



I reconnected with a friend from childhood through Facebook last year. We had gone through elementary school together but lost touch pretty much after then. Her name popped up on Facebook because we had a mutual friend, which allowed us to catch up on our lives over the past almost 50 years. One of her daughters was diagnosed with MS two years ago- she is 25 years old, and was participating in a local walk to raise money for MS research in a park in my hometown. I like to walk, so I decided to join in. Three miles on a beautiful path along a portion of the Hudson River with the sun shining- now let’s hope all the money raised helps to find a cure.
Start!


selfie stop along the route!
Cheering squad at the half way point!
Approaching the finish line!
Done!


There are always people working in New York City. Here a just a few I passed while walking in the city




Birthdays of friends and family members seem to be indelibly marked within my brain. The birthdays of childhood friends who I haven’t seen in 40 years-when the date of their birthday arrives, I can’t help but think to myself, it’s so and so’s birthday. This can be a double edged sword, as today, April 24th, is. It is the birthday of a friend who died 6 years ago. He would have been 62 today. I had known him since I was 16, so it is doubtful the date will ever be erased from my memory. It is likely that each year when April 24th arrives I will say to myself that he would have been ___ years old. It is a reminder of what he is missing, has missed in these past 6 years. His daughter making the Deans List in College, his son thinking about college, his mother dying. Then there are the things that make up the days, the weeks, the months- that we hardly notice around us, but make me realize when I think of him not being here- he is missing them all. The wonderful blueness of the sky in spring, the beauty of the sun rising, the feel of the wind blowing. I must cease to count his years, but will forever remember what they would have been come April 24th.
Birthdays of friends and family members seem to be indelibly marked within my brain. The birthdays of childhood friends who I haven’t seen in 40 years-when the date of their birthday arrives, I can’t help but think to myself, it’s so and so’s birthday. This can be a double edged sword, as today, April 24th, is. It is the birthday of a friend who died 6 years ago. He would have been 62 today. I had known him since I was 16, so it is doubtful the date will ever be erased from my memory. It is likely that each year when April 24th arrives I will say to myself that he would have been ___ years old. It is a reminder of what he is missing, has missed in these past 6 years. His daughter making the Deans List in College, his son thinking about college, his mother dying. Then there are the things that make up the days, the weeks, the months- that we hardly notice around us, but make me realize when I think of him not being here- he is missing them all. The wonderful blueness of the sky in spring, the beauty of the sun rising, the feel of the wind blowing. I must cease to count his years, but will forever remember what they would have been come April 24th.
As I walked along a local trail I heard a rustling in the leaves and stopped to see what was causing the noise. It took me a minute, but I saw something furry and zoomed in with my lens and saw this
Looked a little large to be a squirrel, so I waited a moment and he made himself more visible
Yes, that was no squirrel, it was a Groundhog. I took one look at those claws and decided to make a retreat for the car, rather than wait for him to come out from inside his hiding place.
When I returned to the trail a few days later, I spotted him atop the hill alongside the trail, running. I assumed he must be going back to his burrow, so followed his path.
But I was wrong thinking it was the same Groundhog, as I turned to the burrow I had seen the other day and saw this
and a moment later, this 
Two of them… ah Spring, love is in the air
And then he was gone and, it was time for a nap.

From Wikipeida: Earth Day is an annual event celebrated on April 22. Worldwide, various events are held to demonstrate support for environmental protection. First celebrated in 1970, peace activist John McConnell proposed a day to honor the Earth and the concept of peace, to be celebrated on March 21, 1970, the first day of spring in the northern hemisphere. It was later changed to April 22, and became celebrated internationally.
Spring finally showed up today with the sun shining and the temps hitting almost 70. It was a perfect day to take in the beauty of the “Earth.” My husband and I went to a park known for it’s Cherry Blossom Trees. There are over 2 miles of trees lining the streets in one part of town, and all were in full bloom today



Later in the day I went to my favorite local pond and spotted a pair of birds I had never seen before. When I got home I googled Herons, because they seemed to have characteristics resembling a Black Crowned Night Heron. Sure enough, they were Green Herons. Beautiful birds, and I was so excited to add them to my growing list of birds I have seen!

Happy Earth Day!
I took a “mental health day” off from school last week and decided to take a drive about 20 minutes North of where I live to walk along the Hudson River. The Hudson River separates New Jersey from New York. I hadn’t been to this area since I was in my teens, and forgot about the long and very winding drive down to the river from the highway high above. The road can barely fit two cars, and on one side there are cliffs, the other large stones, or boulders, the only thing separating the car from the steep cliffs. The ride down my knuckles were white, as I am not comfortable with heights, and though I kept my eyes on the road, my peripheral vision kept seeing the edge of the cliff. It was worth the trip as once I reached the bottom the sight of the river running North and South and the quiet surrounds but for the birds and a Hawk were welcoming. On the ride back up, I stopped to take a photo of the road ahead of me, and the view out the window. The last photo is the Hudson River reaching North.




The Great Auditorium located in Ocean Grove, NJ, was constructed in 1894 and is mostly unchanged. The wooden building rests on bridge-like iron trusses laid on stone foundations. It features numerous “barn door” entrances with colored glass, dormers, and panels that open for ventilation. It can seat 6,250 persons, hosts worship services, and other types of performances.



