Dear Family and Friends,
Arrived home late Friday night after being up for 26 hours. I haven't done that since freshman year in college. Between travel and 8 hours time difference my body felt pretty beat up but am doing much better today. To see what our kids were up to while we were gone, check out Meredith's blog. She was nice enough to take pictures, video and write down all the ups and downs of her two weeks. It made me feel like I was almost there in person.
As for what we did here are my thoughts from our trip that I wrote along the way:
We are having a day at sea, passing by Galipole, Turkey and I wanted to write down my thoughts and impressions before they start to fade. I still cannot believe we are doing this trip. What it has really brought home to me is how grateful I am to live where I live and how blessed my life is. I didn't realize how much I take for granted until I see so many people who lack.
After a week of panic to make sure I didn't forget anything we took off early last Friday. Spent a day and night traveling and arrived in Barcelona, Spain. Despite my body trying to tell me it was really 1 am the Larsens and us left our luggage at our hotel and spent the day exploring. We spent 2 days literally walking the city and hopping on and off the subway exploring every tourist attraction. After looking at all of Gaudi's buildings I learned why he coined the adjective gaudy. The Sagridia Familia is a cathedral he designed that is still under construction and was the most interesting cathedral I ever saw. All of his buildings look like they were made out of putty and then left in the hot sun for awhile till it started to melt. Saw the Olympic Stadium, the art museum and fountains and enjoyed paella and swiss hot chocolate (really plain whipped cream with chocolate sauce that you almost eat - I forgot how everything is smaller and less overtly sweet in Europe) along Las Ramblas a hyped up version of an outdoor mall. Sunday we spent the day in the baroque part of the city seeing all the old cathedrals. So technically we went to church and even were there for the sacrament! All the old buildings and the amazing stained glass windows and the narrow cobbled streets made me feel like I was walking streets straight out of the books I have read. One thing that has really impressed me on this trip is the obvious dedication, money and time that people have put into their religious buildings whether it be Greek temples, Catholic buildings or Moslem mosques. We went to the city park that houses their government buildings and saw the Triton fountain that was my favorite fountain of the trip and several castles. My impressions of Barcelona were tiny streets, lots of motorcycles with everyone remembering their helmets, parks everywhere, ladies pushing their shopping in little wheeled bags, cafes on every corner with people hanging out with their caffe and croissant (my chocolate croissant was delicious although I felt very out of place being a non-coffee drinker), apartments everywhere with beautiful railings on their porches and lots of plants, orange trees ripe with fruit along the streets, and beautiful buildings and sculptures everywhere you looked with graffiti quite common, and recycling bins everywhere.
Sunday night it was off to the ship where on our "off" days I have slept in and exercised with the sun up, eaten way too much, realized how big American portions truly are, taken naps and read books, played lots of card games and seen cool shows. It actually took me a few days to get into the lazy mode but I am fully there now! I had a weird buzzy, dizzy feeling for a few days until my body got used to the time change but then I was fine.
Tuesday we spent the day at Rome. We had a tour guide take us and the Larsens around. We saw the Coliseum, the forum and every other famous fountain and Roman remain you have ever seen in picture books. We toured the Vatican and St. Peters. Enjoyed a pasta lunch and gelato and soaked in Rome as much as we could. It felt like a dream seeing everything I have read about in history classes. Seeing Michaelanglo's painting of God touching Adam in the Sistine chapel or Raphael's paintings of the Greek philosophers. You could literally spend weeks in the Vatican trying to see everything and would have a huge crick in your neck as half the artwork is on the ceiling. St. Peters is HUGE. I honestly had no idea. My impressions of Rome are ancient beauty almost all through the Catholic church. You literally cannot go down a street without seeing something. Pretty clean city, driving is nuts but somehow works. People crammed in together in apartments. Pollution hangs heavy in the air so you can smell it. The beauty and age of the city puts me in awe.
