Around Here Week 32 Part 2: 08/07-08/11

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

A glimpse into what it was like to live in our home just this (last part of a) week:







































Intentional Outdoor Hours:  513+ hours (of 1000)
Up 52 hours in the last part of this week alone in huge part to camping- in which I racked up 16, 22, and 7 hour days over the weekend! The difference to my soul is palpable. I know this is broken record over here all the time, but honestly - what the whole world needs is to go outside and breathe some fresh air and see the birds all the way up in the sky, and watch the ants crawl in the grass, and listen to the winds rustle the leaves.

Reading Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick your Ass by Meg Medina. It is really good and I am loving Piddy's perspective through high school, so so interesting and relatable for young people I think. Greyson was very sweet (and trying to be sneaky) this week when he casually questioned me about our next Books & Brews book choice. I told him that it was You Think It, I'll Say It by Curtis Sittenfeld and guess who surprised me with an early birthday present on Saturday after his Gigi helped him buy it at the book store? That Greyson Rudy, he knows his momma's heart.

Half Marathon Training this week: 9 miles
I did a lot of substituting of runs this week (bleh). I substituted our 1000 steps hike for my 3miler that day and then my mom & I brisk walked 4.5 miles at camp on Saturday evening in place of my 5miler. Yikes. After a full day on Sunday night, I bumped my 3mile to Monday. Good grief! I need to get back on track - the half marathon is scheduled for Oct 26!

Swinging by my classroom and discovering that everything I ordered at the end of the school year had arrived! Gah, totally geeked out over all the new language learning novels that arrived, my school supplies (post its, crayons, and index cards galore), and new posters and signs that will give students quick reference for using Spanish in class. So.Excited! B came down to help hang up some of my decorations that go on the ceiling #shortteacherprobs while Rustman got out every prop I own from my closet to try them on. Ja ja!

Hiking up 1000 steps to celebrate my mumma's birthday. She mentioned to my sisters and I that she wanted to try to do it earlier this summer and we were all available on her actual birthday to make the trek. The trail is in Huntingdon (a little over an hour away) and we chatted the whole way out in Sheila with my sisters, Mom, and Becky (one of mom's besties who shares the same birthday!) It was pretty humid, but Abba, Kitty, and I made it all the way to the top! My mom was such a rockstar - it's a really challenging trail, especially on her 59th birthday (!) and I am so proud of her for pushing for the next 100 steps the whole way until she made it to the top. Happiest birthday, mumma.

Organizing for the upcoming school year. I made lists of things to do around the house and things we need to do to be ready for school. I purchased this rolling cart on Amazon to turn into a mobile homework cart. I meal planned for the rest of the month, and the two biggest kids and the parents had our yearly eye appointments!

Stocking up on our camping supplies! We bought a new tent that can fit all of us (plus some!), a cast iron skillet for Dad's famous camp breakfasts, and a new canopy tent because ours busted this summer after baseball season.

Camping at the Quemahoming Dam from Friday to Sunday. The Que is less than 10 minutes from our house, and it is gorgeous - so it's the perfect getaway for our family. We can still run home in the morning and evening to tend to the dogs and chickens which makes it so convenient. I thought I had reserved our favorite spot, but it turned out I read the map wrong and reserved the spot right next (#35) to it (oops!) Even still, it actually ended up being pretty lovely and the people staying in our favorite spot (#34) let the kids use the rock that juts out in the lake to jump from for swimming. (They had the sweetest pup with them too named Kevin that our kids adored).

Not sleeping for more than 15 minutes at a clip on Friday night at camp because it was so cold and so uncomfortable. Brandon and I woke up and walked out to the fire on Saturday morning and looked at each other and both started cracking up because oh.my.gosh. He said, "We can't do that another night." and I said, "I think permanent damage has been done to my spine." and he said, "I slept with my hoodie up and tightened all the way so there was just a small hole open so I could breathe." and I said, "I slept on my stomach with my face in my elbow crook so my own breath would keep it warm." We upgraded on Saturday night with more blankets and the pads from our patio furniture and it was slightly better; tolerable.

Sorrynotsorry that I took 50 pictures of the moon over the lake while camping this weekend.

Thankful for the calmness that the outdoors brings to our kids' hearts, minds, and bodies. It feels like everyone has the wide open space to be their best selves when we spend massive amount of time outdoors. Especially, Grey, who completely turns into a different kid. His normal restlessness and persistent teasing of his siblings falls away and he becomes quietly inquisitive, creative, and slow moving. He took his kayak out and trolled in the lake, fiddled with a homemade bottle fish/crayfish trap, and fished off the bank for hours.

Resolving that even though I don't love camping, there are enough glorious, incredible, perfect moments throughout the camping trip that I can see how valuable it is to our family. As a big family with parents both in education, we don't have bank enough to take these kids on a proper vacation. But camping gives us all those memories and more (and at the Que, right in our neighborhood)! The kids l.o.v.e. camping with every little fiber in their bones. And so for them, just like most things, yeah - this momma can do it.

