Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Beach trips

Two weeks ago, Carter and I tagged along on a business trip to Cabo San Lucas with Jeremy. Jeremy was helping the hotel to get Green Globe certified. It was a little bit of a different experience than we thought it would be... The hotel was in the middle of nowhere and operated completely off solar power. There wasn't enough power to use a lot of things like blow dryers...hair straighteners... air conditioning (it was 96 degrees). To make matters worse, there was no shade on the beach and you couldn't really get in the water because the undertow was so strong. The beach was pretty though.



We saw some wild horses on the beach

The whole time I was there, I just really wanted a chocolate milkshake. I asked the bartender to make me one. He acted like he knew what I meant and then made me basically really cold chocolate milk. He thought it looked good, so he made himself one too. I had to get a real milkshake at McDonalds in the airport on the way home. Carter was such a trooper. He was a happy, sweat soaked little guy the whole time


Last weekend, Jeremy's mom came for a visit. Carter loved having his Gram here. We wish we lived closer!


We took Carter to the zoo for the first time and fed the giraffes.


We also drove to Ocean City for the day on Saturday. Carter got to ride on a merry go round for the first time and got to play on the beach again. He seems to really love the beach. I'm shocked he didn't try to eat the sand.



Carter has gotten to be a pretty expert crawler. He's also pretty good at pulling himself up on things and is very proud of himself.

He also likes "helping" with everything. We sure love this little boy!

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

150th Gettysburg Reenactment

Over the July 4th holiday week, my parents, Jeremy, Carter and I went to the 150th Gettysburg reenactment. This trip had been a long time in the making. We had to book our hotel about a year in advance because there was so much demand. My parents and I drove down on Wednesday morning and we spent the evening in downtown Gettysburg. We looked in some of the shops and got Mr. G's icecream, which was AMAZING. they had free shuttles going all over Gettysburg. On the way back to the hotel, we were sitting by a big, slightly scary looking man with a long beard. Carter was sitting on my lap and managed to give the man's beard a good yank and couple of times. Luckily the man thought that this was hilarious. Jeremy drove down later that evening. Carter was happy to see his daddy.

On Thursday we drove out to the battlefield. We went on a couple of ranger tours, one about the daily life of a soldier, and one about the prisoners of war. At the second tour, we ran into my friends Grant and Jill Ensign from my London study abroad program. It was so random and fun to see them.


On Friday, we went to the first day of the reenactment. In the morning, they reenacted a cavalry battle. It was pretty amazing to see all the horses. The dedication of all of the reenactors is incredible to me. I cannot imagine how hot they must have been in their wool uniforms. I think there were close to 13,000 reenactors there this year.

Carter actually did really well with the guns firing during the battle. He just got a little bit worried when everyone yelled "huzzah" at the end of the battle.

After the battle, we went to a couple of presentations. We went to one by Jeff Shaara and Jeremy was able to get an autographed book. My mom and I went to a presentation on Civil War fashion and the ghosts of Gettysburg. Carter enjoyed the fashion presentation as well!

After the presentations, we went to the generals' tents. It's interesting, they only have one General Lee, General Longstreet, etc. It was pretty funny watching Jeremy and my dad at the generals' tents. It was like watching a kid at Disneyland trying to get pictures with all of their favorite characters. Here we all are with General Pickett.

After meeting the generals, Carter was about done for the day.

 I was so proud of him, it was SO HOT and he was such a good boy. My mom and I left to put Carter to bed and swung by Gettysburg Cupcake Cafe on the way home (their cookie dough cupcake is probably the best cupcake I have ever eaten in my life).Here are a couple of pictures that Jer took of the second battle.


That night, when Jeremy and my dad got back, we didn't want to leave Carter in the hotel room without someone watching the door, so we camped out in the hallway for dinner and had a feast of Chinese food, Wendy's, and cupcakes. I love the look of pure joy on my mom's face in this picture, haha.

The next day we went to a couple more battles and saw presentations on spies during the civil war and on civilian life during the war. Jeremy was also able to meet up with a man that he works with in the reenactor's camp. Even with heat, we had such a great time. I can't think of a better way to spend the fourth of July.


