Roc City Fringe Fest: Week One

Here’s what I saw at the Rochester Fringe Festival on Thursday-Sunday! Check below for my thoughts and recommendations! 

Mariah Maloney Dance at Xerox Auditorium – “Partially inspired by a sparkler dance that her father performed for her while living in an Alaskan cabin with no electricity, LIGHT features MMD’s professional dancers clad in LED costumes – this charming engagement with formalism in post-modern dance will literally light up your life!” I love dance and had really been looking forward to this, but I had mixed feelings about the performance. I was totally enchanted and transported by the evocative music selections that accompanied the dancers in the second half of the show, but the music and choreography in the first 20 minutes felt shallow and without vision and passion. There were two solo dances in the middle that were particularly moving and they were the clear highlight of the performance for me. I wasn’t super impressed with the construction of the LED costumes, which were only in a portion of the show. And I felt like I saw the same choreography repeatedly, but the dancers had lovely technique and all did a fine job. Altogether, I was hoping for more. C.

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Cello Show at Java’s – “What do you get when you combine six saucy lady-cellists, a slick drummer, and a sock-rocking vocalist? The answer is: a show of epic proportions only attainable through the juicy sound of a pop-cello group.” Despite their small and crowded venue (a college hotspot coffee shop), starting over 20 minutes late because they all showed up late and had to fight through the crowds with their giant cellos, and a vocalist that, even with a mic, was difficult to hear over the sounds of a noisy coffee shop, I really enjoyed this free performance. These fierce ladies are good at what they do and have a nice sound. The cello is such a cool instrument and their vibe worked nicely with a bustling coffee shop when mixed with a warm beverage and a relaxing window seat on which to people watch. B. 

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Bandaloop at Washington Square Park/Xerox – “A pioneer in vertical dance movement, the San Francisco company turns the dance floor on its side by seamlessly weaving together dynamic physicality, intricate choreography and the art of climbing. BANDALOOP performs in theatres and museums as well as on skyscrapers, bridges, billboards, historical sites and natural wonders all over the world.” These guys dance vertically on skyscrapers…hundreds of feet in the air. I mean, that’s just plain rad. Really, it’s very cool and they certainly can do some neat tricks and dance moves. But I saw them last year too, so the wonder and awe has worn off a bit for me. I also think it’s a little strange that Fringe chose to bring them back as a headliner for the second year in a row. Once was awesome, but it would have been nice to see something different this year. B.

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TheatreRocs Showcase at Xerox Auditorium – “The TheatreROCS Showcase will provide a living collage of dynamic talent hosted by two of Rochester’s most beloved personalities:  Kasha Davis and Aggy Dune. See previews from Rochester theatres’ upcoming seasons as well as teasers for TheatreROCS Stage at Xerox Fringe shows to come.” Hosted by Rochester’s two biggest personalities – a hilarious and big-hearted duo of glamorous drag performers – this performance offered preview snippets of several upcoming shows from various theatres within the Rochester theatre community. I really enjoyed some of the performances and was less thrilled by others. But everyone was passionate about celebrating and sharing live theatre within this community, which was the most important thing. And it was great to see previews of what’s coming up this season! Highlights were definitely jokes from Kasha and Aggy, music from The Last Five Years and several improv songs based upon topics of the audience’s choosing. B.

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A Thousand Dreams Within Me Softly Burn at George Eastman House – ” The evocative capabilities of the harp are unlimited: at once graceful and dreamy, then fearsome and imposing. This concert uses this power of the harp to transport audiences to the realm of dreams and nightmares through the pairing of acoustic harp music with visual art.” This collaboration between a harpist and local visual artist was awesome. The visuals were almost illusion-like and one thing sort of flowed into another, so each image could be seen as several different things. They were probably 30+ drawings, and the harp music that accompanied it went from soft and dreamy to bold, plucky and nightmarish, showcasing a full range of emotions on the harp to mirror the visual art. Really cool. The venue was intimate and visually interesting, but very tiny. But I think 30-45 minutes would have been an ideal performance time, rather than a hour. A. 

