19 April 2026

Weekend Wrap-Up

 

in my front flower bed

What a good, but busy, weekend we have had around our house!

It's Sunday evening, about 7:15 and the sun is shining after a cold, dreary, rainy day! It's still chilly but......there's no snow like in the mountains and it IS Spring in the Northeast where it tends to be very fickle. 

Friday was a gorgeous day...it actually got up to about 83 degrees!  I did some housework in the morning and then my husband, who works from home on Fridays, wanted me to dash over to Lowes for him so I did that. I had had horrible low back pain all day Thursday and couldn't figure out why, until I remembered I had lifted 2 bags of garden soil (no, not at the same time) but by Friday morning, after icing, doing the fitness ball routines, yoga stretches and rubbing Deep Blue on it, I woke up with no pain and it stayed away! After the Lower errand and a lunch of fresh raw veggies and garlic hummus with whole grain crackers, I repotted some flowers I had bought and finished cleaning the deck. 


repotted violas, a new solar lantern 
and a swept off deck





 I also prepared the wildflower mini garden for putting seed down in a few weeks, and prepared and planted morning glory seeds in what I call my trellis garden. 

This little mini  garden is where wildflowers will grow 
later this year....this is located in a corner of our backyard near the firepit 
and the white pine tree. 

This will be where (hopefully!) morning glories will grow and climb.
I had really nice ones here from 1996-2020 and then they just vanished. 
That green plant you see is some kind of wildflower that grew last summer. 
It felt great to get all the leaves and dead stuff out and get the new soil down 
and some seeds planted after they soaked overnight in a cup. 

I'm actually also growing some  morning glory seeds in a pot to be transplanted into the ground come mid-May when the threat of frost is finally over here in eastern NY. 

After an early dinner of slow cooker sloppy joes, steamed broccoli, and tossed salad, Dave had a gaming thing he wanted to do, and I took a library book I was finishing up, outdoors to sit by the pear tree. It's a bit stinky (It's a type of pear tree that looks gorgeous but has a yucky scent).  Needless to say, I moved to the deck after  finishing a chapter. It's so pretty though in bloom!

I noticed our yellow and pink tulips were finally open!  I love tulips! I took one pic (at top of this post) before the pink ones were fully opened and I haven't had a chance to take more yet. 


  I also drove over to a part of the bike path, after lunch,  that parallels the Mohawk  River that I sometimes power walk or bike on.  I hadn't been to this section of the bike path (aka the Empire Trail aka the Erie Canal Trail) since last October.  I spied this baby turtle in the grass sunning himself. 



Friday evening  found me finishing up a movie on Netflix  while Dave had a gaming event he was involved with. I finished the book and wrote up a book review for my blog and also wrote for the next letter in the A-Z Challenge. 

Saturday morning we had to go to the bank where we've had our joint checking and a joint savings  for 36 years!  We are no longer doing business with this particular bank as they have really gone downhill and are no longer getting good reviews.  


We had opened up a new joint checking in a bank closer to our home and are so pleased with the service there.


our new bank for  checking account


 We have our own separate savings accounts and CD accounts in the credit union near our home as well. So we closed out the account, deposited what was left in Dave's savings as his is smaller than mine and we agreed we would use that money for a down payment for him to get a new car next year.  The  credit union is in a new location near where my daughters went to elementary school and only about 3 minutes from our house.  It's a gorgeous new building and even has a coffee station.  We love it!

This is the building where the credit union(Broadview)  is now located although 
the name on the sign is the former one that was there. 



After we ran those two errands, it was time for me to get ready to go meet a friend from my childhood hometown who was driving out to this area and we were going to hike to a firetower that is only open a few times a year. Yesterday was one of those days!  


a very short walk up this old road to the 
firetower cabin and tower

the Cornell Firetower was open so we climbed it
and had an ok view of the Vermont Mt
and the southern Saratoga County Region

a pretty pond walkway at Wilton Preserve/Camp Saratoga

Delgaden Pond
at Camp Saratoga/Wilton Preserve 

The "hike" was disappointing. It was really just a walk, less than a half mile, up an old camp road (Camp Saratoga used to be a Boy Scout Camp and now the town and state allow groups to camp there with a permit). The firetower is kept up by volunteers and is only open to the public a few times each spring and summer. 

The entire preserve is very pretty and I may go back to hike the 2.5 mile loop  around the pond on another day.  It was nice to get together with my longtime friend and get caught up and spend the day outside. It was 72 degrees and only about a 35 minute drive from my house. We had a really good time! 

After our 2 hour jaunt poking around the Boy Scout camp, we parted ways and I drove home to cook some dinner for Dave and I.  We had baked salmon and salad with some leftover new potatoes and zucchini. 

Dave wanted to finish up the gaming event he had started the evening before, so I chose to watch a really good movie on Netflix called Danny Collins with Al Pacino, Christopher Plummer (I'm a huge fan of him), Annette Benning (Love her!) and Jennifer Garner. It was such an endearing film.  That's two films I've seen on Netflix in the last week that were top notch. 


After the movie, Dave was done gaming so he and I spent some time chatting and reading books in bed......we were laughing that we were in bed by 10:30 on a Saturday evening when back in our early years of marriage, we would still be either out with friends, or hosting game nights, or sitting around the firepit.  

