Andew’s 5th Birthday party

Last weekend, Andrew had a fun-filled birthday party at Tenney Park beach.  He’d enjoyed his fourth birthday party so much, that he requested a repeat. So we had a Godzilla cake (constructed and decorated by Granny and Andrew), a T. Rex pinata (in lieu of Godzilla), swimming, relaxing beach fun with family, and this year…an entertainer who made cool balloon sculptures for the kids.

I didn’t take many photos, but Jessica took some for me.  And Granny took some too.  Enjoy a few!  More are available in the gallery!

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My boy is five!

365 days ago, I wrote the following post as Andrew was on the eve of his fourth birthday.  Right now, my clock says June 21, 11:58pm.  In a few more moments, my little guy will be five.  An energetic, focused, exuberant Five.  When you’re raising kids, the hours do sometimes gooo soooo sloooow, but the months, they fly by on zippy wings.  Andrew is still so much the little boy he was at two and three and four, and yet, when I look back at photos or videos, I can see just how much he’s changed.  In the past year, he’s grown more aware of the world outside his own skin, and yet, he’s still so very content to do his own thing.  He sometimes adjusts to unfamiliar situations with a calm that surprises me.   He’s gotten funnier and punnier, and the knock knock jokes keep on comin’.

In the last 12 months, Andrew’s leapt into reading.  He started with Gerald and Piggy books, and these days, he can read just about anything he wants.  Too many words on a page frustrate him, but he reads Sylvia all her picture books…an activity that makes my heart fill and overflow.  Andrew loves to do art projects, to help cook in the kitchen, and to work (endlessly?!) on his workbooks.  Physically, he loves to climb trees, he is experimenting with the idea of giving up his bike’s training wheels, and he’s almost able to paddle a few feet in the pool. I imagine that in a year, we’ll be at a whole different place!

While his mind is growing and his limbs are strengthening, my little Andrew man is still such a cuddlebug.  He wakes up in the morning and wants to snuggle.  Occasionally he still tucks his arms down between us when we hug, just like he used to when he was tiny.  He glows with love toward me and Bryan and Sylvia.  I feel so very lucky that he is my golden haired boy.

Andrew, you were a terrific four-year-old.  You were so easy and fun and amazing to me this past year.  And now you are brim-full of excitement about Kindergarten.  I look forward to spending the next year with your five-year-old self.

And if I was your fairy godmother and could grant you a few sparkling qualities on your birthday, I would wish for you health and compassion and resiliency and kindness and curiosity.   Happy birthday, my dear boy!

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Sylvie’s cuteness

While I was in Chicago last weekend, Bryan took this cute video of Sylvia.  Just a little snapshot of our little girl right now.  She’s 28 months old.  What a fun place we are in right now!

Grandma Harvey’s lovely obituary

Back in the days pre-2007, back before my mom, my two grandparents, Bryan’s grandpa, and Terry’s dad passed away, I hadn’t given a lot of thought to obituaries.  Or stories written about a person’s life.  But in the last few years, I’ve become much more aware of how challenging and important it feels to me to write and talk about a person when they’re gone.  Andrew and Sylvia didn’t get to spend much/any time with important people whom I loved and whom have passed.  That means that it’s up to me and others who knew them to share stories about  and to make them them present in our lives.

Grandma Harvey (Bryan’s mom’s mom) passed away last month, and the pastor wrote up and delivered a really lovely funeral service.  In preparation, she talked to family member and read a memory book that Grandma Harvey wrote, and wove together some lovely words that painted a wonderful picture of kind, sweet Lola Mae Harvey.  I asked Pastor Kim to send me a copy of her notes, and I’ll share them for you here.  I hope you can sit back take a moment to read this, because then you too will hold memories of Grandma Harvey in your heart, and the more people who know and love her and Grandpa, the better.

Thanks to Pastor Kim for sharing this with me!

