I got help from Calvin and Hobbes to send best wishes to you all in 2008.
Hint: click on cartoon to enlarge if your eyes are suddenly a year older!
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to go over the next two days to reach our finish,the town of Whitby on the North Sea. We have crossed the Lake District and Yorkshire Dales National Parks and begin Day 5 on the Cleveland Way, a major walking path across the North York Moors. Throughout the morning's walk we climbed higher on the moors, walking through heather and seeing the occasional ancient standing stone..jpg)
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storefronts. Our inn was just off the town square so we could watch local farmers and tradesmen set up for the week-end market on the town square. We checked out several walking shops, purchasing a variety of bandages and plasters to pass out to the wayfarers when we met them for pre-dinner drinks back at the inn. We also met several great dogs, choosing this fellow and his two buddies for our Dogs of the Day photo. We were told that it would be okay to pet the black one, but should steer clear of the lap dog! We heeded his warning. . .
we had a short bus ride to start one of the trip's highpoints. At Pickering Station we climb aboard the steam-hauled Moors Railway, aka Harry Potter's Hogwart Express, for a ride across the wild Flyingdales Moor. (Sally! Sally! Sally! How your standards have gone down. When you started this adventure, it was with shirt tails tucked in and now there's not one, but two, tails hanging out.) 
After lunch we are all very quiet, lost in our own thoughts of what this day means to each of us individually. From the village of Eskdale we follow the Esk Valley until we get our first glimpse of the North Sea! .jpg)

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nearby Dunsley Hall where we will spend our last night of the walk. At the Farewell Dinner we each receive our Finisher's Patch and some good natured words of praise from Dave. And, I can't forget--there was a Dog a Day--a handsome yellow lab who kept sneaking in the dining room from the terrace to get a pat and piece of cheese. Regretfully I didn't have my camera. . ..jpg)
over the past couple of weeks has inspired me to dig back in the photo archives. I found this one from the mid 90s--a fantasy tree filled with antique glass ornaments from Czechoslovakia,Poland, Germany and the much loved Shiny Brites manufactured in New York in the late 1930s and sold at Woolworth's. I collected these ornaments for years from antiques stores, flea markets, and tag sales. The presents under the tree had to be wrapped simply and tied with single bows of real fabric ribbon. In '96 Willie the pit bull was a pup and I didn't put a tree for fear he would turn it over and break all my treasures. Inspired by all of you, perhaps I'll try harder in '08.
under the tree looking for their presents. They both were smart dogs as shown in their Christmas shopping. Both went for the presents wrapped in dog printed paper!
Indies. I was a Peace Corps teacher and John served in the U.K. equivalent to the American Peace Corps. In September 2001, I had the pleasure of meeting John's family for the first time in New York at a volunteer reunion. Since then we always touch base during the holiday season and I'm always excited to see the air mail post in the mailbox. I loved the simple bird drawing and the bright red and yellow colors, plus card sales benefit poverty relief efforts through OxFam.
and feather tiara--more is more. I'm also learning an important fashion lesson from the little one. You know how insecure you can feel when you're dressed up more than usual? Requires a lot of attitude or, I now understand, some cool shades and a pacifier. These girls get their love of bling from Nana Pam who sent this photo..jpg)
down all Santa's cookies, do an under the table crumb cleanup, and then eat something disgusting to hide the smell of chocolate on his breath! On second thought, perhaps he should get credit for helping Santa meet the proposed new dietary guidelines for Jolly Old Men--less trans fats and carbs and more sharing of Rudolph's carrots. . .
Today was a weather mess around town with rain, sleet, and snow falling non-stop. We could have hit the malls for that second to last weekend of frantic Christmas shopping, but nixed that idea for an afternoon
of beautiful music and theater. Today was the first in a series of eight high definition transmissions of live performances of the Metropolitan Opera. So, a couple of friends and I parked ourselves in stadium seats--heck, we could have had a tub of popcorn as well--at Tinseltown, our local movie-plex for Gounod's Romeo and Juliet. We joined people from all over the U.S. and over a dozen other countries in experiencing a live performance from the great Metropolitan Opera.
Right after this interview Romeo and Juliet will play their most intense love scenes. So, Renee is asking Anna and Roberto how they manage to pull off the love scenes. Roberto very charmingly talks about the need to be healthy, physically fit and spark some chemistry with his leading lady. He claims shyness which neither Anna nor Renee buy! He then clinches the interview by telling Renee that he would love to sing with her some day. Those charming Frenchmen!
If this description has piqued your interest in opera,here's the remaining HD performances for the 2007-08 season. As you can see, there's some biggies--Macbeth, Tristan und Isolde, La Boheme--to come. Just go to www.metopera.org/hdlive to find the closest theater for your area as well as directions for ordering tickets online. .jpg)
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sheep which meant that we were getting closer to the Yorkshire Dales farmland. At Troutbeck Church I was amused to see sheep "trying out" the resting places in the church yard..jpg)
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as always. We came off the river path near the town of Masham onto a vast parkland to find this castle at Swinton Park waiting for us! Our rooms were totally luxurious. In fact, someone from our group said that her bath was large enough to fit a small 3rd world county in it-not much of an overstatement. At any rate, it was just what we needed to restore body and spirit for the final push to the North Sea in the final two days of walking.
dip our boots in the Irish Sea to mark the eastern beginning of our walk through the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and North Yorkshire Moors National Parks. In six days we hoped to walk 85 miles to finish the trek in Whitby on the North Sea..jpg)
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Dog a Day--in the village of Conistan on Conistan Waters we stopped
at a local pub for a traditional pub lunch. The Ploughman was a hefty serving of bread, cheese and ham spiced up with a relish called Branston pickle--very good, but I have no idea what made it brown. We met these two pub dogs, one inside waiting for his person to finish a drink and the other out on the patio with us, hoping to share the hearty ploughman.
We curve down the Langdale Pike into surrounding farmland for the last leg of this first day of walking..jpg)
this beautiful black lab who greeted arriving guests with tourist information and peppermints from his spot under the table. The following morning Sally and I spotted him from our window coming across the carpark with a leash in his mouth--ready for his walkies before getting on about his work. The only thing that would have made us happier with this place would have been to have The Concierge sleep in our room that night. Instead, we leave Skelwirth and start Day 2 of our walk.