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Human Library at Eastman School of Music – “The Human Library is a mobile library set up as a space for education, dialogue and interaction. Visitors to a Human Library are given the opportunity to speak informally with “people on loan,” who represent a variety of backgrounds and with whom participants might not easily get the chance to engage in an open conversation. This innovative method designed to promote dialogue, reduce prejudices and encourage understanding has been part of many festivals all over the world.” This was phenomenal. There were 18 “books” (people each with a unique story to share that are sometimes faced with stereotype or prejudice) and you could check out a “book” (person) of your choosing at the circulation desk for a 30 minute conversation about who they are, their history, and worldview. You could ask them any question and, even if you don’t subscribe to that worldview, you could have respectful discourse with someone you might otherwise never have had an opprtunity to speak to. An incredible way to break down barriers and learn more about the world and people in it. Books included a vegan activist, homeless single mom turned PHD student, a high school teacher going through a gender change, a Hijab-wearing Muslim woman, a refugee from Sudan, a couple battling anorexia together, etc. It was just way beyond super awesome. A+.

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Dangerous Signs at The Little Cafe – “DANGEROUS SIGNS uses a mix of spoken and sign language poetry to create pieces that are comedic, serious, musical or tell a story.” Students from RIT’s National Technological Institute for the Deaf make up this theatre/poetry/creative movement group. They use sign language along with spoken word, movement and song to tell stories, poetry, and current events. I saw it last year too and I really love what they do. It’s wonderful that the worlds of the theatre, music, and poetry can be shared with everyone. B. 

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Divas Our Way at Xerox Auditorium – “BIG WIGS is a high-energy, Las Vegas-style show featuring Kasha Davis and Aggy Dune, who bring their dead-on impressions to sold-out crowds everywhere. The fast-paced DIVAS OUR WAY includes all of your favorites:  Cher, Tina Turner, Celine Dion, Liza Minnelli, Lady Gaga, Bette Midler and many more.” Amazing. Seriously fabulous. Hilarious. Glamorous. Spot on. Highly entertaining. I enjoyed every single minute of these talented “ladies” (it’s drag) diva show. Don’t miss it….really. A+

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Surround Sound at The Little Cafe – “Surround Sound is RIT’s first and only all-male barbershop group. They specialize in the nearly forgotten art of barbershop music is what sets them apart from the rest. Their music takes advantage of the natural strengths of the human voice, incorporating complex chord structures and glowing harmonics to produce a full, rich sound, even without amplification.” These dudes were stellar. It was fun and uplifting and nostalgic. They sounded so great together and it put a huge smile on my face. I really love the barbershop style and they did not disappoint. They could pack a little more punch on their consonants, but it was a blissful way to spend a cool autumn Sunday afternoon. A.

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Proof of Purchase at The Little Cafe – “Proof of Purchase is the Rochester Institute of Technology’s premier and only co-ed a cappella group. Affectionately known as POP, Proof of Purchase combines the ethereal qualities of the female voice with a strong foundation of male vocals.” I enjoyed this a cappella group too. Their tunes were more contemporary and they added in some percussion with their voices as well. They had a lot of passion and produced a full, vibrant sound. It would be nice if they established more of a dress-code for their members (it just helps pull the look of the group together nicely) and some of their songs could use a bit of cleaning up around the edges, but they did sound really great together. B. 

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Total dollars spent: $0 (Most of the shows were free, but it pays to volunteer because A) it’s a nice thing to do, and B) there are occasional perks)

Next week you need to see: Divas our Way at the Xerox Auditorium! Bring your friends for a fun night out!

Next year don’t miss: The Human Library and Surround Sound

Favorite venue so far: The George Eastman House is an awesome, intimate and visually appealing venue (arrive super early!) but Xerox Auditorium can seat lots of folks comfortably, has a lot of different shows on rotation, and is selling delicious brownies (an obvious plus).

Looking forward to seeing next week: A Man A Magic A Music and Merged both at Geva’s Nextstage, Swingin’ on a Star and Mikaela Davis at the Gibbs Street stage, Get Cut Off at Xerox Auditorium, and the Spiegeltent! Among other things…

*All photos via the Rochester Fringe Fest website. Also, I was not paid to share these thoughts and all opinions are my own. 

