Uncategorized

Just Beachy

cropped-cropped-myrtle-beach-retired3.jpg

Every Child Left Behind

Well the end of summer is finally here and we are seeing what it’s like for that September beach vacation we all wonder about.  I can tell you that yes, the water is still warm, the beaches are still awesome and the weather is typical hot with showers, just like summer.  But the crowd is different: toddlers and seniors, not teenagers.  And of course, less crowds altogether.  The teacher in both of us still wonders why we see a dozen or more school-aged students still around.  Isn’t every school in session right now?  Oh, well, maybe home-schooled or just vacationing.  Still, we kinda want to ask “why aren’t you in school?” (and of course, “Is that gum in your mouth?”)

Thanks for the shirts, Bernie!

Thanks for the shirts, Bernie!

Anyway, Myrtle Beach has a nice beach and we are right on it. Not with our RV, although there are several RV parks that are right on the beach. We are using our time share points for this week. Lots of pools and hot tubs at this resort; several walks along the beach and a bike ride to stay active. Local happy hours have been good for inexpensive meals of finger foods and seafood.

Complaint department:  Let me share one frustration about using a time share that you own . . . while using the vacation you paid for, you have to fight off the “upsell” that happens every time.  To get your parking pass you have to visit a separate desk, where they try to schedule you for a complimentary breakfast or lunch and maybe $50 (which experience has taught us takes hours and is a timeshare sales pitch) and find yourself having to explain that all you want to do is relax.  Then you receive phone calls about your “welcome gift” which has to be presented to both adults and consists again of the Q&A about extra vacations, more points and such.  Be careful about the morning coffee and snacks for owners – heavily populated by sales staff.  So can you ever just use the vacation and not be pushed to buy more vacation???  Guess not.

Great view of the beach!

Great view of the beach!

 

Happy hour at local spot

Happy hour at local spot

 

Beach chairs

Beach chairs that say it all . . .

 

Back of car decal

The heck with ‘Salt Life’ – THIS one is on my car.

 

Good Deed ReDo

Ok, you remember the day that I helped push a wheelchair across the beach (with the brake still on)?  Sitting on the beach this week, there was another couple using a wheelchair across the sand.  I figured I would try once again to help out, so I helped pull the chair (a regular wheel style) across the sand and up the ramps back to the hardscape of the resort.  No brakes on . . . success!

On the way back home …

Just had to stop for a brew and sandwich!

Just had to stop for a brew and barbecue!

We head home at the end of this week, via Charleston (never been there yet) and a quick visit with my parents in Hilton Head.  Southend Brewery was a cool spot to sample some craft beer and eat some barbecue.

One week left before we roll out with the RV and the pets on our westward adventure.  Hope we remember to pack everything!  Be sure to check out the Places Gallery where I can post more pictures from our trips, and tell your friends to follow us on the blog!

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

It’s a Hard Knock Life . . . sometimes

To borrow from “Annie” – today was that moment when I felt like I was scrubbing the floor in triumph, only to find my efforts had been undone. Let me explain (and by the way, we are not off on an adventure this week, that is coming up next week).

Getting the van ready for our upcoming trip out West, we wanted to get the black grime off the roof and return it to the bright white that it should be. And looking down on it in the driveway is a daily reminder of just how grimy it has become. So up on the roof of the van I went, bucket and brushes in hand. Naturally, I didn’t want to slip on down to the driveway, so the scrubbing was done on hands and knees. Got it all scrubbed clean by lunch and left it to dry. After lunch, Jackie helped as we repeated much of the hands and knees work to apply a UV protectant to the newly clean roof.

2015-09-03 14.34.32

Sparkling clean roof!

Ok, looks great and should make it through the 6 week trip out West just fine. Except that Mother Nature had other plans. Round about 3 o’clock an intense thunderstorm rumbled through the neighborhood – no kidding, this one had very high winds, rain, hail and explosive lightning and thunder. As you can see, the result is that the very clean roof is covered in branches, pine cones, pinestraw and leaves. Arghh. Well, I guess I know what I am doing tomorrow. Sometimes it is, briefly, a hard knock life.

