Archive | pretty places

more photos from California

Our quiet family days continue here in northern Virginia.  My parents and sister came over to Elliott’s family’s house for dinner last night, since they live 10 minutes away from each other (!).  It always amazes me to see two such different (and yet… so weirdly similar…) families gathered around the table, discussing and remembering and punning away.

Just before my family drove home, my father-in-law pulled a quote off their fridge to share with my dad.  Soon all the parents were gathered around to listen, four graying heads who have raised nine children between them.  The quote was:

But this at least all married people should know.  They can do no better work and do nothing more valuable either for God, for Christendom, for all the world, for themselves, and for their children 
than to bring up their children well.
Martin Luther in “A Sermon on the Estate of Marriage”
Our four parents have all done their very best to bring up their children well; they have dedicated the prime of their lives to raising multiple little lives.  Now as Elliott and I start out in our own marriage and bring up our first child, we are constantly grateful for the influence and dedication of our own parents as they read aloud to us, ate dinner with us each night, made church a second home for us instead of just a family requirement, encouraged us to study and value the good and the beautiful, and most of all loved us through these first formative 25-30 years of our lives.  Thank you so much, dear parents.
And now back to California.  After feeding the horses that morning, we enjoyed a quiet afternoon to ourselves at the ranch, napping and recharging for more activities that afternoon and evening.
 

After a peaceful morning at the ranch, we headed into the nearby town of Solvang to do some window shopping.  This cute little town is entirely Danish and looks like it could have come out of a touristy neighborhood of Copenhagen.  And the toy shops!  We had so much fun rediscovering favorite from our childhoods and imagining Lena playing with some of them in a few years.  Elliott discovered several different Playmobile versions of veterinary clinics.  The one he’s holding here is the smallest clinic available; there’s also a gigantic one that Lena might get lost in at this point.

Later that evening we enjoyed another meal with the combined family at the ranch house.  Even got a family photo, sorta.

And then, of course, another hard-fought Settlers of Catan game later that night.  The lovely blonde on the right, Deborah, won for the very first time!

The next morning we helped feed the horses again.  

Well, okay, maybe we just took photos and watched our hosts feed the horses. :-P

Lena’s sporting an awesome pair of wool pants that Elliott and I found at a kid’s consignment shop the day before.  So fabulously funky.

And then, as usual, retired to the fireplace for some quiet moments in the afternoon.

One of our favorite things we did while at the ranch was go out for my birthday dinner to The Hitching Post.  We’d eaten there on our honeymoon and I had been dreaming of their grilled artichoke appetizer ever since.  Our second meal did not disappoint, from the aforementioned artichoke to the filet mignon to the baked potato to the key lime pie dessert with a single glowing candle.  Thank you, sweet hubby. 
Going to California was a little bit of a last-minute decision for us.  Should we use these reward miles, should we drag our baby through multiple airports and 6am flight departures, should we use our last weekend in San Antonio to travel somewhere else instead?  And we said yes, in the end, because we love the people we went to visit.  We greatly value and are deeply blessed by their friendship.  I am so thankful we did, too, in retrospect, because our friendship was strengthened to endure another few years (?) of separation before we see them again.  
Maintaining friendship in adulthood takes sacrifices, for sure, and often the sacrifices are mutual.  We aren’t in college anymore; we don’t live within a 15-minute radius of our best friends.  We have to deliberately choose friendships over ourselves.  But the rewards are so great.  I am blessed by a husband who has five or so close guy friends and makes an effort to call them or see them every few months.  (Do you do that?  It’s not as easy as it sounds… and keeping up with or seeing five far-apart people actually takes a lot of time every couple months!)  I’m not as good about calling my friends, as they will assure you; they often do the pursuing of me.  Yet I see the example that Elliott has set for me and the choices he’s made, and I also want to be a pursuer, an enduring friend.  I see the incredible value of holding a few precious people (and their precious, growing families) close to your heart.  
What do you think?  How do you maintain and pursue your friendships?
4 :: in family, friends, hospitality, husband, pretty places, travel

a visit to California

I’m writing this while sitting in my father-in-law’s leather chair, enjoying the comforts of home in northern Virginia.  We left San Antonio on Saturday and have been almost too busy and happy here to miss our little home away from home by the river.  Hardly seems possible that those two months of Elliott’s training course are over!  Now a week from today we’ll be on our way back to Sicily at last; after all this waiting, the time to being “real life” will finally be here.

