Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Map Time

The license plate game. 
Didn't we all play this as a child when we went on long road trips with our family?
When everyone piled into the car. 
The car that may or may not have had working A/C. 
DVDs and streaming movies did not exist in my childhood. 
We didn't even have computers that could print off coloring pages or lists of things. 
Coloring books, pads of blank papers, and my mom's handwritten lists got us there in a remotely sane fashion. 
When we drove to Florida from Illinois my brother and I had our imaginations to get us there without driving our parents bonkers. 
Which may not have worked when, as soon as we got to the ocean, my dad locked the keys in the car. 
He had driven right onto the sand and we all hopped out in true Griswold family stye and he forgot about his keys in the ignition. 
At least he had it in Park. 

But, my mom did try to keep us occupied on long road excursions. 
She would make lists of things for us to look for and mark off of the paper she had handed us at mile marker 57. 
So, I would fashion a blanket around my side of the backseat and over my head. 
I would briefly roll the window down to tuck the end in. 
Briefly, because if the window was down too long my mom would yell "roll that window up!  My hair is flying all over my face!"
I would have my backseat tent area all set up. 
And my brother better not get into my space because I wasn't afraid to scream. 
I would have my list in my lap looking for...
red barn
cow
truck pulling boat
blue motorcycle 
school
cloud shaped like a tv...
And when that game was over, my mom would whip out her list of states. 
We were to look for their license plates as my dad rolled along the interstate. 

In this 21st century world my kids get to grow up in, they don't understand hours of boredom. 
They have car DVD players. 
An iPad and portable DS game players to keep them thoroughly occupied when traveling across the great U.S. of A. 
But, I do want them to look out the car windows. 
To see America's landscapes. 
To see the giant roadside stand called Boomland. 
Where you can buy fireworks, snacks, AND home decor. 
To see bridges and cotton growing in the field. 
To see the mighty and marvelous Mississippi River and the churning Gulf Coast. 

I was pumped when I caught a Today Show segment pre-summer for a website called Mr Printables.
They had a map of our country with the names of the states and so I decided on a revamped version of the license plate game for our summer adventures. 
We traveled to all over Illinois, Southern Michigan, Northern Indiana, Western Tennessee, and Eastern Missouri. 
Each time we saw a license plate from another state we colored it in with a purple crayon. 
Traveling in Indiana afforded us the opportunity to see many plates from Canada. 
The highway that travels through Northern Indiana and on to Detroit leads right to Canada. 
So we got to color in the top of our map which, for us, represented another country. 
We found 40 states during our summer travels. 
We even saw a Washington DC plate, which I've never seen on the road that I can recall. 
We had friends visit our farm from Vermont, but they had a rental car with Ohio plates. 
Go figure. 

We never saw Massachusetts
New Hampshire 
Vermont
Montana
Wyoming
South Dakota 
Utah
Nebraska 
do western staters ever leave home?
Or Alaska and Hawaii. 
I don't think I've ever seen a Hawaii license plate on the mainland, but I was certain we would see Alaska. 
Darn it. 
Maybe next summer. 





Tuesday, August 25, 2015

A Day At The Zoo

I took the girls to St. Louis today.
We went to the zoo. 
We try to drive to this zoo a few times a year. 
It's closer for us than Chicago zoos. 
They have a new polar bear and a new exhibit space for him. 
He's from Alaska and is little over two years of age.  
They have named him Kali. 
Here's his bio from the zoo's website...

The first occupant of this exhibit is Kali (pronounced "Cully”), a 2 ½ year-old, 850-pound male polar bear that was orphaned in Alaska. In March 2013, the orphaned bear was turned over to U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) by an Alaska Native hunter who killed Kali’s mother in a subsistence hunt without realizing the mother had a cub. USFWS determined that St. Louis would be the bear’s permanent home, working with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) Polar Bear Species Survival Plan (SSP)


He seemed to love chomping on his ice. 
While I love zoos, I also feel a bit sad that some of these animals never see the wild. 
But, most have been born into captivity and know nothing else. 
As climate change is hurting the polar bear population, this new home should be a safe and secure place for this young polar bear. 
I hope he is the start of a great legacy. 