Arghh... just moments later after the storm.

Arghh… just moments later after the storm.

Afternoon “Relax, Refresh and Rejuvenate”

We stopped by our former middle school this afternoon to meet up with many of our colleagues and friends. They have a nice tradition (thanks to Jen, their Teacher of the Year) of getting together on Thursdays after school to wind down and catch up with each other. It was nice to hear that the school is doing well with new administrators, some new faculty and a whole new crop of 6th graders. Great job, teachers!

I mentioned that I had just read about a recent research study that had implications and some possible explanations for some of the student behaviors and performance issues many of us had witnessed while teaching. You see, sometimes you just scratch your head and wonder why it is so difficult to conduct class, convey a concept or motivate students to jump into the topic and learn all they can. You say things like “it must be something in the water” or “does everyone have ADHD?” or “this lesson always worked in the past.”

The six-year study by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison indicated that growing up in severe poverty affects how children’s brains develop. Educators often hear that poverty affects student achievement, and we respond that we can’t fix poverty or be held responsible for any resulting lack of achievement. That is important to note these days, since teachers are evaluated on student achievement and may soon have their paychecks dependent on that achievement. But how does poverty affect student achievement? This study suggests that poverty affects parts of the brain that controls attention, self-control, planning, inhibition, emotions and complex learning. Those parts of the brain were 8 to 10 percent smaller for children of poverty.

Wow. That is a solid explanation for the exact behaviors teachers find vexing and frustrating – all leading to lower achievement. The study estimated that 20% in score gaps could be explained by the slower brain development. Clearly, poverty does have an impact.

Hey, we are off to Myrtle Beach next week, so look for some beach pictures to be posted.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , | 1 Comment

Hometown Tourists, Part 2

This weekend we spent a little more time visiting the local sights here in Kennesaw and catching up with friends.  Knowing that our good friends “Blind Fate” would be playing at the Burnt Hickory Brewery on Saturday, we hit the micro-brewery to see what it was all about.  Short tour was followed by some sampling of the results.  You can purchase 6 pours, which was enough for Jackie and I to split, or 12 if you are really thirsty.  We liked the lime and sour beers and a pear variety.  The peanut butter cup variation (with something else, maybe graham cracker) was a bit sweet and heavy for me.

Burnt Hickory Brewery

Inside the brewery

We grabbed a stool and a barrel table and got to listen to some great tunes by Blind Fate’s Terri and Dan (joined by a harmonica player, but I missed his name).  Terri even made pretzel necklaces to snack on!  What fun.

Blind Fate Live at the Brewery

Terri of Blind Fate Live at the Brewery

Next stop was the Pigs and Peaches celebration in Kennesaw.  We had barbeque, bar-b-cue, barbecue, BBQ ribs, sandwiches, pulled and slathered with sauce (and some more beer to wash it down).  Checked out the Weber Grill Academy and other booths.  Great afternoon, but was it ever HOT … mid-90’s at least.  It was fun checking out the competition side of things, with all their trailer rigs and special smokers.

Next adventure starts Monday.  We are headed down toward Eatonton and Lawrence Shoals Recreation Area.  This is a Georgia Power managed site that looks like paddleboarding and hiking will be possible.  Just a few days to hike, paddle, explore and relax around the campsite before we do our Labor Day trip to Myrtle Beach.  High Falls State Park was first on our list, but we don’t think there is enough to do for a couple of days staying at the falls.  Will post a few pictures from the camp later in the week.

Thanks for checking in.

Update:
We are the only ones camping here this week, so we have the place to ourselves. If you ever wondered what vacationing in August is like, it’s quiet.
Lake Oconee is warm, clean and lined with granite outcroppings. Wonderful for paddling and swimming.