Lola Mae Harvey’s Funeral Service

Pastor Kim Dickerson

Aldersgate United Methodist Church, Wichita, KS

May 17, 2010

One of Lola Mae’s favorite childhood memories was to lie down in the grass with her sister, Lucille and her brother, Melvin in the late evening. They would watch the stars and make up stories together.  “It was so peaceful,” Lola Mae said.  This experience impacted Lola Mae, and made the 23rd Psalm one of her favorite bible verses.  She said that it seems that heaven would have green pastures and quiet time.

As I read Psalm 23, I invite you to hear the section about the green pastures in a new way knowing how important the scripture and experience was to Lola Mae.

Psalm 23

Proverbs 31: 10-31

Ode to a Capable Wife.

Obituary

Lola Mae Blue Harvey was born May 6, 1919 to Edward and Mabel Blue in Wichita, KS.  Lola Mae writes that she was most thankful in her childhood that she had parents who loved God, who loved and respected each other, and also loved and respected their children.  While they had very few material things, they still had fun.

She grew up during the depression, and she had to make up most of her own games.  Lola Mae enjoyed playing paper dolls that she would cut out of the catalog. All of her dolls had names and she played school with them.  And she enjoyed passing this game on to her children and her grandchildren.

I was told Lola Mae even would put rouge on the family’s chickens and dress them up and play with them.  Her favorite chicken had a broken wing, and it was a devastating day when a chicken with a broken wing ended up on the dinner table.  She didn’t eat that night.

She was a good student. She loved school and spelling bees.  Growing up, she enjoyed running and swinging on limbs. Walking on stilts, jumping rope and throwing the ball against the garage and catching it.  She enjoyed the times her family would stand around the piano and sing hymns.  She had two older brothers, Vernard and Melvin, and one older sister, Lucille.

Lola Mae also enjoyed baseball, and she would surprise all the ladies in the beauty shop when she would ask for the sports page. She was the only lady who cared at all for that section of the paper. She liked going to games at Lawrence Dumont stadium, and she was a Braves fan.

When she was 14 or 15 years old, she met her husband of 70 years, Forrest Lowell Harvey, who survives her.  They met while in the opening exercises of Sunday school.  Forrest says that on the day they began talking to one another, there was another boy who wanted to sit beside Lola Mae, but Forrest got there first.  He said about Lola Mae, “She took my eye. I wasn’t going to lose her.”  Lola Mae wrote in her book of memories that she liked Forrest because “he was a real nice boy, neat and clean.”

They were married on August 27, 1939 at Bethel Methodist Church in Wichita KS during opening exercises because they could not afford a regular wedding.  Forrest had worked all night at the Beacon.  He got home around 6:30am, and the wedding was at 9:30am.  Their honeymoon was spent going to the Blue family reunion in Blackwell, OK.  It was a one-day honeymoon, as Forrest had to go to work the next day.

The love that Forrest and Lola Mae shared with each other is something that anyone who knew them could recognize.  The children and grandchildren especially appreciate the model for a loving marriage that the couple showed them.  As LuAnn put it, “Some older couples have one of them walking in front, and one of them walking in back.  But they always walked arm and arm.”

This was true. I had the pleasure of greeting them as they left the sanctuary every Sunday, and Lola Mae always was on Forrest’s arm, and you could tell that they had a very sweet love for one another.  Forrest said many times as we prepared for today, that “she was a wonderful little girl, a peach.”

Throughout their marriage, Lola Mae would make a couple of pies and a cake each Saturday, and then some of Forrest’s friends from work would come over and when she would get up on Sunday, a lot of her dessert was missing.

Pies and cakes, rolls and cookies were things that Lola Mae was known for.

This is a tradition she kept up well into her old age—something her family will remember her for.

Forrest and Lola Mae enjoyed square dancing.  They square danced and round danced until they were 80 years old. One of their favorite trips was to Alaska in 1989 with a square dance group.  They also enjoyed playing cards with friends.

Lola Mae was very musically talented.  She could play anything by ear. She played for opening exercises in Sunday School.  She also played once at a McDonalds restaurant.  They were with a tour group and someone asked if anyone could play the piano, and she volunteered. She had the entire restaurant singing old time songs.