We also saw some happy chimps. 
They kissed. 
Just a peck. 


The girls conversed with a bird. 
I think it's a cormorant. 


And I saw a scene straight out of a Serengeti stock film. 


Friday, February 13, 2015

The Final Days Of Paris

Still in Paris and still walking. 
I would love, love, LOVE to live in this city for a few years. 
To get to really know the neighborhoods. 
To become one with it's cafés and museums. 
But, since we had a limited amount of time we had to see it all. 
And at a quick pace. 
With a few leisurely strolls mixed in. 
Actually, my quick paces all turned to leisurely strolls on this trip. 
Seeing that I was hauling around a growing human within my abdomen. 


Norte-Dame. 
The cathedral in the heart of Paris. 
I believe it's very near the center of the city. 
The one made famous by Victor Hugo and the hunchbacked boy he wrote about who lived within it's towers. 
The church that began being constructed in 1163. 
That's 500 years before Pilgrims decided to get on a boat and head out into the saltwater for a new life. 
The church that is protected by gargoyles who live atop it's towers. 
Who put that sign up saying *not recommended pregnant women climb the stairs?
Move out of the way people, this pregnant lady is climbing to the top of Notre-Dame!
And I did. 
All 387 steps up. 
Or was it 433?
It was a lot. 
Thank goodness there's a gift shop halfway up. 
With some seats. 

The few from up there was literally magical. 
It was the most breathtaking view I had seen in a long time. 
Was it what I had hoped it would be?
Yes. 
And more. 
The River Seine and Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe and Sacre Couer. 
All seen from the top of Notre-Dame Cathedral. 
A postcard view from my dreams. 


Once we meandered leisurely back down the steps we stopped for a crepe. 
There's a great crepe shoppe with a red awning right at the feet of the Cathedral. 
If you're ever in Paris, get one of those crepes, okay?

When Chad and I travel to a new city, we visit a zoo. 
Paris was no exception. 
We started out one morning to the oldest zoological park in Paris. 
The Ménagerie.  
Not realizing how far away it really was, it took us a very, very long time to get there. 
And we may have been going in the wrong direction for maybe an hour before it was realized. 
And I may have been the one in the lead. 
When we finally arrived it wasn't that interesting. 
All I remember are flamingos and meerkats. 
And my feet hurt. 

It was nearing the end of our trip and we had one thing left to see. 
And we were having trouble finding it. 
Why we wanted to see this particular sight is odd enough. 
We were on a quest to see the tunnel that Princess Diana was in when she was killed in a car accident in 1997. 
I had read that there was a memorial near the tunnel, but it wasn't in many guidebooks at that time. 
The Liberty Flame that commemorates French Resistance fighters. 
And it was supposed to be near our apartment. 
We had looked and looked and decided to look one last time during the evening of our last day there. 
OH, it was on the other side of the Seine!
We had been looking on the wrong side of the river the whole time. 
It was dark when we found it. 
A sculpture of an oversized golden flame sits over the tunnel on the street above. 
But I wanted to see that tunnel.
And take a picture. 
Why?
Who knows why really.
To document a piece of history, I guess. 
In my lifetime, her death was headline news. 
A tragic end to a beautiful life. 
So, I was going to get a picture. 
There's a median between the two traffic lanes leading into the tunnel. 
I thought I would just walk down that. 
Geesh, there's a lot of traffic going through that tunnel. 
My plan was to walk down the median, getting as close as I could without actually going into the dark. 
I ignored my husband's numerous requests that sounded like... "you're not going into the traffic! you're going to get killed!" 
And snapped a picture. 
And another when I got back to the side of the road. 
Both were a bit too dark. 
Of course I didn't know this at the time because this was before the popularity of digital cameras. 
I had to wait until I got home to see what had been captured on the film. 


