A weekly round up: eats, workouts, watches, reads, and a little early retirement life chit-chat and June travel plans. Summer is in full swing over here, and someone is making the most of her dog days.
Eats
Between travel and some at home social events, I haven't had to put much thought into dinner yet. I've been happily eating off my freezer stores without much planning.
Occasionally I get inspired to try new things. One night I made Chef' Brian's BBQ Shrimp (YouTube video here).
One night I was craving something indulgent and I was also craving vegetables, so I cooked up some Costco pot stickers and his frozen stir fry veggies (YouTube video here).
Workouts
I'm still not doing anything exciting on the fitness front. Bodyweight strength plus dog walks, and now that it's getting warmer, the trend is leaning toward shorter dogs walks and human solo walks.
One day last week I took an island day with Bikie (my folding bike that is small enough to fit in the car and go places with me). For those who were around three years ago for my Island Bender, you may remember that there are islands in Lake Erie. One of my favorite things is to hop on a ferry with Bikie and cruise around.
We (Bikie and I) went to Put in Bay and I crossed off another "things I want to do on Put in Bay that I have not done yet" item, which was a tour of Perry's Cave.
According to the tour guide, back during the War of 1812, Perry's fleet was having a problem because the only place to dump their sewage was in the lake, which was also where they were getting their drinking water. They hopped over to Put in Bay in search of water, and someone found the cave with a large lake (and a rock that looks like an alligator, hence the sign). The ship now had a supply of non-contaminated water, which set them up for success in winning the war.
- French is my "high school" language.
- Spanish is the "practical" language, the second most common one in the US.
- German is my "love" language, the one that I studied for the sheer love of the words. I used to sing in a symphony chorus, and we did a lot of German music, and eventually I wanted to know what I was singing about. I got further in German than in any other language, and the apex of my German studies was coming across an old German silent movie and pausing and translating the title cards one by one, back in the days before Google translate.
- DuoLingo
- Pros: everyone else uses it, and you can do it for free for as long as you can tolerate the limitations of the free version. There are just enough written exercises to challenge without being too hard or tedious.
- Cons: no spoken lessons in the desktop version, and very limited speaking in the app version. In many cases, I'm just following along with the examples without knowing why things are right and why they're wrong. The gamification is annoying.
- The bottom line: It's too convenient and too widely used to ignore. I recently caved and got the paid version so that I don't get kicked out after making five mistakes, which is all you get in the free version. My current routine is to do all of the daily "quests" that DuoLingo assigns me, which takes 15-20 minutes.
- Pimsleur
- Pros: audio lessons! The lessons are conversations where you are prompted how to respond in Spanish. In the version that I got, there is additional review material at the end of each lesson.
- Cons: the lessons get boring pretty quickly. Sometimes phrases would hit my ear wrong and I wouldn't be able to repeat the words until I saw them written out in the end of lesson material. I wasn't always able to follow the grammatical explanations. There are five levels of 30 lessons each, so eventually I finished the course and there is no "next step" to go to. You can get Pimsleur from the library, but for Spanish the hold times were so long that I ended up getting an annual subscription.
- The bottom line: I really feel that Pimsleur covered a lot of ground, and for all of the cons, I plan to use it again. I just wish that there were more lessons and more vocabulary. I continue to take a few minutes on most days to do some of the audio exercises for practice.
- Dreaming Spanish YouTube: short videos in Spanish. When I started, I was at the Super Beginner level, and now I can understand the Beginner videos and sometimes the intermediate videos. I watch DS videos most days, and in a perfect world I would watch at least one every day.
- Michel Thomas. Audio lessons that Tim Ferris talked up back in the day. I did the German series back then and liked it, but when I tried to do the Spanish lessons after finishing Pimsleur, I gave up pretty quickly.
- Pros: when he gives you a new word, he spells it out, which is something that I desperately needed in Pimsleur. Like I said, I found the German version to be helpful when I did it a long time ago. This is an old series, so you can mostly likely get it for free at the library.
- Cons:
- Mouth noise!!!! I believe the gentleman had dentures, and you can hear things that you should not be hearing on the audio.
- The format is that there are two other "students" on the recording, so you get to hear and learn from their mistakes. I remember this being a little annoying for German, and it was why I bailed on the Spanish series. I am capable of making my own mistakes, I don't need to hear other people's mess-ups, thank you very much.
- The bottom line: I'm not saying that I would never do another Michel Thomas course, but it's low on my list.
- Spanish Group on Meetup. I found a local group of other folks who love Spanish and meet up once a week to chat. The only issue is that the meeting time isn't convenient, and it was a bit overwhelming. I didn't die, though. Between you and me, this group is most likely exactly what I should be doing, but I couldn't get motivated to go back the next week. The group isn't going anywhere, so I can join back in any time that I want.
- After asking Google what the cool kids do nowadays, I found an audiobook called Learn Spanish with Paul Noble that was available on Hoopla. It's in the Pimsleur/Michel Thomas vein, but instead of two "students" the recording has a Latin American speaker and a Spanish speaker repeating the exercises correctly so that you can pick up on the slight differences. I'm a few hours into the 13 hour recording. It doesn't have the conversational depth of Pimsleur, but it is giving me insights into some of the grammar that didn't make sense before, so I believe this is a keeper in the language tool box.
- I also picked up a book of short stories in Spanish with English translations, so I'm going to be adding more reading into the mix. I originally found this book on Libby, but it was too cumbersome to go back between Spanish and English on the ebook, so I got the hard copy. I was able to understand the first few paragraphs of the first story in Spanish, but I need the English to check myself.
- Eh I could do private lessons, either in person or online. But that seems...like something that I don't want to do right now.
- St Louis MO
- The Arch (I mean, duh of course I'm going there)
- FLW house
- Anheuser Bush tour
- Jefferson City MO
- Capitol Tour
- Mansfield MO
- Laura Ingalls Wilder Home
- Bentonville AR
- FLW house
- Walmart Museum (because when in Rome...)











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