Tuesday, August 18, 2015

What else happened today? Oh right!

Happy 14th Birthday Jonathon!!  We love you!  Too bad it had to be the first day of school!

With sparklers on his cake.
New shirt and a crazy sister.
Loot Crate for the next 6 months!
Nicholas said it was his worst birthday ever.  Yeah, I said Nicholas.  Jonathon got new pants (I'm always practical), some fun new socks & a variety of candy (from the grandparents), some cash (from grandparents and great grandma), and a 6 month subscription to Loot Crate (one guess who that was from).  And then there were sparklers on his cake. Nicholas was greener than Jonathon's new shirt. 

Northern Ireland outdoors (well, most of it) is amazing.

Here's the thing, Belfast is a bit of an industrial city, but it's up-and-coming.  Great food, some great stuff to do, but the real gem of Northern Ireland is the countryside and the nature.  If you know us, you know we pretty much hate nature, and yet N. Ireland encouraged us to love it.  Except for the stinging nettles.  Those can go into a hole and die as far as we're concerned.  Just about all of us got stung (so... thanks geocaching X stinging nettle nature) and it's not an "ouch that hurt" sort of pain but a 12-24 hour hivey swollen stinging misery.  Oh, and the spiders.  Those should really just stay outside even if it rains 2 out of every 3 days and spiders don't like rain and prefer the warmth of a cozy curtain in a bedroom.  Stay. Out. Side.  Otherwise you will meet the bottom of Nicholas's shoe.

Back to the loving... and yes, we even liked the rain.  Almost all of us.


That's Rebecca looking miserable at Inch Abbey (GoT: The site where Robb Stark was crowned King of the North). It probably had something to do with the shoes she was wearing that were more holes than shoe and that the field was more puddle than grass.  And yes, it was still raining.

Here she looks a little less miserable.  I think.


Next to our house, we had cows.  We called that lovely guy in the back SkullFace.



We rode bikes around Audley's Castle (GoT: One of the Twins), through pasture land and forest and alongside Strangford Lough.



So, no question we don't really like nature.  What we discovered is that Ian really doesn't like bike riding.  At all.  Even more than his dislike of nature. We did two separate circuits  and for the first (through the fields and pasture) all 6 of us rode.  For the second, only 5 of us went out.  Ian would have none of it.  Truth be told, Rebecca didn't enjoy the first round either but took on the second and found it much more enjoyable.  Though the area was described as "flat" and "good for families" even the smallest of inclines proved challenging for our non-bike-riding family.

But you know what?  It was still tons of fun.  Even if we did walk up most of the hills. 

And look what else we found?


Cute story.  When we arrived in Edinburgh, we met up with another Embassy Amman family who we happened to cross vacation paths with.  At lunch, we learned that their 3-year old daughter was fascinated with Nessie.  We pulled up this photo on the camera and showed her that Nessie was in fact real and was vacationing in N. Ireland which is why they hadn't seen her in Scotland.  

My favorite take-away from this trip was a sign I saw in some shop:  There's no such thing as poor weather, only poor choice of clothing.  

It's absolutely true.  It's also good to remember up north that it's going to rain whether you go out and do fun stuff or not, so you might as well go do it and have fun.  It makes the best stories when your activities are just this side of uncomfortable or chaotic.  For this trip, we were soggy more times than I can count, and survived.  We missed the 110F and massive duststorm in Amman in exchange for 65F with rain every day, and it was awesome.

Before I get to more R&R stuff...


Happy first day of school to our Senior, Sophomore, and Freshman!!

Saturday, August 15, 2015

R&R Favorites

We spent our time this R&R in a small town called Strangford outside Belfast in Northern Ireland, in the 2nd city of Scotland aka Edinburgh, and in London. It was tough for us to choose favorites, but after much prodding the overall favorite was Edinburgh.  OK, not that hard, the Fringe Fest was awesome.

