Saturday, October 10, 2015

Minneapolis

UPDATE:

Sometimes, I scroll back to posts written at another time and place, reminding myself of a special moment, a meal, a shared conversation. I know I'll come back to Minneapolis more than once here, on Ocean. It's the city that I feel in part is mine by incorporation: any place where a daughter resides becomes, in a way, my home as well.

I'll want to remind myself of the walk my daughter and I took last night to La Belle Vie -- just a few blocks from where she and her husband live. La Belle Vie is your stately, old restaurant -- you know the type: a flagship eatery, located on the ground floor of a lovely old building, a place you don't really go to very often (at all?) -- too expensive, too fine in all senses of that word, unless, perhaps for a drink at the bar, because there is a fireplace and there is a warmth in those old faded carpets and comfortable chairs.

La Belle Vie is closing in a few weeks, but I had a chance to visit this place this one first and last time with my girl for a predinner drink and a beautiful set of minutes (hours?) by the fireplace.


to Minneapolis-1-2.jpg



And then there was a walk to dinner, where her husband and his mom, too, joined us for a great meal (fish, dumplings, macaroons mmm!) at the bustling, modern Burch.


to Minneapolis-3-2.jpg



Meals, especially dinners, have always been an important event for my family. In planning each and every dinner -- whether it's to be cooked at home on a routine day or, in the alternative, chosen for that meal out for a special occasion (like the visit of mom!), so much thought and concern goes into the process! Because, of course, it's not just about the food. We have come to understand that dinners together matter. They've always mattered and they'll continue to matter. You save your best for that time around the table -- best story, best manners, your best caring self -- coaxed and cajoled out into the open over a dish of wonderful food.


That was my Friday evening in Minneapolis.


The next day I am up too early. I'm too eager, too engaged in where I am. Sleep is for another time. I want to begin the day.

I promised shorter posts -- here you go:

Fantastic brunch at Tilia, followed by a neighborhood walk through the Linden Hills neighborhood -- a benefit to Snowdrop, as we do Christmas shopping with her in mind! (One visit is to a glorious local children's bookstore, where the browsers were often small, cheeper sized, in fact. Yes, that's a live chicken and no, I do not understand how or if they house-train her.)


to Minneapolis-11.jpg



You couldn't ask for more beautiful weather or more spectacular autumnal landscapes. We have close encounters with both at the U of Minnesota Arboretum. We take a walk along paths that weave in and out of the forests, through prairie fields and rose beds, past lakes and linden and oak groves and forests that shine their gold.


to Minneapolis-12.jpg





to Minneapolis-25.jpg



After -- a drop in to the Apple House -- this, people, this is where the honeycrisp apple was born:


to Minneapolis-29.jpg





to Minneapolis-30.jpg



In the afternoon we have several memorable visits with my son-in-law's grandpa, then parents. We drive through neighborhoods of his childhood and watch the sky turn orange, then dark, from the open windows at Five Watts Coffee.


to Minneapolis-1-2.jpg



And I'll end there for today. I'll catch up with you tomorrow, but know that I truly believe that there are few days more special than ones where I spend time with my daughters (and their families!). I sit back and think -- the lives they live are genuinely good and filled with the best that life has to offer: support, grand intention and even grander effort, and love.


to Minneapolis-16.jpg

Friday, October 09, 2015

north and west

If you look at a map of the upper Midwest, you'll see that Minneapolis is as much to the west of Madison as it is to the north of us. Nonetheless, that small jump up toward the north brings with it not a small amount of change in both weather and landscape.

I could surely appreciate this on the bus ride up to the Twin Cities.

But first, breakfast, for which I am so grateful, despite the rush today.


to Minneapolis-1.jpg



(I'm also grateful for the one photo I could eek out of my camera before it ceremoniously died on me. Yes, it will discharge the battery if I leave it on overnight, even if it is plugged into a recharger.)

The trip itself was as good as all my other Megabus rides weren't. On time, not freezing (not toasty warm either, but I come prepared!), and comfortable. The deal now is that you can reserve a seat if you're willing to cough up the additional $3. Most students (the primary riders of a bus between Madison and Minneapolis on a Friday) are not. I feel like at my age, I can indulge my craving for that extra bit of room and the lesser chance of being stuck, as I once was, in the middle seat of the very last row. Talk about bumpy and tight!

