RV Ambush Gardening

Friday, October 20, 2006




October 17, 2006 Blog pictures

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Orange City, Iowa

We spent another 8 days in Iowa. We just lived and enjoyed our kids and grandbaby. We so enjoyed worshipping at Alton Reformed Church for 3 Sundays of our trip. Pastor Mike and Elizabeth have such special hearts and ability. The congregation is so warm and welcoming. They are really looking out to their community. If we lived in Orange City, we’d sure enjoy serving there!

We went antiquing in Spencer, Iowa, spent a shopping day with Mary, Eric and the Divine Miss Iz in Sioux City, had a luscious dinner at Blue Mountain in Orange City. It is a really nice, high end restaurant – fairly new. Eric is working there part-time as a line chef. His wildest dream come true! Mary took me to her book club last Thursday night. They are reading Cry, the Beloved Country. I enjoyed meeting with the ladies because I had read the book a couple of years ago.

I’ve been baking! How weird to have time. We stumbled on fresh picked apples everywhere we went, so I made apple donuts and apple cake. We’ve also gotten into the habit of a hot breakfast – bacon, eggs, biscuits, pancakes, cinnamon rolls, oatmeal (not in a cup of hot water either!)

I hope you enjoy the pictures of us at Pumpkin Land! It is this great farm in Orange City, where they grow and sell pumpkins and every product you can think of made from them, and all the other fall produce. They also have a corn maze (I’m told by the kids it is most fun after dusk with flash lights), petting pens with bunnies, chickens, turkeys, peacocks, llamas, goats and lambs. If you talk to Mary or Missy, ask them to share with you about their love of goats! The local animal shelter also brings in a pen of puppies – free to a good home. Eric nearly took home the cutest chocolate lab. I think if they have a house next year, a puppy will make it’s way home from Pumpkin Land in Eric’s coat pocket! Isabel had the best day. When we got back in the car she communicated, in her own way, how much fun she had. She licked like the doggies licked her, she made the rooster noise, and clicked like the turkey and kicked her legs and waved her arms and laughed throughout her monologue. Did you now that only the male turkeys gobble, and the females click? She repeated this all day and evening. And, the next morning, she repeated the whole thing again for Mommy!!

Doug has been tinkering on our little rolling home. He installed a water purifier, connected the heating blankets to 110V, replaced the water heater computer board. Just like home, the maintenance of this little house is constant – just smaller!

We also had some more work done on our RV. We think all but about 5 things have been repaired. We’re just waiting for the furnace, AC, fridge, stove and slide to breakdown, then, we will have had everything replaced in the whole trailer!! If you need to buy an RV, we can definitely tell you where NOT to buy it. The last thing fixed was the axel. All 4 shackles were fractured, and the axel was just hanging! We wondered why it just beat us up to drive the thing – all the way from California to the East Coast and back to Iowa. We are now enjoying a very smooth ride and are absolutely horrified by the thought of what would have happened to us if that axel had dropped on the road! God is so good to us!

We woke up in Boise, ID this morning – surrounded by people and cars. Funny how you can get so acclimated, so fast to wide open spaces. We wonder how we’ll ever survive in busy LA again! As I write, we’re driving through eastern Oregon. We’re on our way to Port Townsend, WA - one of our favorite places. We hope to have several quiet, restful days there before heading down the coast to civilization.

Current favorites:
DVD: Baby Einstein
Book: Baby Shapes
Favorite Food: Cherrios
Favorite Song: “Blaaoomp Went the Little Green Frog”

*As usual, I'm having technical difficulty downloading the pictures. I will post them on the blog to follow - same date!

Friday, October 06, 2006

Washington DC. The Capitol, The American Red Cross, Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, Washington Monument beyond the WWII Memorial



Friday, October 6, 2006
We are ending week 7 of our trip. We really could do this for another 3 months, but our California kids and our cats would kill us! We talked to Bob and Leo on the phone the other night. Bob just walked away, but Leo rubbed the phone and cried and told me all about his day - 'Meow, meow, meow, meow'.
We were able to visit Missy last Sunday. We met her at Three Bridges Reformed Church in Thee Bridges New Jersey. It is a homey church with a very friendly congregation. A little smaller than her Alton, Iowa church. We think she will be very comfortable there. We returned to Princeton for lunch and a little shopping before leaving her to study in the evening. It was so good to be with her again. We'll miss her - until we meet again in December in Iowa.
Monday we drove to the Washington DC area. We were stunned to hear of the school shootings and deaths in Paradise, PA - amish country. We were just very short distance away as they happened, and had driven right past 2 weeks earlier. Such a sad event for such a quiet, gentle place that seems set apart from our worldy world.
We visited DC on Tuesday. We rode the bus/train in - which was such a great idea. We started at the Smithsonians - Air and Space first. We could have spent days there. I was so touched by the Apollo exhibits - I saw the work my Daddy had done on the program. His flight manuals on display - possibly even some of his handwriting. We also really enjoyed the Wright Brother's exhibit, and their first plane and an early bicycle.
Then on to the Art Museum, where they were showing 17th century French and American works. After a tasty lunch in their cafeteria (better than most nice restaurants), we were off to the Capitol building. Sadly, you must arrive early in the morning and get a pass for a tour. They have very limited admission, since 9/11. So, we went over to Library of Congress. The architecture is incredible. We wandered around rare books, hispanic studies and the Bob Hope exhibit.
We caught the train to Arlington, but got off at 4:50pm - to late for admission. We hoofed it across the Potomic River on foot and collapsed at the Lincoln Memorial. Abe is a big guy! I was ready to crawl up on his lap%