As the family shared with me, when you looked at Forrest and Lola Mae, you would think they were prim and proper, but they loved to be silly as well.  She was spunky, and even ornery. She surprised her family once when she told them about the time she put on a show as a one-woman band. She played the drum, the harmonica and the piano all at the same time.  But Lola Mae would downplay it if you said she was talented. She was very modest.

To Forrest and Lola Mae were born three children, Larry Harvey of Augusta who is married to Susan; Don Harvey of Wichita, married to Cheryl; and LuAnn Dotzour of College Station TX, married to Mark.  All of her children survive.  Lola Mae writes that the happiest times in her life where “when they were raising their family.  Each child as so different and so special.”

She was a caring mother, who wrote, “There is nothing as sweet as the way a baby looks up at you when you’re feeding it it’s bottle.  It’s like it’s saying,

‘I know you love me and are going to take good care of me.’”

Larry said that as kids, their home was a gathering place.  Lola Mae enjoyed knowing where her kids were, and if they were all at her home, she felt the best.  She was wound a little tight, when it came to her children.  The serenity prayer was her favorite prayer, but she found it hard to let go of her worry about the welfare of her children.

She was a loving mother, but she also had high expectations of her children.  Once when Larry took ice cream from the kitchen for himself and his friend, she got after him and said, “There are other people in the world other than you.”  She wanted her children to be considerate. Another time when LuAnn had gotten in trouble at school, but fibbed about why she was late getting home, Lola Mae got after her for lying.

She was a loving mother, and also a loving mother-in-law. Cheryl, Susan and Mark all said that she was the best mother in law you could ever have.

Lola Mae was a homemaker for most of her life. She also worked in the school cafeteria for a time.  Lola Mae was a great seamstress.  She made most of her children’s clothing.  She even made a prom dress for Debbie.  She made most of her own clothes until she was in her 70’s, at least, maybe longer.  And, she was very particular.  If it wasn’t done correctly, she would rip it out and do it over.

She was also a great teacher.  She would teach LuAnn how to cook and clean and do the laundry: some of the happiest times LuAnn remembers spending with her mother.  Lola Mae even shared her knowledge with the young women of the Ruth Circle, in which her daughter, LuAnn participated.  She taught them how to make homemade noodles.

In addition to her three children, Lola Mae has seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.  She was a wonderful grandmother who would intentionally lose at every card game she played with her grandchildren.

Her grandchildren remember how she showered them with love.  How she called every camera a Kodak, no matter the brand.  How she came to a Valentine’s party at school and read all the valentines.  How she would fret that the pies and rolls might not be good enough, even though they always were the best.  How she was always so well dressed and classy, even though she would never admit it.  How she never said a negative thing about anyone—she always saw their good side.  How she was such a gracious hostess.  How her dog cookie jar always was filled with something special.

If Forrest and Lola Mae could choose the best way to spend their time, the best activities to take part in, it would have been the times they spent with their family.

Not too long ago, the entire family was sitting in a circle in the living room, talking.  And even though Forrest and Lola Mae may not have been able to follow along fully in the conversation, they were beaming that their loved ones were around them.  Forrest leaned over to Lola Mae with a huge smile and said, “Look, they are all here.”  And that made them so happy.  The highlight of her life was when everyone got together.  She was so proud of each and every one of them.

Faith was a vital part of their lives.  Forrest and Lola Mae were members of Bethel UMC, which later became St. Luke’s UMC.  Each Sunday after church, the couple called on the people in the hospital.  It was their ministry to take cards to the people who were hospitalized that the Congregation would sign.

In November of 2006, they joined Aldersgate UMC.  It has been such a pleasure to see them each week, and be a witness to their love for one another, and also a witness to their love for God and the church.

Lola Mae passed away peacefully with her family at her side on Thursday, May 13, following a stroke.  Memorials have been established with Aldersgate UMC and Harry Hynes Memorial Hospice.

Message

In Galatians 5:22-25 we read, “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self control.  There is no law against such things.  And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.  If we live by the Spirit, Let us also be guided by the Spirit.”

