village walk

It has been a nice few days but gosh I am sleepy tonight.  A proper update is in order. We have made some lovely pies and my nose has been buried in books lately when I can steal away from moving prep. Hopefully soon I will get some things typed out here about all that.  Meantime, the village is lush and green with all the rain we have had so I will just share some glimpses around town right now. 

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lettuces peeking through the fruit trees in the neighbor's garden

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I know what you're thinking.  I have no idea.  But I have been behind them on the open road I tell you.  In this country, anything with wheels has the same right of way as you do in your car to include horse drawn wagon, tractors, and yes, three-wheeled dealie-bobs. Hence, the license plate. : )

 

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There are German colors flying everywhere.  I am so sports ignorant I initially wondered at this sudden display of patriotism.  I even briefly worried it was indicative of anti-American sentiment.  The vuvuzelas clued me in however.  They apparently cross borders and have international appeal.  Really late at night too.  

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My sidekick pooped out.  She really needed a nap which is pretty hard to admit when you have so many older brothers and sisters who don't.  I convinced her to ride in the stroller though and she didn't make it very far. 

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There was a frenzy of hay-cutting recently.  The farmer behind us made several turns 'round the field out back and then came back to continue into the night. (below)  I know this because I stay up far too late these days, but am hitting the hay now – no pun intended…

Jun

The C word

It is coming up altogether too often lately – cancer.  Striking far closer to home than we'd like.  Rob is still fighting for his life having undergone several rounds of chemo and two major surgeries, with two more to follow.  Another friend is in Munich this month while her husband receives treatment there.  Two close family members of my husband have underdone surgery and/or other cancer treatments in the past couple months.  We have prayed and prayed.  St. Peregrine has heard a lot from us indeed. 

We were running errands Saturday, leaving a deposit for the temporary furnished place we will be staying in between the time our things are moved out and we leave the country.  The cell phone rang with very bad news.  Jemma, my friend Julie's littlest one, had been hospitalized a few days earlier for what had become a really significant infection.  There had been no apparent cause however and by Saturday morning they had to begin considering ominous explanations.  Scans and bloodwork confirmed she has ALL – Leukemia  I choked over the words when I called home to tell the girls.  Not Jemma. : /

Julie, you might remember, is the creator of the Speed Math card game.  We spend Tuesday mornings together over cameras and knitting needles.  Tomorrow her older daughter comes for her last piano lesson with Alannah.  Then life changes.  She and her brother will press on with a prearranged vacation to family in the States to be cared for there. Julie, meantime, will be bedside with Jemma through a 35day in-patient course of chemo which will be followed by many times weekly outpatient visits for 6months and 18 months of regular appointments after. Assuming all goes well of course. 

Jemma is a curly-topped blonde dynamo, the bitty one pictured below and here.  She speaks good German which will help a great deal at the hospital.  At just five she performs with the local German folk dancing club, kicking her tiny feet over head and spinning in time.  She is a classic girly-girl, loving dress-up and hairbows and handcrafts – which she is remarkably good at for such a young age.  We would like to see her be able to enjoy as much of the things she loves in life as possible while going through treatment. 

We are leaving very soon but I wish to continue to walk this road with Julie's family if we can help in any way.  If you would like to support Jemma and her family also, we have thought of some ways to do that.  Jemma will be losing those lovely curls to the chemo.  We would love to shower her with accessories to wear in their place.  Hats, elasticized hair bows or flowers, costume jewelry, wings/feathers etc. These things are harder to come by in Germany.  

She has an ipad so gift certificates to the itunes store for educational apps or audio books would bless them too as they pass the hours at the hospital. Small handcrafts. The children in Julie's family absolutely love to get postcards from around the world.  Jemma loves mail. (I am going to suggest that if you were thinking of purchasing a pack of Julie's math cards maybe go ahead and do that now too : ))  I know a lot of creative women read this blog, some of whose families have weathered cancer as well,  and will have ideas I haven't considered too.  If so, please contact Julie or I and we can give you their mailing address which is an American address and will not cost more to send to. 

edited to correct email to

jmommymom@gmail.com

Highhill Homeschool blog

Jemma

driving to Düsseldorf

That is how we spent the better part of Thursday in pursuit of UK Visas.  In so many ways the past few months have been a comedy of errors, one of those comedies that are funnier when you're not a main character.  We have been working hard at offering it up and trying to roll with it.  What else can you do? Still, every now and then something surprises you.  In the case of Thursday it was that everything went right.  Everything. 

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These Visas are a really big deal.  We cannot do a thing without them but we couldn't apply for them until Allen's paperwork came back from the base.  As it turns out the paperwork sat in the limbo of someone's outbox, forgotten for a week or so, which set us back considerably.  So once we had the documents in hand we headed for Düssedorf, a 3.5 hr drive. 

I missed most of the ride there.  We had confirmations this week as well and extra feis practices.  We had to leave at 5am to make our 9 am appointments.  I collapsed in bed late Wed night, rose early to fill them with Raisin Bran and nudge everyone towards the door.  Then I promptly fell asleep in the car.  