And of course, there were the colors up north (not yet in Madison) to admire.


to Minneapolis-4.jpg



In Minneapolis, good fortune would have it that my friend Diane is passing through (now a permanent resident of Florida, she just happened to be up here this week). And so in my first hours, as I wait for my daughter to be done with work, I am able to sit back and have a protracted cup of coffee with her, right here (Anelace):


to Minneapolis-9.jpg



And then comes the thrill of having exceptionally long stretches of time with my daughter and her husband. Here is my little girl, welcoming me (as always, with such great care) to their home.


to Minneapolis-13.jpg


We're about to set out for a night on the town (cross that out and substitute an evening; I am 62 after all). I'll do us all a favor by clicking "publish" now!

Thursday, October 08, 2015

weekend, coming up!

With the weekend, comes a small lull in Ocean writing. Oh, I don't anticipate a total break -- just a slowdown. I suppose you could compare it to the slower pace you take on after you've just run a marathon. But there's a more immediate reason for my slower stride. Early tomorrow, I'm catching the bus to Minneapolis. It's been exactly a year since I last visited my younger girl and her husband in the Twin Cities and even then, it was only a fleeting stopover. Since then, they themselves have made the trip to Madison repeatedly to see Snowdrop, to celebrate various holidays -- down that long stretch of highway, at least five hours each way, back and forth they went, again and again. It's time for me to put in my travel hours.

Because I'm there only until Sunday, I don't want to take chunks of time for Ocean work. I'll write, but briefly and I'm getting into that pace already today, even though I am with my normal routines still.

But are they ever normal? At the farmette, the view out the kitchen windows, past the porch, is never quite the same. Here's this morning's:


farmette life-2.jpg



We do eat a very normal breakfast...


farmette life-3.jpg



And then I am at my early Thursday hour at Snowdrop's, but that girl is never completely predictable. I expected a thumb-sucking pout after the bath and before breakfast, but get a giggle from her instead.


farmette life-6.jpg



After chasing the little one all morning (stand up, sit down, stand up, watch out! sit down, stand up, careful! sit down...) I think maybe I should avoid the afternoon thunder showers and go out for a stroller walk in the earlier hours. She is agreeable, though she does want to make sure that I'm still there, that this isn't some kind of a strange game where I wheel her off into the great unknown and disappear.


farmette life-18.jpg



After, we play, of course, but I wont swamp you with photos. In fact I'll leave you with just these two -- and they will be the last of her until Monday, when I next see her. In the first, she is interpreting what I am telling her...


farmette life-4-2.jpg



In the second, I just want to remind you that even if Snowdrop may seem entirely serious here, on Ocean, she has her goofy moments each day. Here's one from today:


farmette life-1-2.jpg



In the evening, Ed and I do our own lovely Thursday routines -- market, take-out, home. Beautiful hours, regular hours, the familiar hours of farmette life.

Wednesday, October 07, 2015

Wednesday

Hadn't I just this August tampered with travel plans so that I could have a quick stop over in Warsaw? Didn't I then make a mess of things, flying this way and that, even though in the end, I didn't need to be there after all? Well, this morning I'm at it again. It's a brilliant and sunny day but here I am, inserting flights into flights so that I can have a couple of October nights in Poland. Why all this confusion? Well, if all goes according to plan, I'll have another tagline to add to Ocean. Goodbye chicken calendar on the side, hello to a new, soon to be disclosed link. If I sound vague it's because I am vague. I'll be very transparent once all pieces fall into place, but for now, I'm just telling you that of a beautiful October morning, 1% was spent in the garden...


farmette life-5.jpg



... 5% was spent over breakfast (we take a long time to eat in the morning)...


farmette life-1.jpg



... and the rest was spent over my computer screen, working through my late October travel dilemmas.

And so I am tremendously glad that by 11 a.m., everything in Poland closes for the day and I can do nothing more of a bureaucratic nature and, too, Snowdrop is back home from her medical check up (assessment: she is a gross motor skill powerhouse! ... as if we here, on Ocean, did not know that!).

Ah yes -- she goes from clinging to my finger...


farmette life-12.jpg



... to clinging to nothing at all.


farmette life-13.jpg



She is, after the doctor's visit, in a more serious mood and I let her stay with that.


farmette life-18.jpg



She needs her nap, but I refrain from putting her down until we pass the noon hour -- the time of the monthly practice weather warning siren. (It unnerves Snowdrop and interrupts her sleep.)


farmette life-20.jpg
it's just a siren, Snowdrop...


The afternoon is lovely and I do, of course, take her outside for a walk.


farmette life-14-2.jpg



(But first she has to make sure the UPS package delivery is not for her. I explain to her that she is too young for Zappos. Then I look at the Zappos website -- hmmm, guess I'm wrong.)


farmette life-7.jpg




In the evening, as I make my way home, I think -- I should have driven Rosie. Typically, in October, I'm too cold for the moped. Not today. Surely not today.