Once we saw that tunnel, we were assured that we had seen everything. 
We had eaten dinner near the Arc de Triumphe. 
We had taken a batobus ride down the River Seine taking in all of the sights from the water. 


We had climbed the curving walkway and stairs up to Sacré-Coeur in Montmartre. 
We had eaten a prosciutto and cheese sandwich on a bench on the Ile de la Cité.
I ate the largest cotton candy I've ever seen under the glittering lights of the Eiffel Tower. 


We had meandered through Rue Cler. 
The street market that was around the corner from our apartment. 
We bought fresh food there that we took back to our kitchen. 
In our Parisian kitchen Chad whipped up dinner for us a few times. 
It was a grande street market and I loved it a lot.
Except for that one afternoon at the fromagerie. 
And the cheese shop owner began yelling at Chad in French. 
Was she yelling that she wanted us to try a free sample?
Oh. 
We were being told to leave. 
Because he had touched the cheese. 
Apparently, that was a big no-no. 

We said goodbye to our Paris apartment in the 7th Arrondisement and headed back to the airport. 
Since we were flying standby, we had to wait for all revenue ticket holders to check in before we would know if we would get a seat. 
Two seats, remember.
As we chewed our nails and looked around we noticed two other people waiting. 
And then it was announced that there were two seats left on the jet back to Chicago. 
Two seats and four people. 
Please, please, please give those seats to the pregnant lady and her husband!
Luck was on our side that day and we got the seats. 
We said a bittersweet au revoir to Paris. 
And have been dreaming of a trip back ever since. 
With our two daughters who have a love for all things French that they have inherited from their mère.
Our daughter Gigi will fit right in. 


Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Creme Brûlée

When I arrive in a new city I get all jittery to get out and about. 
My time is limited and so I need to start seeing the sights. 
Like now. 
And Paris was no exception. 
Irregardless to the fact that I was lugging around twenty extra pounds.
Twenty extra pounds that made me very top/front heavy.
We decided, in our overly frugal way, to walk everywhere that we could. 
We took the subway to farther off neighborhoods. 
But once there we hoofed it. 
Up steep inclines. 
Around mysterious corners. 
Is that a cafe?
Let's get a creme brûlée. 
Berets were bought. 
Postcards were sent back to the States. 
We bought a collar for our dog from a sweet French woman who owned a shop that sold petite puppies. 
She spoke no English. 
We spoke no French.
We pointed our way to a purchase. 
We meandered near the banks of the River Seine. 
Past tea houses. 
Do they have desserts?
Let's get a creme brûlée. 

We tried to see it all. 
The Louvre Museum that houses the infamous Mona Lisa. 
She was hard to see really. 
People were twenty deep to gaze at her amused face. 
I preferred the large portraits that adorned the halls that took us to her. 
The Rodin Museum. 
Where The Thinker contemplates near The Gates of Hell. 
The Moulin Rouge with it's red windmill. 
Everything in that city is mesmerizing. 
Everything. 
The bridges have gilded flying horses atop them. 
The parks are immaculately maintained. 
I don't remember seeing much garbage. 

Dogs and death are everywhere. 
Dogs ride the subway.
Sit in shops. 
Frolic in parks. 
And there are cemeteries. 
And tombs. 
Napoleon's Tomb. 
He was encased within six coffins before entering his crypt. 
To keep everyone away. 
They have an underground cemetery. 
The catacombs. 
Where people were deposited under the streets of Paris in 1786. 
Piles and piles and piles of bones under the feet and homes of the people of this city. 
Cimetière du Père Lachaise. 
A cemetery overlooking the city on a wooded hill. 
We saw Jim Morrison's grave. 
And the final resting places of Oscar Wilde, Edith Piaf, Isadora Duncan, Chopin and Balzac. 