As I have listened to the family’s stories about Lola Mae, and read through her very thoughtful book of memories that she completed for her family, I believe Lola Mae throughout her life was moving on toward perfection (as the founder of the Methodist Movement, John Wesley, might say).

She was moving on to perfection, or wholeness, moving on to Sanctification, and throughout her life yearned to allow the Holy Spirit to fill her with the fruits of the Spirit.

As I listened to the stories, I heard so many that shared examples of her love her joy and peace, her patience and kindness, her generosity and faithfulness, her gentleness and self-control.  And I believe that she was able to share this because of her deep faith in God.

In the book of memories, one of the early questions was, “When did you first go to church?  What are your earliest memories?”  She replied that church had been important to her all of her life. She remembered sitting in little chairs in a circle at Sunday School. She remembered the dignified ushers.  She remembered the choir, and the big voices some of them had.

She wrote that she always felt like she was a Christian, but that she and Forrest went forward at a revival service when they were about 15 years old to once again profess their faith.  Their faith was one not necessarily lived out through a lot of talking about the faith, but by actually living their faith.  Lola and Forrest would hold hands and say grace before every meal.  And there was a Bible always beside Lola Mae on the table.

The family shared stories with me about how gifted and talented Lola Mae was, but they were very quick to point out that she always wanted to find ways to improve herself.  She knew that to be a follower of Jesus, she must be humble.  She may have been a little too humble, as her family has shared, and not realized what a true gift she was.

She was so talented, but you would never hear her say that, and if you would say something to that affect, Lola Mae would downplay her strengths and say that she had a long way to go.  And even though she was an extremely beautiful and classy lady, Lola Mae definitely believed she was not perfect. She would sometimes cut her face out of family photos.  Forrest says of his wife, “She can never imagine how much she meant to me. I wanted her to know that she was perfect for me.”

We pray that now that she is with her Savior in heaven, that he is showing her what a perfect wife, mother, perfect grandmother and woman, perfect and beautiful Christian she truly is.  Made perfect because of God’s love and grace. Made perfect because she allowed the Holy Spirit to mold her heart, and grace her with the gifts of the Spirit.

Through her faithful life, Lola Mae shows each and every one of us how faith is lifelong journey.  It is not something to take for granted, but it is something that should be nurtured throughout a lifetime.

One of the ways that Lola Mae found to best express her faith was through her gift of music.  Even though her parents could not afford to send her for music lessons, she received a natural gift from God.  Throughout her life, even up until the time of her stroke, God would put a song in her heart.  She would hum a tune around the house and, it would stay in her head until she sat down to play it.  When she would go to the piano, she would smile and play.

The song that Lola Mae would play the most in her later years was “The longer I serve him, the sweeter He grows.”  The words are “Since my life He controls, since I gave my heart to Jesus, the longer I serve Him, the sweeter He grows.”  All who knew Lola Mae would agree that the longer she served him, the sweeter she did grow.

She had a heart of a true servant of Christ.  Her grandchildren and children remember how it was so important to Lola Mae that the porch be swept off before anyone came over.  She was always looking for a way to serve other people.  When the grandkids stayed at her house, she would turn down the covers and lay out their nightclothes.  When the grandkids were in college, she would send them care packages filled with buttery sugar cookies.

Lola’s favorite advice was from Ralph Waldo Emerson: “You cannot do a kindness too soon, for you never know how soon it will be too late.”  This is how she lived out her life.

I think Lola Mae would encourage each and every one of us here to live this out. As she did.  She would encourage us to live out the fruits of the spirit. To serve one another.  She would want her family to continue to spend time together with Forrest.  She would want us to love one another, just as her Savior loved her.  She would ask that we remember her great love and commitment over any of her accomplishments.

May we all learn from Lola Mae’s life, may we all continue to work towards perfection in wholeness.  And may we all experience the assurance that God loves us, just as we are, but too much to leave us here.

In Christ’s name we pray,

Amen.

