Tag Archives: vacation

Memories

I’m up, the 3 a.m. thing. Hours before we sail off to see my dad I checked up on Top Chef Masters and missed the last episode at Grand Canyon.

Yes, I remember the Grand Canyon from when I was ten. It was the late 1960’s and I knew little of Vietnam or hippies. Dad wore a staid suit and skinny tie (tie clip, too) and had his hair cut really short, and Mom had graduated from matching skirt sets to a yellow pantsuit.

First ever airplane trip, we flew to Phoenix and got a rental car. It had air conditioning, we’d never seen that before and never would. Dad said we had to keep the windows closed or the A/C would never work. It was 112 in the shade and we east coasters were wilting!

Then we got to the southern rim of the Canyon to a cabin with an “air cooling system.” That system consisted of opening the windows on a 112-degree day. It was July 3 and private fireworks went off all night. We all traded beds because we thought another would be cooler.

Then at 6:00 a.m. with no sleep, we stood in line for breakfast while Dad looked over the Canyon and said words like “awesome” and “majestic” and we were just tired, cranky and hot.

Then we drove to Flagstaff without even seeing the Grand Canyon and had A/C in the rooms and a pet raccoon out by the pool. For a ten year-old kid, that was heaven.

I’d love to go back one day with my husband and stay on the north rim and explore a bit.  Then I can say things like awesome and majestic and mean them.

We ended up in San Diego for a conference then drove up the Coast to San Francisco and it ended up being a great experience. Just the Phoenix/Grand Canyon part set us off on a rocky beginning.

As we age not only do the days get shorter, the years do as well. It’s been quite some time since I’ve seen my father and I look forward to our brief visit. Seven hours there today, same back on Sunday and my task board for me and my husband and dog care says one thing for Saturday: relax.

This story just came to me. While you might think it sheds a bad light on my childhood, it does not. The fact that I lived in a microcosm and only learned years later that I missed out on the Summer of Love because I was a sweaty kid in Phoenix is precious.

I did know the body count from Walter Cronkite every evening, and that it was imperative that the college students not know that the college president had been on Oppenheimer’s A-Bomb team.  And I’d give anything to see the home we practically built decades ago, and have my ashes scattered in my Enchanted Forest someday. I guess you could say I had my own 60’s listening to Frank Sinatra, playing the violin and skinnydipping in the pool with my sister at night.

Who cares about communes and magic mushrooms? I certainly didn’t miss out. And my parents brought me to see Frank, Chairman of the Board, at Carnegie Hall in the 80’s. Dee the Geeky Cook

Caretakers

Life used to be easy and I could mow someone’s yard, pull weeds or babysit without fear of a lawsuit.

Now people want to do this for me. Our needs are simple, a basic cleaning or walk the dog.

My arthritis has kicked up big time and I can’t clean our shower. But they all have their needs and pick at me for anything that makes it harder for me to hire them than it is to do it myself.

We can’t let you hire another dog-sitter mid-day because it’s on our watch and we’re responsible so we can’t take care of your dog due to our insurance policy.

What? It’s my place, my dog and I have insurance and I hired YOU! This is ridiculous. I’m going elsewhere, already have an appointment early tomorrow.

For now, I pay the bills so I set the rules. No maids or dog walkers tell me what to do with my life. The home is mine, the dog is mine and that’s that.

Snob? No. Arthritis and going out of town for two days just to see my father who is gracefully aging, yes. I miss our mountainous state. Dee

The Room Picnic

It’s funny that as I write about cooking and quilts and such, that my families (mine and my husband’s) have at least one thing in common, a passion for fabric, linen, tea towels, serviettes.

Here I am showcasing their works and am proud to do so. A few weeks ago I found my great-grandmother’s linen-embroidered scalloped tablecloth that had yellowed. I washed it and hung it to dry and it looks great, just needs ironing.

Jim’s mother has gifted us with quilts and other linens over the years, that are treasured.

But more about room picnics. As a kid, we had four maternal cousins and three aunts and Papa. When 14 of us met every summer (we lived about 8 hours away) we always had one meal in the room.

My aunts would cook for days and bring coolers with food and beverages and we always had “serviettes,” cloth napkins, even though we might be at the local Holiday Inn or some variety thereof with a pool so we could swim ourselves silly.

My father hated room picnics. He’d rather have waitress service downstairs. I have fond memories of them. We were usually in our swimsuits, toweled dry and came to eat a few morsels before going back to the pool.

Sorry, Dad, you once said that all we talked about was food. What was for lunch, where are we eating dinner? Now you cook. You know your favorite restaurants in every city and you eat well. Your eldest daughter (moi) trained as a chef.

What is life if one doesn’t look forward to eating the next meal? And what else is there to talk about with 14 for dinner, on vacation?

It’s a joy to talk about recipes et al with family and friends, and to prepare meals that delight guests. It’s wonderful to have an arsenal of serviettes and torchons and tea towels and tablecloths. And quilts as conversation pieces and prized art.

When we look for hotels, depends with/without dog, but we like a place with a safe for our laptops, a real 1/2 frig for breakfast items, and choosing a pillow is a good thing. Thanks, Martha, for your birdcage curtain/quilt rods. Cheers, Dee

Vacation

There’s no possible way we can ever use the vacation days Jim has accrued. He’s just started a new job at work and once he gets into it, there’s no way to get him to go on vacation and November and December are pretty verboten for time off.

So where do we go? He may have a week off mid-August but I don’t want to travel to somewhere like Europe then when all the kiddos are still out of school and it’s a backpacker’s heyday.

So I’m looking into driving vacations and short, inexpensive flights, trying to stay away from triple digit heat and deserts. I’ll work on it over the weekend as I also have to make plans for the dog because she’s a pain to travel with. Even when hotels will take her, we get a crummy room, can’t have her stay there alone, so our meals are compromised as we can’t take her there either. A week driving into Sonic, forget it. That’s no vacation, eating with the engine running in an air-conditioned car with the dog in the back. And even if Sonic’s burgers are OK, their bathrooms are horrendous.

If you’ve any suggestions for the trip, probably in the Western states or Pacific NW, just comment right here. Thanks! Cheers, Dee