And yes, the faux wood siding on the minivan was cool. At the time.
Our kids always had a great time running around in camos with their cousins, playing laser tag on dirt bikes in the dark ("Yeah, the second time we got tossed when the front wheel hit a gopher hole, we figured we might want to quit."), camping in the woods, etc.
Though our kids are now scattered around the world, we were not going to miss Thanksgiving in Leonardtown. Brynn and Chad and their kids drove up from Jacksonville, NC, and did some of the traditional things: scaling Uncle Mark's climbing wall in the barn,
running around the woods exploring stuff,
having a cool-evening bonfire,
flying drones with Uncle Mark,
riding in Aunt Kathleen's dog cart,
and of course going out in the bay on Uncle Mark's sailboat.
One of our missionaries from Peru is doing an internship in DC, so yeah; Jorge Morales, c'mon down!
And there was food!
The unwashed heathen were placed where they could do the least damage.A visit to Uncle Mark's has to include playing in cold water at some point. The first day, not enough wind.
However, the next day it blew much better, and some kiting got done, despite dropping temperatures.
With less wind on a later day, the biker gang did their thing.
By the end of the nearly week-long visit, Paula was drinking straight from the bottle.
It was time to go home, though with a lot more good Thanksgiving memories.
We hope your holidays are as rich.
Dave & Paula
1 comment:
Those are fabulous Thanksgiving traditions! What a great place to hang out together.
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