Busy day paddleboarding.  Time to relax.

Busy day paddleboarding. Time to relax.

 

Lake Oconee Selfie

Loving this. We are the only campers in the place!

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hometown Tourists

Isn’t it funny how most of us don’t play tourist in our own town? There are so many places and events around us that we always mean to stop and visit, but somehow never do. Well this weekend we checked out a few of those places with my son Alex and his girlfriend Bethany.

It all started with something that is all too familiar, however: spending time at Lowe’s and Home Depot to search out stuff for his new house. We looked at bath fixtures, lighting, cabinets and countertops, power tools and … well, you know how it goes when you are fixing up your first house. But heck, we got lunch out of the deal: hot dogs from the AC reps at each store. Actually, the only thing we bought was some shelving at Aldi’s (our favorite place to shop) that was a great deal.

Taking a selfie at Kennesaw Craft Beer Fest. “Is this thing on?”

Back to playing tourists. This past May, Jackie and I went to our first beer festival, the Kennesaw Craft Beer Fest. Great day, hot as heck but lots of great sampling of local craft beer (did you even know we HAD local craft and micro breweries?). Represented was the Kennesaw Burnt Hickory Brewery, among others, and I found out that Ale Yeah! was a new shop that had opened in town that featured local brews. So that lingering curiosity finally got us in the door of Ale Yeah!. Little old house that now sports 16 craft beers on tap. If you have kept up with changes in Georgia law and craft brewers, you will know that you can now buy a container (called a growler) of your choice of draft, craft beer and take it home for consumption.

Since we couldn’t decide which we would like, we opted for a flight of 4 pours each (little 4 oz. brandy snifter type glasses). We spent the next half hour or so trying to match up the flavors with the names and share our thoughts (peach flavors were a hit, as was pumpkin ale, raspberry was pretty sweet, some of the IPA’s very hoppy). I am by no means an expert, nor a big beer person anyway, but it made for a lot of discussion.

Lazy Guy Distillery

Lazy Guy Distillery

Not finished with our day about town, we drove about a block away and joined a tour of the Lazy Guy Distillery. This is a great little whiskey distillery, right in town.  Very informative tour was followed by a sampling of some of their whiskey and bourbon. Yikes, some of them had a definite kick of proof, but several were very smooth and others were infused with coffee, vanilla, cinnamon. How fun. Saturday tours are free, but if you pay for the tour you can take home a souvenir bottle of whiskey.

Anyway, we had a good time playing tourists. Still need to go back and visit the Burnt Hickory Brewery and check out the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History (home of “The General”). How funny that you sometimes never check out what is right there in your own home town.

Monday's Blueberry Peach Pie adventure

Blueberry Peach Pie

And now it is Monday and I am NOT back at work (retirement is cool), just staring at a bowl of peaches that are in need of peeling and slicing. Hmm. There is a package of pie crusts in the fridge along with some fresh blueberries, so today’s adventure is making a peach and blueberry pie. It was five cups of fresh peaches and blueberries with some flour, lemon juice, cinnamon and stevia inside two refrigerated pie crusts.  The result was amazing for my first effort, and it was OK to have a piece at lunch, since I did my 4 mile walk already this morning.  Too bad the picture isn’t scratch and sniff, cause it was good.

Until the next adventure …

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Good Deeds of Summer

Our next big camping adventure is a few weeks away and we await a call that our body repair parts are in and ready to install (I think this one will be a while). We just spent the weekend with family in Nashville, enjoying the Tomato Arts Festival, then swimming and paddleboarding in Percy Priest Reservoir.  Our friends are all busy back at school (gosh it is nice to have morning coffee on the deck and read the paper).  Now might be a good time to tell the tale of a good deed gone slightly awry this summer, plus a few things learned along the way.