Meeting Zachary

My friend Kathy lives in California.  We went to graduate school together at the University of Michigan, and along with Grace and Jennifer, we worked for two years on a master’s project at the Brookfield Zoo.  Our master’s project was a lot of fun.  The things that kept us happy and sane throughout that long effort was common friendship, a love of food, and lots and lots of baked goods.

I last saw Kathy in 2007 when we all met up for a reunion in Austin (see post here).  Since then, she’s gotten married and we’ve both had a child.  Life happens!  Kathy’s husband Eddie is doing a lot of traveling for work these days, and they are all located in Chicago this week.  So on Sunday afternoon, they were nice enough to make the drive up to Madison to visit us.  It was great to see Kathy and Eddie and such a treat to meet sweet little Zach.

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I brought my camera as we played at Olbrich park and caught a few images.  That little boy sure does feel exuberantly happy about the water!

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On Tuesday, the kids and I packed up and drove down to Chicago to spend the day at the Brookfield Zoo with Kathy and Zach.  The day was rainy, but we had so much fun visiting the Hammil Family Play Zoo, the Swamp, Tropic World, and the new Bear & Bison exhibit.  I’m heading down to Chicago for a workshop this weekend, so I’m hoping to get to spend a little more time with Kathy before she leaves.  It’s always fun to get together!

Playing with Dad

Father’s Day is coming up in a couple weeks, but my kids don’t need a special day to shower their daddy with love.  In fact, if their affections were a real rain shower, he’d be soaked.

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The light was so pretty a few nights ago, we did a little photo session.  More pics are in the gallery.

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Then the kids decided to act like manic wrestlers.

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After the grunting and roaring, there was some cuteness.

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You may have noticed that it looks like Andrew has drawn all over his body with markers.  This is, in fact, what he has done.  He was apparently being Boewolf, the ancient warrior.  He informed me several times that he was mean.  This could be told by the hearts with arrows through them well as by the unhappy faces =(   that he had drawn all over his legs.  Creativity and imaginative play thrives here at the Dotzour home!

Maine Vacation – Part VI: Relaxing at Acadia

Click here for Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, and Part V to hear the start of our story!

Monday was our last full day in Maine.  We woke up in our Bar Harbor hotel and headed out to Jordan’s to eat some Maine wild blueberry pancakes with Maine wild blueberry syrup.  A local couple sitting at a nearby table struck up a conversation, and they suggested we go try out the Wonderland trail.  Since the gentleman was a Bowdoin grad, we decided to follow his advice.  I’m glad we did!

The Wonderland trail was a nice 40 minute drive away, and we really enjoyed getting to see the landscape as we traveled.  One surreptitious aspect of our Maine visit is that it coincided exactly with the peak of lupine blossoms.  I’m a big fan of Barbara Cooney’s book Miss Rumphius (I’d bought it the last time I was in Maine), so to happen to be here at a time when lupines are covering the gardens and roadsides and knolls with purple and pink and white blooms was just fantastic.  They are the bluebonnets of Maine!

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10-05-31_Maine_051I’m a little worried that they aren’t native and I’m actually reveling in the beauty of an invasive non-native, but as a tourist, I think I’ll just enjoy my ignorance:)  Was Miss Rumphius making the world more beautiful or was she propagating invasives?  Shoot.  Darn you internet.

OK, on to other things…

We drove along, stopping to play on the rocks.

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10-05-31_Maine_065Sylvia needed close supervision to ensure her safety, but she also loved playing all the rocks!

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10-05-31_Maine_087At the Wonderland beach, we spent several hours exploring, sitting, and looking into the tide pools.  We found snails, oysters, lots of sea grass and kelp, and a flock of Eider ducks grunting just off shore.