Wednesday we spent the day in Athens. Our driver there was a huge talker so we learned all about life in Greece and the political system, strikes and the economic crisis. We walked through the Acropolis and the Pantheon. It amazes me how close they let you to all these ancient ruins here. We saw the Temple of Zeus, the theater of Dionysus, the palace guards and did a drive by the more modern historical buildings. Greece is so tightly packed in together. I honestly don't know how people drive as there are only inches of space on either side of the car but there wasn't too much swearing or yelling. The Acropolis is in the middle of the city on a hill and then surrounded by a city of tiny streets and apartments. We had our delicious slouvaki (gyro) and walked the streets a bit. People are a little in your face as they try to get you to buy the touristy nick knacks but not too bad. One thing that this trip has really brought home to me is how little I know about the history of other parts of the world. I have learned a lot this trip and at times have felt like my head is exploding as I try to cram all the information inside. But there are so many things I want to read about now.
Friday we spent the day at Ephesus, Turkey. I had never heard of this city before. It is in the middle of the countryside and is the best preserved Roman city in Europe. You could literally walk through the town for around one and a half miles as our guide pointed out what every building was and told the stories behind them. They have started excavating the Terrace Gardens which are old Roman upper class houses. It was amazing to see these beautiful tile mosaics and realize they are over a thousand years old. Afterwards we went to have a traditional lunch prepared by this family. It was cool to try out all the different dishes. They don't eat breakfast in Turkey, just lunch and dinner so they are bigger meals. And turkish yogurt freshly made is so good, nothing like Greek yogurt. And their hummus tastes nothing like the Costco special. We saw how Turkish rugs are made and I now understand why they start at a thousand dollars. Turkey had lots of pollution too and the people were much more pushy trying to get you to buy things but they were also willing to negotiate prices. The stated price is just a starting point.
Saturday we landed at Istanbul Turkey. We went to the Spice Market and the Grand Bazaar. Manic shopping, every kind of thing you could ever dream of buying, spices heaped up in containers and candy shops full of turkish delight, crowds and pick pockets everywhere with loud pushy shop owners trying to get you to buy. It is truly an experience. Then we headed up to see the Blue Mosque. They let you in towards the back to see the inside if they are not praying. It was beautiful and so cool to see the faith of those there. They have spigots in the front of most of their buildings for those entering to wash their feet before hand. Since we were tourists we just had to take our shoes off, cover my hair and walk through a special door in the back. Although Turkey is the most liberal Muslim nation and half the women had their hair uncovered on the streets it is still a more modest culture.
Sunday we had our first day of bad weather. It has been pretty cool on this trip but nice for walking around. Sunday it was 44 degrees with a cold, brisk wind coming off of the water. It was dang cold and these sights don't have heating. We toured Topaki palace where the sultans lived until the 1900s. I didn't realize that the sultans ruled until World War One. It was as opulent and immense as the movies and tales always make it out to be. It took us several freezing hours to walk through everything. One of the neatest moments for me was hearing the call to prayer and then walking through their shrine to the prophets where they have someone chanting the Koran in a sing-song voice as they store the mantel and some remains of Mohammed there. They also had the rod of Moses, the cooking pot of Abraham, Joseph's turban and John the baptist's skull and arm. We didn't have a guide in Istanbul so we were on our own with a tram and a map with the Larsens. After the palace we went through Aya Sofia a former Byzantine church that was converted to a mosque and then opened to the public. Until St. Peter's it was the biggest basilica in the world. Had our taste of baklava and came back to the ship to defrost. That night we saw Turkish dancers with the traditional dancers and then a belly dancer who was everything you ever dreamed a belly dancer could be but never thought actually existed. Definitely PG-13 material! But it was so cool to see how she could manipulate her body in ways I never imagined humanly possible.
We have heard from the kids a few times via email with messages like this, "I love you and miss you. Don't forget my souvenir. Allison P.S. We finally found Rocky" Luckily Meredith was nice enough to send us a real update. Rocky enjoyed an overnight stroll but luckily a neighbor found him. Spencer survived his ski day field trip. Kids had a good valentine's day and are enjoying playing board games with Meredith every night. We have one more stop in Malta. Am trying to soak in every moment of this amazing trip.
