Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Dublin Autumn - Pure Survival mixed with Beautiful Days

 
This my friends....is a ponytail. You might say..."Huh? What on EARTH is the significance of your near 3 1/2 year old having a ponytail?" Well...I'm glad you asked. It's the very first ponytail 1) she requested and 2) that held and wasn't more than 6 strands of hair. Norah may be big on brains and big on personality....she is not big on hair length. :)
A couple weeks ago, after I picked Norah up from school, I decided to take her to UCD to visit Wayne at school. We had only taken her there twice in the two years we have been here so I decided it was time for thrice. :)
Norah drew us this Fairy. Yes, its a fairy.
Looks likes she's going "Oooo". :) Are you SURE it's not a ghost or a peanut? "No, that's a fairy!"
N - check! O - check! RRRRrrr...on the way.
N-O-R-A-H Booyah!
I think this was the same day we visited Wayne at school. Instead of hopping the bus back home, we went into the city to our favorite Lebanese restaurant. It's inexpensive, family-owned and they always remember us. I'd say we've been there four times in two years (places in Dublin city centre are hit & miss and expensive, so when you find a place that's not those things, well, you stick with it) Norah drew the waitresses a picture and so the owner came over and told us this young waitress (maybe his daughter?) is studying drawing in University. Well, then she offered to draw us something, disappeared to grab some paper and came back to sit at our table for the next 10 minutes. She did this sketch of Norah with a ball-point pen and it was adorable! We have it hanging in our kitchen now.
Another afternoon after school, exploring with Norah.
Ahh, Dublin Rain in the fall/winter. It's begun and has come with a vengeance. They say this winter is supposed to be record-setting cold and wet. That's just fannnntastic! Not having a car is starting to get a little old.  It's been two years now without a car and this is the first time I've felt that it's honestly getting to be difficult. Everyday, we leave at 8:30 am to walk Norah to school and 50% of the time, that means walking in a full monsoon for one mile (and then one mile home). This means...colds all around and lots of wet clothes.
                  
Norah at People's Park some afternoon last week.
Walking down to Sandycove. The weather here can be a bit manic-depressive - monsoon rains/wind and flooding and then blazing sunshine the very next day. I think this must be the Fall-process which eases us into full-on Winter.  
This afternoon was so beautiful! We walked down to Sandycove beach (15 minutes south of us) and it was so warm out that Norah played on the sand in her bare feet. We started our walk in full coats and by the end had stripped off all our layers and sat here in t-shirts. (mid-October, mind you, so it felt amazing!) 
Speaking of being manic - on one of those rainy "indoor" days, Norah and I had a "crafter-noon" (credit for the term to my sister, Mimi). No joke, we sat here for nearly 3 hours one afternoon.
The picture quality is not great but this is a herd of deer in Phoenix Park - one of several herds of deer who roam freely here. Phoenix Park (8 miles from our house) is the largest gated park in all of Europe. It is Dublin's Yellowstone.
This last weekend, our sweet friends Nolan & Karen invited some friends over to celebrate Canadian Thanksgiving. (which was Oct. 14th) Well, their place is just past Phoenix Park and while it is a mere 8 miles away from us, the bus journey takes 1 hour 45 minutes. Not kidding, we've done it. So, given the rain and not wanting to spend a total of 4 hours of our Saturday commuting, we decided to rent a car for the weekend. The €35 we spent on this did absolute WONDERS for my mental health and we had one of the best weekends we've had in a really long time - simply because we got to drive in a Toyota Yaris to our friends' house, have dinner, and drive home. It was so NORMAL! I loved it so much. We were all so giddy to be driving around Dublin. We've rented a car a few times, for trips around Ireland but never to do just "normal life things". This was almost more exciting for me. We stopped in at the grocery store (LOVED it), we "ran a quick errand" in Blackrock (LOVED IT!) and neither of those things became our entire day. Honestly, if we have to pick something up in Blackrock, that's our entire afternoon. (and that's 2 miles from our place). It's just too expensive to have a car in Dublin otherwise we'd be getting one. So, instead, we've vowed to rent a car like this, for 48 hours, once per month. If for nothing else than to save our sanity a bit. Or to "stop in" at the grocery store and buy more than we can carry home.
Look at the baby deer! :)
So this is the angel we went to see at Nolan & Karen's. We didn't want to see them, just their baby! Hannah is 4 months old and so precious. Hannah is just starting to coo and make sounds, and she lit up when Norah would sit in front of her. She told Norah alllll about her day.
On Sunday, we were so excited about still having the car, that we drove back to Phoenix Park. :) The park is a bit of a runner's paradise with several thousand acres of wooded/gravel/paved paths all crisscrossing. So, one of my main reasons for going back was to do a run there. (I've done two races in the The Phoenix Park - a 10K and a half-marathon - but obviously when you're in those, you're pre-occupied and not quite "strolling" to take in the landscape). So, this time, I felt like I was going there for the first time.
This dog, outside the visitor center at Phoenix Park was....killin' me. He's making sure we're all safe from that devilish "reflection dog" that keeps popping up.
They have one of the best playgrounds we have ever seen too - (this is a small part of it, it was huge). I have about a 5-minute attention span for playgrounds and in this one, I could honestly see myself playing with Norah for 45 minutes before I told her some 'white-lie' about why we needed to leave, to coax her to the adjoining cafe. :) My normal M.O.
Wayne, on the other hand, can easily handle a full hour in the playground and does it with ease. I don't understand it but I'm in awe of it. Anyway, while they played here then, I snuck off for a 30 minute run. It was just as good as I had hoped. I ran 3.5 miles, with no pain in my knee and absolutely loved the location.

