Saturday, November 28, 2015

Charlotte Turns Ten

Charlotte Turns Ten

Charlotte's tenth birthday was yesterday. Since it was a holiday, she had the whole day planned out. It was very fun.

A few weeks ago we replaced our decrepit old waffle iron and we've been a waffle craze since. So we started the day with waffles, but this time some of us topped them with chocolate syrup and whipped cream.

Yum!

Mom and Dad did some chores, but then we went to Bonkers, a party/play place nearby. It's in a large former grocery store and has a huge Habitrail-like "maze" with cool slides. Like a McDonald's playland but four or five times as big. Plus it has lots of arcade games, and pizza.

We were there for three hours and the girls had a wonderful time with each other.

Since we spent Thanksgiving at our friends' house, we didn't have leftovers. So Carol cooked our own Thanksgiving dinner on Charlotte's birthday. Then we put candles in the pumpkin pie since it is one of Charlotte's favorite desserts.

We can't believe our little girl is 10 years old!

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Cape Cod 2015

Cape Cod 2015

In mid-September we joined the Latta-Giulianas at their family cottage in Dennis Port on Cape Cod. It's becoming an annual event. It's great to be there after the crowds of summer have departed.

This year the weather and the ocean were still warm enough for swimming and we spent a fair bit of time at the beach a block from the cottage.

The cottage is in a "cottage park" that has a pond and wooded areas. This year, for the first time for our kids at least, the kids disappeared for long periods of time and explored the woods. After they had them mapped out, they took the adults on a tour.

One of the highlights was a dead heron.

We also had our traditional meal at the Dog House.

Friday, November 13, 2015

Crane Beach with Mia

Crane Beach with Mia

Crane Beach is not only awesome in the summer - from October through March it's open to dogs so we also love to go there in the off season. On October 11 it was quite warm and we decided to go. We brought Audrey's best friend Mia with us.

I thought it would be nice for Audrey and Mia to have some good photos of them together, so I focused on capturing them. I managed to get a few candid ones.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Strandbeests

Strandbeests

At the beginning of October we went to see the Strandbeests exhibit at the Peabody Essex Museum.

The strandbeests ("beach creatures") are fascinating machines made by a Dutch artist named Theo Jansen. They are powered by the wind and walk along the beach.

I first read about the strandbeests several years ago. This is the first time they have travelled for an exhibit. I'm so glad we went because I learned so much more about them.

I didn't realize they are almost entirely made out of PVC, including many small parts that make up the joints and mechanisms - not just the "bones".

It also hadn't occurred to me that to make the larger beests required many copies of the same part so he had to devise "mass production" techniques. There were some great videos in the exhibit that showed that.

The best part was getting to push one and examine up close how it works.

The PEM always has an activity for kids. This time it involved building ecosystems out of colored foam and other bits. Each of us built one.

Outside the museum there was another exhibit called Stickwork by Patrick Doherty. Back when it was installed the artist invited the public to help build the "houses". We missed that, but we sure enjoyed the result.

Also, Salem has become quite the tourist attraction during the month of October, leading up to Halloween. As many as 100,000 people show up on actual Halloween! Outside the museum the streets and alleys were filled with witch and Halloween-themed stuff.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Fall 2015 Photos

We've had a pretty fun Fall!

Charlotte went to the Topsfield Fair with her friend Madison and jumped really high on the bungee swing things.

Carol and I finally got to see a favorite musician of ours: Melody Gardot. She's American but lives in Europe and rarely tours here. It was a fantastic show: so much talent on that stage and she shared the spotlight generously. We can't wait to see her again. It was a wonderful date night.

Our Seattle friend Britt came to visit for a few days. That's always a treat!

Back in the spring we bought discount passes to a local amusement park: Canobie Lake Park. At the time we planned to use them with our neighbors during the summer but that never happened. We finally used those passes in mid-October. Only New Englanders would go to an amusement park when it is 45 degrees out! We were underdressed (it had been warmer just before), but we still had fun. We'll go back next year when it's warmer.

At the end of October yet more Seattle friends were in town: Paula and Chris were visiting Paula's parents while on their way back to Seattle from a trip to Ireland. We met them at a beautiful place called World's End and then had a seafood dinner with them.

I met Paula when I was a summer camp counselor in 1982. She and Chris are both artists and we have a large painting by Chris hanging in our kitchen and two large drawings by Paula in our living room. It was great to see them and catch up a little. It was also the first time they had met the girls. We hope to see them in Seattle in the summer of 2016.

Then there was Halloween. I didn't even get a photo of Audrey's costume this year. As a sign of getting older, she went trick-or-treating with a friend in a different neighborhood for hours.

I built my usual Halloween electronics project. This year it was a sidewalk piano. I'll have to make a separate post about that.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

NYC Weekend

NYC Weekend

At the end of September Audrey and I travelled to New York City.

The trip was scheduled around our annual visit to Maker Faire, a festival of "making" (hobby electronics, robotics and technology wackiness).

A month or so before I had read a glowing review of the special Picasso sculpture exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. So we travelled down Saturday morning to visit MoMA. That was well worth it: I thought the exhibit was fantastic. We always think of Picasso as a painter, but the journey he took through sculptural media is fascinating. It also makes it even more obvious what a genius he was.