I am in the airport awaiting our flight. 25 hours being awake and traveling is not on my like list. Hopefully my body will adjust quickly!
Malta was beautiful. I never knew it was its own country. The storm held off for us and the few small rain showers always happened while we were inside. We took a rickety old public bus to and from our destinations and spent the day exploring. We went to Mdina, the silent city - a fortress city with cobbled streets 5 feet side and tall buildings, some from the Middle Ages. We got the best of both worlds as I found a great audio tour that walked us through the city while I listened and Jeremy was able to follow behind me taking his time with his camera. They had several church/cloisters there that were cool to walk through. But it was more the atmosphere that I enjoyed soaking up. Seeing the old moat turned into a formal lemon/orange tree orchard and seeing the magnificent carvings on the buildings. We went to Rabbat and walked through the crypts seeing were people were buried two thousand years ago and seeing the mosaics on the wall that were made by the earliest Christian worshippers. We saw St. Paul's grotto where Paul lived and preached when he lived on the island. Then we went to Valetta where we saw more cathedrals especially St. John's that has Cavillegro's painting of John's beheading in it. That cathedral was built by the Knights of St. John and each of the 8 church's inside was decorated to represent one of the eight orders of knights. The amount of skulls in the decorations and realizing that each tile on the floor was a knight's tombstone and seeing a skull grinning out at you from the alter/grandmaster crypts was a little odd. After that we toured the palace and armory next door and learned about the Knight's history and Malta's past battles. What always amazes is seeing all the old suits of armor and realizing how small these ferocious men were.
The storm that had held off during our sight seeing hit that night. It was a late night already with the chocolate buffet, the big show full of acrobats, magic, illusions, dancers etc and then a karaoke competition. By the time we went to bed everyone was walking, swaying side to side as if seriously drunk. By early morning it was 12 to 18 foot waves with a force 10 gale that had us trying to watch a movie to keep our minds off our stomachs. Sleep didn't happen till things calmed down. So our last day at sea was spent recuperating from the night a bit. We did get in one last game of shuffle board with the Larsens. That is really a fun game.
Sad for the trip to end. It really flew by. Not looking forward to snow, jet lag and the household chores that await. But I am so excited to be with our kids again and looking forward to the family routine.
Glad to be home and so grateful for our blessings. Love to you all, Heather
Dear Family and Friends,
Nope we haven't left yet. 2 more days! This last weekend between stake conference, ward conference follow-up meetings and the super bowl I didn't have a spare moment to blog. Between Jeremy and I, I think this last weekend qualified for a part time job of church service - it was a little too packed. So I thought I would do a quick summary of what we have been up to before we are gone for 2 WEEKS. I still can't believe that.
I have been stocking up on freezer meals and any other household supply we might run out of while we are gone. We have a literal binder of information sitting on our counter so hopefully we have thought of everything. I realized that we have 11 neighbors/friends helping out while we are gone. It is literally a neighborhood service project! There are two friends who are picking Allison up almost every day from play practice as she has to stay late at school. She is quite excited about how big her role is becoming in the play.
Allison and I got to have a little mommy/daughter date Saturday. We went and watched her friends' basketball game, went to a salon and had a red feather hair extension put in her hair and had lunch at Jumba juice. A very girly date and it was a lot of fun.
Robyn is going to grow up with a testimony of Relief Society as she spent yesterday wearing her little apron and washing dishes for a multi-stake luncheon our stake was hosting. She was thrilled to be such a good helper with all the older ladies and loved the fact that the kitchen help gets to eat 2 pieces of chocolate cake if they stay happy.
Jeremy has been doing some extra jobs both computer and photo wise. He had another shoot of the Utah Symphony on Saturday night plus a few corporate jobs that came up. Add in doing a how-to video on applying Sassy nails and a photo camp planning event and his days have been packed. I am worried he will start his trip pretty burned out but he can sleep on the long plane ride over.
Spencer's meds have changed around a bit which seems to help. He sure loves his bean bag from Christmas as he still sleeps in it every night. He has been picking out all his classes for junior high and today we have a meeting with his counselor.
