Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

5.14.2026

Idahoooooo

Wednesday was a long day - up at 4, on the road at 7 for our 1 pm flight (you never know what LA traffic - or airport security - is going to do. Much better to be really early…) Then a 2 hour drive in the rain to see -

these cuties. 

We’re staying in a tiny house (here) on the banks of the St. Joe River. 

I was afraid we’d feel cramped in the 399 sq. ft. space, 

but the high ceilings make it feel spacious and there’s a crazy amount of very clever storage places. 

 Marie, Leo and Kenia; their side yard, Polish chicks and bunny sisters, S’mores and Butterscotch.

Jac had school today, so we just hung out at Marie’s house and around town until she was done. 

Jac: Grandma! This ice cube has a mouth so it goes in my mouth! (I’ve really missed daily Jackie-isms.)

We’re planning to visit a gold mine and a couple of historic towns tomorrow. Hoping the rain holds off  - our lazy day today had clear skies, of course - but either way, it’ll be fun hanging out with the grand girls again.


4.16.2026

Time Out

We’re in Cambria for a long weekend, 

View from the west balcony

renting a house about a block from the ocean 


and across the street from the nature preserve 

 Downstairs

where Pop likes to go walking in the morning.

 Upstairs

My original 100 Days project is on pause, so I brought along the National Parks quilt I made in… 2021?!? 

Made a plan in 2024 (here) to embroider around each state park we’ve visited. It keeps getting put aside for other things but 100 Days may give me the push to finish it. 

 Traditional sunset-over-Cambria pic

At least until we visit another park…

 East-facing balcony. Love a house with a choice of balconies-with-a-view

 View from east balcony


3.15.2026

Travel Back

Saturday was long. 

Queen Charlotte in the lobby of Charlotte Airport.

We left Matt’s house about 1:30 pm and finally arrived home at 12:15 am - about 14 hours total, counting time zone changes. Fortunately the whole journey, while tiring, was pleasant and drama-free. 

Matt had some drama before we left. He woke up to half the house with no electricity, including the heating system. Not a good thing when temps are predicted to be in the 30’s this next week. Two companies, four trucks and one crane later, the utility company said the fault - a nicked wire - was on their side of the meter and thus their problem/responsibility. It couldn’t be fixed that day so they hoisted a generator onto the back deck and hooked it up. Hopefully things will get fixed this week. 


A few more pix from the covered bridge day: 

A picture of me ⬆️ taking a picture of Mary taking a picture of me ⬇️. 

The original farmhouse


3.13.2026

Last Day in SC

Going to be sad to go home tomorrow. And sadder once we get there with no baby grands around. BUT…

… today was filled with fun, food and the wild baby lizard Donovan caught twice! The boy has fast hands.


 Donovan’s baby raptor

The big boys took a quick trip to the huge BMW plant and ‘museum’, aka visitors center. They had a couple of interesting cars on display, a merchandise store and not much else. Factory tours were on hiatus but the guys will definitely be back once they resume in July 2026. 

Lunch was in Greenville at a collection of small food vendors operating out of remodeled shipping containers. 

 Practicing their ‘cool’ moves

Great selection of food, fun atmosphere and absolutely no pictures taken, which is a bummer as it was very fun. Would definitely go back. 

Next up was our main event - 

exploring Conestee Nature - and wildlife - Preserve (here), 

640 acres of watershed, boardwalks, trails and observation decks, with lots and lots  of wildlife. 

Mary said there were hundreds of turtles in this one pond alone ⬇️. 

Donovan had so much fun - and is going to sleep well tonight - trying to see and experience everything the Preserve had to offer. 

Note for next time: snack stop at Buttermilk Sky Pie (here) was a letdown. Friendly people but the pie, especially the crust, was not great. Dinner at Pig Out BBQ (here) was fantastic. They only do barbecue and sides and all of it is done well. Best ribs and potato salad (and “large fries” too) we’ve had in this trip. Definitely going back next trip.

Adding this as a reminder for Pop of something he wants to make. 


3.12.2026

BBQ, Bridges and Chilly Milk

Matt had to work this morning, poor guy, so we got a late-ish start on our sightseeing. 

First up was lunch at Southside Smokehouse in Landrum. 

Probably the best barbecue we’ve had on our trip so far and my shrimp po’boy was excellent. 

D and Cousin It

S. Carolina has one remaining covered bridge 

and since it’s only 25 minutes from the new house of course we had to go find it. 

Campbell’s Covered Bridge (here) was built from 1909 - 1911 and rebuilt twice, the last time about 1992. 

It’s about 38’ long, 12’ wide and set in a lovely little park along Beaverdam Creek. 

The bridge construction is the relatively rare Howe Truss (here), a four-span design invented by William Howe in 1840. It uses vertical iron rods and diagonal timbers.

 Last photo is the underside of the bridge flooring

Donovan was initially not a fan of this side trip - 

he wanted chilly milk* right.now. - 

but he had a lot of fun running along the creek and exploring. 

 The remains of the old homestead and mill

We even found some great sparkly rocks (mica?) along the path. 

And yes, he got his chilly milk. We found a great small shop in Inman - Averies’s Ice Cream Shoppe - serving Hershey’s ice cream along with baked treats (banana pudding for Matt) and packaged bake-at-home dinners. So good! 

* Donovan said “ice cream” soooooooooo many times, mom and dad started (joke-seriously) taking points away every time he said the IC word. Lose too many points and no treats for D! So smart kid that he is, he got around the prohibition by calling it ‘chilly milk’. I’m betting this will be the start of a funny, long running, family joke.