All of the walking made for a very hungry pregnant woman. 
I ate bread. 
And ham. 
And creme brûlée. 
And snails. 
And creme brûlée. 
Did I mention that I ate creme brûlée?
Upon returning home my obstetrician was shocked to see that I had gained 10 pounds in one month.
I sheepishly smiled and said that I had just returned from Paris. 
All was forgiven. 

One thing we did notice as we were traveling around the city...people talked to me. 
Not to Chad. 
To me. 
Standing on a street corner figuring out where we wanted to go, French people would stop to ask me directions. 
Sitting on a park bench to rest my swollen ankles, someone would stop to chat. 
They were always a bit bothered when I shook my head and said "American."
I think it was because I was so roundly pregnant. 
Or it may have been the jaunty scarf tied around my neck. 
I guess I looked Parisian. 
I'll take that as a compliment. 


To be continued...









Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Seeing The Light Of Paris

We landed in Paris. 
The air was ripe with Frenchness. 
The airport had an indoor smoking area that was packed with people puffing away on tar sticks. 
Our first order of business was to make a phone call. 
We were renting an apartment from a company called Paris Perfect
We would be living like regular Parisians in a regular home in a regular neighborhood. 
But we needed to call the person who would meet us there to give us the key to get in. 
This was happening 11 years ago. 
I think we owned a cell phone, but this was before the invention of the all-knowing smartphone. 
We didn't want to use our cell and use expensive international minutes to make a 2 minute phone call. 
So we needed to buy a phone card. 
At what appeared to be a little convienance store within the airport. 
You could buy a bag of chips, cigarettes, phone cards, or condoms at this tiny little shop. 
When you only speak English and you're in a foreign country, you must make do with your key intellect in the art of pointing and pantomime. 
After using our hands and finally getting the clerk to understand what we needed, we headed to the pay phones. 
We had to punch in a whole slew of numbers to reach who we needed in the city limits. 

After completing our call, we hopped onto the Paris Metro. 
We would take the train into Paris and then walk a few blocks to our apartment. 
My husband had been taking the subway in Chicago for many years as he didn't drive. 
He was confidant that he could figure out the Paris subway system. 
I have a profound love for maps and he has a great sense of direction when looking at colored lines on a board, so we weren't worried in the least. 
We settled onto the train and headed out. 
Past what I would consider the suburbs of Paris and into the underground tunnel system. 
We got off at a stop called Invalides after transferring lines a few times. 
And as we ascended the stairs we came out into the light. 
The light we had dreamed of fell upon our faces. 
It was the light of a city that I immediately fell in love with. 

We began walking to try to find the street our apartment was on, Rue Saint Dominique. 
It was in the 7th Arrondisement. 
The French call their neighborhoods or districts Arrondisements. 
And those Arrondisements have names as well as a number designated to them. 
We were staying in the Invalides and Eiffel Tower Quarter. 
The Invalides was a hospital built by King Louis XIV for his wounded and homeless veterans. 
It now houses Napoleon Bonaparte's  tomb. 
We saw this imposing gold-gilded building and, I guess because we were in awe of it's giganticness, we began walking in the wrong direction. 
After a few blocks of pulling our suitcases down uneven and oh, so tiny sidewalks we came to a halt. 
My map instincts told me we were going the wrong way. 
I sniffed the air and said " go back."
So we headed back to the subway entrance and walked the other way.
Through a small green space, around a few corners and yes, there it was!
Rue Saint Dominque!

The apartment was nestled on a quaint street full of clothing shops, bakeries, and coffee shops. 
Tiny cars were parked on the cobble streets. 
Dogs peered out from the doorways of shops run by their masters. 
There was a veterinary clinic that we passed, where we would eventually spot a beagle waiting with his owner one morning for the doctor to arrive as it stood in a gingerly fashion as a sock was sticking out of it's bum. 
There was a Pizza Hut. 
A French Pizza Hut.  
That we did eat at because the pizza choices were not at all similar to the Pizza Hut choices in America. 