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The Weekend According to my iPhone

ZooBrew Friday night…

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Saturday’s dreary rain showers, morning haircut/shampoo/conditioning/style session via a Living Social deal, free birthday venti soy vanilla chai latte with caramel from Starbucks, and hours spent stringing delicate cafe lights across an expansive 14th floor ballroom with awesome views of downtown Rochester while helping my dear, funny, pals over at Writers & Books set up for their 1920s Paris themed Ernest Hemmingway gala (yay for artsy non-profits!) apparently weren’t interesting enough to document via iPhone…so…

Representing Geva at the awesome Clothesline Arts Festival and a morning spent browsing the Memorial Art Gallery on Sunday…

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And Sunday night’s NFL football games, showing of Better Off Dead (which I am pleased to report has gotten no less funny than it was a decade ago when I last watched it), amazing homemade goat and white cheddar mac n’ cheese (a serious rival to my beloved Macarollin’), and lollipops…

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A Weekend Not For Laboring

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{first pic via}

And, on a laborful note (but a joyful one), today I celebrate the anniversary of my first full year at Geva!

Over Labor Day weekend in 2012, I packed everything I could fit into my little white car and left my husband behind for the next nine months in Cincinnati and arrived, pretty much sight unseen (with the exception of my 6-hour interview), in my new home city of Rochester, NY, to start the wonderful job at the wonderful professional theatre that I’d always hoped for, on September 4, 2012.

And it was worth it.

I love this city. I love my friends. I love this theatre. I love my job. I love our life here.

I’m looking forward to an even more exciting year two livin’ and lovin’ in the Roc City – this time with my husband!

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{First day in Rochester}

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Down on the Farm

Carrots

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Sunday morning I was up with the sun and in my car by 7 a.m. driving an hour east past orchards lined with hundreds and hundreds of trees dangling lush, ripe peaches (and equally as many roadside stands selling the very same fresh-picked peaches) into the beautiful farmland of upstate New York to spend my morning on a peaceful farm weeding and harvesting in the rich earth and bright sun.

My friend Becca and I are part of a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) group that brings us fresh vegetables from the family owned and operated Peacework Organic Farm every week from May to November. We split a full share of produce every week that we pick up at Abundance Co-Op near the theatre, and in return for these large bundles of fresh veggies, we pay a small sum of money to the farm (guaranteeing the farm a reliable income), and agree to work a few distribution shifts (weighing, bundling, and handing out the produce to the other CSA members), and a few farm shifts (weeding, harvesting, cleaning, hauling the produce from the farm to the distribution site, or whatever else the farmer and his wife need help with that week).

While the thought of rising at 6:15 on a Sunday morning (you know, like hardworking farmers do every.single.day. rain or shine) wasn’t particularly appealing, I had been really looking forward to the farm work for the past several months.

I think it’s nice to be reminded where your food comes from. It’s good to remember that your food doesn’t just appear at the grocery store or in a stall at the farmers market, but that the farm, the earth it comes from, is carefully plotted out, the soil is prepared, seeds are planted, meticulous and timely care is given to things like sunlight, rain, pests, nutrients, diseases, weeding, weather, seasons, etc., and food is picked, inspected, cleaned, bundled and packaged – all before it ever even gets to you. Even the smallest carrot or leaf of lettuce that you can eat in one bite and be done with forever was a long time in the making.

And at small farms like the one we support, all that work is done by hand. By people. By families. And these people work outside twelve hours a day, every single day, in gorgeous weather and in atrocious weather. They worry about too much rain, too little rain, a bad crop of seeds, woodchucks, weeds choking the beets, and what happens when Late Blight infests their entire tomato crop that they have to destroy in order to keep it from spreading – if it will reach the potatoes before they can kill it and what impact that will have on them financially. Their hands touch our food – to plant it, to weed around it, to pull it out of the ground, and to clean it with cold spring-fed water.

