Such a long but easy trip! Think of all the things that can go wrong here: a cab taking you at 4:30 a.m. to the airport, a flight taking off on a misty cold morning in Warsaw, connecting to a 9 hour flight to Chicago where, too, it's misty cold, though not as cold as when I left. Finally, a bus ride to Madison.
Nothing went wrong. Each flight came in ahead of schedule. The transatlantic Delta flight was half empty and the three men in the cockpit came on to reassure any jittery passenger that, between them, they had 80,000 miles of experience (unspoken subtext: we can handle emergencies!). I watched three movies in succession and slept through half of another. And the plane came in not at 3:30 as scheduled, but at 3:05. I walked through immigration and customs fast enough that I could take the airport train and still be on the 3:30 bus to Madison.
How is that for a trouble free journey!
Back home. It was an especially poignant return. Ed was out fetching dinner and Isis was out at the sheep shed and still, I felt so completely welcomed. May as well have had horns blowing and confetti flying -- home.
It's always interesting to survey things afresh the next morning -- what plants complained, what snow has remained.
So after breakfast -- yes, gloriously in the sunroom, with a cooperative Ed (imagine: three weeks of no one bugging him with a camera!) --
...I went out to look at the yard. And it became obvious that the snow we'd been pushing off the porch roof found a happy home just below. Meaning we'd created a mountain of snow in the northern shadows of the farmhouse and if I wanted the plants to awaken anytime soon, I would do well to move some of the snow out of there.
So my first task on this first day of spring/UN Happy Day is to shovel.
In the evening I have my monthly meeting with retired or nearly retired UW friends and even though I am feeling quiet tonight, it still feels nice to be embroiled in the pattern of regularity again.
HOME, SWEET HOME! Hi, Ed! Hello to the cheery breakfast table. A blue Midwestern sky to greet you, how lovely.
ReplyDeleteWelcome back, Nina. I've really enjoyed following along on your latest trip. Sounds like you're having a seamless transition back home, too.
ReplyDelete...and from me/us - welcome home dear traveler/friend. You did so much, went so far, and returned... and gave us such wonderful scenes, sights, smells, tastes, and memories. xxx
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