Taylor is having all his official meetings this week. Met with his social worker Monday, has his IEP today. He was sick and stayed home for half of last week and generously shared his cold with me. Luckily I had lots of leftover birthday cheesecake to tide me over.
love to you all and plan for lots of pictures and stories in 2 weeks time.
Love, Heather
Dear Family and Friends,
Birthday festivities have stretched over a couple of days for me which has been wonderful. And I had the realization that in 12 days I will be on a plane to Barcelona (lots of excitement and small moments of panic over that one). Feeling extremely spoiled and loved so thank you to everyone for their love and birthday wishes.
Last night my friend Brenda threw a party for several couples. We had a great time eating dinner and playing games. And since 3 of us had birthdays that week she had cheesecake for dessert. After 30 days of no sugar, it tasted really, really good. And tonight kids are excited about their pieces of cheesecake waiting in the freezer. Spencer was the only kid who really made it all month long as the girls cheated often. But everyone did so much better than I thought they would. Robyn despite great complaining got into the spirit of it and would ask our neighbor quite seriously as she chomped on her third s'more in his backyard if s'mores had sugar in them as she wasn't eating sugar.
Last highlight of the week was that I got to go out shopping with my sister-in-law Kelly as she instructed me in wearing "cool" clothes. She gave me red sparkly pointy high heeled shoes last year and zebra glitter flats and this year she gave me a gift card to her favorite store. If I have any outfits that look good - it is thanks to her.
Rest of the week was full of church meetings, kid activities and everything else that fills up our days. We changed up Spencer's meds a bit as paranoia was starting to creep back into his life. Hopefully this will get things under control before we leave. Had our team meeting for my Rangar team and changed the name from team "what the hill?" (loved the name but was a little embarrassed to wear the shirt with my kids) to team "steel magnolias - cause we're tough enough". One of our runners is making us all magnolia flowers to clip into our headbands. Should be cute.
We bought tickets this week to go see my brother Daniel and his family in Phoenix over spring break. Nice guy that Jeremy is - he drives us out, flies home and works and then flies back and drives us back. I am glad because 12 hours of driving by myself gets a little intimidating. The day after he booked his tickets he found out that his work is flying out with wives for a few days in San Francisco at the same time. But as a consolation prize he is getting a new monitor for his office instead so we are all happy.
Allison is excited to have a speaking part in this year's school play so she has been busy carrying around her script and trying to speak in an Asian accent. Taylor is down with a snotty nose cold and makes me really wish he could blow his nose. Spencer has re-discovered magic tricks - guess I needed a lesson in patience. Robyn is just bouncing around everywhere and with a friend whenever she can. So life is good.
Love, Heather
Regular life, school, activities, church etc kept us busy the rest of the time. Spencer and Allison had their science fair this week so they were busy getting their projects together.
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Spencer's jelly bean experiment - can you tell he is a boy just from his layout? |
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Allison's project with her friend - can you tell they are girls? |
I made a bunch of mini pies this week for a Relief Society event. You make them in half pint canning jars. They look really cute. Hopefully they will cook OK. Right now they are in my freezer. |
2 1/4 tsp instant yeast
1 1/2 tsp salt
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 3/4 c water, warm
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp basil
1. Pulse flour, yeast and salt in a food processor till combined. Add the oil, oregano and basil. Pulse till combined. With the processor running pour the water in until a rough ball forms, 30-40 seconds. Let the dough rest for 2 minutes and then process for 30 seconds longer.
2. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface and knead by hand until it forms a smooth round ball, about 5 minutes. Transfer the ball to an oiled bowl, cover with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place until doubled, 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
3. Spray pizza pan with oil. Sprinkle pan with 1 Tbsp cornmeal. Roll out dough into 2 18 inch pizzas. Prick all over with a fork. Bake in a 400 degree oven for 10 minutes. Cover with sauce and toppings. Bake for 10-15 more minutes at 400 degrees until crust is golden.