After the run, we drove to another part of the park and parked to run around the hills with Norah (to give an idea for the size of the park, it would take you probably 20-25 minutes in a car, to drive the circumference). As we park, Wayne points up to the crest of a hill (WAY up above us) where racers were zipping past. A race! A running race! It only took 3 seconds before I said, "You don't mind do you??", as I jumped out of the car and ran up the hill to see.
Well, turns out, this was the All-Ireland Men's Cross-Country Final (Women's had been earlier).  Anyway, it was very exciting and I've almost never seen guys run this fast. They were from clubs all over Ireland and were doing 5 laps of a 1-mile loop. The spectators were all situated in the center of the 'loop' so you could walk back between sides as they passed. It actually made for a pretty exciting race. (I am such a running nerd...I am aware of it... I just can't stop it) 
So here comes the "peloton" with one guy out in front.
This guy in the red ended up winning it. He finished 5 miles in 24 minutes. (the same pace, mind you, that I finish only 3 miles) That means he runs at 4 minutes 50 seconds per MILE.
To put that in perspective, I run 8 minutes 15 seconds per mile in a 3 mile race and the VERY fastest guy I know in my running club, runs at 6 minutes per mile. And that's lightening fast. So.......4:50/mile?? Well, it's Olympic at the very least, and quite possibly approaching the speed of light. :)  
This is a very, very steep hill going down into this gully, and then climbing back up to the other side. Just off center, in between the trees, you can see Norah's pink coat. They were pretending there were bears and my job was to chase them. Then, for at least 30 minutes we played "Attack the naughty policemen with sticks and knives" (this was Norah's imagination...not mine). haha! We ran and ran and ran, yelling "Hai-YA! Hai-YA! Yaw! Heee-YAW!" while pretending to wield daggers and sticks, chasing...(you guessed it) the naughty policemen who kidnapped "Norah's sister". We eventually attacked them, sufficiently, and rescued the sister. Thank goodness. I need a burrito.  
On Saturday, we left my essential umbrella at Nolan & Karen's house. So, we asked if he could bring it into school on Monday (Wayne & Nolan are Ph.D. buddies in the Psychology department). Seeing as how Nolan also rides his bike into UCD, this is how he had to carry my umbrella. Karen sent me this photo Monday morning.
Well, then Wayne brought it home that evening and I decided to send this picture back to Nolan & Karen. (and now I share it with you) :)
I caught her, huddled in the corner with a make-up bag filled with stuff I never use. She decided to add a few dabs of eye shadow to her cheeks and just under her nostrils. I'm sure it was 'shadowing'.
They were yelling, "Cirque Du Soleil! Take our picture!".
Norah inside Wayne's shirt. I don't know. Things get weird pretty fast after dinner.

And, for your viewing pleasure, here are a couple videos of Norah BUSTIN' a move. This girl can dance. As I told her, I think a dance studio should pay US to have her as a student. This is all 100% her. Sheesh, I couldn't dance like that 'til college. :) Maybe not even still actually.
 
 


Friday, October 18, 2013

Last Day in Paris - Wayne's Birthday and Euro Disney!

Breakfast on our last day, just before heading to EURO DISNEY with Cousin Suzy!! Now this would not have been on our list for Paris but honestly.....honestly...it was the most fun we had. I expected Disneyland to be that experience you might expect - heat, coupled with crowds, coupled with lines and a toddler?? Well, it wasn't. Sure it was hot but lines were not that bad and we had a BALL. And in fact there were zero lines for the adult rides. The longest we waited was 25 minutes for the Dumbo ride.We felt like little kids, which is exactly the experience it is meant to evoke right?
Suzy offered to take us all there (any Disneyland park is her favorite place on earth) and it happened to be Wayne's birthday as well. One thing Suzy knows how to do really well is to conjure up that magical feeling you have as a child, upon walking into Disneyland. It wouldn't have been near as fun without her because her love for the place was contagious. Also Wayne has never seen a Disneyland park so it was doubly-fun to show him one that was also in Paris, France! I defy anyone to not find this place a little magical.
First we made our way to the Arc Du Triomphe to catch the train.
And here we go, on our way! (The train ride is one hour, twenty minutes from Paris)
 So giddy to be here with Suzy!!!
Notice Wayne in his "I Love White Center" tshirt from Uncle Marko. He thought it was the perfect birthday shirt for his first trip to Disneyland (and it was). :)
 Surprisingly excited to be entering this park and could not stop taking photos. Ahhh!!!
 Disneyland Paris! Tinkerbell! Ahhh!!!
Oh my gosh, a fire truck with people inside! Ahh!! It's so exciting!
(this was my internal state)
 "Where are we going? What do you want to see first? I want to see everything. Hurry up, let's go"
A little girl again.
 
