Check out this photo Tiffy sent from Washington, DC:
Check out this photo Tiffy sent from Washington, DC:
At work we got a floating holiday since the legal holiday is on a Saturday, so I used it today, and Travalon and I headed to Chicago. We hit some really bad weather, so it wasn't a fun drive. There were a lot of scary sights in the sky, like a cloud in the distance that looked like it had a waterfall underneath it. Because the interstate was moving so slowly in the deluge, it took us forever to get to my aunt's house. We talked a while, then we drove to Old Warsaw and met another aunt and uncle for dinner. This restaurant is a Polish buffet, and I was happy that there were plenty of things to eat that were either fish, seafood, or vegetarian on a Friday night. The pierogis were especially tasty.
The aunt who joined us there is really into genealogy, so we talked about that a lot. At one point she said she took her family tree off the internet. "I'm incognito," she said, and my uncle said, "I'm in Oak Park." Badoom-ching. He and Travalon didn't say much; it was mostly us three women chatting, and at one point we were talking about fermented foods and what is the best brand of sauerkraut. (I don't have a strong opinion on this topic; I don't hate sauerkraut, but I much prefer pickled red cabbage.) I keep reading that we should be eating more fermented foods. My one aunt was saying how easy it is to make your own yogurt, and I've heard other people say that too, but you know what's even easier? Buying it at the store.
We got done with dinner early, so Travalon and I went to a spot in West Chicago which is renowned in the rail fan community because several tracks cross each other, and there's an old signal tower still in use. Literally as soon as we had parked and walked up to the tracks, a very long Union Pacific freight train with excellent graffiti passed by. Travalon made a video, and I took some photos. Unfortunately, my photos have not yet downloaded to my computer, and the video needs editing, so here are some photos Travalon took of the signal tower and the crossing train tracks.
While it was passing by, a Metra train went by in the other direction. We saw a couple more Metra trains, then we took a walk to find a restroom and ended up at a bar so busy that we couldn't order anything to justify using their bathroom, so we just left. We were starting to head to our hotel when a Canadian National came on the north/south track, so we parked and watched it. When we got back to the car, Travalon tried to remember which direction we'd been heading to get to our hotel, and I said, "We got derailed by the train," so he said I had to blog about that. The weather was fine then, but just about the time we got to our hotel, another storm blew up, so we decided not to go into the outdoor pool while there was lightning. Plus my former neighbor called just to chat, so it got late, and then it got later while I was trying to figure out how to access either the hotel WiFi or my phone's hotspot, and I ended up having to contact Richard Bonomo for technical support. He found a way to get my computer to recognize my phone, and so I can blog. Hopefully I can soon post photos of train graffiti...
Famous Hat
Today I worked from home while Travalon explored historic train sites and went swimming in the Wisconsin River. It was very hot again today, so we walked outside early, but not early enough to see the train that went by around 9:35. I spaced out about praying the rosary while walking around inside on my lunch break, so I just put on my headphones and walked around to music. I walked inside on my afternoon break as well.
When Travalon came home, I said we should head to the Elks Club early to avoid the storm, which my phone said was coming in forty-five minutes, but when I went outside, it felt imminent. Then my phone said it was coming in eleven minutes, which would be before we got to the Elks Club, so we went back inside and waited until the storm passed. Finally we headed to the Elks Club and joined our Shamrock Club buddy and her friend, but nobody else joined us, and the head fiddler was not at the session. In fact, there were a lot less musicians than usual, probably owing to the weather. Travalon was happy because they were showing the Croatia game (but sadly they lost to Portugal), while I chatted with the other two women about plants and other stuff that didn't interest him. At one point we were talking about genetic tests, and I have done both 23 and Me and Ancestry, but I deleted my 23 and Me account when they went bankrupt. My buddy logged into her Ancestry account to show us her background, and I tried logging into mine and was stunned to find out I'm one-quarter from Munster, Ireland. It said I had some ancestry from other parts of Ireland, like Donegal, but 23 and Me said my ancestry was mostly from the south and west of Ireland, and for a moment I thought Munster was up in the north. I said, "How can that be??? Wait... is Munster the part where Cork is?" Indeed it is, so my world was turned right-side up again - I am who I always thought I was. Both tests said I have some Cornish in me, so now I can go to Mineral Point with great pride in that part of my ancestry. Both also said I have some German and a touch of West African, so I'm trusting that they're pretty accurate. I also have quite a bit of Scottish, but the biggest chunk of my ancestry is Munsterish, if that's a word. I wondered if that's where Munster cheese comes from, while my buddy thought it came from Munster, Germany, but we're both wrong - it comes from a French town of that name in the Alsace region of France. Wherever it comes from, I love it - I'm a Munster monster!
Interestingly, when I googled "Munster" and it told me all this stuff, it was showing a slideshow of places in the Irish province, which includes the Cliffs of Moher and lots of castles, like Blarney Castle. No wonder I built that little shrine of Belleek Irish castles! It's in my blood.
Today I worked from home and only left the house for a walk at 9:30 am, until I went to my building after 5:00 to check on my plants. It was warm and humid in the building, so like a greenhouse, and my plants looked perfectly happy, so I didn't bring them home. I did bring home Niko's nameless girlfriend and the flower she sits beneath. Anyone got a name suggestion for her? Here's a supercut.
I forgot to take pictures of these until just now, but Saturday on State Street I bought a couple of crystals.
More random than a rabbit on a B-17!