But I can save those thoughts for another time.  I’ve been wanting share photos from our trip to California last weekend.  Here’s the first half; I’ll share more tomorrow.

The story behind our visit is this: Elliott worked at this ranch in central coastal California during two summers of college and for nine months after college.  The couple who owns the ranch are a bit like grandparents to him and are very dear friends.  At the end of our honeymoon road trip almost two years ago, we spent several days at the ranch, and this was our first trip back since then.
 
We spent a lot of time by the fire, knitting and chillaxin’. 

That night more relatives from down the road came over for dinner.  Elliott’s spent so much time with these kids over the years and they just love him!  

Lena and the youngest grandchild warm up to each other by the fire:

The two youngest grandchildren were too excited that we were visiting to go home that night.  They slept at their grandparents’ and were up bright and early to go feed the horses with us the next morning.

Down at the horse barn, we met Nickel, one of the three barn cats…

… and Bliss, an American Curly pony.  She’s such a sweetheart.

In the barn while we weighed the hay…

And later Elliott did some doctoring.  One of the horses had a sore on his back, so Elliott the Veterinarian examined the wound with his two faithful assistants.

The horse in this photo is Bucky, who I rode on our honeymoon.  I don’t think he remembered me.  Sigh.

If you ever saw our honeymoon photos on Facebook, you already know I really love this dog.  Lena’s warming up already!

But the chickens were not her thing.  [Believe it or not after this photo] Lena slowly became less alarmed by all the squawking and wing-beating and eventually did her best to grab a handful of feathers.

More tomorrow of our own little family adventures around the ranch and town!

5 :: in friends, Lena, pretty places, travel

a visit to California

I’m writing this while sitting in my father-in-law’s leather chair, enjoying the comforts of home in northern Virginia.  We left San Antonio on Saturday and have been almost too busy and happy here to miss our little home away from home by the river.  Hardly seems possible that those two months of Elliott’s training course are over!  Now a week from today we’ll be on our way back to Sicily at last; after all this waiting, the time to being “real life” will finally be here.

But I can save those thoughts for another time.  I’ve been wanting share photos from our trip to California last weekend.  Here’s the first half; I’ll share more tomorrow.

The story behind our visit is this: Elliott worked at this ranch in central coastal California during two summers of college and for nine months after college.  The couple who owns the ranch are a bit like grandparents to him and are very dear friends.  At the end of our honeymoon road trip almost two years ago, we spent several days at the ranch, and this was our first trip back since then.
 
We spent a lot of time by the fire, knitting and chillaxin’. 

That night more relatives from down the road came over for dinner.  Elliott’s spent so much time with these kids over the years and they just love him!  

Lena and the youngest grandchild warm up to each other by the fire:

The two youngest grandchildren were too excited that we were visiting to go home that night.  They slept at their grandparents’ and were up bright and early to go feed the horses with us the next morning.

Down at the horse barn, we met Nickel, one of the three barn cats…

… and Bliss, an American Curly pony.  She’s such a sweetheart.

In the barn while we weighed the hay…

And later Elliott did some doctoring.  One of the horses had a sore on his back, so Elliott the Veterinarian examined the wound with his two faithful assistants.

The horse in this photo is Bucky, who I rode on our honeymoon.  I don’t think he remembered me.  Sigh.