While we were camping in St. Augustine at Anastasia State Park, we spent the days on the beach or bobbing in the surf. If you have never been to that beach, let me clue you in a bit: it is wide as heck and quite the trek from car to water’s edge, “the desert.” You had to be sure you had something on your feet, because halfway to the water you would realize your feet were burning. Anyway, we would make the trek across this desert in the morning, our beach cart loaded with chairs and provisions, and set our chairs at water’s edge to relax and enjoy.

As we were sitting and sipping one afternoon, we noticed a beach wheelchair in the shallow water at low tide, empty. We made a couple of snarky remarks about how strange it was that nobody seemed to be concerned about an empty wheelchair at the edge of the surf and such. Next day we noticed the same wheelchair and the picture became clearer. Grandma was sitting in a beach chair beside the wheelchair, helped there by her daughter. Nice day at the beach. At the end of the afternoon, as most everyone was packing up and heading out across the desert in search of the parking lot, I saw that grandma was in the wheelchair near the guard stand and her daughter was loaded up with chairs, umbrellas, towels and bags getting ready to make the march across the sand. “I’ll be right back for you, Mom,” she said as she set off. Grandma was faced into the sun and looked like it had indeed been a long day in the sun.

It really was a loooong walk across the sand.

It really was a loooong walk across the sand.

I felt I couldn’t just watch this play out and not do something, as grandma must have suffered a stroke recently and was so dependent on her daughter for mobility. I popped up, declared to the guards that I was not in fact stealing grandma, but helping return her to the car that lay on the other side of the Sahara there. So began my good deed, as I tried to chat up grandma and put her at ease. I shared that my mother-in-law had also suffered a stroke and it was a tough recovery. As I pushed and pushed, I heard her mumble and point to her left side and arm. I assumed she was trying to share that her left arm had been affected, as I continued to heave and push the wheelchair through the soft sand.

Yes, it is a wide beach!

Yes, it is a wide beach!

Maybe halfway across the expanse I thought that I shouldn’t complain about my Tommy Bahama beach cart, because pushing this wheelchair was a REAL effort (and why was I huffing and puffing so bad?). I mean, you have these big balloon tires and all and grandma really wasn’t that big a woman, but gosh you really had to dig down and lean into it to move across the sand. At last we made it to the boardwalk and sidewalk and we moved along to the outdoor showers.

It was about then that her daughter saw us on her way back from packing the car and saying “Oh thank you so much . . . that was so kind, it’s such a long walk.” “My pleasure,” I declared (wondering if it really was) and we had a quick chat about her mother, who has Alzheimer’s and had fallen recently, bruising her arm and hip. Not the stroke I had assumed. “Ok, Mom, let’s wash the sand off,” she announced as she stepped to the back of the wheelchair and started to push. “Oh look, the brake’s still on …”

“Arghhhh,” I growled, “no wonder it was so hard to push through the sand.” And come to think of it, grandma WAS trying to tell me something about the left side of the chair, if I had been paying attention. Ok, so we all had a good laugh and chuckled about how no good deed goes unpunished.

“But we forgot your water bottle, Mom.” Just then, as it happened, a little girl arrived from the beach with the bottle and a towel and said “I saw you left these behind so I brought them to you.” How nice, another good deed. “But that’s not our towel.” “No problem,” I chirped. “I’m headed back across the sand anyway.” So back I went across the hot sand to return the towel to the young lady by the lifeguard stand who was wondering where her towel had disappeared to. “It was nothing,” I said, and then quickly splashed my way into the waves to recover from what really WAS something. I did feel better for having helped out, tempered by the thought that I still had to pack up the Tommy Bahama beach cart for one more trudge across the desert.

Some things learned along the way this summer:

  • Unless you want to listen to the piercing, beeping reminder that your leveling jacks are not fully retracted, take time to spray and wipe them with a dry lubricant while they are extended and before you pull up stakes.
  • Chigger bites do indeed itch for about 2 weeks and there isn’t much you can do about them.
  • Charge a spare camera battery and bring it with you on a photo hike.
  • Strong sun can overheat your cell phone and make it shut down. I think that might also have been the problem with my 35mm digital camera.
  • The dry, clean camp shower stall is the one with the worst water pressure.
  • You CAN survive a tire blowout in 95 degree heat if you have good insurance.
  • A countertop ice maker really can come in handy!