Sunday morning we woke up to chilly temps so I went around the upstairs shutting the windows and it was pouring rain! We showered, had breakfast, did our devotions and were in church for the 11 AM service. After church, we spent some time talking with Courtney and Tyler and his parents, then spent some time making plans with our "third daughter" Hannah (our choir leader and friend) and her hubby Scot who is our Production Manager at church, for them to come over in a few weeks for Sunday dinner. Dave and I were wanting some "comfort food" so we popped over to our local diner and it was PACKED.  There were NO parking spots at all so we drove to the other diner in town and that too had a long waiting line. So...we ended up at my fave Italian place  where I had just gone Wednesday night with some book group friends.  I had driven us to  church so Dave ordered a glass of wine and I had some iced tea.  He got one of the meatball paninis and fries and I ordered a MiniPoint (a 4 slice pizza and a small salad):  I chose the Bruschetta pizza and a Caesar salad. Everything was delicious and I brought home some of the pizza to have tonight.  MidPoint Pizza offers 28 different signature pizzas (you order by the number...the Bruschetta is #7 and my fave the Chicken Pesto is #11) along with "make your own" where you can basically create any pizza you want. They also offer vegan crust and two different kinds of gluten free crust (rice and cauliflower).  You can make any  pizza vegan if you don't order animal meat or cows milk cheese.  Our vegan daughter really likes this place, too. I eat cows milk cheese so I always get mozzarella on my za. 

My lunch


By the time we arrived back home from church and our lunch date, it was 2:30 pm so we changed our clothes and Dave wanted me to watch an old movie from the 1930s with him starring Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert. I had seen it years ago with my dad and now it's available on You Tube for free. 

This movie is considered the stepping off point for Romantic Comedies. It's absolutely beautiful movie and so very funny. 


We spent the rest of the day relaxing, talking, reading and I got caught up on some blog reading. 

 

How was your weekend?? 






18 April 2026

P is for PATIENT

 


Today's letter is P and the attribute I'm writing about regarding God is PATIENT.

God is patient. 

Sometimes Scriptures use the word "longsuffering". 

ONe song we sing often in church is this one:  highly encourage you to watch it. 



How He longs for us all to come to Him.

To know Him.

To do Life with Him in a coveant relationship. 

It's not religion. It's relationship. 

It's real. 

He is so very patient to wait for us. 





17 April 2026

2026 Book Review #14:Home Another Way

 

The art work on this novel's cover is what drew my eye into taking this book out of our town library...that and the fact that the author is a Christian who lives  in our area! The biography blurb says she attends Redeemer Church (the book is copyrighted 2008) and that's the  church a former pastor of my founded which now is son is senior pastor over! A good friend of mine and a member of my book group goes there as well. 

STORY SUMMARY

Sarah Graham is a lonely young women who lives a very secular life. She sleeps around and is always broke. 

Shortly after her estranged father, Luke, dies, she goes to the small mountain town of Jonah, New York, to aquire her inheritance. But there's a catch: she has to live in his cabin for 6 months. 

While in this somewhat simple, backwards, but loving community of people, she learns more about her past and needs to face her future in ways that she wasn't expecting.  
She meets the local pastor and learns of his connection to her father. 

Sarah is a tough young woman. She refuses to trust and open her heart.....until one day she learns the real truth about her father and her life changes. 

MY THOUGHTS

This is a really good Christian fiction book and it isn't predictable at all or sappy (which I find most Christian fiction to be!). 

The character development is rich and diverse.  
The setting reminds me of some of the small hamlets in the central part of the Adirondack mountains where I love to hike. 
It cracked me up when the author uses the fictional name Gloverstown in the story.  Gloversville is the real place and my sister Hope used to live and work there and I have many relatives on my mom's side of the family who are connected to Gloversville. I pass through that town often on my way to the southern Adirondack region to swim, kayak or hike.  

The author's depiction of the hard knock lives of mountain folk is so spot on. 

I love this story because the chraracters are so life-like....like I know them.  

The authentic faith of some of them really shine in this story. 
Yet the author doesn't paint the picture of perfect Christians.....all of the characters have some kind of flaw...but they are faithful to God and to their pastor and the church.  Even the pastor confesses to his congregation, an old sin, which shows that even pastors do mess up and that the mercy and grace of God is abundant for anyone. 

The main themes in this story seem to be:  loneliness, grace, redemption, forgiveness, emotional healing, friendship, and overcoming bitterness. 

I love the ending and although  I was surprised by it, I was happy that it wasn't predictable. 

In my opinion, this book is appropriate for ages 14 and older. 

On a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the highest, I rate this a 10.



O is for OMEGA

 


The letter O is featured today in the A-Z Writing Challenge. 

My theme is Attributes of God. 

O is for OMEGA!


The most famous Scripture that talks about God being the first and last letters of the Greek Alphabet, Alpha and Omega (First and Last) is found in the book of Revelation.  



The words symbolize to us that God is the finisher of all things...the Eternal and Infinite Creator. 


The Scripture declares the Sovereignty of God and marks Him as sovereign over time and history. 

  
He was.





        He is (the eternal creator)




    

And He is coming again!



It's a mystery but somehow....someday....God will be the end to those who thirst for the Living Water. 

I love this quote  from John Piper:


"God is a never-ending omega for every man: either as a fountain of eternal life or as a winepress of wrath and a lake of fire. We need to remind ourselves again and again that our lives will end in God" (From the article I Am Alpha and Omega from Desiring God website by John Piper c.1984)


And here is a song we sing in  church about the Great I Am!


and this one that that we sing in church also: