line. “Is that the Claverack line?” I asked.

          A lady in line heard me ask and answered. “Yes, it is.”

          “Holy cow! Let’s walk around for a little while and see if it goes down,” I suggested.

          Standing in line is harder for Mike than walking, and that’s plenty hard for him.

          We walked the line — it was a really long line — until we came to the tent. Then we crossed the line and went looking for one of the two things we’d come to see; the reptile guy.

          “He’s usually here on this corner,” I told Trish. She was looking forward to holding one of the snakes. When he wasn’t there we went on to the stand where the church ladies sold their pierogies for the last umpteen million years. They weren’t there either!

          “Let’s go to information and I’ll find out where they are this year,” I said. I was thinking that maybe they didn’t reserve their regular spot in time this year.

          On the walk to information, Mike says, “I bet they couldn’t get enough help. They were all older people that ran it.”

          At the information booth, the lady said, “They’re not here this year. They couldn’t get enough help.”

          Mike guessed right.

          Then I asked about the reptile guy.

          “He died. Right after the Harford fair he died,” she said.

          We were walking back towards the end of the Claverack line when we spot Pork and Annette, our church peeps.


          “The line is the whole way out to the entrance now,” Annette said.

          We chatted for a little while then went our separate ways.

          One of the political booths caught Mike’s eye and he stopped to chat with the ladies there. “Mike,” I got his attention. “We’re going this way,” and I pointed. Trish and I walked on and found ourselves at the backside of the Claverack tent.

          “Let’s go in,” I said. “There’s some chairs if you want to sit and rest. I’m going to find my cousin.”

          Stacey works for the electric company and I thought I’d just pop in and say hello. I asked a gal manning one of the tables where Stacey was and she directed me to where Stacey was working. I didn’t have any trouble spotting my beautiful cousin.

          “Hi there!” I called when I saw her.

          Stacey got up and greeted me with a hug.

          “The line to sign up is the whole way out to the front gate,” I told her. “Mike can’t stand in line that long.”

          “Where’s your paper? I’ll sign you up.”

          “Mike has it. I’ll go get him.”

          It took me a while to find Mike. He wasn’t where I left him and my phone service was sporadic. After several tries it finally rang through.

          “Where are you?” I asked.

          “Standing in line,” Mike answered.

          “Come to the back of the Claverack tent. Stacey said she would sign us in.”

          It seemed like it took Mike forever to make his way back to where I was waiting for him. Eventually I see him coming.

          When we got back to where Stacey was working she was busy doing her job. She was counting registration slips. We waited until she made her way through the stack, then she got up and gave Mike a hug.


          “One guy was telling us that he’s been here since ten but it didn’t open until two,” I told her. “And people were lining up even then.”

          “That was part of the problem,” she said. “But we can’t tell them when to open.”

          We didn’t keep Stacey from her job very long and as we were leaving, I saw Pork and Annette again. They’d just finished signing up, too.

          “I have a guy on the inside,” I bragged. “Well, really a gal. My cousin works there. I didn’t have to stand in line.”

“Oh, now you tell me!” she said with a smile. “It really wasn’t too bad, though. The line moved pretty fast.”

          The only other thing I’d been look forward to was a Deluxe Walnut Bowl from Loch’s Maple Syrup. I went for those — one for me, one for Trish — while Mike made a beeline for his favorite (which was still there thankfully), an Italian sausage sandwich. We found a place at a table in the shade and ate our treats. Mike, who’s never met a stranger, continued a conversation with a couple he’d been chatting with elsewhere on the fairgrounds.

          We took our leave and strolled down the main “street.”

“Wanna go see the animals?” I asked Trish.

“Sure. I’d like to see the sheep and especially the goats.”

Mike didn’t want to walk that much so he parked his butt on a bench and would people watch while we were gone.

Our walk would take us right past the chainsaw carver, so we stopped to watch him work on an eagle.


          “Do they have special chainsaws?” I asked, but Trish didn’t know.

          I thought if he took a break, I’d ask. But we were ready to move on before he quit. So what did I do? I asked Copilot, my AI buddy.

