Holly has gone to the horse show in Roanoke every year since we first moved here, usually with me, once or twice with a friend. Lots of good memories there: wandering around with Trevor one year in the daytime; me making it home to the top of Claybanks Drive before puking all over the car; Holly literally bumping into one of the internationally known competitors (was it Aaron Vale?); the year I bought tickets for the wrong night, so we ended up going two nights in a row.
Last year, the show was cancelled just weeks beforehand. Holly found a large show in DC, and we went there instead several months laterand had a great time--so much so, that she got tickets again this year for her birthday, and we did it again.
It was a typical rushed day, driving up to Mason, unloading things from my car, running to the (nice!) Walmart to load her up for three and a half more weeks of groceries. Then ran by Cave Mezza (me) and the Peruvian chicken place (her) for food to take home to eat. We drove to the Fairfax Metro station and took the train into the city. We took the long way (hahaha!) to grab something at Starbucks and ended up in Chinatown (which is alongside Verizon Center, but who knew?).
Adorable little Starbucks (not remotely Chinese) and great crosswalks!
Ooh, lots of flashing lights and police activity, second year in a row!
We enjoyed the gorgeous weather and eventually made our way into the American Art Museum.
Grandma Moses.
Loved this of the Golden Gate Bridge being built
The study to gain approval to paint the U.S. Capitol Rotunda. Stunning.
He chose to paint George Washington in the center of the dome, having ascended to the heavens, looking down upon the visitor. Steeped
in Classical mythology, Brumidi presents George Washington as Zeus,
chief among the Greek gods, flanked by thirteen female figures
symbolizing the original thirteen colonies. Six
vignettes form the outer edge of the decoration, allegories pairing
Greek gods and goddesses with an aspect of American prowess and
ingenuity. Brumidi
incorporated current events into his vignettes: at the bottom of this
painting, Athena--portrayed as goddess of war—vanquishes the forces of
evil, here portrayed by Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy,
and his vice-president, Andrew Stephens. The completion of the dome in 1865 came to symbolize a newly reunited America after the Civil War.

This Albert Bierstadt is in its own room at the museum. Breathtaking in its size and use of light. I knew Bierstadt was on Trevor's current art study list. I've been helping him with his flashcards but didn't realize it was the SAME painting. Holly's standing by it to help show the size of the work.
We didn't have a lot of time at the museum. We remembered waiting in long lines to get into the horse show last year, so we went over early and skipped the lines entirely. As always, we had great seats, second row. There was lots of entertainment before the main event. We've seen the Jack Russell Terrier races before, but this one was truly hilarious!
The U.S. Olympic Team was there. Pretty cool!
I did not bring my big camera. We've taken it for so many years. It's old. It's a pain to download pics to my laptop, and I feel guilty and terrible to say that I never downloaded last year's photos. And neither of our phones are new enough to get great action shots, so no horse jumping pictures this year.
It was a great competition--27 jumpers to begin with, 7 made it to the final jumpoff. The timing was perfect, as the show ended between 11:00 - 11:15 p.m., and we knew the Metro would be shutting down at midnight (reduced hours to allow for major overnight maintenance). We easily caught our trains, a bit more traffic than usual with costumed people returning from Halloween parties. It was a much smoother trip than last year, even for Holly, although I wore my Sea Bands just in case!
Back at Holly's, we fixed a late snack, including garlic bread and settled into HGTV. It was a pretty late night, and I was gone at 9 to be home at noon. Not a long enough visit. We've already made plans for me to stay overnight when she goes back after Thanksgiving, and we'll hang out on Monday, take an leisurely brunch, and just enjoy. Time flies. I miss my girl.
Hoping we make the show again next year . . . it's been a great tradition, worth keeping up.