It was nice to reconnect to the earth, and directly to the people, who feed us. It was gratifying to get down and dirty for four hours with the farmer, his wife, their hired hand, two mousing dogs, and a handful of other CSA members early on a Sunday morning out in the boonies to share in the hard work and good stories of the muddy boots, dirty jeans, sunburned arms, sweaty faces, big hearts, wise brains, and kind smiles that make sure we have food every week. I was happy and humbled to learn about the farm and to pick our food, so I can always remember where and who it comes from, and to be grateful for it.

And it was fun too. Our group started with cutting big, beautiful, colorful, fragrant stems of basil (6 varieties – regular, lemon, lime, purple opal, cinnamon, and thai) and grouping them into good-sized bundles for all the members to receive in their shares this week. Then we moved on to harvesting potatoes – on our knees beside a long trench of dirt, digging deep into the ground to find yellow potatoes. I could have dug for potatoes all day! It was glorious! I loved it! I felt like a truffle pig searching for truffles and I enjoyed every second of it, with dirt caked onto my knees, up to my elbows and on my hairline, and a small twinge of joy every time I unearthed another potato to add to the three five-gallon buckets full of potatoes I harvested. When the potatoes were gathered it was time to weed around the parsley and pull weeds as tall as I am (no joke) from the rows of beets. At noon we washed off in refreshing, cold water from the spring-fed spigot (which tasted and felt heavenly!) by the vegetable washing and storage shed, and loaded up the cars with the produce for the drive back to Rochester. Truly, it was awesome and I’m excited for another opportunity to work on the farm, when the chance comes around.

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*Sorry for the lack of personal pictures, but a working farm is not the place for iPhones. It was beautiful out there and I wish I could share it with you. The produce shots of the cabbage and carrots at the top are from Peacework Organic Farm and the gvocsa webpage, and the truffle pig is a pretty accurate representation of how awesome I felt trufflin’ for potatoes. Also, truffle pigs are the best. Love it!

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It’s my birthday!

It’s my birthday!

Last Wednesday, on a rare weekday off, Ted took me for an early celebratory birthday brunch at one of my favorite little eateries in Pittsford, the Village Bakery & Cafe. We sat outside on a lovely morning, drank dry rhubarb soda, and ate to-die-for chocolate croissants, and sandwiches of house-made rolls, whisked and poached egg, Gruyère cheese, fresh pico, bacon, sausage, and avocado. Really relaxing. Really delicious. Really luxurious (for our tiny budget and, really, anything fun or relaxing done on a Wednesday morning is, in essence, luxurious).

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For another early birthday celebration, I met my good friend Kristen for gourmet cupcakes at Sugar Mountain Bake Shoppe to jointly celebrate our birthdays (her’s was on the 17th). So we swapped cards and bought each other Samoa and S’mores cupcakes to go with some much needed girl talk. The cupcakes and the company were both divine.

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Ted’s birthday was yesterday (happy birthday dude!) and since our birthdays are only one day apart, we usually do something fun to celebrate our birthdays together, and I have one more birthday celebration tonight with my friends while Ted is at rehearsal. I am so blessed to have such an awesome husband, such great family, such a fun job doing what I always wanted to do, and to have made such wonderful friends here in Rochester.

I am incredibly thankful for 26 beautiful years so far and I’m looking forward whole-heartedly to the 27th.

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On A Mid-Week Weekend

I was able to snag a couple days away mid-week to unwind from a busy summer, so on the agenda was lots of…nothing.

We slept in, enjoyed a leisurely mid-morning brunch at the Village Bakery to (early) celebrate my birthday, went for a hike along a wooded and marshy trail at Mendon Ponds Park, enjoyed a glass of chilled wine and a good book on the couch in the early afternoon, met a friend for dual birthday celebration cupcakes, made pickles, checked out a local craft & hobby store (so many wonderful childhood things!), went to the public market on an uncrowded weekday morning, enjoyed a hot and freshly made cider doughnut, went to the beach armed with my sunglasses, swimsuit, a good book, a mug of iced tea, and a soft beachy blanket…for approx. 17 minutes before it started pouring, distributed farm-fresh veggie shares with a friend for our organic CSA group, watched some guilty pleasure TV the likes of Duck Dynasty and wedding and house flipping shows, and generally, just spent oodles of time relaxing with myself, my love, and a close friend or two.