          “Yes, chainsaw carvers often use specialized chainsaws — or at least chainsaws modified for carving — to achieve the precision and control their art demands. While you can carve with a standard chainsaw, most serious carvers prefer tools tailored to the task. Here’s how they differ: smaller bar lengths, lightweight and compact, and modified chains for low kickback.”

          So now we both know.

          We were approaching the antique farm machine buildings when loud clanging caught our attention. A blacksmith was hard at work. We stopped and watched for a few minutes. There was another couple there already in conversation with him so we didn’t get to ask any questions before we moved on.


          “Shall we walk through and look at the antique farm equipment?” I asked. “That was something my mother liked to look at. That and the cows.”

          A sign on the sliding door.


          Trish reading a sign on the wall.


Again this year, I had to wonder.

“Why did they go through the trouble to put fancy designs on the machines?” I asked Trish.

“I don’t know." She didn't know.

I went on. “I wouldn’t think guys would care about something like that.”


          Since I asked Copilot about the chainsaws, I asked about the scrollwork, flourishes, and pin striping on the old machines.

          Wanna know what he said?

          “I do!” you say.

          “Pride in ownership,” Copilot answered. “Farmers took immense pride in their tools —these machines were expensive investments and central to their livelihood. Many pieces were hand-built or assembled locally, and decoration was a way to showcase skill.

And marketing appeal is another reason. Companies like McCormick, Case, and Oliver used ornate designs to make their equipment more visually appealing at fairs and expos.

Lastly, for tradition and identity. In some communities, especially among Pennsylvania Germans, decorative painting was part of a larger cultural tradition—think of hex signs on barns or fraktur script.”

Copilot summed it by saying, “It’s a beautiful reminder that even utilitarian objects were treated with reverence and artistry.”

Then he asked me if I wanted him to sketch a scrollwork design for my garden tools. “Maybe a poetic nod to your possum rescue. Want to play with that idea?”

I had to smile. AI remembers that in conversations past I asked about how to take care of my rhubarb and how to help the baby possums that I rescued.

“Go for it,” I replied. “Let’s see what you come up with.”

“Here it is—your custom scrollwork design is ready! It features a hand-painted opossum nestled in swirling acanthus leaves and folk-inspired flourishes, perfect for adorning a garden trowel or even a possum rescue kit. The colors echo antique farm equipment: rich reds, deep greens, and hints of gold, all balanced with a touch of whimsy and reverence.”

          I have my very own Scrollwork Signature! Or would you call it a Heraldic Mark? A Possum Seal? Maybe a Caretaker’s Crest? Copilot says I can call it any of those things and suggested two more. The Mark of Quiet Rescue or Scroll of the Hollow Guardian. Whatever I call it, I quite like it!


          After our stroll through the past, we went looking for animals. The closest barns were the cows and everything else was farther than we wanted to walk. We decided to head back out. Instead of turning around, we just made a circle around the expo building and headed back out.  

          “I think there’s a bee hotel in the front of the building in the garden. I’ll cut through and get Mike and meet you up there,” I suggested.


          Mike wasn’t in the area we left him and my phone wouldn’t call him. I head for the front of the building where I told Trish I’d meet her and what do I see? Mike and Trish sitting on a bench, talking.

          One of the events listed on the fair schedule was for a strong man demonstration. I found out where it was and we went to watch. I mean, who doesn’t like to see big, strong, sweaty men bending steel?

          The show was in progress when we got there and it was packed. The stands were full and the standing room was four people deep. I gave up on seeing the show and we decided to leave.

          All in all, the fair was a disappointment this year. So much so that we elected not to go back on the last day, as has been our tradition for as long as we’ve been attending.

          Leaving the fair behind, Mike drove through Laceyville. The church there is in the process of building a new church and you know how Mike likes to watch things being constructed.

          There’s grass growing from the tires stacked in the back of this truck as well as near the back. “I wonder how long that’s been sitting there.” Then it occurs to me that maybe the tires already had grass growing from them when they put them in the truck.


          Outside the fire station, a crashed car had been staged with its back sitting on a wall.

          “Why did they put it up like that?” we all wondered.

          A man across the road was packing his car for a move (it looked like).