Favorite activity in Northern Ireland: River Bouldering.  I have no actual photos of the activity as we were in the water most of the time.  The link actually brings you to a program called "Coasteering" but the winds and water along the coast were too strong so instead we climbed up a rushing stream with boulders and swirling pools and overhanging rocks to jump from.  I highly recommend it, even with the really cold water.  Wet suits are a wonder.

Favorite activity in Edinburgh: City Dash.  It was an activity we had never heard of but saw people rushing around the Fringe with numbers on their backs.  On a whim, we signed up and over the course of an hour we tore around Edinburgh following clues that popped up on our phones, gathering points as we solved riddles and losing points as we were spotted by the spies posted on various streets.  We discovered that the city is made up of a lot of hills and corridors filled with stairs.


Favorite activity in London: Hint Hunt.  We split up and did the 2 Zen rooms.  If you've never done an escape room, please go find one near you and plunge in.  It's tons of fun.  This Directory should get you started.


We should do more fun stuff like this.




Friday, August 14, 2015

And we're home.

R&R was great.  Very great.  This is the first time I can remember that the kids actually had thoughts and inputs into what we did while we were doing them.  Some photos, I'll get to some highlight posts later.

Graveyard in Downpatrick, N. Ireland

The Dark Hedges, N. Ireland.

Friday, July 17, 2015

Keeping Busy

Today being Friday, we are on our weekend.  In case you haven't noticed, in the Middle East weekends are Fridays and Saturdays. It's kind of awesome and kind of not.  Awesome in that we're on weekend and you're... not :)  Not awesome in that Sunday comes and we're back at work and you're... not :(  At the same time though, since much of what an Embassy does involves people back in DC, Sundays are a great catch-up day.  DC isn't open so emails are sent but not answered.  Phones don't ring as much.  You get the idea.  And with the time difference, Monday is much the same.  With the 7 hour time difference DC opens when we're getting ready to close up.

Of course all that really means is that Tuesday-Thursday are jam-packed, Sundays are really spent answering all that stuff that came in on Friday when we were sitting at the pool or napping at home, and everyone works through Fridays and Saturdays anyway with their blackberries or iPhones.  But not me, I don't even turn on my work phone on the weekends.  Or ever.

Today being Friday, July 17, we're also at the first day of the Eid holiday. We don't go back to work until Tuesday. A lot of people travel over this long weekend, but as is normal for us, we're at home.  Traveling around Jordan is not a fun idea on Eid breaks. Aqaba, the Dead Sea, pretty much everything is packed to the gills with people escaping Amman.  That's fine with us.  The grocery store was basically empty at 11 a.m., the same with Starbucks.

Yeah, Starbucks is open again during the day.  And we can drink in the car.  All hail the end of Ramadan.

So looking to a month from now when it's the night before school starts again and in between we have our R&R, I did some stuff that needed to be done.  Like organizing the school supplies.  I don't even know why we have shelves of school supplies.  I must have 150 brand new pens.  I'm the kind of person that when I can't find a pen I order 50.  Then I forget, can't find a pen, and order 50 more.  It's almost an illness.  We have stacks of paper.  You want unopened college rule?  Got it.  Graph paper?  Got it.  Construction paper?  Got it.  Dividers?  I did not know we have 7 full sets of dividers.  For all the lined paper we won't be using.  Because everything the kids do is done on the laptop... written, edited, submitted.  Math assignments?  Online.  Science projects?  Online.

I have an entire rubbermaid container on the floor full of unsharpened pencils, partially used pens, and a mix of markers. Those are separate from the container of markers and highlighters on the shelf.

New unopened erasers, for all the pencils we won't be using with the paper we won't be using.  Glue sticks.  Do kids beyond elementary school use glue sticks?  I have about 50 of them just waiting for the next paper project that comes home and requires glue sticks to complete.  It won't happen.  With the block schedule, the kids have gobs of time to do projects in class and therefore use class supplies for it all. Projects don't come home.  And if they do?  You guessed it... online.

