It’s Our Anniversary!     6/19/18

Wagon Trail Campground, Rowleys Bay, Wisconsin Peninsula

 

It’s hard to believe it’s been one year today since we hit the road!  And we still absolutely love it!  The only thing I ever wonder about is whether or not I’ll still be keeping up with this blog post in five years.  Ten years?  Twenty?  That remains to be seen, I suppose.  Right now, I have no intention of stopping!  How would I ever remember everything if I stopped?

I have to stick this bit of information in somewhere, so this is as good a place as any since we’re moving today.  One of the places we talked about visiting, but didn’t was another water town called Egg Harbor.  Mostly, I wanted to go so I could tell you how they got there name.  It’s so great, I’ll do it anyway.  😊

From the Peninsula’s brochure:

Egg Harbor   ~

A legendary egg battle took place in our harbor on June 23, 1825.  The battle began when men among a six-boat trading flotilla began throwing hardtack at each other while approaching a spot of land.  This first bout ceased due to their continuing need of the staple.  The playfulness started again with eggs now the ammunition of choice.  The leader tried to stop the battle, but the fun was “too fierce to be readily given up.”  When they camped on that spot of land, the storm was brewing for yet another egg fight!  The great egg battle stopped only for want of ammunition and the men “laughed until exhausted.”  The next morning the battlefield was so strewn with eggshells that before leaving shore, speeches befitting the occasion were made and the spot was formally christened Egg Harbor.

Is that not a cool story???  My question is . . . . why are hard, stale, wormy biscuits (hardtack) more of a staple than eggs???

 

Today is moving day, and we had a short way to go, but a long time to get there.

As the crow flies, we only moved about 20 miles today.  But it took us 136 miles and three hours to get here, because we had to go down the peninsula and back up past the city of Green Bay.

Not much traffic most of the way

Look at this beautiful overpass! There were quite a few like this and they’re working on more!

Passing through a small town.

And for the next few days, the large body of water we’ll be looking at is Green Bay.  Still part of Lake Michigan, but a huge bay area.

 

To celebrate our anniversary, Blaine and I put together a recap of the past year.  The original plan was to present one  picture chosen by each of us from each month.  Boy was that hard!  In fact, it was so hard, sometimes choosing only four became difficult! So that idea flew out the window! And since we didn’t want to leave anyone out, we decided not to include pictures of family and friends.  Well, not too many anyway. . . We’ve been so abundantly blessed!  Thank You, Jesus!

June:

The Ark
Williamstown, Kentucky

Letchworth State Park, New York

Kayaking with ducks!
New York

July:

Baddeck, Nova Scotia

Peggy’s Cove
Nova Scotia

Peggy’s Cove
Nova Scotia

Peggy’s Cove
Nova Scotia

Yep.  Three from the same place, and there could have been many more!

August:

Burntcoat Head Provincial Park
Nova Scotia

Burntcoat Head Provincial Park
Nova Scotia

Kejimkujik National Park

 

September:

Campobello Island
International Park (Canada and USA)

West Quoddy Lighthouse
Lubec, Maine

Dinner for two provided by Sunset Point Campground
Harrington, Maine

The Bubbles
Acadia National Park, Maine

The top of the North Bubble
Acadia National Park, Maine

 

October:

We made an exception to the “no people” rule for the grandkids. : )
Kade and Harper
Akron Zoo, Ohio

Alex, Max and Cody
October Festival
Wooster, Ohio

View from a “cellphone tower” mountain near Jamestown, New York

Mogadore Reservoir
Countryside Campground
Mogadore, Ohio

Favorite picture from an unexpected house tour
Blenheim-Gilboa
Property of New York Power Authority

November:

Stone Mountain State Park Campground
North Carolina

Stone Mountain

Chimney Rock State Park
North Carolina

 

December:

Magnolia Plantation
Charleston, South Carolina

Cathedral of St. John the Baptist
Savannah, Georgia

Blaine’s side

My side

January:

