EXPLORING NEW ENGLAND || PORTSMOUTH

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

EXPLORING NEW ENGLAND || PORTSMOUTH
Over the summer, the kids + I tagged along on a work trip to New England. While the Hubs worked his hiney off, the kids + I pursued Downtown Portsmouth. We even took a little road trip down Hwy 1A to Wallis Sands State Park where the kids got their first experience swimming in the Atlantic Ocean. It was too cold for me to join in but the kids had a blast. Here are some of my favorite photos from our time spent in New Hampshire.
The steeple in the background of this photo belongs to North Congressional Church, organized in 1671. I thought it was pretty neat to learn that some of the people that once attended were General William Whipple, signer of the Declaration of Independence; John Langdon, signer of the U.S. Constitution; and President George Washington.





The Wentworth Coolidge Mansion. "An 18th-century house + farm... (that) is historically significant as the only original surviving residence of a Royal Governor in the United States." - source
  

I had my first ever lobster roll during our visit. Because #wheninnewengland you eat #allthelobster. It was divine + you should eat at Surf if you ever visit.





SIMPLY LIMES

SIMPLY LIMES
 

Well, here we are - just a short four months since we celebrated my son's ninth birthday - and I've finally gotten around to collecting a few pictures to document his big day.
 

The birthday boy requested a chocolate chip cookie cake, but I wanted it to match the lime theme, so I tinted the icing a bit. I served a baked shrimp + homemade limeade, recipes for both came from Nellie and Joe's website. My daughter loved the shrimp + the limeade, but our guest wasn't a big fan, so hot dogs were a welcomed back-up. Later on during the day, we took a dip in the neighborhood pool. Mr. Big Stuff had a really fun day!

I took a few pictures of him the night before his birthday + these are a few of my favorites.

My big plan was to have a joint birthday party for both kids + combine all of the lemon decor from my daughter's party + the lime decor from this part. But when party time came around, I couldn't get any of the foil balloons to inflate (for a second time) so I quickly gave up on the idea of decorating, all together. But the party was a fun one!!


SIMPLY LEMONS

Saturday, June 30, 2018

 SIMPLY LEMONS
My daughter just celebrated her 6th birthday this past week. Although we have a party scheduled for August, I still wanted our birthday girl to feel special on her big day. I invited her best friend over for the day + we celebrated with a simple lemon theme.
The plan was easy. Gather all things yellow + lemony. I baked a vanilla cake + I used this recipe to make lemon + cream cheese frosting. I picked up some yellow plates + lemon balloons from our local Five Below store. The number six gold foil balloon + striped straws came from our local Target store. Then we added the yellow daisies because you can't have a party without flowers.

The celebrate script banner + felt garland both came from Paper Source but I purchased them last year. I just checked their website + the banner is out of stock but the rainbow felt pom garland is still available.  

I mentioned earlier that she was going to have a party later in the summer. We are planning to host a joint birthday party for both her + her brother. And since we've started with a lemon theme, I'm thinking we'll do a lime theme for him on his birthday, then bring them together for the joint party - A LEMON LIME PARTY! I love me some themed parties. =)
Happy 6th Birthday to you, Honey Chicken!

EXPLORING ALABAMA || CATHEDRAL CAVERNS STATE PARK

Saturday, April 28, 2018

EXPLORING ALABAMA || CATHEDRAL CAVERNS STATE PARK
I recently spent my 35th birthday tagging along with my son's third-grade class for a field trip to Cathedral Caverns State Park. I'm a sucker for field trips, so this outing was a special birthday gift. Mostly, I hung out at the back of the group, snapping photos along the way. We had a tour guide but I didn't pay too much attention to the stories he told - I was more interested in taking in the sights.

The tour took us 3,000 feet into the cave and once we reached the endpoint, our guide turned off all of the lights. It was SO DARK - but then he surprised us with a little "light show." I don't want to give too much away just in case you ever go. Let me just say it was really neat. =)

Along the tour, we saw so many incredible things: some really cool caves faces, stalactites, stalagmites, a waterfall, a river... And in case you're wondering, we didn't see any bats.

Here are a few photos taken along the way.




Happy exploring, friends!

TOURING TENNESSEE || LYNCHBURG

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

TOURING TENNESSEE || LYNCHBURG

After Saturday morning pancakes this past weekend, we loaded up the family + headed North to Lynchburg, Tennessee. It’s a short 70 miles from Athens – a very easy drive there + back. What’s in Lynchburg? Less than 400 townsfolk + the Jack Daniel’s Distillery. It’s small but still worth the visit.