If you ever saw our honeymoon photos on Facebook, you already know I really love this dog.  Lena’s warming up already!

But the chickens were not her thing.  [Believe it or not after this photo] Lena slowly became less alarmed by all the squawking and wing-beating and eventually did her best to grab a handful of feathers.

More tomorrow of our own little family adventures around the ranch and town!

5 :: in friends, Lena, pretty places, travel

Japanese Tea Gardens

One of our favorite little spots in San Antonio is the beautiful Japanese Tea Gardens.  Elliott and I visited the gardens three years ago when he was going through his initial Army training and I came to visit him for a few days.  We have fond memories from several years ago of sitting side by side on a little stone stairway eating olives as the shadows gathered after sunset.  Now, three years later, we brought our little baby back to enjoy the gardens as well.

Lena was fascinated (for a good 45 minutes at the least) by the pond full of magnificent koi.  I always loved the koi at the National Arboretum in D.C., but… folks, everything’s bigger in Texas.  These guys are huge.  A mom and his son were [illegally] tossing dog food kibble to the koi, causing feeding frenzies. 

Later Lena made friends with a massive gray koi.  He was about as long as she was and almost as wide around.  I think he thought her hand was just the right size to eat.

We wandered back into the gardens, pausing near the stone steps where Elliott and I ate our picnic three years ago.

After a bit of searching, we found this secluded spot for some reading and knitting.

I remember that visit to Texas like it was yesterday: our relationship was healing after a rough summer, I was sleeping on a blow-up mattress on the floor of Elliott’s friend’s girlfriend’s apartment (!), Elliott was struggling through 5am PT and no showers, and we wondered where on earth we were headed.  Together?  Maybe.  But we were anything but certain.

Could we have ever pictured this three years ago?  We’ve come through so much: a proposal and a wedding and a deployment and a pregnancy and a birth and an international move.  And here we are, in almost exactly the same spot, except with each other’s rings on our fingers as we snuggle this little beauty on our knees.  It hasn’t always been an easy three years, but I wouldn’t trade our sweet life together for anything.

“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, 
“plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Jeremiah 29:11 

3 :: in family, pretty places, Texas

Japanese Tea Gardens

One of our favorite little spots in San Antonio is the beautiful Japanese Tea Gardens.  Elliott and I visited the gardens three years ago when he was going through his initial Army training and I came to visit him for a few days.  We have fond memories from several years ago of sitting side by side on a little stone stairway eating olives as the shadows gathered after sunset.  Now, three years later, we brought our little baby back to enjoy the gardens as well.

Lena was fascinated (for a good 45 minutes at the least) by the pond full of magnificent koi.  I always loved the koi at the National Arboretum in D.C., but… folks, everything’s bigger in Texas.  These guys are huge.  A mom and his son were [illegally] tossing dog food kibble to the koi, causing feeding frenzies. 

Later Lena made friends with a massive gray koi.  He was about as long as she was and almost as wide around.  I think he thought her hand was just the right size to eat.

We wandered back into the gardens, pausing near the stone steps where Elliott and I ate our picnic three years ago.

After a bit of searching, we found this secluded spot for some reading and knitting.

I remember that visit to Texas like it was yesterday: our relationship was healing after a rough summer, I was sleeping on a blow-up mattress on the floor of Elliott’s friend’s girlfriend’s apartment (!), Elliott was struggling through 5am PT and no showers, and we wondered where on earth we were headed.  Together?  Maybe.  But we were anything but certain.

Could we have ever pictured this three years ago?  We’ve come through so much: a proposal and a wedding and a deployment and a pregnancy and a birth and an international move.  And here we are, in almost exactly the same spot, except with each other’s rings on our fingers as we snuggle this little beauty on our knees.  It hasn’t always been an easy three years, but I wouldn’t trade our sweet life together for anything.

“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, 
“plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
Jeremiah 29:11 

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3 :: in family, pretty places, Texas

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