How to Change Your Car Radiator

Click on the first thumbnail and scroll through the photos.  Jon Simpson was a good sport. ~P.

Sculptures & Monuments in Philadelphia, PA

Tesla and I walked Philadelphia, excited by all the sculptures, fountains and monuments to take in.  When possible, I will note the name and information about the photograph.

View from the steps at the Phila Art Institute and the steps where Sly Stallone ran up 7 steps before his body double finished the run for him.

View from the steps at the Philadelphia Art Institute, and the steps where Sly Stallone ran up 7,                                            before his body double finished the run for him.

 

Phila Art Institute PnT at Rocky Rocky Statue

We had a few interesting moments at the Rocky Balboa sculpture.  A man introduced himself and offered to take pictures of Tesla and me.  I agreed and he snapped away.  I realized as soon as I reviewed the photos there was a smudge across the lens.   Graciously, he took over again, telling me he was homeless and moved to Philly after Hurricane Katrina.  I slipped him a buck and moved on.  The Rocky t-shirt looked cool and I asked him over my shoulder how much they were.  “Ten bucks, they’re his,” indicating another man further off to the side.  Pink was my choice but the seller didn’t have change for a $20.  He yelled back over to the impromptu photographer, “Hey General, you got change?”  The General replied, “Yeah, what ya got?  I can break a hundred even.”  I spoke up, “Dude, you just told me you were broke and homeless.”  To which he replied, “Well, I am homeless.”

We moved on.

TT Rocky shirtPausing ever so briefly to catch a man taking a nap on a bench.  I’m sure this is a no-no–him sleeping there and me taking his photo–but he didn’t seem to be harming anyone. Interesting hair, that’s what caught my eye.  He was sleeping like a baby.  God, I hope he was just sleeping…

In their natural habitat

In their natural habitat

Click the first thumbnail to open to picture gallery.  Honestly, the only sculpture I saw that I didn’t care for was, Iroguious.  Just didn’t do a thing for me…or Tesla, who thought it was part of something abandoned.

Meudon Gate Rodin

Rolin Adam 2

Adam

Rolin Adam

Rolin The Shade

The Shade

Rolin The Thinker

The Thinker

Rolin The Thinker close

Thinking…

Tesla and I visited many more exciting places.  More to come and thanks for joining us in Historic Downtown Philadelphia!

Please take a moment to like and comment.  Maybe even subscribe for emails?!  Thanks ~P.

Jon McGoran Book Signing Philadelphia PA

My trip to Philadelphia on July 9, 2013, was to make the reading and book signing of Drift, Jon McGoran new thriller about genetically altered foods–Frankenfoods–and once I picked it up I couldn’t put the book back down!  Great read, I highly recommend it!  Makes you really think about food and how it is grown.

The book signing was at The Academy of Natural Sciences, an amazing location for a first time book release.

A packed house!  ~P.

Drift Book Signing

The bears were fierce

The bears were fierce

Phila Zoo 219 Phila Zoo 228 Phila Zoo 225 Phila Zoo 224

That is a set of chompers

That is a set of chompers

Phila Zoo 220

Jon signs a copy of Drift

Jon signs a copy of Drift

Guaranteed sign, when you stand in line.

Guaranteed sign, when you stand in line.

Academy of Natural Sciences

Glad to have never met dinosaurs.

Glad to have never met dinosaurs.

Outside The Academy of Natural Sciences

Outside The Academy of Natural Sciences

The REAL Shoe House~Hellam, PA

The Little Old Lady needed to live somewhere, why not Hellam, PA?

The Haines Shoe House

197 Shoe House Rd, Hellam, PA 17406

197 Shoe House Rd, Hellam, PA 17406

Tesla and I made a stop at The Shoe House today in hopes of a tour of the Shoe and a cone of Hershey’s ice cream.  Neither happened.  But I did take a few minutes to snap some pictures from behind the gated fence.  There was no fence hopping as this house is under heavy video surveillance.  😉

The Shoe House History (Wiki)

25 feet high containing 5 stories with a matching doghouse and mailbox.

Modeled after a work boot, the house was built by shoe salesman Mahlon Haines in 1948 as a form of advertisement.

Haines had the building built by handing a work boot to an architect saying, “Build me a house like this.”

There is also a stained glass panel that shows Mahlon holding a pair of shoes with a message below it that reads, “Haines the Shoe Wizard” and additional windows featuring a boot.

He lived in the shoe house for a short while but ended up moving into a house across the street. The renters were served by a maid and butler and then received free pairs of shoes when they left.

The current owners are Carleen and Ronald Farabaugh who bought the house in 2004. The house received a small renovation and new paint in 2007.

The Shoe House was visited in the 8th season of the reality television series The Amazing Race and was featured on HGTV‘s What’s With That House.

Click on the first thumbnail to open the photo gallery.  Enjoy!  ~P.

 

Suskie River Man~Wrightville, PA 4th of July 2013

I love the randomness of my life and the places it takes me.

Dale and I stopped at his parent’s house, Steve and Susie, and surprised them with a visit.  They were preparing to leave for their friend Butch’s house, a Susquehanna river man since 1969.  He broke the rules by tearing down the majority of ratty trees on his property causing the fur of neighbors to rise.  The neighbors got over, moved away or have died.  Butch is a tough old man with a heart of gold and a soft spot for his family.  Within his family are members of no blood relation, just great friends.

