What's Up With Elisabeth & George

Welcome to our family blog!

For how we're doing right now, please see "How we're doing right now" on the right side of the page. For the details of our life, daily stories, and lots of photos, see our posts below. And please comment! It helps us feel loved!

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Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Christmas cravings

Many women talk about foods they crave during pregnancy.  I'm a little different.  (When is that not the case?)

Last time around, I craved no foods (in fact if I could have avoided altogether something so repulsive as eating, I would have) and so far, again, no cravings of the alimentary kind.  What I do crave is winter and Christmas.  With pregnancy #1 I began listening to Nat King Cole crooning about roasting chestnuts sometime around early September.  This time, I'd say it was probably mid July when I started having vivid memories of a vacation spot we visited the winter of my 7th birthday in Austria.  I know it was that winter because on that trip we smuggled our puppy across the German-Austrian border; she was hidden on the floor of the backseat, below my feet, and covered in a blanket.  She was a beautiful little border collie with a title - Anita von den Waldburgen (we just called her 'Nita') and we got her when I was 6.

Shortly after we crossed the border, we arrived at our destination, a cozy little town where we had rented a typically Germanic cottage, complete with deep brown wooden beams, the way you see them in all the postcards (not that anyone sees postcards anymore).  On the approach to the house, we saw several of these little houses, nestled deeply in a deliciously thick frosting of untouched snow.  And a heavy, whipped frosting hung over the edge of each roof.  The day was bright and made the enormous icicles hanging along the roofline of these little gingerbread houses absolutely glow as brilliantly as if they each contained the fire of the sun itself.  These icicles are the kind that the little twinkly Christmas light icicles are modeled after, but the manufactured kind can never approach the beauty of the magnificent, dripping crystals of my memory.  They were so large, that the ones on each end of the sloped roofs, where the refracted rays of the sun glistened the brightest, just kissed the top of the thick snow below.

After that, my memory fades.  I remember nothing else of this trip, but I can replay that approach over and over, and it's the kind of beauty, even in the mind, that moves you emotionally.  It must have moved me pretty deeply even then, when I was 6 or 7, for me to remember it for so long without pictures to aid me.  What can I say?  I'm the woman that dreamed of the romance of a wedding, draped in fur, in an ice hotel in the far north.

This morning, I woke from sleep with a similar memory, also from my childhood in Germany, also in winter.  It's the Christmas Market at Marienplatz, the old town square in Munich.  I saw the rows and rows of stalls glowing with twinkly lights.  I saw vendors selling their traditional, German, hand-made Christmas ornaments and decorations, felt the sting of the cold on my face, and smelled the sweet-spiced German pastries and hot drinks being sold nearby.  I also remember the glockenspiel and everything stopping as people watched the figurines in their mechanical show above the square.  I am not sure if it played during the evening market scene I experienced, but it seems romantic to remember it that way, so I do.


 Christmas in Germany was magical.

As soon as this memory came to me, I grabbed the iPhone on my nightstand and began searching online.  Oh, thank you internet!  I saw photo after photo of that very scene and I was filled with so much nostalgia I couldn't stop tearing up over it.  I felt the sudden need to go back and experience it again. If I wasn't going to be so very pregnant this Christmas, I'd push for us to go then, but George tells me that if I wasn't going to be so very pregnant, he'd be pushing for us to spend Christmas in Colombia.  Hmm... Still not sure I'm ready to go there.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Happy Anniversary, Love

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Just remembering the time I talked you into watching the sunrise with me over Ft Lauderdale beach. Thanks for being such a good sport with my crazy ideas, thanks for helping me make memories, and thanks for sharing this view with me. I love you, Babe.
Happy Anniversary!

Monday, September 14, 2009

Faroese-Japanese Fusion Cuisine!