          “What’s the deal with the car?” Mike asked.

          “It was for a training exercise,” he said. 


          Another highlight from Trish’s visit was an outing to Hickory Run State Park. We’d seen a segment on the nightly news about its massive boulder field. We thought that would be cool to go see.

          The distance checker on the internet said it was 78 miles and would take just under two hours.

          Can you say road pictures?

          We took the highway down so I didn’t get many pictures. But here are a few. 




          Between our GPS and road signs, we didn’t have any trouble finding the park.


          Inside the park, the road to the boulder field was also well marked.


          It was a quiet and scenic drive back to the boulder field. We had the narrow, one-way, rutted, dirt lane to ourselves for almost all of the drive in. “Look at all the rhodies!” I exclaimed as we drove through a virtual forest of them. I mean, miles and miles of tall rhodie bushes on both sides of the road. We were driving out of it when I thought to take a picture.


          Then there was a space where tons of ferns were growing on the forest floor. “Look at all of them!”


          Then we were back into more rhodies. It was a sight to see.

          The road became even more narrow and I thought Mike was going to hit a tree as he dodged the biggest of the potholes.


          As we approached the parking area, we fell in line behind two park ranger trucks. One of them turned off and the other pulled into the parking area at the boulder field.

          Preston, the handsome park ranger, was happy to chat with us and allowed me to take his picture. 

 

          “How big is the boulder field?”

          “Sixteen acres,” Preston said. “It’s about eighteen-hundred feet long by four-or five hundred feet across. But it used to be larger. As leaves and other debris collect at the edges, the trees and weeds start growing.” He pointed out where this was happening.


          It was named a natural national landmark in 1967 and unlike other boulder fields that form on slopes, this one is flat. It’s the largest boulder field of its kind in the Appalachian Mountains. The boulders range in size from basketball to car-size. And, of course, you can’t take any home with you.


          “Do you ever have to rescue anyone?” Mike asked Preston.

          He grinned and nodded. “It happens a couple of times a year where someone will get out there and sprain their ankle. But it hasn’t happened yet this year.”

          “What’s with all the rhododendrons?” I asked.

          “We do have a lot of Mountain Laurel,” he said. “I guess they just like the climate here.”

          Now I’m second guessing myself. Were they Mountain Laurel that I saw and not rhodies?”

          Trish had gone on ahead and I trailed after her as Mike continued to talk with Preston.


          I caught up to her at the edge of the boulder field where she rested with her hands across the top of her walking stick.

          “Wow,” was all she could say.

          I know pictures won’t do it justice, just the same, I know you expect pictures.


          Mike took our picture.


          Then Trish made her way a few feet inside the boulder field and sat down. 


          “Now come stand by me and take a picture so Ben knows I didn’t go very far,” Trish said. Ben is her son and lives next door to her in West Virginia.

          Mike, not trusting his balance, opted to stay at the edge of the field.


          This gal was coming back out and just walked across as sure footed as a mountain goat. I may have attempted it in my younger years.


          “You make that look so easy!” I told her.

          “You have to be careful,” she said. “The rocks move sometimes.”

          We chatted with her for a bit as she waited for the rest of her party to come off the rocks.

          Trish got up and her foot wedged between two stones.

          “I’m stuck!” she cried.

          “I can help,” the lady volunteered.

          I was closer, only a step away from Trish, and moved to give her my shoulder to steady herself. After a few small and tentative scoots of her foot, she managed to get it turned around enough that she could step out. But I’m grateful for the kindness and willingness of a complete stranger to help out two old ladies.

          Trish and I made our way out of the boulder field and joined Mike at the edge of the parking lot. A car pulled in and a couple got out.

          We exchanged pleasantries with the woman as we walked past but didn’t engage in a full-blown conversation.

          The man, husband I assume, was busy at the back of the car readying a drone.

          “I’m not going out there. I’m going to see it this way,” he said.

          “Sounds smart to me,” I replied. It sure beats getting a sprained ankle.


          Trish and I watched the roadside as we made our way out of the park and we think we spotted the Mountain Laurel as well as rhodies. So there’s both there.

          On the drive into the park, we saw a church just inside the woods. “Let’s stop at the church on our way out,” I said, and we did.

