Summer seems to be racing by faster than usual this year. We're making the most of it, though! Compared to the
trauma of last summer almost anything would be a welcome break this time around, but even with the vacation bar set low I feel we're helping make some great memories for our kids.
To me the essence of summer vacation is being unscheduled, getting outside, having time to do projects purely for fun, a cookout, reading for hours on end, bare feet, watching movies/TV way too late into the night, and a road trip. By those measures it's been a quintessential summer break, and there's still some left, so life is good.
After our
trip to Washington D.C. we had a few days at home together, and then Ian took the kids off to the cottage. I had to stay behind in Milwaukee to work, but I loved that my kids got to meet up with their cousin in Michigan and just be at the lake. My mom and my brother were there, too, and Ian emailed me reports of much swimming and fishing and cookie baking.
It's weird living in our house with just the dog. I kept Chipper with me because I needed the company, but he was so sad. He kept wandering into the kids' rooms to look forlornly at their empty beds. After a couple of days he begged to go out the back door (which is odd--he's the only dog I know who hides when you offer to walk him), then begged to go into the garage, then begged to get into the car (another thing he doesn't like), and then he climbed into the backseat and wouldn't leave. I think he wanted me to drive him to wherever the kids were. I left the doors open to everything for over an hour in the hopes he'd come back in the house, but eventually I drove him around the neighborhood a bit and when we returned home he bounded inside. I think he believed some kind of magic would have happened and everyone would be back again on our return, but when he got in the house everything about him just drooped in disappointment.
The opposite of the depressed dog was when I got him out of the kennel on the ferry. I managed to get away to join everyone at the cottage for a weekend, and the only convenient way to do that is to take the high speed ferry across Lake Michigan. I've never taken the dog on the ferry before, but they have a kennel down with the cars and attendants make sure the dogs get water and treats. I thought the dog was going to wag us both to death when I got him out of there, and his joy at being reunited with the kids again was something to behold.
The
cottage remains wonderful. Mona caught many frogs this year. Quinn caught many fish. We played badminton on the beach. The kids swam at The Point, and crossed the island on the other side to use the rope swing there at the other sandy spot they have dubbed The Pointless. We ate literally pounds of blueberries from a local farm. There was Monopoly and Boggle and we stayed up very late to watch both Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle. I got to help everyone do tie dying, and Aden was finally successful in making a real spiral pattern on a shirt the way she always wanted.