There has been this series of short films put out of the Faroes lately, presumably to attract tourists.  Some really great stuff in these little pieces (produced by Kovboy Film).  Some stuff many of us (who've spent a lot of time there) have seen before, but also some totally new stuff like this:



WOW!  COOL!  I'm all for the fusion and introducing such a healthy food into the diet.  That makes it better for me for when I eventually move there.  But I am a little bummed that he has to use the microwave.  I try not to use the microwave at all for health reasons; some question whether it causes elements in the food to become harmful, but I think it's also fairly widely known that much of the good stuff is destroyed in microwaved food. 

Anyway, speaking of moving there... George is getting a little desperate for work at this point.  And I'm getting pretty nervous that nothing has materialized yet.  I want everyone in the Faroes to be on the lookout for software jobs for George!  (People here looking out wouldn't hurt either!) ;)

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Garden of the Gods

So we've just finished a nice, week-long, visit with the David family, who came in from Florida to see us.  George's brother, Pierre, and his family, as well as their mother, Gloria, all spent a week in Colorado.  They were here for Regin's birthday party which was SO great.  And we've spent some fun time with them during the week too.  Unfortunately I'm not able to post some of the photos.  I'm missing a memory card, so we'll see if I ever find those photos.  Teddi took our photos for Regin's birthday. I'll post those soon (they're on Facebook already).  But I can share some of the rest with you now.  First up...

Garden of the Gods !
We went on Tuesday.  Gorgeous scenes as always!  Regin proved himself to be QUITE the little rock climber.  And once he got going, he didn't want to STOP!  That is until he had a teeny, tiny fall.  Then he was just wanting to be held and carried again.  You can see all of the photos as well as download the high-res copies here on Flickr.  Highlights are below.

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I had Regin on my back for a lot of it.



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It was hard for us to get very far.  We kept getting stopped every two minutes.  People would walk by me saying, "OH CUTE BABY!" and I would smile, thinking it was the one on my back, then I would turn to look, and no... it was our other "baby", the furry one, Smilla.  She was a HUGE hit with everyone we passed.



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The family, together at the Garden of the Gods.



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Alexandra and Pierre




On the shoulder's of giants.
Regin & Papi



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Us



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Regin climbed up on top of this rock by himself.  That whole, steep rock-face on the bottom two thirds of the picture!  He was SO proud of himself.  He LOVED climbing on the rocks.



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Pierre, Dalleny, Anthony & Alexandra
Regin calls Alexandra "Zaca".  Cute.



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The kids in a cave.  Regin was sleepy!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

They're here!

52 boxes of 'us' just arrived from Penang...

Thursday, March 19, 2009

January Pictures

You can see most of them on Facebook. (Album 1 and Album 2)  And all of them (for download) on Flickr.  Below are some highlights:

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We said bye-bye to Papi for three weeks!  He went back to Penang and we went to Walsenburg to hang with my parents.


We fed the chickens and checked for eggs:
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We saw a pack of wild horses:
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And made hissing sounds back and forth with our friend, Mr. Goose:
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Then Papi came home and we met him at JoAnn (Mostir)'s house in Golden:
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YAY!

We moved back 'home' but we had an awful lot of work ahead of us:
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And that's not including all of our stuff we're still waiting to come from Penang!  No... we'll never get unpacked...

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Our stuff

Our stuff from Penang was supposed to have arrived in Denver today.  I'm not sure when we'll get to see it, but it's being held for the time being.  We're going to be receiving 52 boxes!  While I am thrilled to get all my stuff back (hopefully intact), and some of this stuff can't get here soon enough (like my kitchen gadgets, utensils, etc.), I have no idea what the heck I'm going to do with 52 boxes!  We haven't even unpacked half of the boxes we already have here!  Sheesh!

PS I'm still looking for entrants for my portrait giveaway.  I only have a few, and I'm giving away 5 free custom portraits, so send me your photos peeps!  Deadline is Friday.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

5 hours in Singapore

I know this is not exactly in the order of my travellog, but, the Thailand photos are on multiple drives and things are still totally disorganized here.  (Like I ever have things organized, ha!)  So, I present you with the photos from the 5-hour layover we had in Singapore (on our way back from Penang) in December.  You can see the full album here (40 photos) and highlights below:


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In the airport: "The World's largest 103-inch 1080p HD Plasma Display"
Hmm... I wonder if it really is larger than other 103-inch 1080p plasma displays.