You know, all stuff I can do normally, but is so much more indulgently delightful to do on a lazy Wednesday morning when you’ve got nowhere to be.

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(a rooster and a bakery)

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(pickle time)

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(Bread & butter and garlic dill)

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(Hiking treasures)

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(Samoa cupcake…it exists and it is delightful)

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(mere minutes before the skies unleashed a torrential downpour)

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(a new friend)

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(colorful squash and peppers)

All of this = Heaven

I’ll be working Saturday, but on Sunday and Monday we’ve got some birthday celebrations coming up! Another day, another blessing.

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Do What You Love!

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Yesterday afternoon was our company picnic at Durand Eastman Park, in a large rustic picnic shelter with family style wooden picnic tables and benches overlooking the sandy beach and blue waters of Lake Ontario, with a large adjacent expanse of soft grass and shady trees for running children and the playing of lawn games. Can I just say that all Monday afternoons should be so lovely!? I could get used to it. Really, I could adapt.

About 50 folks from our staff at the theatre, along with their families and our current visiting playwright (two-time Tony Award Winner for Urinetown, Greg Kotis – our other visiting playwrights for the year include Karen ZacariasEric Coble, Mat Smart, John Cariani, and Deborah Zoe Laufer) made it out to the beach for delicious grilled burgers, brats, baked beans, macaroni salad, potato salad, unbelievably fantastic cream puffs, and a myriad of veggies, chips, and dips. We ate, we talked shop, we talked life, we drank beer, and we played lawn games (specifically wiffle ball and the epic frisbee game Kan Jam), and then we took a few blindfolded whacks at a pinata before feasting on its contents – pure sugary Pixy Stix goodness! Ted and I finished the night off with a relaxing sunset stroll along the beach.

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Thanks be to Geva Theatre Center for an awesome company picnic!

And today we all came together for a company meeting, official company photos, and a Meet n’ Greet with the board, staff, cast, crew, designers, playwrights, and cohort club members for our first two productions of our 41st season – Pump Boys and Dinettes (the 30th anniversary production) and All Your Questions Answered (a world premiere by Greg Kotis). After a round of introductions we checked out the costume designs (I desperately want all the cute dresses and aprons! I am beyond thrilled that this gives me full license to break out my cowboy boots for the next two months!), the scenic design (love the neon signs and all the awesome hubcap and bunting touches that will be added to the gas station and diner!), and talked about the incredible music in this production, and the pie that will be available onstage and served out of the diner window for our patrons during pre-show and intermission. Most. Brilliant. Idea. Ever. THIS is how you please theatregoers! I can’t wait for this production to hit the fair citizens of Rochester…and to gather a group of my friends for a ‘boots and pie required’ night at the theatre!

In addition to an extraordinary amount of talent, teamwork, passion, and creativity in one building, there were also an extraordinary number of people in the rehearsal hall (it normally feels pretty spacious in there but today we were packed in like sardines!), and an extraordinary amount of croissants, chocolate croissants, scones, and danishes in attendance. Whew!  We theatre folk love some us some sweets!

Annnd a website full of our pro photos from the Summer Academy showcase came in for us to review and enjoy! Check them out here! Clearly, my work life has been awful lately. I just love the start of a fresh new season and the scent of excellent theatre!

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(These fireworks have nothing to do with anything above, but were from the baseball game on Saturday night and I liked ’em. Just wanted to share.)