Tuesday, October 06, 2015

Tuesday

The stunning thing about a garden is that is never quite done until a deep frost sets in. Would you believe it, on my early morning walk from the coop, I encountered these:

farmette life-1.jpg




farmette life-2.jpg




farmette life-3.jpg




farmette life-4.jpg



And speaking of nasturtium, as I look at my remaining photos from the day, there definitely (and quite coincidentally) appears to be an orange theme to them.

So, a hurried breakfast...


farmette life-5.jpg



... A quick drive to Snowdrop's home, where I greet the waking girl and plunge her into her tub and then pause for a pre-breakfast photo, where she is mildly amused with me...


farmette life-6.jpg



Energized by food, she does a lot of standing up/sitting down/standing up/sitting down... I'm exhausted by watching her efforts!


farmette life-13.jpg



Let's do some music, little girl!


farmette life-14.jpg




farmette life-19.jpg



And lest you think I'm just too serious for that playful little girl, well I'm not. Here's our camera-on-self-timer game:


farmette life-2-2.jpg



Still, the girl has intense periods of thoughtful seriousness about her.


farmette life-3-2.jpg



Until she doesn't.


farmette life-7-2.jpg



In the evening, Ed and I recoup, regroup and watch a PBS show about E.O. Wilson and the study of ants. I would not have mentioned this except that it is so fitting to what topics my mind strays to these days.

Monday, October 05, 2015

Monday

Three things -- I say to a groggy Ed, as I come back to the bedroom after letting the cheepers out.
I don't know if Isie boy liked the leftover fish I gave him. He's meowing outside, which means either that he wants more, or he hated it and wants something else.

What else? -- he's waking up now.
I pulled some weeds on the path to your shed and got tangled in that damn prickly plant and now I have a thousand seeds in my hair and each one has to be individually removed.

And?
You know that label on the can of paint I used on the walls yesterday? You know how we didn't understand why I had scribbled over it "upstairs trim?" Well that's because it's glossy and we used it on the baseboards. The touch ups that I just did on the walls all over the farmhouse? It looks like someone spit on the walls.

So I guess the painting project isn't quite finished. There is a P.S. to it -- cover up the cover ups.

On the upside (and the day is one with endless upsides), the purple asters are dazzling, the gaura ("whirling butterflies")  is still going strong...


farmette life-2-2.jpg




farmette life-3-3.jpg



... and breakfast in the front room is splendid.


farmette life-1.jpg



And it's Monday and so Snowdrop comes to the farmhouse, this time for an unusually long visit, as her parents have an evening event to attend. She arrives just as I'm about to dump my fruit and kefir on the oatmeal. We're tickled to have her company for breakfast (she herself has just woken up and has yet to be bathed, clothed and fed)!


farmette life-5.jpg
what'you guys doin'?



farmette life-10.jpg
I want what she's having!



farmette life-17.jpg
the berry's fine, but I think I like my stuff better than kefir... (it's an acquired taste, little one!)



She is such a patient little girl. Finally -- we are done, she is bathed, fed and dressed and ready for play.


farmette life-19.jpg



Oh, there are the usual favorite toys, but our time together here always includes dancing...


farmette life-31.jpg



... and Ed play. It still surprises me no end how quick he is to want to poke her, hurl her, laugh with her...


farmette life-1-2.jpg



... and she just laps it up.


farmette life-2.jpg



I tell her, too, that we must give bread to the chickens. You need a sweater, little Scottish lassie. It's cool outside. (In fact, only the sweater is from Scotland.)


farmette life-34.jpg



Here we are -- favorite scene, favorite routines, favorite cheepers...


farmette life-36.jpg



And now is the time for quiet play. Indoors. Looking at favorite books, including the unwieldy Richard Scarry tome.


farmette life-9-2.jpg




farmette life-4-2.jpg



The farmhouse hours go by so quickly. More play, more music, more food (oh-oh, does she need a haircut?)!


farmette life-5-2.jpg



We take a walk, she and I, while Ed goes over to help the young couple with a house issue. It's different here, on the rural roads, isn't it, Snowdrop?


farmette life-6.jpg



Different, but equally lovely. She lets me know that she is happy.


farmette life-10-3.jpg



Ed comes home at the same time that we return from our walk.
Hi to you!
Hi to you too!


farmette life-14-2.jpg


Our evening is again full of play, full of music. She helps me toss the salad and the three of us munch on raw carrots (she lack a set of top teeth to make this a very successful enterprise). She assists in piecing together an extension to her play floor and she uses every item of furniture to hoist herself up on her two feet.

Snowdrop is nine months old today. Remarkable. Was it just a few months ago that I was wondering when she'd be able to hold up her head?


farmette life-6-2.jpg