10-05-31_Maine_090While Andrew roamed far and wide, Sylvia found a couple tiny rocks that she decided were babies.  She put them to bed, would wait a while, and then would go wake them up.  She’d cradle them in her hands and talk and sing to them.  No doll needed for this little girl:)

10-05-31_Maine_091After wonderful Wonderland, the kids slept in the car while I shopped a bit alone in Bar Harbor.  We all went to lunch, and I learned the pleasure of clams dipped in butter.  At first, I didn’t know to take off the “neck.”  The first one I ate was full of grit, and it was almost the last one I ate.  But then my waiter showed me how to remove the neck and dip it in brine and then in butter.  And I was hooked.  I can’t think of something yummier.  Of course, I could try dipping all sorts of food in butter and test, but steamed clams are now one of my favorite foods.

After lunch, we piled back in the car and drove the 2-3 hours back to Portland.  The kids did a great job with all our traveling, and while we were driving Bryan and I made a list of the 15 or so places we’d like to take the kids.  Now that they’re getting a little older, it seems like it will be fun!

***

We woke up at 4:30am on Tuesday for our flight home.  The kids were, once again, delighted to be waking up in the middle of the night to travel:)  Despite getting stuck at LaGuardia for several extra hours due to a variety of mechanical issues, and thereby missing our flight from Detroit to Madison, we were able to get home only a couple hours after our scheduled flight.

Andrew has wistfully said several times, “I loved Acadia National Park!”

I feel so lucky that we were able to take them on that adventure.  Thanks, Joe, for picking a college in such a beautiful state!

Now we’re home for June…a month of birthdays and anniversaries!  Thanks for reading about our trip:)  I hope it was a little vacation for you too!

~Althea

Maine Vacation – Part V: Up to Bar Harbor

Click here for Part IPart II, Part III, and Part IV to hear the start of our story!

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After Joe’s graduation on Saturday, he packed his belongings into a truck, said goodbye to his friends, and joined our family at the cottages. The next morning, Joe drove down to Washington DC, where he will have an internship this summer…living with Heather and Michael.  Terry, Dad, Tom, Michael, Lisa, Maretta, Kyle, Heather, Michael, and Evie all drove down to Portland to catch their airplanes.  And Bryan, the kids, and I hopped in our car and headed north for our further adventure.

The drive was just beautiful!  Little New England towns sprinkled along the coast.  Peeks through the woods at the ocean and islands.  Harbor towns with white church spires rising above the green forest, beautiful homes, and sailboats and colorful buoys dotting the deep blue water.  I think that on our three-hour drive, our favorite little town was Camden.  So pretty!  So picturesque!  Wish we could have stayed there for a while.  It actually reminded us a lot of Bayfield, Wisconsin on Lake Superior!

When we arrived at Bar Harbor (a town on Mt. Desert Island where Acadia National Park is located), we stopped for lunch at a lovely outdoor cafe.  Andrew colored on a children’s menu, and that menu came with us for the rest of our journey.  Andrew declared (dozens and dozens of times) that it was a map that could tell us how to go all ways.  At one point, we asked for some wisdom from the all-knowing map.  Andrew said, “The lobster on the map says we should turn left.  … Or right.  … … … Or maybe go straight ahead.”

For a look at a real map of the park, click here.

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Following the map’s advice (or maybe not), we traveled down to Sand Beach in Acadia National Park.  Most of the coast line is really rocky, but in this cove, the beach was long with rough sand.  It was full of people…I can’t imagine what it must look like during the real tourist season!

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Sylvia was really worried about the water, so she and I sat on the beach and tried to keep the sand from getting on her (for some reason that became really important to her).  Andrew, meanwhile, was at the shoreline chasing the waves and then running from them.  I was busy with Sylvie, so I wasn’t able to get any pictures of Andrew, but he was so gleeful and joyful.  Over the course of the hour we were there, he played with lots of different kids as they ran toward and away from the waves.  Oceans are so cool!

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He had a little adventure at one point when he waded in a bit and the undertow pulled him down.  Before he could get up, a big wave splashed over him and pushed him up the shore…covering him with sand.  Bryan pulled him up right away, and it took him a moment to decide whether to be stunned or cry.  While he did cry a bit, he was back on the shore a bit later, having a blast…his scalp and ears full of gritty sand.  That night, the tub looked like a beach.

