Summer is over?!? Apparently. This post will serve to update
you on everything that has happened during my summer. Personally, I’d say it
was a rather eventful summer, and I enjoyed most of the shenanigans I took part
in. Due to the fact this was my last
summer before college, combined with
it being a somewhat busy (I actually had a
real-ish job?), this summer felt noticeably different from past summers. It
passed very quickly, and I felt relaxed in that I didn’t have the thought of
another school year looming ahead, but at the same time, preparing for college
was arguably more time consuming than any ECHS summer assignment has ever been.
Enough with my musings on the nature of summer 2017. Let me write about what I
actually did these past 3 months!
The beginning of summer (literally went to the airport right
after graduation) started with a trip to the East Coast and Dartmouth to attend
the graduation of that dear sister of mine. Yay! Mariko has a college degree. I
found the juxtaposition of my ECHS graduation with her Dartmouth graduation two
days later to be highly intriguing for social observational purposes, as the
student body was vastly different, and high school and college are kind of
different too. We were staying on a nice lake house in Vermont with the Js, so
that was a load of fun and very pretty. The house seemed to have an abundance
of moose-related decor, but sadly we did not manage to catch a glimpse of any
meese. Notable events from this stay would include dinner with a couple of
Mar’s friends and also the cake project in which Julia, Jenna, and I refrosted
the King Arthur Flour cake with chocolate frosting after deconstructing the
cake and removing the original buttercream.
After this little Dartmouth stint, our family headed up to
Maine and Canada for a lovely family vacation. We covered a bit too much
mileage (seven hours of driving in one
day was taxing both on our rear ends and our family dynamic), but it was probably
worth it.
We went to Acadia (only East Coast National Park!) and then up to
Canada to visit Prince Edward Island , the Bay of Fundy, and St. Andrews. We
also made a quick stop in Freeport to go to the L.L. Bean and acquire a winter
jacket for me. Some highlights of the trip would be the lovely coastline, red
land in Canada, scenery straight out of the Anne of Green Gables movie, some
nice seafood, some truly delicious PEI milk (ADL brand, ten out of ten would
recommend), baby beavers and baby foxes!!, oodles of lupines in the lovely
pink-purple-white color scheme, and plenty of quality hiking and family time.
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Red chairs are a thing in Canada National Parks
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| Cool rocks at low tides |
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| Trying to recreat Anne Shirley-Diana Barry moments :) |
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| Acadia Views...there's an island out there |
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| Sometimes this is necessary |
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| More red chairs |
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| I am ready for winter, thanks L.L. Bean |
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| We look derpy but appreciate the lupines! |
When we returned to El Cerrito from this trip, I had a
couple of free weeks, mainly spent with Mariko and other family, and then
Mariko went back to the Dartmouth and I started my job with Camp Galileo.
During this period, we also went up to Tahoe for a quick trip. Highlights of
that trip would include making ginger crème brulee (I have a blowtorch!!!!) and
a 12 mile hike in desolation wilderness in which daughters and dads hiked up to
a lot of beautiful lakes.
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| Lake at the top of our hike |
Camp Galileo was my life for the next five weeks. I had the
amazing and slightly exhausting task of herding 12-15 first and second graders
to art, science, and outdoor classes as well as snack and lunchtime. I
thoroughly enjoyed getting to work with these children and continued to be
amazed at how hilarious, pure, and sweet young kiddos can be. So many quotable
comments spout from their mouths! Also, so much fun being super goofy with
them, dancing to super kid-friendly playlists, and having them guess my age (it
ranged from 14 to 40-something).
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| I love my campers |
The cherry-on-top of this summer was backpacking on the
northern border of Yosemite with Andy and Grace. I cannot capture in words or
pictures the beauty and peace created from being away from people, without
WiFi, and surrounded by wondrous nature. I think my soul hath been cleansed and
Peeler Lake will hold fond memories forever. Stargazing was a highlight, also
lots of napping, the sweaty accomplished feeling of taking off my pack, and the
greatness of the mountains and meadows and wow, I truly cannot describe it in
ways that do it justice. Just imagine something really simple that makes you
really happy and that should be about right. Kind of like the taste of cold
water after a long run, but on a wayyyyy larger scale.
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| Meadows are my favorite |
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| Sunrise over Peeler Lake |
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| Barney Lake |
Well, I guess I summed up my summer in five paragraphs. A
few other things I feel like I should mention:
-My cousins Tom and Jack made friends with Miya so that
makes me happy because I love it when people I love get along
-I tried sunbutter! Almond butter and peanut butter are my
preferred but I did enjoy
-My Grandma made me sourdough starter (thanks Grandma!) so I
made some fun stuff with that (mainly bread, but also waffles)
-We had a cross-country sleepover and Grace introduced me to
jalapeno peppers on pizza, which I approve of highly
-I went to the SF Symphony with Grace and Jae-An J
-During my Galileo weeks I would spend Wednesday nights at
my Bachan’s and it was a dream
-Running was a part of my summer because it always is
-I completely covered our living room in clothes and other
belongings while I was packing for Vassar
-Stone fruit and heirloom tomatoes deserve to be mentioned,
they are basically the best part of summer. My stone fruit ranking: nectarines,
apricots, peaches, plums
Are there important parts of my summer that I completely
forgot to mention? Definitely. Oh well. You’ll just have to wonder.
ahh sounds so fun!!!!!! #bestteacher
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