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The Future is Looking Grand

Upcoming things I am pretty darn excited for:

1. Finally getting to see Much Ado About Nothing with some girlfriends this week and the start of a brand new season of Duck Dynasty on A&E on Wednesday nights

2. Lovely late summer and early fall bike rides in gorgeous weather with my Ted

3. Saturday night’s Red Wings baseball game double-date with our awesome friends!

4. Our company picnic at the beach!

5. A Night Circus fancy and delicious Midnight Dinner with the Book Thieves!

6. Ted’s birthday, my birthday, and the accompanying celebratory activities for our birthdays! And ice cream cake. Duh.

7. August birthdays for all! – Ted’s brother-in-law, Ted’s sister, my friend Kristin, Ted, me, my mom…

8. Food truck rodeo

9. The New York State Fair!

10. Our CSA shift harvesting crops at the farm

11. Labor Day 3-day weekend of lawn-games and cookout goodness

12. The return of Girls Nights!

13. Our second book club meeting for The Night Circus

14. Zoo Brew!!!! Animals, live music, and cocktails…I can think of nothing more spectacular.

15. The 1920s Paris Ernest Hemmingway themed Writers & Books Gala and the Clothesline Arts Festival

16. Geva’s awesome 2013-2014 season and all the incredible shows we’re producing, including several world premiers and great interactions with playwrights

17. Our annual pilgrimage to Wisconsin to see wonderful family, visit Door County for our anniversary (!!!), and attend the Packers home-opener game at Lambeau Field!

18. The Rochester Fringe Festival

19. A trip to Virginia to visit my brother and his family!

20. The circus is coming to town!

Yippee! 

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R&R

First off, let me say how much I adore Summer Academy. I sincerely do. But working 10+ hour days for four weeks now with occasional 12.5 hours days also thrown in there for casting sessions, parent workshops, dry tech, etc. (you know, like normal theatre professionals do every single day) has taken its toll (read: see my lack of cooking, 9:30 bedtime, and bags under my eyes) . Since it is, in fact, summer, I’ve been trying to make my weekends strictly for relaxing whenever possible.

Friday after work Ted and I headed over to the Public Market for the their free concert series – Bands on the Bricks. We sat in the cool breeze, on the bricks and beneath the shade, and listened to a few folksy bands with a great collection of instruments before heading off to split “the world’s greatest cheeseburgers” and curly fries at Bill Gray’s – a New York burger legend that I needed to introduce Ted to, and then I spent a few hours at my friend Shawnda’s house enjoying some wine and good company. A perfect, relaxing Friday night. Saturday Ted and I made breakfast tacos, hit up the public market again for some farm-fresh produce, scoped out a bunch of garage sales and a dance studio sale (to no avail but it was fun and low-key) before attending a Saturday evening church service and the Red Wings baseball game at Frontier Field (in the pouring rain…all in good fun!) with a friend/co-worker and his girlfriend. The Red Wings won (yay!) and we split fried pickles, a pulled pork sandwich, dippin’ dots ice cream, and a blueberry ale along with some baseball, the cowboy monkey rodeo (yes, it’s exactly what it sounds like – monkeys riding dogs chasing sheep into a pen…and it’s fabulous), good company, lots of rain, and a fireworks show to finish it off. Also awesome. Sunday we slept in, hit up the market yet again (for the third day in a row – apparently, we’re regulars) for their Sunday garage sale where we scooped up three insanely cheap DVDs for movie night, then met another friend/co-worker at one of our favorite waterfront pubs right on the bay for lunch, some Ace’s pear hard cider, and talk of Packer game tickets. The rest of the day we took it easy – finishing up a few tasks around the house, a walk around the neighborhood, and a movie and game night at home.

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Are you ready for the weekend? I sure am!

Have a great one!

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To the Beach!

After spending the morning berry picking (if you missed it, check out yesterday’s post!), we all headed to the beach for a sunny, sandy picnic. We’d also planned on swimming, but due to heavy rains, they closed the beaches to swimmers and cautioned folks to not spend too much time in the water with all the bacteria stirred up overnight. Unfortunately, that meant we didn’t swim as intended, but instead we waded and splashed knee-deep for a bit (which was still wonderful and cooling), but, fortunately, it also meant that we pretty much had the entire beach and a nice shady picnic spot all to ourselves, which was glorious

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We feasted on juicy slices of watermelon, strawberry-infused ice tea, roasted chicken legs, hummus and pitas, tomato basil chips, and several delicious chilled salads. Summer picnicing at its finest!

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