We enjoyed a night of fishing, laughing and at some points, annoying the hell out of Dale’s mom.  She gave me a warning (about 5 times) to stop messing with her, but I just couldn’t help myself.  When Dale’s brother Jon showed up with his girlfriend Jill, it was an all out verbal memoir of their childhood that I greatly encouraged.  Susie wasn’t as amused as the rest of us.  Fortunately for her, there was a huge distraction when someone threw a box of fireworks into the bonfire.  Missiles of fire headed right at us with incredible explosions that should never be viewed at close distance.

I yelled for the mom of two kids to run them up the hill.  The little girl Bailey was nearly in tears.  Tempers flared briefly;  it was a stupid move, made by someone drinking cheap beer.  Butch later set off his fireworks (completely legal, I’m sure) and shortly after, Wrightsville began their display.  The fish were biting, the people were happy, the kids were hilarious (I let them take some pictures of me) and the fireworks gave us many ooooo and aaaaaah moments.  The fireworks ended and the sky went dark, minus the moon and some stars.  We heard a voice coming from the river, “Butch, Butch!  We ran out of gas!”

Two men were drifting down a swift Susqhuehanna River in a fishing boat with no fuel for their motor.

“What do you want me to do?” Butch yelled.

“Help!” the unknown boatist yelled.

“There’s nothing I can do.  I can’t reach a rope out to you.”

“They’ll hit the dam.” I stated.

“Yes, they will.” Butch confirmed.

“The current will drag the boat under and drown them.”

“Yes, it will.” He replied.

“Should I call the police?” I asked.

“Probably.”

He yelled out to the boat which was quickly passing and nearly out of sight.  “You want us to call for help?”

Both yelled back, “No!” and Butch said, “they have beer on the boat and don’t want caught.  Not worth dying over.”

I pulled out my phone; it was dead.  The entire group began discussing if 911 should be called.  At one point I thought for sure, someone, anyone who had a charged phone, would call for help.  In less than five minutes, the boat and men were gone.  We couldn’t hear them and they wouldn’t have been able to hear us.  I felt sick, and a little faint to be honest.  I had dread that I would read of a drowning at the dam in the morning news.  (I checked, no drownings last night, thank you Jesus for watching over drunks in boats.)

Butch said they would most likely be able to direct the boat to shore or at least get to one of the islands and call for someone to bring them gas.  No police involved.  Got ya, Butch.  Glad it worked out for them.

Butch said, “I’m a fixture here, a legend.  When I die, I want to be buried in my wall.”

I asked him how long it took him to build that impressive wall in front of his massive home.

“No one’s ever asked me that before.  A long time, like 9 years, and a lotta money.”

I have no doubt about that.  Beautiful living, down by the river.

Enjoy the pictures by clicking on the first and opening the gallery.

~P.

Join Me- Downtown Gettysburg PA for the Fourth of July 2013

Dale and I arrived in Gettysburg shortly after noon.  We went on a portion of the auto tour and found that to beautiful, but entirely too hot to be in a car with no air conditioning.  I walked around and there was endless landscapes and war relics to photograph.  We parked downtown and checked out center city Gettysburg.  My camera loved people dressed in clothing from the Civil War period.  (They had to be roasting)

One stop we took was at the Majestic Theater, to watch a film about the Civil War and the history of Gettysburg College’s involvement.  I did not know that every year, there is a re-enactment of the Gettysburg Address for the freshman students.  That is something I would like to see myself.

God Bless all those that were involved in making our country achieve freedom for all citizens.

Please enjoy the gallery by clicking on the first picture.  Thanks for visiting! ~P.

Boredom Happens II

My car is old….21 years old, to be exact with 198,000 miles.  I am very attached to my car, even though the a/c hasn’t worked in years, nor the cruise control and many other little things that I’ve grown accustomed to not having.  Do I miss my Mercedes? Well duh.  But my Honda, she treats me right.

I can’t be upset that the radiator finally gave out, because I appreciate that it didn’t go out when I was traveling to or from Georgia or even Philly a few weeks ago.  I celebrate my car and the lack of monthly payment.  A fancy car need not define me.  I’m good with my trusted Accord.  A scrapper, just like me.

Showing my car love…Tesla, Andrew and I.  The paint helps hold the car together!  ~P.

Mushrooms, Bugs and More

I find nature very interesting.  The way trees grow.  The shells cicada bugs left behind.  The mushrooms sprouting up everywhere.  My neighbor’s pile of stuff.  ~P.

What is that

Take a guess at what the picture is…….having fun with my camera. ~P.

Microwaving Ivory

So my friend Jen said, “Microwave Ivory soap, it’s really cool.”  I gave her a look of, “you’re messing with me right?”

She continued, “I’m not going to tell you what it does but after you mic it, add a little water and food coloring, and make your own cut out soap bars.”

This is how I did it.  Take one bar of Ivory (must be Ivory soap) and microwave it on a plate or in a bowl.

Add some food color (or in my case blue shampoo) and mash it back together.  It will be HOT so be careful.  In hind site, I recommend gloves.

Flatten it out (you can’t roll it out, I tried) and press a cookie cutter into it.

Pull away the “scrap edges” and slide a knife under the cookie cutter to break the seal on the table.

Presto!  Your own personal soaps!  Keep mashing and cutting.  My last was just a little ball of light blue ivory.

Very Cool….whoever thought to microwave Ivory must have had too much free time on their hands.

Clean up is easy….just rinse away the soap from the cutters and wipe off the table.

The coolest part is watching it in the microwave!

Enjoy!

~P.