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June 20 – USWNT v Sweden : 2019 France Trip Memories

Cute little kid at the game, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Game Day

There was enough interest in getting fans from Paris out to Le Havre to see the US Women’s Nation team play Sweden that they added another train. They even hauled out these standing cut-outs of soccer people to greet us as we boarded – according to the old French guys that got stuck riding with us: this was a slow slow train. Slow. We didn’t care so long as we got to the game in time… which we did.

The Soccer Train to Le Havre from Paris, June 20, 2019
The Soccer Train to Le Havre from Paris, June 20, 2019

Le Stade Océane appeared through the train window, and like that we were charged up for the game.

Stade Océane, Le Havre, France, June 20, 2019
Stade Océane, Le Havre, France, June 20, 2019

We had great seats again, looking down the goal line at Tobin Heath’s part of the field. USWNT v Sweden is always contentious, this game assured their positions in the first and second places in Group F. Sweden would have had to clobber the USWNT to gain first place since the standings after the US played Thailand and Chile. Even still, a great rivalry in this last game of the Group F stage of women’s world cup play.

Tobin Heath, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Tobin Heath, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Click here for the US Soccer recap of the game. By the time I got to my seat the US was already up 1:0.

Megan Rapinoe, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Megan Rapinoe, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Not sure the referee saw this hold.

Did the Refs See this? USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Did the Refs See this? USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

The Swedish fans were coordinated and ready to go.

Swedish Fans Showed Up in Force, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Swedish Fans Showed Up in Force, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

We US fans were a bit more rag-tag, but definitely had spirit.

The stadiums were all decorated by FIFA for the event. I honestly felt “Dare to Shine” was a weak slogan, why couldn’t it just be “Shine”? Why did they have to “Dare to”?

Stade Océane dressed for the occasion, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Stade Océane dressed for the occasion, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Megan Rapinoe playing keep-away like she does.

Rapinoe doing her thing, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Rapinoe doing her thing, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Rose Lavelle was a magician moving the ball down the field. She finally made a score in the final (spoilers!) after one of her runs downfield. But all these games we saw she’d get the ball to the net from the other end of the field and wouldn’t take the shot.

Rose Lavelle and her magic feet, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Rose Lavelle and her magic feet, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Alyssa Naeher goal kicking.

Alyssa Naeher sending the ball downfield, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Alyssa Naeher sending the ball downfield, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Crystal Dunn’s a hero, she did an amazing job regaining possession over and over.

Crystal Dunn, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Crystal Dunn, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

Attendance was always reported on the big screen towards the end of the game. Each game had more and more interest.

Attendance at USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Attendance at USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

A wide shot of the field, the blue and wavy architecture of the stadium portrays the harbor status of the city, Le Havre.

Stade Océane, USWNT v Sweden, June 20, 2019
Stade Océane, USWNT v Sweden, June 20, 2019

Handshakes after the game as the audience disperses.

Game Over 2:0, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Game Over 2:0, USWNT v Sweden, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

A core part of the USWNT would always huddle like this after a game, after all the hubbub was over.

Post game huddle, USWNT, Le Havre, June 20, 2019
Post game huddle, USWNT, Le Havre, June 20, 2019

With groups of merry US and Swedish fans we walked out, in our case to our rental car to drive back to the hotel. The spirit of the games and the crowds were delightful.

Click through this YouTube video for the official highlights.

The day after this we spent the day touring Le Havre, the most comfortable weather we had all vacation with it’s proximity to the ocean. That’s next.

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June 19 – Scotland v Argentina : 2019 France Trip Memories

Half Time Fun with Lettie, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019

Didn’t plan for it, but ended up getting front row tickets for the Scotland v Argentina Women’s World Cup Soccer game at Parc des Princes in Paris on June 19, 2019. The two teams were vying for a third place slot in their group to possibly make it to the knock out stage. Long story short, Scotland blew a 3 – 0 lead to end up tied with Argentina 3-3, ultimately neither team making it to the knock out stage.

For us it was a practice run on attending soccer matches in France. This game was at the Parc des Princes in the south western part of Paris, we had tickets reserved for the winner of group F: USA, Sweden, Chile, Thailand versus likely France in a week’s time at this same venue.

Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019

Our seats were in the front row looking down the line at the goal. The opening ceremony is always a treat as they always have children participating. Look at all the empty seats! Such a great game tho.

Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019

The first half of the game Scotland dominated 3:0.

Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019
Scotland v Argentina, Parc Des Princes, Paris, June 19, 2019

The field gets watered at halftime. Another warm evening.

Half Time, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019
Half Time, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019

Lettie, the mascot, plays with the children during the break. They gave a bunch of tickets to school children for this game to fill the seats. A teacher saw us looking lost at the bus station and had us follow her and her group so we could find the venue. Again, a great dry run for the group winner game later on.

Lettie the Mascot at Half Time, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019
Lettie the Mascot at Half Time, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019

After halftime Argentina worked their way back from 3:0.

Argentina fights back, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019
Argentina fights back, Scotland v Argentina, Paris, June 19, 2019

VAR was a huge part of Women’s World Cup 2019 in France. Not sure what FIFA was thinking. So often the games were stopped so referees could review video in the back.

"VAR" takes over the game, Scotland v Agentina, Paris, June 19, 2019
“VAR” takes over the game, Scotland v Agentina, Paris, June 19, 2019

Basically there was a new rule for the game that the goalies had to stand exactly on the line as the penalty kick took place. Here’s an article at CNN about Hope Solo’s take on it.

Ref tells Goalie to stand on the line, new rule for Women's World Cup play, June 19, 2019
Ref tells Goalie to stand on the line, new rule for Women’s World Cup play, June 19, 2019

Argentina missed the first kick, VAR came back saying the goalie stepped off her line so they retook the kick.

Penalty Kick from Argentina, June 19, 2019
Penalty Kick from Argentina, June 19, 2019
Penalty Kick from Argentina, June 19, 2019
Penalty Kick from Argentina, June 19, 2019

The second penalty kick take went in, Argentina tied the game 3-3, ultimately keeping Scotland out of the knockout stage.

Argentina Ties with Scotland 3-3, June 19, 2019
Argentina Ties with Scotland 3-3, June 19, 2019

After the game we exited the stadium right where a Scottish bag piper was leading fans out of the stadium. This is my video of the piper, who, if you think about it, packed his bagpipes for travel from Scotland to Paris to lead a dirge of fans out of the stadium after a heartbreaking day for Scotland.

This video below is the FIFA highlight reel for the game.

Next in our travels was a train ride to Le Havre to see our first USWNT game.

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2019 France Trip Memories

Taittinger 2019 Women's World Cup Label

Index

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June 19 – Paris City Tour : 2019 France Trip Memories

Women's World Cup posters in Paris, June 19, 2019

First full day in France, took a bus tour. We saw and photographed a lot of the famous landmarks during this tour, but I’m not going to focus on the typical guide book stuff if I can help it. The photos I’m sharing here are more about my impressions of the Paris as we worked our way around.

Paris Bus Tour June 19, 2019
Paris Bus Tour June 19, 2019

Didn’t climb the Arc de Triomphe, but these people did.

Tourists on the Arc de Triomphe, June 19, 2019
Tourists on the Arc de Triomphe, June 19, 2019

Photo from a tour bus of marked off photo line for tourists at the Arc de Triomphe. Paris in a nutshell: tourists, photos, traffic, and more tourists.

Traffic Island for Tourists to Take Photos in front of the Arc de Triomphe, June 19, 2019
Traffic Island for Tourists to Take Photos in front of the Arc de Triomphe, June 19, 2019

One of countless rideshare electric scooters in front of the Eiffel Tower. Definitely ended up using these scooters after a while as it was 95 degrees most of the time making walking and the subway a less attractive way to get around the city.

Eiffel Tower, June 19, 2019
Eiffel Tower, June 19, 2019

Read the names across the top – the Eiffel Tower is a monument to science! I had no idea before this bus tour, somehow that’s not usually highlighted when spoken about.

The Eiffel Tower is a monument to science.
The Eiffel Tower is a monument to science.

The statuary on top of the National Academy of Music is quintessential French. Love it.

Architects sign the buildings in Paris, why doesn’t this happen everywhere? The varied decorative features on the buildings were lovely, couldn’t get enough.

This is one of my favorite photos, people are the same everywhere. Can’t have a cherub in a fountain without turning it into an anarchist with a curly mustache.

Anarchist Cherub Fountain, Paris, June 19, 2019
Anarchist Cherub Fountain, Paris, June 19, 2019

This Ferris wheel was in varied states of construction during our time there.

Assembling the Big Wheel at the Place de la Concorde, June 19, 2019
Assembling the Big Wheel at the Place de la Concorde, June 19, 2019

Mosaic street art dotted the city. Here are two of the many we saw.