La Blanche Niege (Snow White). The characters and rides' names being in French added a whole 'nother element to the experience. Loved it.
Norah, however, did NOT love this ride. We made the mistake of going into the first ride we saw - Snow White and the 7 Dwarves. Its one of those train-like rides where you're taken through these dark rooms on a wooden cart-train. Well....turns out...this story is VERY dark and we didn't exactly remember that. It only showcased the creepy witch with her glowing green eyes, dragons, the evil forest, the witch poisoning Snow White, and then, literally at the exit door, Snow White with her prince, looking happy with squirrels dancing, as if we didn't just take a ride through purgatory. Our poor girl was huddled in Wayne's lap, hiding her face and screaming that she wanted to leave. Oooo, sorry Norah...bad choice for the first ride...let's stick to 'outside' rides.
First things first, we got some juice, some candy and chips. :) At Disneyland you are not allowed to eat well-balances meals. Sugar is all you can have here. And meat in tube-form.
Still recovering from the Snow White ride, Norah spotted the evil queen from Alice in Wonderland in the distance and didn't like her one bit. She became fixated on where she was and wanted to keep her in her sights. In the video below (we're in the famous teacup ride) she is making sure the Queen is not near us.
Magic little Dumbo-bums.
Wayne: "I'm 32! This is the best birthday ever!"
Of course I'm holding onto Norah as if this thing is suddenly going to go upside down.
Seeing as how Wayne had never been to Disneyland, he knows nothing of Space Mountain! He went on it twice and thankfully, since this was one of the adult rides, we only had to wait about 3 minutes in line. I'm not kidding you here, one time, in California, I waited for 2 1/2 hours for this ride. I'm not joking. And at the time, it seemed reasonable. Humans!
 When Wayne went the 2nd time, with Suzy, Norah and I sat outside and I snapped this photo of the people being shot up the tube here. It was terrifying and so awesome! You start out in the pitch black and you feel yourself clicking up the incline (you know that feeling in roller coasters). Well then it stops and you're inside that lower tube, it's pitch black and they start a countdown like a space shuttle! Ahhh! So fun but I could only handle one ride. Wayne rode twice which seems fitting for a 32nd birthday but that was his max, as well.
Norah sitting in front of the photo of Simone de Beauvoir sitting in this very seat.
(more explanation below)
From Wikipedia:
Les Deux Magots is a famous café in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés area of Paris, France. It once had a reputation as the rendezvous of the literary and intellectual élite of the city. It is now a popular tourist destination. Its historical reputation is derived from the patronage of Surrealist artists, intellectuals such as Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, and young writers, such as Ernest Hemingway. Other patrons included Albert Camus, Pablo Picasso, James Joyce, Bertolt Brecht and the American writer Charles Sutherland.
The Deux Magots literary prize has been awarded to a French novel every year since 1933.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Deux_Magots)
St. Germain Des Pres (the oldest church in Paris). This is directly opposite Les Duex Magots, where we had dinner.
 The brought out the dessert tray for the birthday boy.
 At points, the ambience in Paris was so THICK you felt it was being "put on" for show. For instance, we're sitting outside this incredibly famous café where some of the most respected and famous writers and philosophers sat, and then we hear.....Opera... being sung, live, 15 feet from our table.
Oh cooommmmmee ON!
And they were unbelievably good. Incredible. Several times they brought tears to my eyes. These 3 set up here, across from the St. Germain des Pres church, as part of an Opera contest going on. They hard cards which showed how you could vote for them online. Anyway, whatever the reason, their singing, in that place, was one of the most beautiful sounds I had ever heard.  
(In the first few seconds, a massive German Shepherd in the back of an SUV scares the crap outta' that poor woman.)
Also, as Wayne spotted, Mark Twain was joining us for dinner.
Ernest Hemingway
A very late night for our little sweetie on our last day in Paris. She had an absolute ball. Given the 14 or so blog posts on our five days in Paris, you might have gathered that I adored every moment of our trip. Hence my inability to NOT share every single one of those moments in picture/video form.
As I've told a few people since returning, if I spend the rest of my life working and saving money for trips back to Paris, I will be just fine. I want to go back when Norah is older. I want to go back, sans children, when Wayne and I reach retirement, and then again. And again. Now, of course, none of these things are guaranteed and so this trip absolutely meant the world to me. To be able to see Paris for five whole days, with nearly all of my extended family was completely surreal. Every time the seven of us were out walking together (near Notre Dame, at the Louvre, the Sacre Coeure, etc) I took a mental photograph (and 10 actual photographs), in hopes that I could keep that forever.  Needless to say, this was one of those trips I will spend the rest of my days conjuring memories of...