Brad + I aren’t loyal to Jack Daniel whiskey but getting the opportunity to learn a little more about the process of making whiskey as well as a history lesson on Jack himself was intriguing.


Apparently, Jack Daniel’s whiskey has been distilled + bottled at this location for over 150 years. Production hasn’t moved because of one thing – the cave spring.Even in drought conditions, this spring has never stopped streaming.

Our tour took us through the Rick Yard, Jack’s Office, Cave Spring, Still House, Bottle House + Barrell House. Photography wasn’t allowed in many of the areas we toured, but I did manage to get a few shots.One of the most interesting things I learned while on the tour was how Jack died. The story goes a little something like this. Jack Daniel came into the office early one morning + after a few failed attempts at opening the safe (pictured above), his frustration got the best of him + he gave it a swift kick. Which injured his toe. Which caused an infection. Which killed him. His famous last words on October 10, 1911, “one last drink, please.” He was 62 years old.

Fair warning, folks. The Distillery stinks – literally. At the beginning of the tour, I asked our guide about the stench. In return, he asked if it smelt like a bakery – to which my husband replied, “yeah, if you’re making shit cakes.” The tour guide didn’t laugh. We could hardly contain ourselves.Lucky for them, the whiskey doesn’t taste like the distillery smells.

Lynchburg Square was only a few steps away from the distillery, so we strolled the area for a bit. I think the Moon Pie Shop was my favorite.Who knows where we’ll end up next. I’m just so excited to be back in The South!

Happy Roadtripping, Friends!

TOURING ALABAMA || MOORESVILLE

Thursday, January 11, 2018

TOURING ALABAMA || MOORESVILLE
Well Folks, we’ve moved our family back to The South and now call Alabama home. We made the move just under two months ago and I would say we are pretty well settled + look forward to putting down roots in our new Hometown of Athens.

Now that the holidays have passed and the children are back in school, I’ve had some free time to do a little exploring in + around our community. Yesterday seemed as good as any to load up the truck with my pup + my camera and hit the road. I drove south down Mooresville Road which led me straight into the 200-year-old Town of Mooresville. That’s right – two hundred years old. There are quite a few historical markers sprinkled around town and the first one I approached noted that this quaint village was the first to be incorporated by the Alabama Territorial Legislature on November 16, 1818.

While fewer than 60 people currently call Mooresville home, according to the marker, it was once “a bustling town with doctors, lawyers, business houses craftsmen and shops, including a tailor shop where a future president, Andrew Johnson, apprenticed for some time.” Also noted was that another future president, James Garfield, preached a sermon at Mooresville Church of Christ, one of two churches in the village.
But it was the other church, Cumberland Presbyterian Church, also known as The Brick Church, that caught my eye.

Check out the photo below. Have you ever – in your entire life – seen a church steeple with a spire that had a wood-carved hand with a finger pointed to the heavens?!

It’s not just the steeple that makes The Brick Church unique. During the 1870s, Constantine Blackmon Sanders ministered at the church and was known for possessing special abilities. These abilities were recorded in a book titled X + Y = Z; or The Sleeping Preacher of Alabama. In a letter to the reader, the author states that the book is “mainly a statement of facts, furnished by a large number of living witnesses—gentlemen and ladies of intelligence and unimpeachable veracity, presenting the most remarkable, preternatural, mental phenomena that have come to light, (so far as is known,) since the days of Jesus Christ and his Apostles.”

The entire book is available to read for free online, and I intend to read it, but until then, let’s have a look at the historical church at which The Sleeping Preacher ministered.



The Brick Church was locked when I visited but it saw that the City of Mooresville will rent it out as a venue for events such as weddings. Maybe there will be a vow renewal in my future. =) But if that doesn’t happen, I can at least bring the kids back for a photo shoot.

Mooresville is also home to an 1840s Post Office, the oldest in continual use in the State of Alabama. Y’all, the town was just ate-up with history + charm. Here are a few other photos from around town that I just had to share.

I think the four-legged friend that followed us around may have been as old as the town itself. Bless him (or her).

Oh! I forgot to mention that Disney’s Tom and Huck was filmed here too! If you were a young girl in the early 1990s, you probably had a crush on Jonathan Taylor Thomas and probably loved this movie.

It feels great to get back to blogging! I hope to have tons more Adventures, Experiences + Southern Scenes to share of life here in the Tennessee Valley.