Ellwood H. Stokes, was the president of the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association…a Methodist group which was granted a charter by the New Jersey Legislature in the 19th century to operate as a religious community-in 1905 a statue of Stokes seated in an arm chair with his left hand resting on a Bible on a podium next to him, was erected.
The plaque on the statue’s pedestal reads:
“ELLWOOD . H . STOKES
BORN . OCTOBER . 10 . 1815 .
. THE . OCEAN . GROVE .
CAMP . MEETING . ASSOCIATION .
. WAS . CHARTERED . MARCH . 3 . 1870
DR. STOKES . WAS . CHOSEN . ITS
PRESIDENT . AND . SO . REMAINED .
UNTIL . THE . TIME . OF . HIS . DEATH .
JULY . 16 . 1897″


Nancy says: Who remembers watching Sesame Street as a child (or with your child) and hearing “One of these things is not like the others. Which one is different? Can you tell?”

Paula says: This time the theme is “zoom in, zoom out”. Show one subject/scene (whatever you like) from up close and far. Let’s see how different things seem when you have a closer look.

This book belonged to my great grandmother, who was born in 1881. For many years we thought it was a diary, as it was written all in German and no one in the family knew German. After I was married, I realized my mother in law might be able to help as she was raised in Germany and spoke German. She told me it was not a diary, but an “autograph book” that people had signed at the end of the school year, filling the pages with sentiments for the future. The cover is leather with a silver emblem and corners, and my great grandmother’s initials, PS. Some of the pages contain dates, as the one below, which reads 1895, and the name of the city she lived in, Bielefeld.

If you would like to see how beautiful some of the pages are in color, they are included in a post I wrote previously Here
Been anywhere recently for the first time?
Sundays are my husband’s and my “excursion day”- we like to visit new places that are no more than a 2 hour drive away. We usually take these day trips during the Spring, Summer and Fall as the winter weather can be prohibitive and during tax season my husband who is a CPA is working on Sundays. The last place we visited was in November- Olana, a beautiful historic site -I wrote about it here

List three favorite book characters.
When I read it is usually non fiction, so I am finding it hard to think of 3 “characters”!
What is your favorite non alcoholic drink: hot or cold?
I don’t drink alcoholic beverages at all. Lots of water, and my favorite thing to drink is Coffee. Hot or cold.

What did you appreciate or what made you smile this past week?
I was off from school last week and even though the weather was cold and dreary I managed to get out with my camera. I spotted two Great Blue Herons at my lo cal pond which really made me smile!

Dutch Goes the Photo asks us to show what breathe means to us.
Being outdoors and taking in nature lets me breathe



April is here but the air is still cold… it’s only in the 20’s. More like January than April. Signs of Spring are beginning to appear, the birds are finding mates, and buds are showing on the trees. My Spring clothes hang waiting to be chosen, my sweaters tired from being worn. Here are some of the sights of Spring I captured while out walking.








Are we who we are because of genetics? environment? a combination of both? As I have grown older I have to come to realize I am my father’s daughter most certainly. So much of who I am, the things that make me tick, are so because of him. I was always closer with my father than my mother. He was always the more “emotive” parent- free with his hugs, easy to laugh, a good listener who really heard what you had to say. He was willing to engage in discussion at times when my mother just saw everything as black or white, gray never existed in her world. I was an emotional child- easy to cry, sensitive- my mother didn’t know what to do with it- thankfully my father was always there.
My father was a complicated man; loving on one side, the other side a short fuse with a temper. Giving, but don’t cross him or his vindictive nature would come out. He could cut people off and out of his life. I share many of his traits, and often wonder if it is learned behavior or genetics, or a combination of both. He and I became estranged for almost 14 years through my 30’s & 40’s. His doing, not mine. A new wife, a different life, his ego all contributing factors. I was glad I was old enough to understand the whys, and glad that while I was growing up he had always been there for me. I needed him less as an adult. We reconciled 4 years before he died when I found out he was sick. I thanked him before he died for playing such an instrumental part in my becoming who I was as an adult. The many good qualities I had that I knew came from his teaching.

He grew up poor with an alcoholic father and no education past high school, but succeeded in rising above it and away from it, following the lead of people willing to help him, observing people, paying attention to how they got to where they got to, and reaching those heights himself because of it. Did he have a darker side, yes, but I am happy to remember what was so wonderful about him, and understand where the darkness came from and why it was a part of him and accept it.
He loved music and loved to sing. He had hoped to become a professional singer in his early 20’s, but real life came along and he needed to be able to make a living. His love for music was infused throughout our home-he always sang to us and for us, he played the banjo- old folk songs with verses we could all join in on.
My father recorded a few songs in a studio when he was thinking he could turn his singing into a career. The recordings were on 78 rpm records. Shortly before he died I was able to have the recordings converted to CD. I remembered hearing the recordings as a child, but had literally not heard them in 45 years. At the sound of the first note of him singing, what a rush of emotion- music or a song can always take you back to another place and time- but to hear his voice! What a gift to be able to hear that beautiful voice again.
This week Paula gives us words to choose from. Here are the ones I chose…
First signs of Spring

sempiternal: eternal and unchanging; everlasting
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