Visiting my great grandparents' home in Patton, PA with our family. The kids had so much fun playing with their distant Adams cousins while we meandered around the farm listening to stories from long ago from my Dad and our cousin David (who lives there today). Grey was so pumped to fish in the pond and yanked out bass, crappies, and sunnies while the other kids zoomed all over the yard on four wheelers.

Wandering through the Smithmyer's Sunflower Maze on Sunday evening with Chum, Abba, Kitty, Uch, and Kevin. They have hundreds (thousands?) of sunflowers in a field with a path mazed throughout. The kids tried to complete their scavenger hunt and we all marveled at how beautiful the flowers are and watched as the bumblebees buzzed by. We all went out to dinner together afterwards too (celebrating Abba's birthday) and it was the perfect ending to a fun and nature filled weekend!

Fall Sporting with one cheer practice this week where I taught the girls half of their halftime dance! They did so great and I am impressed with how quickly they caught on. Now, just to get them to learn the stunt (oh boy!) Brandon and Grey had three football practices and started tackling this week.

Frugal Living by ordering my Walmart pick up through the Ibotta app ($3 back each time!), meal planning for the rest of the month, and using mason jars that we already had to help keep our supplies organized on our new homework cart.

Making hot dogs, kielbasa, and sauerkraut in the crockpot and peanut butter protein bites for dessert. At camp we had mountain pies, lunchmeat sandwiches, walking tacos, and cinnamon rolls over the campfire!

Keto'ing and cheat-o'ing off and on between mini vacations. We have been eating tons of almonds (#obsession) and trying to make better choices even while cheat-o'ing. I am going back to strict keto after our mini vacation week and B is going to go more lazy keto since now he's lost more weight than he wanted (ugh. boys.) Despite no weight changes (still), I had a non-scale victory this week! I switched my Fitbit bracelet to the small size because it was too loose even on the tightest setting!

August Meal Plan

Friday, August 9, 2019

I have been doing terrrrrible at meal planning this summer, and we've just kind of been throwing our meals together at night with whatever we have available at the house. It's been working out alright somehow, but it's not making feel great about not having 'real meals' for family dinners.

Part of my back-to-school prep includes making sure that we are stocked and planned for the first week of school with dinners. We have been doing Keto for over two months now and we've slowly been incorporating our kids into eating more keto-type foods (low carb/non-processed foods). So we are making the full transition come the school year, because ain't no momma got time for making two meals at dinnertime!

In an attempt to hold myself accountable, I'm sharing the rest of the month plans here. Send over some inspiration too for back-to-school meals (especially Keto-friendly!) please! xxox

grilled pork chops & cheesy baked brussel sprouts

(the rest of) August Meal Plans:

F 8/9: (camping): mtn pie pizzas, bacon & eggs, walking tacos, cinnamon rolls over the campfire

M 8/12: ground turkey & green beans over cauliflower rice
T 8/13: chicken & zucchini casserole
W 8/14: keto chili
R 8/15: grilled salmon (and hot dogs for the kids)
R 8/16: keto pizzas

M 8/19: air fried chicken tenders
T 8/20: taco salads
W 8/21: chicken & brocolli alfredo soup
R 8/22: buffalo chicken stuffed zucchini boats
F 8/23: (teacher in-service!) church picnic grilled chicken & cheesy baked brussel sprouts

M 8/26: (first day of school!) chicken and gravy over mashed potatoes
T 8/27: elote style baked cauliflower and turkey burgers
W 8/28: breakfast for dinner
R 8/29: cheesy chicken & broccolli casserole
F 8/30: creamy lemon cauliflower chicken

Around Here Week 32 Part 1: 08/03-06

Thursday, August 8, 2019

A glimpse into what it is like to live in our home just this mini vacation half week!


































Intentional Outdoor Hours:  461+ hours (of 1000)
Up 18 hours on vacation with plenty of time outside riding, swimming, and exploring while on vacation. I also snagged some of that time thanks to my half marathon training (see below).

Reading and finishing Still Life with Tornado by A.S. King  (loved it!) and then starting Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick your Ass! by Meg Medina which is one of the books for my class from my classroom fairy godmother Ashley from The Big White Farmhouse. I've been hoping to expand my classroom library with English books written by Latinx authors and this one is so good (thank you Ashley!)

Half Marathon Training during vacation: 10 miles
I tried to take Bullet for my 4 mile run on Saturday morning before we left, but he was not having it after about a half mile; literally would not budge. I ended up tying him to a tree in the woods (LOL) and running on without him before circling back. He was just patiently chilling out waiting for me, all like 'momma you cray.' After a 22,000+ step day on Saturday, I didn't have any heart for my 3 mile run on Sunday morning at the hotel. So I walked about half of it, but I got the miles in, even if it was half-assed. Monday was a rest day and then I ran my 3 miles on Tuesday after B got home from football at the CT track and finished just as the stadium lights auto-shut off at 10pm! Count 'em!

Road-tripping to the Eastern side of the state for our mini family vacation. Brandon had a school leader conference at Kalahari convention center, and so we decided to stretch it into a mini vacation for our whole crew. His conference was from Sunday night-Tuesday morning; so I did some research and found a family fun spot to visit on the way there and the way home!