          Mike pulled off in front of it and that’s when I realized it was on the other side of a creek. I took a couple of pictures and got back in the car.


          “There’s a dam there and I think there’s a road up ahead.”

          Mike drove a few hundred feet to the where the side road joined the road we were on. As he made the turn onto the road we saw the signs. “It’s one-way. Maybe we could find the other end and drive it,” I suggested.

          Mike is a good husband and turned the car around. We drove back the way we came and never did find the other end of the road. Jokingly I said, “You could back up the road.”

          Trish laughed and said, “It’s not that far. We could walk in.”

          Mike pulled into the road then backed up to the bridge that crossed the creek. I thought he was going to let us out, but he didn’t. He backed up to the church.


          I was hoping we could go in but it was padlocked.


          I took Trish’s picture at the dam then walked out to look at the water cascading over the rocks.


          At the base, big rocks were laid out to make a floor for the water to land on.

          “Do you think it’s natural?” Trish asked.

          “I don’t think it is.”

          (If I’d known I was going to talk about it, I would’ve take a picture of it for you.)

          Suddenly, a truck comes the wrong way down the one-way road. A few minutes later another truck does the same thing.

          “If I’d’ve known that we could’ve just driven in, too!”

          Mike is a good backer-upper and didn’t have any trouble backing in anyway. 

          Trish and I walked along the creek bank and came to a second set of falls. 

          Then continued on to the bridge, where I took a photo of both falls. 


          We crossed to the other side of the bridge and looked out over the creek. 

          I was wondering what these concrete things were for when Trish said, “There’s another set of falls under the bridge!”


           I tried to get a shot of them but it was straight down and didn’t turn out very well.


          “Can we go home a different way and not take the highway?” I asked.

          Mike is a good husband. “Put it in the GPS. Do you think there’s a Wawa on our way?”

          “I can put it in the GPS.”

          We’ve been seeing on the TV about a new Wawa service station/convenience store being built somewhere, I don’t remember where, down near Scranton maybe? And they made it look like a huge store that had everything in it. Mike really wanted to check one out since neither of us had ever been in one before.

          The GPS found us a Wawa a few miles away and that was a good thing. I needed to let my water down and Trish needed a cup o’joe.

          Doncha know that we ran into workers putting down a coat of fresh tar and chips.

          Mike groaned. “Now I’m gonna get tar on the side of the car.”

          “Sorry,” I mumbled, but at this point we had little choice but to go through the work zone.


          We found the Wawa with no problem and once inside, it sure was a lot smaller than I thought it was going to be.

          “Maybe it’s an old store,” I suggested.

          “Maybe it’s the magic of TV,” Mike said. “You know how they always make things look better than they really are.”

          I did know. Especially when it comes to food.

          We took care of our needs and hit the road again. 


          We started to see signs for Francis E. Walter Dam. Much to our delight (mine and Trish’s) our GPS took us right over the top of the dam. There were no cars in either direction so Mike stopped and let me out. I quickly took pictures from both sides of the road and got back in the car before any cars came.



      

          We hadn’t gone far when I saw the sign telling you NO STOPPING STANDING OR PARKING.

          Oops!



          An internet search tells me that this is a earth-filled embankment dam with a rock shell. It was built in 1961 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and spans the Lehigh River near its confluence with Bear Creek, creating the Francis E. Walter Reservoir. It’s 3,000 feet long and stands 234 feet tall.

          Fun facts...

          It was originally named Bear Creek Dam and renamed in 1963 to honor Congressman Francis E. Walter who championed flood control efforts in the region.

The reservoir is a hotspot for fishing, kayaking, boating, and whitewater rafting, with scheduled water releases that support both anglers and thrill-seekers.

The area supports diverse species, including bald eagles, painted turtles, and even timber rattlesnakes in the rocky cliff zones nearby.

The dam’s reservoir holds up to 110,700 acre-feet of water—enough to cover all of Wyoming County in a shallow lake.

The land was originally owned by the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company, which planned to build hydroelectric dams before the federal government stepped in.

Beneath the reservoir, remnants of old forests still stand underwater, providing aquatic habitat for fish and turtles.