This “Religieus” cream puff was gluten free. I think about this cream puff a lot, I’m not gonna lie.

This is Gluten Free, Paris, June 19, 2019
This is Gluten Free, Paris, June 19, 2019

Paris streets as seen from the top of a tour bus.

Support for women’s world cup soccer wasn’t ubiquitous, a few Parisians we spoke to didn’t even know it was going on. But graphic art posters like these were spotted here and there around the city.

Women's World Cup posters in Paris, June 19, 2019
Women’s World Cup posters in Paris, June 19, 2019

We found ourselves speaking to some Scottish soccer fans in a pub, turns out the Scotland team was playing Argentina this night right in Paris. We went onto the FIFA website and got ourselves front row tickets. The stadium wasn’t sold out from lukewarm interest in the game, but we went as a trial run to see how attending these games works so we were savvy for the US games. Turns out we had a great time, that’s my next post.

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June 18 arrival : 2019 France Trip Memories

Notre Dame Cathedral, Paris, June 18, 2019

A year ago I took the best vacation ever: to France to watch the women’s world cup soccer matches in different cities across the country, and I am reliving the trip this year by posting memories with photos every day, to document all the great experiences in a travel journal that I didn’t get together last year.

We flew direct Boston to Paris, checked into our hotel which was a little bit away from the city center and the sites. After we rejuvenated with a nap followed by an Indian meal nearby, we jumped directly onto the metropolitan subway to figure out how to make our way around on public transportation. We headed for the center even thought it was late in the day.

Right away we found ourselves at Notre Dame cathedral. It was just two months since the date the building burned. We arrived June 18, 2019; the fire happened April 15, 2019. The area around the cathedral was cordoned off for safety and construction work, including the walkway down next to the river. An abandoned ride share bike, left on the river walkway and covered in ash, can be seen in the photo below. The cathedral looked lovely regardless of its trouble.

Abandoned Bike Share in front of  the recently burned Notre Dame Cathedral, June 18, 2019
Abandoned Bike Share in front of the recently burned Notre Dame Cathedral, June 18, 2019

The gargoyles were still impressive against the sky.

Gargoyles on the recently burned Notre Dame Cathedral, June 18, 2019
Gargoyles on the recently burned Notre Dame Cathedral, June 18, 2019

Tired from our first day of travel we wandered across the river and found the English language bookshop and cafe, Shakespeare and Co. Perfect for a caffeine pick-me-up to get ourselves back to the hotel.

Shakespeare and Co Cafe Paris
The English language bookshop and cafe, Shakespeare and Co. June 18, 2019

Tomorrow is more Paris and our first soccer game experience: Scotland v Argentina. Thanks for following along.

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Cleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff

white book in white table near yellow wall Cleopatra: A LifeCleopatra: A Life by Stacy Schiff
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Read this book if you love history.
So much to think about and recognize in our own times regarding political science and culture norms and assumptions.

This book quote sums it up,
“as one of Caesar’s murderers had noted, ‘How much more attention people pay to their fears than to their memories!’ It has always been preferable to attribute a woman’s success to her beauty rather than to her brains, to reduce her to the sum of her sex life. Against a powerful enchantress there is no contest. Against a woman who ensnares a man in the coils of her serpentine intelligence – in the ropes of her pearls – there should, at least, be some kind of antidote. Cleopatra unsettles more as a sage than a seductress; it is less threatening to believe her fatally attractive than fatally intelligent.”


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Circe by Madeline Miller

white book in white table near yellow wall

Circe by Madeline Miller

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


The perfect thing to read after playing through the Assassins Creed Oddysey video game with all the DLC.

I had no idea what this book was about when I picked it up, but was delighted by the whimsical subject matter.

Off to go look up all these characters and where they’ve popped up over time.
I highly recommend this for a light yet still deep read.



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Nerd Fun Boston

Nerd Fun Meez

After hosting and attending 346 meetups since 2007* the time has come to step down from running Nerd Fun Boston. 

I started the Nerd Fun Boston Meetup in 2007 because couldn’t get my “normal” friends to go to the local events that I wanted to go to, so I figured I’d collect fellow nerds from the internet to go with me.  The first event that I hosted was a Michael Palin book signing, and no one showed – it was just me and my meetup sign. I went in to the venue alone and had a great time creating the lifelong memory of making Michael Palin laugh.