Jun 2012 dusseldorf mirror web
It rained pretty hard approaching the city and I was dreading the potentially long wet walk from however far away we would have to park and reminding myself of the dismal condition of the few umbrellas we own.  As we got off the autobahn we entered a sea of red tail lights with about a half hour before the appt.  And then….then it all just worked out.  

Traffic cleared and we found a few parking spots on the same block as the border agency.  That just never happens.  Never. Happens.  We rang the bell to the building which is as secure as Fort Knox.  We were ushered in and immediately frisked and searched which was a little unnerving. The staff was visibly tense looking over our group.  As we moved into the waiting room however we were super pleased to note that it appeared as if everything we needed to do was right there and there weren't many other customers. 

Jun 2012 dusseldorf window web

Allen went over the applications with one staffer and we settled in the chairs for close to an hour while they processed our packages.  Then they called me back for my semi-Orwellian 'biometrics' fingerprinting and scans. With a heavy sigh and anxious rifling through the packages the gentleman informed me that I would have to stay in the room while he processed all the children since they are under 18.  No problem, I said. He looked over the packages again and passed over several of the smaller children and we began fingerprinting and scanning each of them, one by one.  

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I am not sure what he expected but when we finished the last child he heaved another big sigh, this time of relief, and shook his head.  "I see a discipline there.  They are all so calm. When we have children here it is usually bad.  Very bad. But these were very good."  As we went back out to the security check and were led to the door the staff there piped in as well thanking the children for their behavior.  We got back to the vehicle ten minutes ahead of our 2 hr parking deadline.  All good. 

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Every day isn't like that day. There are days – and I am just pulling from my own history here – when your 7 year old pukes right as you are paying the cashier at the convenience store, or your toddler decides they have to pee RIGHT NOW…. and does. (that would be the day you forgot to pack a change of clothes of course)  There are days when they drop the good salad bowl.  Days when they back into the lamp post, or a tree (take your pick) Days when one of them wades along the beach and splits his foot open halfway through your once in a lifetime Disney vacation – requiring a wheelchair for the rest of the park visit.  Days when the teenager does things so unbelievably flippin' stupid you wonder if there is any possible way the nursery switched him up at birth.  There are days like that.  

And then there are these days, when you smile easy, pat them all on the head, and consider that maybe you didn't completely screw up this parenting gig.  Not completely anyway.  You live for these days. Write them down.  You will want to refer back eventually.  : ) 

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I brake for storks…

Day or night.  My husband can sense my pulse quickening, my grip on the camera tightening and if there is no car behind he just swings over to the shoulder, sometimes alerting me to the time frame I have – like ok you've got about 30 seconds…. go!   

Good enough. : )  No tripod and no time to adjust the settings ideally because birds, you know, fly away.  Especially if you leap out of a car.  But having lived in the high desert for 8 yrs I seriously FREAK OUT when I see storks.  Or hedge hogs.  I have been known to circle back for a possible second sighting of a hedge hog. (they always, always get away though) So yeah.  Some people have Coach bags, some have reality tv, I have water fowl I guess.

And hedge hogs.  But I mentioned that, didn't I?

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If you look closely below you can see a tiny head peeking up over the edge of the nest.  That is one of the two babies this year.  

stork nite web


Irish eyes

Had a wonderful session with our Irish dance instructor last weekend. Sharing some glimpses of her gorgeous family and the birthday bash that followed at a local Irish pub, complete with performances by the studio kids and any willing Irishmen who ever learned to jig. And there were several! There's no party like an Irish party. : ) 

Saorse

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you can catch all the fun over at the gallery

today was a fairy tale

Senior prom on a Rhine River cruise.   I think that qualifies as a fairy tale.  

Scenes from the hours beforehand…

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Best friends and beloved sisters, pouring over hair and makeup options. 

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May 2012 prom blog

twirl, curl, primp, set, brush

 

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pin, tie, hug, cry

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pose, laugh, dance

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My beautiful girl, with her beautiful friends, on a beautiful day.  

(the rest of the images here)

over, under, and through

They were well equipped this foggy day for a perfect adventure.  The Rheinfels Castle, with its extensive mine tunnels were beckoning.  The castle sits high above the Rhine, strategically placed just before the river turns wild.  This location encouraged many travelers to pull off and regroup before hitting rougher waters at which point tolls could be collected.  It was also a target for invaders.  Clever castle guardians devised an intricate system of tunnels which allowed them to plant land mines many yards away from the compound.  The mole like burrows are just about boy size, unlit, damp, and irrestible. You know we had to try this. 

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drink in the sunshine

"Whenever you go out of doors, draw the chin in, carry the crown of the head high, and fill the lungs to the utmost; drink in the sunshine…" – Elbert Hubbard

Yes, do. 

 After dreary spring weather I was so afraid there would be no brilliant blue skies this rapeseed season but the clouds have parted and soon as they did we brought the little girls to the fields, where they gathered armfuls of bright yellow blossoms.  

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Drink it all in.  

It doesn't last forever.