Okay, maybe not so much fun as just plain facts, but I wanted to know more about it and now you know what I know.

We crested a hill — maybe mountain would be a better word — and could see just about forever and a day!


Going down the other side we see signs for a runaway truck ramp.

“That would be a helluva ride,” Mike said.


          I thought the circles on the fence were interesting. I imagine they’re just there to lend it strength.



          Then we were back on our stomping grounds and I was recognizing the landscape.





          The only other outing we made was a giant circle. We went to one big flea market in Wysox, the thrift store in Towanda, then drove down 220 to Monroeton for a side trip out to the Amish store, then continued on into Dushore for lunch at Mary Beth’s Westside Deli and two more second-hand stores. There were plenty of other flea markets we could’ve stopped at but I knew these would be enough — and they were. We were done-in by the time we got home.

          Mike took the scenic route into Wysox. 









          The flea market in the old Agway building is huge — wait a minute, it’s HUGE! We walked around and the only thing I bought was a DVD I wanted to watch with Trish.

          “What was that?” you ask.

          Angel Eyes with Jim Cavizel and Jennifer Lopez. The story line is good but the language is kind of rough. The story would be just as good without the rough language but film makers think that’s what we want.

          Trish found a live plant and some crafting supplies.

          Our next stop was the Rainbow where I found a Fiskars fabric cutting set for two bucks. It has a cutting mat, cutting ruler and rotary cutter. Some time ago I’d been looking at buying a rotary cutter but they were expensive! The one in this set is in great shape.

          Trish found a pretty blouse and more embroidery hoops for her crafting needs.

          Hmmm. I was just thinking. Are you really interested in our little finds at each of our stops? It was more of the same kind of stuff at the last two second-hand stores.

          I took a few road pictures on our side trip to the Amish store.





          We met the nicest guy in the Amish store. He had his “support” dog in the cart and this was the chillest dog I’ve ever seen. The man had recently lost his wife and you could tell he was lonesome for conversation. We stood and let him talk for about fifteen minutes.

          Trish bought some spices and I bought three of the dishrags. I love their dishrags!  

          After lunch we went up to the school and I showed Trish the bridge I had to walk across to get to the playground. Then we went on up the hill and visited Momma, Pop, and Mike.


          It was a very full day! 

          The rest of Trish’s visit was busy and full as well.

          We painted. Actually, Trish painted more than I did. I would set her up to paint while I took care of something else. But I was always on the standby if she needed me. She did a beautiful job with her vase and flowers.      

          We did tackle a tutorial together. Hers looks more like it was supposed to look, a rain-swept ocean with a ship in the distance, whereas I turned mine into something else. I was not liking how my clouds were turning out, so I just played.



          “The most important thing is to just paint! Anything you want to do, you will do, and you’ll get better at it every time you do it,” is one piece of advice I gave her and you can tell she has a certain amount of natural ability.

          Watercolors can be tricky. Trish, who usually paints with acrylics, was trying to use those acrylic techniques with watercolor.

          “Load your brush,” I had to tell her a couple of times. With acrylics you dab the tip of the brush in the paint and paint with it. With watercolor you load the brush with as much paint as it will hold and the paint will flow down to the tip. You get different size brush strokes depending on how much pressure you put on the brush.

Water control is the biggest issue with watercolors and it isn’t anything anyone can teach you. You only learn it by doing it.

          As for supplies, almost every watercolor artist I’ve watched says that more important than what paint you use, more important than what brush you use, is the paper you paint on. Fiber papers will not act the same as one hundred percent cotton watercolor paper.

          I’ve painted on both and will continue to paint on both. You just have to learn the characteristics and limitations of both kinds.

          We painted a green bird and peacock from tutorials.



          We both painted a lemon. 


          Then Trish painted some pumpkins that were awesome! 


          “Will you paint some pumpkins in my old book for me?” I asked.

          And she did! I love them!


          If you notice the August date on it, just know that we’re old women and easily confused. Besides, when you’re retired, the days and weeks and months can run together and I don’t always know what day it is! 

          Something else you may (or may not) notice is that we wore our crafting shirts every day that we were home. We did something creative almost every day and there's no use in ruining more than one shirt at a time.