Joyfully screaming while riding all the rides at Knoebels amusement park which was our first stop on our mini vacation. Knoebels is a free admission amusement park where you buy ticket books to ride. The big kids were tall enough to ride everything and they were even brave enough to ride the Impulse with me - their first upside down rollercoaster! I loved the Phoenix which was an olde-time wooden rollercoaster that had us all lifting up out of our seats and banging around giggling the whole ride. The food was reasonably priced, the park is mostly wooded and expansive - so even though there were tons of people, it doesn't feel overly crowded. We got some funnel cake to end the night before driving back to a nearby Hampton Inn to sleep.

Swimming and sliding at Kalahari Waterpark in the Poconos for the second leg of our mini vacay. The indoor water park is huge and has tons of different areas for all ages and interests. The little kids loved the smaller areas and the slides were the perfect size that matched their bravery. There is even a section for teeny tiny kids and everything is wheelchair accessible. All the kids love the wave pool  and the girls loved challenging all of us (and our coworkers) to the Cheetah Races. Grey was obsessed with the Screaming Hyena - this crazy waterslide that the floor drops out and sends you flying down, he must have ridden it 100 times in two days! There were slides with single and double tubes and even a few with four person rafts. The big kids, B and I went down the Wild Wildebeest (4person raft)! There is also an outdoor section that includes a big pool and more kid-friendly waterslides that we spent a lot of time at because the weather was beautiful. We got to stay for two days and two nights while B attended a school leadership conference in their convention center. It seemed like the perfect amount of time to spend there; by the end of day 2 the kids were pretty waterslided out.

I have to be honest though, I felt a little funny about the overwhelming tribal/wild "Africa" theme at the resort. Africa is made up of many countries and is incredibly diverse as a continent as a whole (just like every continent), but only the tribal/wild version of "Africa" was the one that was pushed throughout all the thematic parts of the resort. It all screamed cultural appropriation to me and I had to do some research because it was bothering me so much (The Nelson family who created and owns the Kalahari parks got the theme idea from a vacation to South Africa in 1999). And I was also like, there's no way I'm the only one that thinks this (I'm not, at all).  I will say that Kalahari is making an effort to offset their monetary gain off of all the parts of Africa that they think will sell best by trying to be more socially responsible, but it all still felt a little icky to me. 

Getting pampered bigtime as Brandon and the kids secretly scheduled me an afternoon at the spa for my upcoming birthday. I had a pedicure and a Himalyan Sea Salt 50minute massage. They were both amazing. My masseuse said, 'welcome back' when I finally came out of the room at the end and I laughed and said, "no seriously, I think I was in outer space."

Feeding the animals at the Lake Tobias Wildlife Zoo which was our final stop on our mini vacay. On our way towards home, we made a stop (on the long way home) at this incredible zoo. The zoo is beautiful and the animals are so clearly well taken care of and the admission prices were so affordable ($8 for a walk around ticket, and $15 to include a 'safari tour'). The safari tour was awesome- we had a great tour guide who cracked jokes and could answer any question that we threw at him about the animals. The kids got to feed many animals (elk! fallow deer!) and got to see bison and regal watusi up close! There is a petting zoo that we all about fainted with joy over the goats because we love them so much. There were lizards, alligators, and snakes in the reptile building and we got to hear the hilarious call of the gibbon monkeys. It was honestly my favorite part of our whole trip! I highly recommend a visit here if you are ever in the area; all the staff was kind, knowledgeable and helpful, the whole park is wheelchair accessible, the animal exhibits are all clean and respectful, and the real care and concern for wildlife and educating about each animal is so clear.

Feeling so grateful for Miss Hannah who is our regular Mary Poppins for babysitting the kids, but who this week took on the task as house/dog/chicken -sitter while we were away. She so graciously came to our house twice beforehand to meet & greet with Bullet (he has a lot of new people special needs). We took them both on a walk together (to help him calm down and associate her with one of his joys in life) and then I made sure he was good and tired before we left. She reported to us that they all did great and it was such a huge relief to know that they were all good and in great hands. Thank you Miss Hannah - we love you!!

Fall Sporting with Grey's football practice and weigh-in on Saturday morning before we headed out on the road. Brandon and Grey had football practice when we got home on Tuesday night too. Gem and I were supposed to have cheer practice but on the drive home, Rust started throwing up and so I figured it was best to cancel and just get home and take it easy (baths, resting, and cleaning up)

Frugal Living (vacation edition!) using our excess of credit card points to book our first hotel, so it was 'free.' Packing a cooler of drinks (gatorades, waters, and juice bags for the kids - some adult beverages too for us!) Enjoying complimentary hotel breakfast when available! Eating off site while staying at our nice hotel; we ordered in pizza from a local place one night and then drove about 12 mins the second night to have dinner at a local mom&pop place. The kids and I traveled off-site for breakfast while Brandon was at his conference and then we ate snacks (bought at a grocery store) or leftovers for lunches.

Keto'ing almost not at all! We did a lot of 'cheating' and kept saying "it's vacation!" haha. As I wrote in my Keto update, it's so much about the intentional eating now, so that even though we were 'cheating' we were still doing it in a mindful and aware way.