We got to the apartment and knocked. 
I don't remember if it was a man or a woman who answered the door.
But whoever it was welcomed us joyfully and in English and gave us a "Welcome to Paris" basket of goodies. 
One of the things in the basket was a hand embroidered baguette bag. 
You buy your fresh baguette loaf from the bakery everyday and store it in this cloth bag once you get it home. 
I still use it to this day. 
It holds my French rolling pin and hangs in my south facing kitchen window. 

The apartment was amazing and was everything we hoped it would be. 
On the top floor of a three story building. 
With an inner courtyard that we could see from the kitchen. 
There was a small pool of water in the courtyard that was tiled in dark blue so it made the water so deep and luscious looking. 
Everything was so clean.
The people who lived in this building were very proud of it and it showed in the pristine condition of the courtyard. 
It would be our home away from home. 
A kitchen that my husband could cook in. 
A dining table for two. 
A washer/dryer combo machine was in the bathroom. 
A bedroom window that when I opened and leaned out and looked to the left I saw what I came to see. 
The Eiffel Tower. 
Just down the street. 
The symbol of France was within my view and I couldn't wait to see it up close.

Across the street we could clearly see the neighboring apartments. 
Every morning we saw the neighbor's cats sunning themselves in the window as we ate our breakfast. 
We were only in Paris for a short time, but I looked for those two white cats every morning. 
While I ate a croissant and had a latte that my husband had fetced for me from the bakery downstairs, I would pretend that I was in my own home. 
And that my own cats were in the other room sunning themselves in our window. 
And someone else was noticing them. 


To be continued...

To read Part 1...


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

A Trip To Paris

My husband graduated from culinary school in 2004.
We lived on the north side of Chicago. 
A block and a half from the lake. 
A few blocks from the red line train.
I had been working the whole time he was in school. 
He just went to school. 
Yes, I'm nice like that. 
He had struggled through the years trying to figure out what he really wanted to do with his life. 
Many people urged him to try culinary school. 
He succeeded and we thought, how can we celebrate this?
Why...with a trip to Paris of course!
So, off we went. 
To the City of Lights. 
The land of baguettes. 
Napoleon...open air markets...the Louvre...it would be heaven. 
And it was. 
It wasn't heaven for my ankles, though. 
My ankles hated that trip. 
Because I was 5 1/2 months pregnant. 

My pregnant uterus was big. 
My belly wasn't one of those sweet little bumps. 
I have super stretchy skin and gave my baby lots of room to roll around. 
You couldn't tell I was pregnant if you were walking behind me. 
A big thank you to the pregnancy gods for that. 
But if I would turn to the side...BAM!
I looked 8 months instead of 5.  

We flew overnight from Chicago. 
On standby. 
My friend worked for American Airlines (still does) and we used two standby passes to get to and from Paris. 
It was pretty easy getting on a flight out. 
But standby passengers get on after everyone else is in their seat. 
We boarded last. 
"Hello! How are you?  Yes, I'm sitting waaay back there.  In the back middle of the plane.  It's so far back there.  Sorry.  Sorry.  I can't find anywhere for my bag.  Stupid big bag that I can't lift up with any grace at all.  Honey!  Is there room up there?!  Wait!  There's a spot back here!  Come back this way!  Excuse me.  Sorry.  Oh, you want me to sit in the aisle seat?  Yes, I'm going to get up often!  Ha Ha!  You've been around pregger ladies before, haven't you?  I'm going to have to pee a lot!"