          “Christine loves the gnome home you made for me. I’d like to make one for her if you don’t care,” Trish said.

          “Absolutely!” I love teaching arts and crafts.

          The first thing we did was scour the internet for ideas. Then I made the first batch of concrete clay and we went out on the patio where Trish went to work on a gnome home for her sister. One batch wasn’t enough and I had Trish mix the second batch. Experience is the best teacher, doncha know?

          I totally spaced out and didn’t take any pictures of Trish making the gnome home. The first pictures I took were when she was painting it.



          After she finished painting it, I showed her how to make glass paint from a couple of chemicals and Styrofoam.

          “Always make it and use it in a well ventilated area,” I cautioned. The fumes are wicked and will make your head spin!

          The completed gnome home with its stained-glass windows and fairy lights is so stinkin’ cute!


          Besides crafting, we played cards. Two games I love to play, and Mike won’t play with me, are Quiddler and Phase 10.

          Tiger helped.



          Mike’s brother Cork taught me to play Phase 10 and my beautiful cousin Rosemary taught me Quiddler. When we play Quiddler, though, we always play with my cute little red-haired sister’s rule.

          “What’s that?” you wanna know.

          You have to make a sentence with the words you put down. That can make the game even more fun as the sentences don’t always make sense. But hey! It’s our game and we can make up funny and quirky sentences if we want to! Trish was a hard task-master though. She wouldn’t let me make up words.

          I did lots of cooking for Trish, too. I wanted to make her some of our favorite dishes and desserts. Hamburger Stroganoff, coffee cake, Frito Pie, meatloaf, apple pie, sausage and peppers, lemon bars, unstuffed cabbage rolls, cheesecake (which I burnt!). “It just has more flavor,” Trish said, trying to make me feel better about it.

          She helped make homemade tortillas for a breakfast wrap that I make and put in the freezer for a quick breakfast. She cooked the tortillas as I rolled them out, then I cooked the eggs and she rolled them in the tortillas along with pieces of sausage and wrapped them in foil. For the sausage, I just cut a pre-cooked sausage patty into strips and we put two in each one. It was a breakfast she seemed to like as much as I do.


          Trish didn’t arrive empty-handed; she came bearing a bundle of handmade treasures, each one crafted with care and creativity. There was a decoupaged bottle glowing with fairy lights, and a matching bathroom set: a beautifully decorated box for toiletries and a coordinating tube for cotton rounds. She gave me crocheted Christmas tree ornaments, and even a little crocheted tree that fits over a bottle with fairy lights inside. I could get mini ornaments to hang on it but I ended up adorning it with some of the flowers I’d made myself until I can get some.

And then there were the crochet wind-spinners, which I absolutely adore! Whimsical, breezy, and full of movement. But the showstopper was a birdhouse designed to look like a tiny camper. It’s impossibly cute.

As I admired it, Trish smiled and said, “My brother made that one and one more. He told me he’d never make another.”


There was one other gift that Trish made that sits on my desk and I smile every time I look at it.

“What is it, Peg? You have to tell us!” you say.

And I will. She made a tissue box cover. 

The first side I saw was a likeness of Raini.


I turned the box and there was Tiger!

Another flip and I see a dog rear end and a mouse.


I didn’t understand it until I turned it to the fourth and final side.

 Then I saw Bondi and laughed right out loud! How clever!

Trish captured her expression perfectly! This is what Bondi’s beautiful eyes look like as she silently begs me for a new toy!


On the top, Trish put my initial, two dog bones, and the blue thing with a smiling face and two red cheeks? It’s a beautiful reminder of my dear sweet friend Joanie who recently lost her battle with cancer. It started as a small vase with a small potted plant in it that Joanie gave me. I’m not good with plants and it died. Now I use the vase to hold water when I watercolor and Tiger drinks from it.



Trish has such a gift for crochet and needlework; her creations are both delicate and full of character. Her needlework is the kind that makes you stop and admire—so much care stitched into every detail!

All too soon, Trish’s time with me came to an end.

I started missing her before she even left the driveway. 

Let’s call this one done!