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After getting mostly dried off, we took a little trek up the Beehive trail.  Unlike some of the other trails we’d walked down, the part of the Beehive we hiked was made up of large boulders.  Bryan or I carried Sylvia, and Andrew bounded ahead.  He reminded me a little of a dog who is given the job he was bred to do.  A hound who’s been taken pheasant hunting or a collie who’s been given some sheep.  My little Andrew man was hopping about on those boulders like a mountain goat who has finally been released on a mountain.  It was a lot of fun to see.

I didn’t take my camera on that hike, but here’s a couple of us walking on some flat terrain…

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After our hike, we drove past some really lovely ocean views back up past Bar Harbor to supper at a Lobster Pound.There, we enjoyed the largest lobsters I have ever seen in my life.  One of them had a claw that had to be a pound on its own.

10-05-30_Maine_041This lobster pound was a neat place.  You stand in a line and order your lobster at the counter.  They stick the yummy crustaceans in these outdoor pots to boil.  You stand around for the 25 minutes or so that it takes for them to cook, and then you grab a picnic table or one of the little tables inside and chow down.  Expensive.  Casual.  SO YUMMY.  The kids weren’t too adventurous, but that just left more lobster for me and Bryan to devour.  And chow down, we did.

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10-05-30_Maine_044Well past the kids’ bedtimes, we rolled into our hotel, checked in, and got them to bed.  Sylvia slept in a bed for the first time.  There was actually a very nice crib for her to sleep in, but the room also had two twin beds, and she wanted to be just like Andrew.  While it took the kids a long time to settle down and go to sleep, they finally did, and I passed out while reading my book.  What a great day it was!

Maine Vacation Part IV: Graduation Day

Click here for Part IPart II, and Part III to hear the start of our story!

Friends.  One thing I found remarkable about visiting Bowdoin College and seeing a bit into Joe’s college experience was meeting his friends.  I went to Carleton College, which is a similar kind of place, and Joe and I are relatively similar kinds of people, but while I had perhaps four close friends and seven good friends at college…maybe two of whom I keep in close contact with (Hi Sarah and Wes!), Joe seems to have a large, very close community of friends who clearly adore each other.  I don’t think I’ve ever seen so much affection at a graduation before!

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Joe’s graduation was held outdoors on their lovely campus.  The graduates and teachers and alumni walked all around campus before the ceremony.

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While we sat and listened, the three little kids did very well (Andrew played on iPhones the entire time and Sylvia enjoyed some nice packages that Heather had put together for the girls).

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There are 105 photos from graduation, and you can find each and every one of them here.  If you’re so inclined, here’s a slideshow!

The speeches were all well done.  I particularly enjoyed the student’s speeches.  Here’s Joe receiving his diploma:

10-05-28_Maretta_277And our new, official graduate.

10-05-28_Maretta_288The paperwork…

IMG_0162Now for some pics of our graduate with the fam.  Here’s Joe and Terry:

10-05-28_Maretta_295And Joe and Dad:

10-05-28_Maretta_297Joe and the kids:

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Joe and me:

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The four kids and Dad:

10-05-28_Maretta_391Joe and Maretta ham it up.  They’re sooooo dramatic:)  More pics of this charade in the gallery.

IMG_0093Joe with the Lerners.  Joe, you kinda tower over them.

IMG_0079Sweet, sleepy Evie.

IMG_0078Joe with brothers, cousin, and nephew…”the boys.”

IMG_0292After this little family photo session, we met up with Joe’s friends and Maretta and I followed him around like paparazzi.  Hugging ahead!

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Here’s Joe with this year’s roommates: Marc, Sasha, and Lindsey

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And an earlier set of roommates:

IMG_0223Here’s his larger group of friends.  I think most of them lived on the same dorm floor this year.

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Here are the friends he might live with in DC:

IMG_0168More friends; more hugging:

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IMG_0276Joe, I am so glad that you had such a loving group of people with whom to surround yourself these last four years.  From our brief time together, they all seem like wonderful people.  I wish them all the best!!