1 Tbsp oil
1 8 oz can tomato paste
1 tsp salt
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp basil
1 1/2 c beef broth (or 1 1/2 tsp beef bouillon and 1 1/2 c water)
1. Cook onion in oil over medium heat, till soft, about 5 minutes. (If in a hurry you can skip this step and use dried onion pieces)
2. Add the rest of ingredients and stir till warm and thoroughly combined.
Labels: main dish, pizza, recipe 1 comments
2 lbs frozen corn
4 slices bacon (4 oz) chopped fine
1 onion, minced
2 garlic cloves, minced
3 Tbsp flour
3 c chicken broth or 3 c water and 3 tsp chicken bouillon
2 c skim milk (or whole)
4 medium red potatoes, scrubbed and cut into 1/4 inch cubes
2 bay leaves
1/4 tsp dried thyme
1 c whipping cream
salt and pepper
1. Saute the bacon in a large pot over medium heat until crisp, about 8 minutes. Stir in the onion and cook until softened, about 5 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cook for 30 seconds. Stir in the flour and cook for 1 minutes, scraping up any browned bits. Stir in the broth, milk, potatoes, bay leaves, thyme and frozen corn. Bring to a simmer and cook until potatoes are tender, about 30 minutes.
2. Stir in the cream and simmer till soup is hot but NOT boiling. Stir in salt and pepper to taste.
Corn Chowder
Labels: recipe, soup 0 comments
Although it was a full week, it was also a pretty normal routine week around here. As you can see, Spencer finally got his hair cut. I have learned I just have to tell him he has a week to commit. He usually puts it off till the end of the week but he feels better about having some control over when its done. It was way too long as the buzzers kept bogging down. To get Spencer in the right mood as Jeremy was taking pictures, he played "I'm too sexy" with Robyn singing right along. She is going to grow up a little warped with being the youngest kid.
Taylor was sick for Monday but after that has been pretty good. And knock on wood everyone else has stayed healthy. They have a new walker at school for him which allows him more freedom to walk around and he has been loving it. We are rebuilding his weight so he is enjoying his chocolate whole milk as we the sugar deprived watch in envy.
Spencer has been working on his science project this week. He told us in the name of science that we had to participate even though it involved eating jelly beans to see if we could name the flavor with our nose plugged and eyes blindfolded and then with our nose unplugged. Being able to smell as you chew makes a huge difference.
Allison and I went to her first mother/daughter book group at the library. We read "Everything on a waffle" this last month and they discussed the author, the book, made a collage and then had waffles. I found out Robyn could come with us but Allison doesn't want to share her mom time so we didn't tell Robyn. They do a new book every month so Allison is already starting "Princess Academy" for this month. She started play practice this week and has been singing The king and I soundtrack. She and her friend did their science project yesterday which involved soda pop bottles, mentos and gum to see if gum would slow down the reaction.
Robyn turns 5 this week. Hard to believe my baby is this old. I put her on the list for kindergarten this week! She tells everyone about this huge birthday party with friends that she is having despite us telling her for months that we are doing a family party. Every time the subject comes up it ends in her crying. I feel like a mean mom but I am sure it will all work out.
Jeremy has had a couple of photo events this week as he gets his studio co-op up and going. His life is busy but he is enjoying the challenge of it. Last night we got to enjoy a double date with friends and to celebrate Jeremy being back at his lowest weight and my really wanting sugar, we went out for Chinese food. I forgot how good Chinese food can be! After an evening of visiting and catching up we went and saw True Grit. Really enjoyed it. It was as good as the original I thought, which is saying something.
I have spent my free moments this week working on painting our bench/shelf unit. It is all put together now and done. We just need to run some wires, put in a speaker screen and make the cushions. Hopefully next week I can post a finished picture. I was spoiled this week as I got to go out to dinner with some friends. None of us cared what or where we were eating, it was just two hours of grown-up talk. In the winter time especially it is so nice to have some grown-up time. We have had an inversion all week so cloudy, smoggy air keeps everyone huddled up inside especially. We need a big storm to blow through.
Love to you all and hope you enjoying blue skies somewhere, as we don't have them here.
Heather