Sunday, July 7, 2019

Rehoboth '19

I've been a little slow in writing these updates about our annual summer vacation. We've been back for about a week now, so I'll post these photos now.

Every year since John was a year old, we've gone to Rehoboth Beach for a day in the summer. I'm not a huge beach person, but this one is my favorite. I love seeing how much he's grown when I look at the pictures each year:

                           2016                                                     2017                                      2018


 
With his Hawaiian shirt, he was the coolest 4 year old on the boardwalk!

 
                                             We made a few discoveries

 
And had fun on the rides

2019









Saturday, July 6, 2019

Wilmington

While we were in Delaware, we spent a day exploring Wilmington.

There were a couple of places on Atlas Obscura for the state that we hadn't made it to yet, so we decided to cross a few more off the list.

The first place we visited was a rare gem. Gibraltar Gardens is described as beautiful and well-kept, but it was downright magical! I thought we'd just go in and take a quick look, but we were there for a while because there was so much to see.



It's hidden behind a stone wall, so it's very reminiscent of The Secret Garden, and the decrepit mansion that overlooks it could easily be a stand-in for Misselthwaite.

 

I love watching YouTube channels about urban exploration, and I love the gothic beauty of abandoned buildings so I had to get as close as possible. (There is a small chain across the top of the staircase, that I ducked underneath. I just wanted to get some better photos up close.)

The gardens came to life before our very eyes. As we admired the small pond with all the lilypads, we spotted a frog. Before we knew it, there were several frogs, of different sizes, croaking and jumping around and splashing in the water. We also spotted some koi fish of different sizes.



I couldn't stop taking pictures because everywhere I looked was a cheeky frog, or a regal-looking statue, or a Victorian fountain, or a burst of color from the flowers growing in there.

 


We also made a quick stop at the sculpture garden at the art museum to see The Crying Giant. It is a memorial to the people who were killed in the 9/11 attacks. This sculpture is actually one of three that the artist made; the others are in the Netherlands and the state of Missouri.


The original plan was for the statue to be a kind of fountain that cries an endless stream of tears into a pool, but that part never came to fruition, so it's just a sculpture.