Friday
I took the day off work so that I could spend it with my kids who had the day off from school. After a long and arduous quarter, and a week that felt like a hurricane on the heels of a tornado followed by an avalanche…it felt soooooooooo good to have a day of rest.
I took the kids to lunch at The Bebedero, a newish Mexican restaurant in Charlottesville…


The friendly bartender explained that the service can be slow sometimes…

So tired, but so happy.

“Where’s the food?”

Mmmmmm…delicious nachos.

Camarones Ensalada Frio
We strolled along the Downtown Mall…


“So that‘s how they change those letters!”
We had dessert at The Flat Takeaway Crêperie:

We can highly recommend the Chocolate Chip Cookie Crêpe!
That evening my friend and I returned to the Downtown Mall to take our daughters to the Paramount to see their beloved violin teacher perform with the Waynesboro Symphony Orchestra:


Saturday
We spent the morning getting ready for my son’s Halloween party…
The day was punctuated by soccer games…My husband took our oldest son to his game in Lynchburg; I took our daughter to her game at Booster Park in Orange County. The park also happens to be adjacent to an airport and a skydiving outfit. I tried to pay attention to the game, but every thirty minutes people would fall out of the sky:



Oh sure, that’s not at all distracting!
We rushed home to finish getting ready for the party:


Ghosts in the Graveyard – a nostalgic favorite!

Apple cider with a vanilla flavored bone and a gummy eyeball.
After dinner the kids took their flashlights and went outside to hunt for Halloween candy and to have an epic game of flashlight tag. They came in sweaty and red-faced and ready to watch their scary movie…

Popcorn and candy corn fingernails.

Vampire blood: Hawaiian Punch, cranberry ginger ale, grenadine, and a dollop of vanilla ice cream. Oh, and the blood of a vampire, obviously – (Preferably O positive for the best results).

Thank you, Pinterest!
Sunday
Church! Choir! And Marie-Bette Café & Bakery in between!

Trying to behave like this, when…

…you really feel like this.

Ebony and Ivory

I’m shriiiiiiiiiiiinking!

Happy Halloween!


We also came to terms with the fact that our youngest child no longer needs a babysitter. Every summer our friend and former neighbor would host “Camp Barbara” for my daughter and some of her friends. She would take them on adventures, teach them manners, introduce them to new games, cook with them, and throw parties for their birthdays. Whenever I tried to sign my girl up for any other camp or activity, she would complain bitterly and say, “No more camps! I only want to go to ‘Miss Barbara’s’!” This year Miss Barbara announced that my daughter and her friends were ready to be on their own this summer. This was highly disconcerting for her young charges, who were not yet ready to be kicked out of the nest. To tell the truth it was just as disconcerting for the girls’ parents, who were not yet ready to face a summer without Camp Barbara. The girls had the lovely idea to show their love and appreciation for their beloved Miss Barbara by throwing a (surprise) party for her for a change:
The day after the party, I hit the road for the almost five hour drive to Charlotte, NC.
…and had a blast in the open studio playing with watercolors:



We promised to meet up again next year, because when you do finally grow up, you realize you never outgrow your true friends.
The last time we visited Montpelier was 18 years ago, soon after my husband and I had moved to Charlottesville and about a year after we were married. He had been pining to go back to the house again since it was restored to look as it did in the 1820s when James and Dolley Madison lived there. He reminded me that when we had first visited the house, there was nothing to see but a single room decorated in art deco style with an elaborate zinc bar. It was the sole relic of the days when Montpelier was the private country estate of the duPont family, before they bequeathed it to the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 1983. The garden was nothing but overgrown boxwoods.