Friday, June 7, 2013

Texas

Last week, we were able to visit Jeremy's family in Texas. It was so great to catch up with them. On memorial day, we had a barbecue with Jeremy's grandparents. It was so much fun to see Carter with his great grandparents. When Carter saw his great grandma for the first time, he gave her a big smile, it was pretty cute.
On Tuesday, we drove to downtown Dallas and went to the new Perot Museum of Nature and Science. They had an earthquake simulator. Jeremy got pretty scared, they had to stop it so he could get off.
They also had a lot of really neat dinosaur skeletons.

and an enormous geode

On Thursday, Jeremy and I were able to meet up with the Brannocks for dinner. It was so great to see my friend, Amanda. We really relied on each other during nursing school and it had been way too long since we had seen each other...over three years. It was so much fun to catch up and to see each other's kiddos.

While we were in Texas, we definitely took advantage of a having an eager babysitter nearby. It was great for Carter to be able to spend some quality time with his Gram.



It was also really great for me and Jeremy to be able to go to the temple and out to a movie. On our last day in Texas, we took Carter swimming. I think the water was a little bit cold for his taste, but he still had fun.


We love Texas! Hopefully it's not too long before we get to come back!

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Paris

On Monday morning, we took the chunnel from London to Paris. We checked into our hotel, grabbed lunch at a little Cafe and headed to the Louvre

The Louvre was incredible, we didn't have nearly enough time there. It is huge! We were able to see a lot of incredible art in the short time that we were there. I loved the Winged Victory and the Madonna and Child by Raphael


I expected the Mona Lisa to be a little bit underwhelming...and it was. The whole room was packed with tourists and smelled really bad. It was pretty entertaining standing back and watching all the people clamoring to get a picture of the Mona Lisa and then leaving without a second glance

The biggest superstar of the Louvre that day was not the Mona Lisa it was actually...Carter. We carried him around the museum in the Baby Bjorn and the Asian tour groups LOVED him. On four separate occasions, an Asian person stopped and (without asking permission) took a picture of him and walked away. The Asian tour group's love for Carter became a recurring theme during our time in Paris, it was pretty hilarious. After leaving the museum, we spent some time walking around the Tuileries Gardens.

We also managed to find Laduree and stopped to get some macarons. We got chocolate, vanilla, salted caramel, and rose flavor. They were amazing.

The next day, my mom, Jeremy and I took the train to Versailles. When we got there, we were blown away by the line. We had purchased the Paris museum pass with the understanding that we would get to skip the lines...apparently not at Versailles. It would have been at least a three hour wait. Luckily, Carter came to the rescue. I asked one of the guards if there was anywhere I could sit to feed Carter, and he just kind of whisked us in front of everyone. I was so glad that we didn't have to wait. Versailles was pretty incredible.


It was really interesting learning more about Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. It seems like there are a lot of misconceptions about them, it doesn't seem like they were intentionally cruel, just kind of oblivious. With all of the excesses at Versailles, it wasn't hard to understand why the French revolution happened the way it did. Here we are in the hall of mirrors

My favorite place at Versailles was Marie Antionette's "cottage" and hamlet. here is a picture of her "cottage" where she lived during the summers

nearby, she had a little village built where she could pretend to be a shepherdess (I don't think this helped her image with the French people). It was such a cute little place.



I think Wednesday was my favorite day out of our whole trip to Europe. We took the train to Normandy to go on a private tour of the landing beaches. If you know me and Jeremy well, you know what big history nerds we are, so needless to say, we were pretty excited. Our guide picked us up at the train station and we drove to Ste Mere Eglise. Ste Mere Eglise is a little village near the Normandy coast that was one of the most important objectives that needed to be captured on D Day. The paratroopers from the 101st were supposed to get dropped about a mile from the village  but instead many of them got dropped right on top of it. A lot of them were killed before they even hit the ground. The paratroopers were able to hold the village and prevented reinforcements from getting to the landing beaches. A lot of my heroes from the Band of Brothers Books fought here. It was so cool to see it in person.