Driftwood Beach
Jekyll Island, Georgia

Wild horse
Cumberland Island National Seashore
Near Savannah, Georgia

Wild horse in front of Dungeness Mansion ruins
Cumberland Island National Seashore
Near Savannah, Georgia

Destin Beach, Florida

Destin Beach, Florida

February:

Campfire
O’leano State Park
High Springs, Florida

Kissimmee Prairie State Park Campground
Okeechobee, Florida

Kissimmee Prairie State Park

Controlled burn
Highlands Hammock State Park
Seabring, Florida

 

March:

Kayaking in Meaher State Park
Mobile, Alabama

Mardi Gras King and Queen robes
Mobile, Alabama

Eating beignets (been-YAYs)
New Orleans, Louisiana

Street band
New Orleans, Louisiana

 

April:

Burial grounds for Andrew Jackson and his wife
The Hermitage
Nashville, Tennessee

“The Parthenon”
Nashville, Tennessee

Cumberland Mountain State Park
Crossville, Tennessee

Chimney Tops
Great Smokey Mountains National Park
Near Gatlinburg, Tennessee

 

May:

Indian Mountain State Park
Jellico, Tennessee

Together, wherever we go!

 

River Park Campground, Menominee, Michigan

We drove 136 miles in 3-hours to a City Park.

That’s our campground.

On this side of the bridge, we’re in Wisconsin . . . .

Now we’re in Michigan. : )

 

Odd place for a campground, but there ya go.  It’s a really pretty park itself, but the surroundings are quite strange.  We’ve got water on all four sides, so I guess technically that makes it an island.  We can see ships docked at some kind of shipyard that look like military destroyers like you’d have in “Battleship”, but they don’t seem to be working, except for a little radar thingy spinning around on top of one of them.

Don’t they look like military boats?

 

There’s some kind of power plant or something, and a state road that runs by across the way – over the River in our backyard.

View out our front window.

There we are!

And we’re walking distance to a strip mall that sports a Kmart, a local pet place that boards dogs, a grocery store that advertises gourmet food, and a myriad of other establishments.

Once we got set up, we drove from Michigan to Wisconsin for groceries!  Yep.  We’re right on the border.  We nixed the nearby place because we were tired and we knew nothing about it.  Walmart’s only about ten minutes away. After some discussion about what to have for dinner, we settled on something I call “Blaine’s Pasta”.  It received that name because one day, he came home from work with a list of ingredients and asked me to make it.  Another electrician, who has “chef-like” abilities and love for cooking and feeding people, brought this pasta in to work for the guys to eat at lunch.  But like most chefs, didn’t measure anything – except the cream.  Ohh-kaaay, then.  Here we go . . . .  and amazingly, I did it!

 

Here’s the recipe – with measurements.  😊

This time, out of necessity, I had to make it with peppered turkey.  No ham.  No chicken.  But it was still really good!

BLAINE’S PASTA

1 chicken breast, cubed and cooked

½ # peppered ham, cubed

3 green onions with tops, sliced thin

½ C. fresh mushrooms, sliced

½ C. green and/or red pepper, chopped

2 cloves garlic, minced

1/2 C. fresh grated Romano cheese

1 t. seasoned salt

2 T. butter

1 pint heavy cream

Favorite pasta, cooked (I use a handful of angel hair)

In 2 T. butter, sauté meat and vegetables just until vegetables begin to soften.  Add garlic and cook and stir 1-2 more minutes.  Add cream and seasoned salt.

Bring to a heavy boil.

Add the cheese.  Stir until melted and mixed well.  Serve over cooked pasta.

HINT:  This is really good fresh, but when you eat it leftover, the butter and cream separate and it’s not as good.  However….I discovered that (at least this time) if you store the leftover sauce and pasta in separate containers, it didn’t separate.  Not sure why???

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