I like July, too, with its long days, but I think August is my #1 summer month. Although I am quite partial to September, too. August often has the kind of heat I like to have a few days of, to remind me that I am human and mortal and a creature of sensation. Heat that makes you sweat, and that peels the layers off the females, and that makes you aware of your skin, how the sun feels on it and the wind and the cool touch of an air conditioner.
Yesterday was one of those days.
Chris and I like fairs. We have always gone to the PNE, and we go to others whenever we can, the Agrifair in Abbotsford and the Fall Fair on Mayne Island if we can get there.
We are also childless this week – I’d say childfree, but that word has been spoiled by elements of the ChildFree movement – and so yesterday we jumped in the Miata and headed south rather than fire up the stove. I had intended that we would drive Chuckanut Drive back and forth and then see what sort of interesting dinner we might find in Fairview, but once we crossed the border we saw signs for the Lynden Fair.
Well, we said, we’ll just have to go to that. And we did.
Unfortunately, my new tote-around camera takes a different cable than all the other goddam things that I tote around with me, and so while I have three cables in my bag, none of them fit. So the scintillating images I took will have to wait.
We did the usual fair things, except rides. We watched animals and horse-judging and wandered through animal barns. We purchased overpriced beef sandwiches and onion rings from leathery bleached-blondes, and noted that even though the beef was overpriced, it was pretty damn good.
We listened to the demolition derby (tickets were an extra $15, and it was sold out anyway) and drank lemonade and marveled at steam mops and fancy dog leashes. We ate poffertjes, which are sort of like little doughnuts without the hole, and had ice cream and looked at animals and had ice cream from the Whatcom County Dairy Women. We oohed and aahed at quilts and lego creations and noted that the competition for the photography prizes seemed remarkably weak.
All that stuff. We did all that stuff. It never gets old.
And then we drove home through the cool fragrant dark.
And so I made a reservation at a cheap hotel and headed for the border on a day that reached 16 in the sunshine.
We had to wait for a seat, which wasn’t too long in coming. I hadn’t even time to finish that wonderful IPA when we were seated at a table. We ordered.
opened. Fortunately, though I was carrying six pints of silliness aboard, I managed to remember to open the door on the sidewalk side.