Next up is our trip to Myrtle Beach just after labor day (using a time-share week) and then we begin preparations to leave for the West.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hey, Hey Harrison Bay

Great weekend!  Have to update you that we never made the camping trip with our granddaughters due to late work on the van for the wheel bearing repair.  We spent the time instead watching the Minions movie and baking brownies and cupcakes (just a little mishap that involved brownie dough, a ziplock “pastry” bag that didn’t lock and clean-up on Aisle 4).

Back to this weekend … we started things off on Friday by hosting a back-to-school lunch for some of our former teaching colleagues on the deck.  Everyone was surprisingly excited to talk about a new, upbeat start to the year with a new administration and some needed changes in philosophy.  Good company and good food.  Bernie presented us with two t-shirts we love: “Retired Teacher – Every Child Left Behind.”  We will be thinking about them on Monday morning when we don’t get up early and head to school to greet new students. Our best wishes for a stress-free and successful year for our friends in the classroom.

B2S Lunch 3 B2S Lunch 2 B2S Lunch

Then we packed up the van, car, paddleboards, pets and bikes to head up to the Chattanooga area to camp the weekend and visit with my son, his girlfriend and her parents. Sort of a last-minute reservation, but we were surprised to find a really nice location on Chickamauga Lake in Harrison Bay State Park.  The lake is beautiful, but our loop of the campground is mid-renovation.  That meant that this very wooded site had just had it’s water and electric service upgraded and all the roads and campsites were pretty much torn up, with lots of gravel spread around everywhere.  Plus, these pull-through sites and access were pretty tight and none really level.  But Jackie knows her stuff and she got the leveling blocks under the wheels and hydraulic lifts so we were level in no time.  We scouted around the park on bikes to learn that there are much nicer sites, some along the waterfront, that we might consider for next visit.

Harrison Bay campsite Harrison Bay Harrison Bay at night

Saturday was a good time for paddling around the lake edges, with lots of wake waves to negotiate (oops, fell a rare time).  Alex, Bethany and her parents gave it a try and were pretty good at it.  We spent the evening finishing off the salads left from lunch and several delicious rib-eyes, with stories about Bethany and Alex’s time in Spain this summer.  Did I mention that he really did run with the bulls in Pamplona? (well, he admits it was behind the bulls).  Sangria was the celebratory drink of the evening, complimented by some Manchego cheese.

Well, what should be our next adventure?

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , | 2 Comments

The Bird That Got Away

You may recall my misadventures in Florida trying to get the Roseate Spoonbill on camera. First sighting was in a marsh on paddleboards with no camera. Then Jackie and I went back to hike along that marsh, finally spotting the bird and clicking away with the camera, only to find out a glitch with the camera did not record the shots. I resigned myself to enjoying the first-hand experience of spotting the bird in the wild and not worry about getting the shot.

Yesterday, my nephew Adam gave me a good laugh while pointing out his superior tour guide skills. You see he is a kayak tour guide in coastal South Carolina this summer and spends a good deal of time guiding kayaking tourists around the marshes and waterways in search of wildlife. He sent me a couple of pictures with the statement that he has been seeing quite a few of the spoonbills lately on tours. Arghh – I mean, good for him. “You should sign up for a tour,” he said. He did mention their unofficial motto is “tip the guide, not the boat,” and that sort of wildlife spotting would definitely be worth a tip.

spoonbill flight

Adam got the shot!

spoonbill

Roseate Spoonbill, courtesy of kayak guide Adam.