My second event was also a treat because people actually showed up! (See photo of boyfriend below, I met him that night. 🙂 )  The Harvard – Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics was having their monthly public observatory night, and never having been I figured I’d collect some random nerds and go check it out. If you’ve never been I highly recommend going. Their monthly public lecture and telescope evenings are consistently the most popular Nerd Fun Boston events I’ve run.

And so it began… 11 years of connecting people to educational and otherwise nerdy events around town. It’s 2018 now and I can easily say that the Nerd Fun crowd has become my community. My world expanded by making new friends, meeting their friends, and then bringing them along for more fun. We’ve all learned new things, met new people, and relaxed knowing that this crowd is completely ok with you giving a damn about 18th century history, or natural science, or the Kepler mission, or the latest medical advances, etc.

The time has come for me to pass the reins to someone new. Times have changed, but the need for people to connect in real life is now more important than ever. So I hope others will pick up where I left off and continue to connect, educate, and entertain.

I do suspect that in the future I may be up for running the occasional event as there’s always something intriguing going on in Greater Boston. But personally committing to hosting at least two events per month is finally wearing on me as I begin focusing on new things.

I’ll finish below with some ideas and tips for running this or any Meetup group. But here is the most important thing that I learned from founding and running Nerd Fun Boston: the most rewarding experiences are the things that take the most courage to do.

Be well, stay curious, and Nerd On, <3

Heather

* ~ 2.6 meetups/month !?!

Things I know from running Nerd Fun

  • Nerd Fun Boston has the nicest, most intelligent, most authentic people anywhere. As a group our members see the term “nerd” and ignore the associated social stigma, “meh, who cares”. Instead they’d rather connect with people who are also intrigued with the world. They all get it, our conversations are rarely small talk. The name of the group, coined by my friend, Susan, self selects really great folk. I’ve seen other people roll their eyes and back away when I tell them that this here group of people is a Meetup group called Nerd Fun. They don’t want the association, and they physically step back. Self selecting. It’s awesome really.
  • Protect the email list. It’s a large group, nearly 15,000 people, and everyone who knows the first thing about “promoting an online bizness” finds the largest Meetup groups to spam the organizers to get their products and services in front of many people for free. I’m not gonna lie, I enjoy saying “no” to these people. I truly think people will leave the group en masse if the email list gets spammed. Protect it, for it is sacred.
  • Being an organizer is the best way to meet new people. The people that take that bit of courage, step up and rally other people to attend a lecture, tour, walk, or event enjoy themselves while being themselves and always end up with a crew of new friends. I’ve seen this over and over.
  • Keep politics out of the group. No political events. Nope. None. It’s everywhere else, that’s not what we are here for.
  • Run events that you’d be going to anyways. If no one shows up you won’t be disappointed. My first event going to see Michael Palin is an example, I would have gone anyways, and had a great time regardless.
  • Find events everywhere. Surf the calendar pages of the local colleges that we’re lucky to have here in Boston. Check out the calendars of the local museums. The walking tours at Boston by Foot, Historic Bostons, and the National Parks are spectacular. Fred Hapgood emails a weekly list of lectures around town and has a great list of sources at his website. People that run events love having interested people in attendance, don’t be afraid to reach out and tell them you’ve got a group showing up.
  • The organizer has to attend. Don’t leave people high and dry. It’s a responsibility. It’s worth it. But it’s a responsibility.
  • People are not good at RSVPing reliably.  People always have a hard time committing to attending. We had a forum post about it with a good discussion of why people RSVP yes and then don’t show up. It comes down to people “wanting to have gone” to an event but not having the will to show up. I mean, we have some shy people, I get it. Also I am aware some people may show up and then not feel strongly about connecting to say “hi” to the group. I’m convinced there’s nothing you can do about how members RSVP, so I tried not to let inconsistent attendance bother me. When in doubt, expect 12 people will attend. It’s usually 12 that attend anyways, no matter how many people say they’re going.
  • Meetup.com is changing. Social media has so overtaken our discourse in the past ten years that people are reacting to sites like Meetup differently. Also, since WeWork bought Meetup they have taken on the “upsell” business model. They took advertising space away unless you upgrade. They mismanaged turnover, the site is a hybrid bug-fest now. The old stuff is there, the new stuff is pinned on over it, the app tries to hang on to the pertinent info, email goes out unreliably… it goes on. In short: Meetup in 2018 is not as fun as it was in 2007. When I bring people on a walking tour and get people talking it’s still the best. But lectures and bar talks are chaos, connecting with people at such events nowadays can be difficult. I don’t know the answer here, other than wait and see how Meetup.com adapts.
  • Courage = Rewards. To reiterate, personally, the things that I have done that have required the most courage have turned out to be the most rewarding. Starting and running this group took a bit of gumption, I had more than a bit of doubt as to whether it was worth the trouble. Ultimately, there is no question that my life is worlds better than it would have been had I not started the group. No question.
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Online Learning

white book in white table near yellow wall

Education is everything: learn, know, understand, so easy now with online learning. We live in a wonderful time where we can get classes about anything and everything online, and usually for free. Like with exercise – challenging yourself mentally keeps your brain bright and active throughout your life, and the challenge is the thing according to this NYTimes article about superaging.