We sat. 
We ignored the scowls from our neighbors. 
We snuggled into out seats and into each other. 
Watched a flick. 
Ate dinner. 
I got up and walked the aisles. 
About 322 times. 
Peed that many times. 
Finally, we slept. 
When we woke up things looked the same. 
But something felt different. 
Was it the stagnant cabin air?
I was all tingly. 
Was it my swollen ankles and toes?
No. 
We were in France. 
It was the tingle of France I was feeling. 
Get me off this plane now because I've got shit to see!
And I need to pee again.

To be continued...


Sunday, May 4, 2014

Almost A Week

Tuesday.  
Cali. 
One of our barn cats. 
The only female in the group. 
She likes to lay on the pool deck and meow at us as we walk by. 


Wednesday. 
My lunch dates. 
Zoe and her BFFs Emmy and Ally. 


Thursday. 
Zoe has been complaining of a sore left knee. 
We went to see the pediatrician. 
The doctor who was quick to get Zoe in for an appointment on September 7, 2010 and who cried when he told us her diagnosis of leukemia. 
We think he's the bees knees...speaking of knees, he didn't know what was up with Z's bum knee. 
We got X-rays. 


Friday was the hubs 42nd birthday. 
We went out with my parents for pasta and had cupcakes and ice cream at home. 


Saturday we went to Chicago.
Went to the zoo...


Got a bubble tea..."Sir, your receipt!!"
This picture cracks me up for some reason!


Hung out with the Wons and Lauricella families. 

Sunday we had breakfast with our friend Don.
Then headed to The Field Museum. 


Sunday, January 12, 2014

A Girl And A Trip...4 More Photos

Gigi and I spend a lot of time together. 
This is the last year, though. 
She will be in school full time in the fall. 
But, for now, we go to dance class in the morning. 
We go shopping. 
Sometimes we have lunch. 

This is her first dance class of 2014. 
Thursday. 
She loves dance, but is a little sad her best buddie won't be in class anymore. 


On Friday, Zoe went to a sleepover. 
So, Chad and I took Gigi out to dinner wherever she wanted. 
She chose Monical's Pizza. 


We headed to Chicago after we picked Zoe up from the sleepover on Saturday. 
My parking karma was on FIRE and we snagged a great spot just around the corner from the American Girl Store. 
Only cost us $8 for two hours. 
Isn't that ridiculous?
But it beat parking in the parking garage for $20. 
The girls took their dolls in for some hair styling and an ear piercing. 
They used their own money and had a blast. 


Today, Sunday, we went to The Field Museum. 
My parents got us a family membership and we are so happy about that!
We plan on going several more times this year. 
Today we saw Sue the Dinosaur, mummies, a special exhibit on The 1893 World's Fair, more dinosaurs, Bushman the gorilla, and we were grossed out as we traveled underground and were shrunk smaller than bugs. 
And we ate lunch. 
They have delicious fries at The Field Museum. 



Sunday, August 18, 2013

An Impromptu Visit

We made a visit to Chicago this weekend. 
It was not a weekend we had made advanced plans for. 
It was a visit of necessity. 
Our dear friend Sue's family had some heartbreak and we were there to show our love and support for them. 
Sue's brother John was unexpectedly taken from his family last week. 
He was only 43 years old. 
This is the same family who lost Jake from childhood cancer. 
So, we found ourselves in the basement of the church's social center once again. 
John was an avid Star Wars fan so it was great to hear the Star Wars Theme playing at the beginning of his memorial service at beautiful St. Gertrude's. 
His sister Sue gave a remarkably moving eulogy for her big brother. 


We spent the weekend at our friend Don's condo. 
He lives right on Lake Michigan and has expansive views of the city we love. 
Chad and Don have been friends for over 20 years. 


I thought it would be fun for the girls to use an alternative mode of transportation on this trip. 
We were close enough to the church that we could walk there, so we brought the scooter and Gigi's bike. 
Zoe ended up walking because she found the bumps in the sidewalks to be too challenging for her and her scooter.
But Gigi trucked along the city sidewalks all the way to the church and back to the condo on her bike. 
She takes after her dad I guess. 


