Showing posts with label pumpkin patch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pumpkin patch. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

pumpkin patch: take 2

This is a very special time of year of us because Pappy comes to town for Halloween! Aurora had a great time. We went all over the place. Marc even got to go back to Tombstone with this dad. (I really don't like it there for some reason.) It was an exciting weekend. It also included me losing our car keys and another pumpkin patch. This farm is much closer to us. We visited it last year and they added a lot more stuff. I think I prefer the first pumpkin patch we went too. It's nice to have so many in the area that you can go to more than one.





I hope everyone had a wonderful weekend and a fun Halloween!!

P.S. Don't forget to check out my new sponsors. They're amazing ladies!

Thursday, October 27, 2011

fall memories: creating new memories.



It isn't fall without a trip to the pumpkin path. I have to say it is a lot different going to a pumpkin patch in Arizona. In Pennsylvania there is usually a chill in the air, leaves changing, and the smell of autumn. If you stay near the city of Phoenix it’s still pretty hot and you don’t really have leaves, just a lot of cacti. It’s still a lot of fun to go pick pumpkins. It didn’t really matter to Aurora that there were no leaves or trees, all she cared about was having a good time and picking her perfect pumpkin.

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If you're wondering who the old dude is in the blue shirt, that's my dad. My parents came in for the first time since we moved here. They've been here for three weeks. It's been a really nice visit but I'm exhausted! They'll be here till Tuesday and we'll get to see them again for Thanksgiving when we fly back to Pittsburgh. It's strange being this far from "home" but absents makes the heart grow fonder, right?

Have you made a trip to a pumpkin patch yet? Any other fall plans in the works?

Friday, October 21, 2011

foto friday: one year ago.

One year ago we went to our first Arizona pumpkin patch. It was a lot different from the one we went to back in Pittsburgh but it was still so much fun.




Happy Friday!

Thursday, October 13, 2011

guest post: fall memories. chapter one by sarah from pastry and promises.

Have I mentioned I’m super excited about fall?! Okay, maybe once or twice. It’s my favorite time of year. I have the best memories from these next few months and I wanted to see what memories you had. I asked what you’re favorite memories are and got some great responses. My best friend Sarah from Pastry and Promises shared a great story about finding Bob. It made me smile from ear to ear! I hope you get a little grin too.



Until my sister was about 4 or 5 years old I didn't really associate "fall" with anything other than coming home from another summer visitation with my dad and the start of a new school year. Sure, we did the whole Halloween thing, and we dutifully drove to Lincoln, MA for Thanksgiving with the grandparents, but everybody has a similar routine and it didn't really strike me as all that special (not that I'm knocking free candy- I just didn't think twice about it). It wasn't until we started taking Laura (my younger sister by 7 years) to Simmons Farm in Pittsburgh, PA that I really started to build an idea of what family tradition should be.

If you've never been to Simmons and you happen to find yourself in the Pittsburgh area in October-go. It's one of the more beautiful places I've ever been. Immediately upon driving in there are signs for "pick-ur-own" apples. Keep going and you'll pass a cute little petting zoo, followed by a barn attached to a greenhouse, where you can buy all kinds of delicious butters (apple, pumpkin etc) pies, ciders... In the greenhouse they've got a jack'o'lantern display and lots of fun activities for the younger kids, and if you keep walking you'll end up in line for the hay ride, which takes you to the pick-ur-own pumpkin patch and giant corn maze.

All of this, in and of itself, is enough to make Simmons a wonderful family retreat each October. What made it memorable for me was, as I said, my sister. Laura is a very creative kid. She has always been one to name and attribute back-stories to every living creature and inanimate object she's come across. Pumpkins were no exception. One year- I don't remember which- she named her pumpkin "Bob" (an incredibly dull name from a child who would later name a fish "Aloysius the vicious fighting fishus"). Bob was tall and thin- the exact opposite of the behemoth that I prided myself on finding every year. We took him home, washed and carved him, and the year progressed. Soon it was October again, and once more we packed into the car and were off to Simmons. We got to the pumpkins and Laura was off. She wandered here and there, turning over pumpkin after pumpkin. I had taken all of 10 minutes to find the biggest, fattest pumpkin within eyesight, but Laura kept searching. Finally we asked, what's wrong with all of these other pumpkins? What kind are you looking for, anyway? She answered simply, "I'm looking for Bob." Much like the Great Pumpkin, Laura had decided that Bob was a reincarnating pumpkin- her reincarnating pumpkin- and it was her duty to find him and bring him back to his proper home. Thus began our quirky family tradition. Every October we drove out to Simmons Farm to find Bob, the reincarnating pumpkin. He was always there, waiting for us, tall and skinny.

I'm 26 years old now, married and expecting my first child. My sister is 19 and recently moved back to Pittsburgh to attend CMU. It's been almost a decade since our family made that trip out to the farm, but at the mere suggestion that she might want to go with me to look for Bob again, Laura squealed like the 5 year-old she once was and declared that Bob had to be found once more. I guess there are some things that you can never outgrow.