This friendly one-upmanship seems to run in our family. While visiting the area just a week ago, I spotted what I thought could have been a Mississippi Kite over the pond at my parent’s house. While at the pool with family I asked Vickie (Adam’s mom) if she thought that was possible and she said “Oh yeah, we see one around here all the time, in fact it’s circling overhead just over there.” Duh. So I posted the shot of the kite I took earlier flying away from me (getting good at those flying-away-from-me shots).

We pause for a moment to point out that as I am writing this, I notice the twin fawns and mom are walking across my driveway, munching their way across the front lawn.

And not so long ago my daughter Karina said she would be getting a great shot of a bald eagle before I would – yeah, right. She did indeed get the shot before me, printed, framed and presented to me as proof. Of course she had to go to Kodiak Island, Alaska to get it, along with gorgeous scenery and Kodiak bears. She is some stiff competition for photos.

My chance at meeting the challenge came earlier this year when a Bald Eagle perched on a branch at my parent’s pond, swooped down to catch a fish, then flew to the bank to re-grip it. I scrambled to get the shot only to find a dead battery – no shot once again. But I did get the “live shot” of witnessing wildlife up close and personal. Maybe that is the best kind.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Pan Am Games and memories

You probably don’t know it, but this summer in Toronto, Canada they are hosting the Pan American Games. This event doesn’t get much play in the US media, but it is important for many of the summer sports, as it serves as an Olympic qualifier for many of the teams and athletes. It reminded me of a summer not so long ago (2003) just before I started teaching and a whole series of events that took place that year in the small world of USA Team Handball.  Let’s hop in the wayback machine and have a look.

ATH won 2003 US Nationals Gold

ATH won 2003 US Nationals Gold

Building on the success of the local club that Coach Cap, Cathy H. and I started called Atlanta Team Handball, I was named as the Vice President, Men’s Program for the sport’s federation (USATH). That meant it was my responsibility to field junior and senior men’s teams for regional and international competitions. Since the Pan Am Games were to be played later that summer of 2003 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, Head Coach Cristian Zaharia and I had to hustle to get the best team possible in the best shape possible with almost no money. I was named Chef de Mission (head of delegation) for the men’s and women’s teams and Cristian and I got an early look at the venues early that spring with the rest of the USOC delegation.

Back in the states we held tryouts and made our team selection. Most of the team stayed and trained at a seminary on Long Island (great hosts) early summer. Knowing that the only way to get strong competition for our players was to compete internationally, we then took the team to Assen, Netherlands to train and stay at a military base and compete against their national team. Awesome experience and wonderful hosts.

Getting ready for the games, all teams were processed in Tampa with credentials and gear, then flew into Santo Domingo. We stayed in their Olympic Village (awesome food, by the way) and trained at the venue until the competition began. We battled in pool play against powerhouse teams from Argentina and Brazil (the favorites) and teams from Canada, Puerto Rico, Nicaragua, Uruguay, Mexico and Peru … at least I think that was the roster. We found ourselves in a game against Brazil that was actually starting to turn in our favor and we almost won. Once it was all over, we came in third, earning the first Bronze medal for the men’s program since 1991. It was all pretty heady at the time.

2003 Pan Am Games Bronze Medal winners USA!

2003 Pan Am Games Bronze Medal winners USA!

As I look at the competition for this year’s Pan Am Games, there is no team from USA, which is so unfortunate. The momentum that had built up from Atlanta Team Handball through the Bronze medal finish dissolved with infighting among board members and a lack of funding outside the USOC. A few governing boards later and it looks like some veterans are back in play with the board, but so much time and talent has been lost to a sport that athletes love to play and crowds love to watch.

I should point out that Atlanta Team Handball ran a recreation league using the gym at my middle school (before I was teaching there) and several of the students from the school were part of Junior and Senior men’s teams that traveled and competed internationally. Team handball is still played there during PE and the court has permanent team handball lines on it (which is pretty rare).

Ok, well that ends the trip down Doug’s memory lane. Next adventure should be a trip with the granddaughters to High Falls State Park near Macon, just as soon as the van has the wheel bearing fixed (scheduled for this week).