We did some sand sculpting and later the girls donned their swim suits to play at the beach. 
It was a gorgeous weekend in Chicago and it reminded Chad and I why we love the city. 
Zoe floated in the lake and dove under waves. 
Gigi buried our legs in the sand and did some underwater exploring herself. 


We met our friends, the Fischbachs, for dinner last night at one of our favorite pizza joints, Lou Malnati's. 
The girls always love seeing their friends Charlotte Brownie and Baby Zane. 


We had a nice impromptu trip to the city this weekend. 
We wish we hadn't gone for the reason we did, though. 
It's a reminder to live each day with gratitude and love. 
To enjoy your life instead of complain about it. 
To live instead of loathe. 
Until next time Chicago...


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Westward HO!

We rounded up our two lasses and heading west. 
West to the yonder side of the mighty Mississippi River. 
To the bustling town of Hannibal, Missouri. 
Where they heard tales of a man with a bushy mustache who had extraordinary storytelling gifts


Where they entered a cave that was only 52 degrees. 
A cave full of bats, history (we heard a story about a dead body that was super creepy), mysterious passages, and wonder. 



They thought the Mark Twain Cave was the COOLEST thing they had ever seen and done. 
I would have to agree. 
Super neato!
They did some sluicing for gems. 
Something they love to do!


And we found the Ingalls sisters when we were there!  


Besides seeing the Ingalls girls, I was also blown over by the awesome salad I had for lunch. 
We found a cute coffe shop/cafe, Java Jive. 
My salad of wild greens (Gigi yelled out "Mom, you're eating grass!") was topped with blueberries, carrots, cukes, and almonds. With the most marvelous poppyseed dressing. 
My fellow travelers/diners told me the sandwiches they ordered were spectacular, too. 
And our meals were served in hand made earthen pottery vessels that you could also buy at the pottery shop connected to the cafe. 
I love finding a jewel of a town.
A town full of caves, history, and awesome food. 
Oh, and the gelato we had...Creme Brûlée, lemon, strawberry/kiwi. 
The Ingalls girls were beside themselves!

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

7 Days

A few things from the last 7 days...

On Tuesday I witnessed our hermit crab Rascal remove his body from one shell to another and it was the most hideous thing I've ever seen.
His body that's encased within the shell is large, bulbous, white, and kinda wet.
I barfed in my mouth a bit and want a cat to scratch my eyes out.


On Monday Zoe had her monthly blood draw to make sure the leukemia is staying away.
It's still staying away (Yay!) and Dr. Niebrugge said she can come every two months for blood draws now (Double Yay!)

On Sunday we were in Columbus.
In Ohio, ya know.
And upon the recommendation of our dear friend Z, we had some ice cream.
But ice cream that takes your taste buds to a new and exciting place.
Where pistachios and honey intermingle.
And where goat cheese makes a cheesecakey flavor in your cup.
Brambleberry crisp enters your mouth and you let out a deep and satisfied sigh.


On Saturday we explored The Columbus Zoo and Aquarium with Chad's cousin Melissa and her family.
We saw koalas, elephants, manatees, okapi, gorillas, stingrays, moose, and polar bears.
It was a perfect day weather-wise and company-wise.


On Friday we drove through two bad rain storms and a dust storm.
For a few minutes, I thought I had time traveled back to the 1930's and I was a victim of The Great Dust Bowl.
That dust-dirt was some scary stuff.


Last Thursday...I don't remember last Thursday.

Wednesday of last week the horse vet came to give Buttercup her spring shots.
She got three shots and did the "bugged-out-eyes pony look" for each one.
Oh, and I had to follow the goats around to get a poo sample for the vet to check.


Update: Day 8...we have to make an emergency run to Petsmart this morning because Rascal has no shell! Jesse booted him out of his and he's hiding under the log tunnel in the crabitat and he's naked and vulnerable.
Ewwwwww.