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Where our cabby dropped us off after we asked to be taken somewhere cool.

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Cool temple door.  We didn't go in, we were hungry for lunch!

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The market in China Town. Apparently this is the thing to see for tourists in Singapore. Unfortunately I'm a little Asian-marketed out. After all the markets in Penang & Thailand, I've kind of been there & done that. Ah well, it was still better than the airport, and I was really taken by the Chinese lanterns and how they glowed in the sunlight.

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Market wares.  I was obsessed with these brushes.  Still am.  But did I buy any?  No!  They were pretty expensive, but looking back, I wish I'd bought at least one.  Next time!

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Me trying to look breezy on my 5-hour vacation.

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Chinatown.

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And back to the ultra modern airport.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Birthdays and Time Adjustments

It didn't work out for me to bring our image drive home with us, so I can't do the now traditional photo post for the current round of birthdays.  So I hope it suffices for me to simply wish a VERY HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Pierre, Reem, Evelyn, Kerry, Hans David, and my dad!  Daddy & Reem, I hope you both have a very special day today!!!  Sorry some of those other wishes are so late!

Late.... speaking of late.

It's 6:45am.  I've been up since 5.  A huge improvement on yesterday when I was up at 3.  I'm struggling to stay up past 7pm these days.  The adjustment to local time is HARD. I think I would have made the switch in a day or two, and I almost did, but then there is the toddler who has no idea of what day or time it is anymore who keeps dragging me back into his world of mixed up sleep.  I guess I have to give it TIME.

It's good to be back.  I do miss some things from Penang already.  We had a great time in Walsenburg with the fam.  Now that I'm in the Denver metro, I can't wait to get all my girls together for a ladies lunch.  I've missed those so much!  But it will probably have to wait.  George is back to Penang on Sunday, and I'm back to my parents' until he returns.  But all will be returned to 'normal' very soon.

We took a peek at the house yesterday.  Everything looked fine.  The house looks fine.  I felt the excited butterflies in my stomach at the prospect of another move and reinvention.  The only problem:  the back yard is a DISASTER.  HUGE TALL WEEDS have taken over.  How have we not had complaints from the Home Owners Association?

We also saw Teddi, Keith, baby Lyric, and Nyree yesterday.  How nice!  So great to reconnect with you all and it's like we got back to our friendships without missing a beat.  Little Lyric has grown so much.  I look forward to pressuring her and Regin into a life-long friendship.  Ha!  Today we're seeing Monica, Eduardo, & Stacey if it all works out.  And hopefully we'll actually get to our laundry and errands.  Still no plans for tonight though.

Ok, well, off to start that laundry right now.  I'm at my sister's house in Golden.  It's almost 7.  Maybe it's late enough to open the garage door so I can go get my laundry from the car (we thought we were going to go to a laundromat yesterday.)  Hopefully it won't be too much longer before the rest of the house starts to wake up and I can enjoy another lazy morning with JoAnn and family.

LOVE TO ALL!
TTFN

Thursday, December 18, 2008

We wish you a merry Christmas! We wish you a merry Christmas!

We wish you a merry Christmas!  And a happy New Year! 
-- Lots of love fron the Hurley-David family!

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Penang -- Week 34 -- Bonfire of the Lunch Group

MONDAY - THURSDAY, November 3rd - 6th
I've decided to try and do at least one legitimate "activity" with Regin every day.  I bought a big book of activities for some ideas, so we'll see how it goes.  The first one, on Tuesday, is to use flour, sand, or sugar to practice making lines to help with skills that will be useful for writing later.  I don't have any sand, and sugar sounds like a bad idea in this ant-infested environment (like it would make much difference), so I go with flour.  What a mess!  We make lines at first, but within a couple minutes, Regin becomes much more interested in scooping the flour out of the tray and onto himself.