You can see a dummy paratrooper hanging from the church steeple. This actually happened, and the soldier survived by playing dead. There is still a little bit of evidence from the battle that survives in the village today.

that chunk taken out of the fence was from a bullet. Next, we drove to Utah beach.


I love that picture of Carter and my dad in the museum at Utah beach. After Utah, we stopped a little museum/cafe for lunch. This home used to be the German headquarters in Normandy. Several years ago, when the man who lived there was removing the wallpaper, he discovered a mural painted by the German soldiers who lived there during the occupation. One of these officers was really hated, he is the one with his face scratched out.


The whole time we were eating, the cute little French man who owns the museum kept bringing us artifacts to look at, he was so proud of his museum.


I am really glad our guide brought us there for lunch, it was fascinating. After lunch we drove to Pointe Du Hoc. It is truly incredible what the rangers accomplished here. They scaled basically sheer cliffs from the ocean to capture the big guns pointing a Utah and Omaha beaches. When they got to the top, they realized that the guns had been moved. Two of the rangers tracked down the guns and blew them up, right under the Germans' noses...pretty amazing. Before the rangers landed, Pointe Du Hoc was bombed really heavily and so there are incredibly massive bomb craters everywhere. Seeing the cliffs in person gave me even greater respect for what those men accomplished here. Seeing the bomb craters made me feel sorry for the German troops who were stationed here. It was interesting to learn that many of the "German" troops stationed along the Atlantic wall weren't really German at all, many of them were Polish or Russian prisoners of war forced to fight. Our guide had an interesting point...they are really casualties of the invasion as well.



After Pointe du Hoc, we drove to Omaha Beach.


In  the first picture, you can see the sea wall that was there during the landing. During the first few hours of the invasion, thousands of soldiers took shelter here when they were pinned down by enemy fire on the beach.We got there during high tide, so you can see there is basically no dry land against behind the sea wall. It is so heartbreaking that so many wounded soldiers actually drowned as the tide came in. They estimate more than 2,000 American troops died on this beach. Our guide did a wonderful job explaining the significance of what happened here, as well as helping us appreciate the heroism of the men who prevented the landing at this beach from becoming a complete disaster.

Our last stop of the day was the American cemetery  It is a really beautiful, reverent place. I really liked what our guide said about the veterans of D Day. He said, "They don't ask much of us, all that they ask is that we remember and that we help others remember."
We plan do this with Carter. I am so glad that we were able to visit Normandy, it was truly a life changing experience.

On Thursday, Jeremy, my mom, and I toured Notre Dame Cathedral. I loved looking at all of the gargoyles at the top.



After Notre Dame, we got crepes for lunch and walked to the "Love Lock" bridge. Here is is, you can see Notre Dame in the background

I thought this was the coolest place, there were thousands and thousands of locks. You write your names on a lock, put it on the bridge, and then throw the key into the river. Here we are putting our lock on the bridge

After the bridge, we met my family at the Musee D'Orsay. This is the main impressionist museum in Paris. I especially loved all of the beautiful works of art by Degas and Renoir. After the museum, we took a stroll along the Seine and went for a quick visit to Sainte Chapelle. Once again, Carter saved the day by helping us to cut the line.



I actually liked Sainte Chapelle better than Notre Dame. The huge stained glass windows were incredible. That night, my mom babysat Carter

and Jeremy and I went out for a nice dinner.

It was delicious! On our last day in Paris, we visited the Eiffel Tower. The Eiffel tower wasn't really my favorite thing, the lines were just too long and it was kind of a hazy day. Here we are at the top.
After the Eiffel Tower, we went shopping along the Champs Elysees. I found some yummy smelling citrusy perfume to remind me of Paris. We stopped and got lunch and a strawberry tart. I think I ate my weight in croissants and pastries during our time in Paris

After our shopping trip we went to the catacombs. They have the bones of six million people down there. They moved them there from cemeteries to conserve space.

This is probably one of the strangest places I have ever pushed a stroller through...
After all of our adventures, we were all pretty exhausted and ready to come home. There were a few things that we wanted to do in Paris that we didn't quite have time for, so I guess we'll just have to go back again someday! What a fun trip!