I opened up new scissors.  That's a good thing.  We have about 12 pairs of scissors but none of them were with the school supplies.  I also haven't discovered where the tape dispenser or the stapler went.  They'll show up.  In the meantime we have 2 brand new scissors to lose.

There are 4 calculators, one of them scientific.  The other scientific one has disappeared in Rebecca's disaster of a room.  It'll show up. I'll probably end up ordering another one in the meantime.  Please don't ask me why, I already mentioned it might be an illness. We also have 3 Geometry sets.  At no point have we had more than one person taking Geometry at a time nor do I use them for scrapbooking or art projects or random "I'm bored" math time.

Amidst all these items, I found some things I'd been looking for.  Last year's grades for the kids (no, not this June.... last June 2014). I never did file them away but now I have.  My W2 from... yeah, 2014.  A Nintendo DS that had gone "missing" a while back.  It looks like at some point a cat peed on it.  Awesome.

A garbage bag full of crap went out.  Folders from when the kids were in elementary because I thought at some point they might be able to use them.  For all those paper assignments that aren't being done. Packaging and yellowed papers that suggest they've been there a very long time.  I think some of that lined paper might hail back as far as Manila.

There's now also a shelf of art supplies.  Becca is taking a number of art classes this coming year so having it all in one place works.  Charcoal, a full set of drawing pencils, a full set of water color paints, gum erasers, stacks of paintbrushes, etc.  All good.  If she doesn't use them this year they'll be donated along with all that lined paper to a school here that can use it.

One more posting with kids in school.  How the time has flown.

I also put away all the scrapbooking stuff today that I've had out for... a very long time.  It's not going to get finished before our next trip and I want it safely away from bladder-challenged cats while we're gone.  My rubbermaid drawers full of scapbooks and photos and mementos make me happy.  It's right next to my yarn basket which has been greatly neglected of late.

That's OK though.  I'll get to it all again eventually.

For now, I'll happily look at the organized shelves and my clean desk. I'll think about the plans we have for our R&R which is all neatly planned out, prep the letters I wrote for mailing on Tuesday, and sleep on my newly rotated mattress.  But only after trying the Pumpkin S'mores Dump Cake I made (Only instead of pumpkin... yams. And instead of evaporated milk... condensed. And I added vanilla powder and pumpkin pie spice powder as well. And I don't have marshmallow "sauce" but I do have marshmallow "fluff." It's going to be awesome, but how much you want to bet I'm the only one who's going to eat it? This is brought to you by "There's less than a year left to eat all the crap in the pantry!") and showering under my newly scrubbed showerhead now devoid of calcium build-up.

And tomorrow?  Well, I think I have some ideas.


Blowing WNW

The bid list is coming out soon, I think Ian said August 7.  We're down to counting months left in Amman, which feels like it was a long time coming while at the same time the past 3 years have passed quickly.

I'll have "memories in Amman stories" next year.

For now we continue with daily life of emptying litter pans, getting groceries, cleaning furniture, reading books, packing for a trip.  There's a lot left to do in Jordan, and I hope we can get it done.

What have I done:
Aqaba
Float in Dead Sea
Skydive over Dead Sea
Baptism Site
Climb to the Monastery in Petra
Graduate a high schooler in Jerash
Um Qais ruins
Ajloun Castle and forest
Qasr Amra
Qasr Azraq
Qasr Kharana
Azraq Wetlands
The new church at Mount Nebo
Madaba mosaics
Ma'In Hot Springs
and of course visited Jerusalem

What haven't I done:
Stayed overnight anywhere in Wadi Rum
Hiked any of the wet or dry Wadis
Kerak Castle
Feynan Ecolodge
Dana Reserve

The thing is that we've all done different things here so not everyone is keen on redoing activities even though I haven't done them (insert tiny violins).  Jonathon slept under the stars in Wadi Rum.  Both boys have stayed overnight in Dana then hiked to Feynan and stayed over night there.

We have less than 52 weekends left here.  A number of them are scheduled for out-of-country trips.  Here's hoping we mark off at least one or two of the To Do list, just for me.