Wednesday is filled with excitement!  I have already written plenty about Obama's election and how it was to experience that from afar.  In the evening, our first salsa lesson is cancelled last minute, so we go to hang with some friends for a little British tradition:  Bonfire Night. 

You can see the rest of the pictures here.

I'm hosting the play group lunch again on Thursday.  I love hosting, but with 6 moms and 8 kids it's crazy stressful.  I have nothing at home to make, so I walk to the mall, shop, walk back, in less than an hour, which is nuts considering what that'll do to me.  Then, I call Shanti, and she tries to come help me clean before people arrive, but her taxi doesn't show till late, so she isn't able to help with anything until about two minutes before people arrive.  So that means I'm running around like mad in our apartment cleaning and food prep doesn't even start until people arrive.  As a result, my joint problems are flaring up and I have the shakes pretty bad from my hypoglycemia.  I love hosting, but maybe I shouldn't do it anymore, especially if George or someone else can't help. 

Lunch is nice.  My almond-flour crepes stuffed with roasted veggies and cream cheese came out pretty good.  Still can't tell if people enjoy my food.  But I guess that is just not something you make a big deal out of here.  At least not while you are eating. 

I made mint-lemonade with simple syrup on the side for people to sweeten their own drinks to taste (something I picked up in Tokyo) and with Stevia for me.  I'm barely into packet number two of four of stevia.  Unfortunately someone saw my open packet and threw it out!  Aaakk!  My precious stevia!

We're supposed to be using this meeting to make plans for future play groups, but once again, almost the entire meeting is taken up by lunch (prep, eating, clean up).  And this lunch thing is not great for me.  We tend to eat late and I get stressed, and these are both bad things for my HG.  I try to talk them into morning meetings, even though I'm so not a morning person, because afternoons are so hard for Regin and me.  But no go.  Jess can't do anything till after ten.  So 11 - 2 it is.  We'll see!

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Penang -- Week 34 -- The Ball Pit and the Maid

How could I forget something else we did on Sunday?  We also went to this indoor kiddie park at the mall.  There is a toddler area, but Regin wasn't interested.  Mostly he just wanted to be in the ball pit. 
Those kids at the end were racing with George and Regin.  So cute.  And Regin LOVED the slide.  He was squealing and signing, "More! More! More!"

It was interesting.  Several kids had been left there with their Indonesian maids/nannies while parents presumably shopped.  I mention the fact that they're Indonesian because there is a whole connotation that goes along with that that I'm not even sure how to articulate.  Whatever it is though, it makes me somewhat uneasy, yet fascinated.  This whole maid-having culture is not one I thought I'd ever be a part of.  And there is a certain stigma with the Indonesian maids, and it's definitely different than having an Indian maid, like I have.  It's not better or worse on the employer's end, but I believe it's worse on the Indonesian's end.

Having the access that I do, it's hard not to stare when I see them.  I try to imagine the life of these maids, what they're day-to-day is like, what goes through their minds.  Do they hate these brats they follow silently all day long?  Do they find the work demeaning?  I'm telling you, it's different than, say, an au pair or a western nanny.  There is a smidge of prestige in that, or at least some dignity.  But here, they seem like the silent, sub-human characters that I recognize from films that have traditionally marginalized the blacks or latins in our culture.  Do they get that?  Do they feel marginalized?  Do they feel they are seen as lesser?  Do they think that's OK?

And I have heard the locals talk about the stigma against Indonesian maids.  In fact, several of the local babywearers have talked about how uncomfortable it makes them when people assume they are the family's Indonesian maid because they are carrying their babies in a sling (something that's mostly associated with the more ethnic/native/old-fashioned Indonesians.)  We had a demo of the traditional Indonesian baby-carrying technique when one of the babywearers brought her maid with her to babywearing group one day.

I'm telling you.  I'm not sure how to process it, or what I think of it, but the nuances of it all are fascinating to me.