“no pain no gain”

I plan to keep a list of the online classes that I’ve taken and recommend here in this post, as well as the classes I am currently taking. The classes are at different levels, different colleges, different websites, etc.

 

The current favorite:

UQx: Think101x The Science of Everyday Thinking • This is a unique widely seen free MOOC from the University of Queensland Australia via edx.org objectively looking at how we as humans think… about everything. Assumptions, bias, proof, sources, intuition, insight… fantastic. So successful they put together a podcast in 2016 http://think101.org to cover many of the topics from the class.

Helpful for indy designers and crafters:

Bookkeeping for Crafters with Lauren Venell • A pragmatic guided tour through business accounting for people setting out on their own craft business for $79. There are a lot of good classes over at Creativelive.com, many of which they run for free if you catch them streaming on their “onair” page.

 

For Knitters:

Lace Shawl Design • This class by Miriam Felton gave me traction when it came to creating my very first design, the Hoo*Bert Shawl.

 

Graphic design basics:

Adobe Illustrator: Mastering the Fundamentals • There are always new techniques and tricks, this free class at udemy.com is worth the two hours of time to absorb illustrator basics.

In my queue right now:

Become a Game Developer/Designer : Complete Master Series • Getting my feet wet in game development and this one looks worth the time. This is another udemy offering, $10 at the time I signed up with a New Year’s deal good til January 10, 2017. $200 normally.

Game Theory • Free without a certificate at coursera.com, taught by professors at Stanford University and The University of British Columbia. A topic always intriguing to me, but I’ve never spent the time to wrap my head around it.

Game Design: Art and Concepts Specialization • A series of reasonably priced classes in game design at coursera.com from CalArts.

The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours • From Harvard for free.

Learn drums • I know I said education is everything, I lied. Education and music is everything. Figuring this one will challenge my musical abilities in ways I hadn’t imagined.

 

NOTE: Coursera, Edx, and Udemy all have apps so you can keep up with your classes on the go.

 

Wait a minute, hold up… I almost forgot to list

PODCASTS to feed your brain.

C-SPAN History lecture videos • Learn about history so we don’t repeat it.

The History of Rome Podcast • no new episodes, but there is a reason Mike Duncan started with this podcast and ended up taking people on history tours all over the Roman Empire.

 

Livestreams

Observatory Nights at the The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) • I attend in person usually, but they have them all at Youtube. The best in astronomy information. Here is their Night Sky Report.

 

Let me know what you take, how you like the classes. And please help me encourage people to catch the online learning bug.

 

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Squam Art Workshops – Spring 2015

I never wrote a blog post about the Squam Art Workshops before, though I’ve been attending since 2011. I suppose I never knew how to put it all into words: meeting great people, taking intriguing classes, dodging “woo”, and, well, the food.

So, how about some photos…

The lovely work of @supgup & @siercia #squamartworkshops

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#squamartworkshops #latergram

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Our cabin, Cliffside #squamlove #squamartworkshops

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This was on the way to the dining hall, though not done by @supgup and @sierca as I wrote on my original caption.

More @supgup @siercia #squamlove #squamartworkshops awesomeness

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Working at home later.

 

I also took Gudrun Johnston’s Short Row class, which was really helpful – I really had no idea there were 4 different ways to do short-rows, and that the one way I knew – turns out I was doing it wrong. I took no photos in this class, as it was a knitting circle, basically. Her designs are beautiful, she had a container full of them where she showed us where she used short rows. Such an inspiration.

But, then, it ends. We say goodbye to everyone at breakfast and we go.

So to console myself on the way home there was a stop at Mr Mac‘s, which really needs to be a national chain.

Mr Mac's on the way home #glutenfree #squamartworkshops

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But, I mean, this.

Dock at Squam Lake #latergram #squamlove #squamartworkshops

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thank you, Squammies, for being awesome,

H