7/27 UPDATE: The games are now over, you can check the final results at the link (1:Brazil, 2:Argentina, 3:Chile).

Link to the Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games schedule: http://results.toronto2015.org/IRS/en/handball/schedule-and-results.htm

Link to USA Team Handball: http://www.teamusa.org/usa-team-handball/news

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , | Leave a comment

Coastal Encounters

Great weekend just ended.  Visited with my parents in coastal South Carolina and also my brother Jeff and wife Vic.  We launched his boat and Jeff navigated to Harbortown, where we swam just off South Beach.  We were joined by a very curious and friendly dolphin who gave us the once-over.  Since we were already in the water, Jackie figured she could get a bit closer, but the dolphin remained cautious.  Jeff snapped these two shots quickly .. how cool.

Jackie's dolphin encounter

Jackie’s dolphin encounter

Dolphin checking us out

Dolphin checking us out

We circled around Daufuskie Island on the way back, although we had to wait for the tide to rush in to make it over a sandbar blocking the way.  Heading for the May River sandbar “Redneck Riviera” we spotted a few wood storks in flight, among the many other egrets and herons.  Later in the weekend I watched a Mississippi Kite circling the pond next to my parents house, (along with osprey, herons, ibis and egrets) but alas my photo doesn’t do the bird justice.  Much more of a grey head and body than the Swallowtail Kite, and not the forked tail.  Great bird.  I am getting a new appreciation for wildlife photographers, as I struggle to get these birds in the lens and in focus.  Ah, well.

Wood storks in flight

Wood storks in flight

Mississippi Kite

Mississippi Kite

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , | Leave a comment

Monday Group Therapy

It looks like there are a lot of views for the site, so now I feel an obligation to post regularly about what’s going on, even if it isn’t a camping adventure.

Had a great meet-up this Monday with friends at Kennesaw Mountain for a walk – just about 5 miles for some of us who needed to get in the steps.  Karen, Kevyn, Jennifer, Jennifer with her dog Molly, Starr, Carla, Lynzee and Anna were there for the morning walk-and-talk.  Something of a group therapy session, since we could chat about the good and bad of the recent year of teaching.  I didn’t get a picture, but I think Kevyn did, and if he wants to share one, I will post it.  Most of the conversation was about how short the summers are for teachers and how it really has become a working vacation for most of us.  For those of you who aren’t teachers and who might be saying “hey, you get the summer off, quit complaining” our answer would be “try a year of teaching and you will understand how much you need a few weeks off” (without pay, I might add) to decompress, get caught up with your normal life and just unwind from the stress.

Unfortunately, the summer weeks have become required staff development and training, often unpaid.  Several walking with us will spend the next 2 weeks in science or math training sessions to learn the updated curriculum and new ways to teach students.  Not that math is really any different or science has suddenly changed, just that there are “new” ways to present the material, new terminology and new pacing guidelines to increase the all important student achievement.  Bit of editorializing there, but it was supported by an article in the AJC this week detailing how much is expected of teachers now, with so little in return.  I could go on about all the crazy expectations of teachers, but I will save that for another day.

Back to camping and RV adventures for a moment.  I made a little “hitch helper” for the hitch end of our tow dolly this week that makes moving it around much easier.  Essentially three caster wheels on a board with a 2″ hitch ball so you can hitch the tow dolly to it and roll it around as needed.  Right now it is rolled under the back of the RV and taking up no more space in the driveway.   (After using it a bit, I would probably redesign it to include a balanced 4 casters or cut the wood as a triangle).  Also, we just booked two weeks back in St. Andrews State Park for next June at the site next to the one we had this year — Yippee!  If you are planning to be camping in the state park next year at that time, let us know — and if you aren’t, why not?

hitch dolly

Tow dolly attached to the new “hitch helper.”

Hitch dolly 2

Side view of casters and hitch ball.

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.