I apparently didn't take any photos, but we spent Saturday night with friend Brady and Julie and Julie's brother in Yonkers. We arrived for a lovely dinner and had a great visit.

At Maker Faire we met up with another good, old Seattle friend: Bill. He was there with his wife and three kids. Audrey had fun with Cole and Tatum at a station where they could disassemble electronic devices. Audrey was fascinated.

That reminds me that I need to collect some electronic junk for the girls to take apart!

One of our favorite things about Maker Faire is the gyro booth that is there every year. It did not disappoint.

Oh, and Audrey always loves to climb on the big spider-web-like thing in the Hall of Science playground.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Carol's Birthday

Carol's Birthday

Carol turned 29 in September!

We had a lovely birthday dinner on our screened porch. We re-screened it at the end of last summer and it's now our favorite dining space.

Happy Birthday, Carol!

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Summer Snaps

Summer Snaps

Here are some photos from the latter half of the summer.

We had a visit from my Seattle friend Brady, planned around attending a Red Sox - Mariners game at Fenway Park. The game was a farce - the Mariners were down 19-2 at one point and lost 22-10 - but it is always fun to hang out with Brady and we got to enjoy Fenway. We also got to witness the M's using their backup catcher as a pitcher.

We had several great beach days this summer. One visit we went in the afternoon and stayed until sunset.

We went apple picking at the very beginning of the season. It was a bumper crop this year. Carol made pie.

We have a regular habit now of taking Rhodie for long walks in local woods. We feel very fortunate to have such beautiful, large wooded areas so nearby. If we want to go a longer walk we can make it to a reservoir where Rhodie can swim. She loves water.

Audrey started middle school in September. She entered with a splash of color in her hair. She's been through a few colors now. At the moment it's a subtle red/magenta over her natural color.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Hub on Wheels

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Today Audrey and I rode the Hub on Wheels event in Boston.

For those of you who don't know, one nickname for Boston is "The Hub of the Universe", or "The Hub" for short.

The event has 10, 30 and 50 mile routes. This was Audrey's first bike ride of more than a mile or two so we chose the 10 mile route.

For the ride, they shut down Storrow Drive, which is the parkway (treated like a freeway by drivers) along the Boston side of the Charles River. It's novel and fun to have a main road closed to traffic for bikes!

Audrey did great and enjoyed the ride. Although she is outgrowing her bike.

She was sad when we turned off at the place where the 10-mile split from the longer routes. Most people went the other way and she liked riding in the crowd.

Next year we'll get her a larger bike and tackle the 30-mile route. Charlotte will meet the 10-year-old minimum next year, too. Perhaps she'll ride the 10-mile with Carol and Audrey and I will ride the 30.

Oh, there's also a video.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Labor Day Weekend 2015

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We almost never travel on three-day weekends. We'd rather not deal with the traffic on both ends of the weekend, and we can usually find plenty of fun stuff to do near home. We just had a great Labor Day staycation.

Friday night we watched an episode of the great public TV series "Mysteries of Matter". The whole time it was showing Audrey was playing with makeup and coming up with some weird looks. At one point she gave herself a black eye that was pretty convincing.

On Saturday we ran some errands (Carol and I both ordered new glasses - very exciting!). Then I did some yard work that I'm very proud of (mostly because it had gotten so wild that it looks fantastic by comparison after cleaning it up!). We ended the day with an impromptu dinner with our dear friends and next door neighbors, the Burtnetts. It's always lovely to spend time with them. I could do it every weekend.

On Sunday morning Carol and I took Rhodie for a long walk in the woods. Carol had never been to the nearby reservoir so I took her there. Rhodie has never really gotten the hang of fetching, but at the reservoir I started slowly throwing a stick very close to her in the water and she would retrieve it. Soon enough I was throwing the stick 25 feet out in the water and Rhodie was hooked. I think she fetched the stick 30 times. Rhodie has webbed feet and is a great swimmer.

I shot a little video and sent it to Audrey who was at home after having declined to go walking with us. She thought fetch with Rhodie looked fun and asked, "Can I come next time?" Of course! Please!

On the way home from the reservoir we walked past a bush that had some huge seed pods. We didn't notice them until after we had passed and noticed that I was covered with them - as was Rhodie.

In the afternoon we drove up to Russell Orchards in Ipswich to pick apples. It's a bumper crop this year. I knew we were a little earlier than usual, but it turns out they just opened for picking this weekend. It certainly is a bumper crop - the trees are heavily laden. We picked Macouns and Honeycrisps for pies and Galas to eat. We also bought a bag of cider donuts, which are the real reason to go apple picking.

On the way home we stopped at a newly renovated playground the girls had noticed. Very fun.

Monday I dragged Audrey out of the house to accompany Rhodie and me on another walk to the reservoir. Audrey thought ahead and wore clothes that could get wet. We had a great time playing fetch again, and Audrey enjoyed sitting in the water.

On Sunday we decided that the forecast for Monday looked like great beach weather. We didn't feel like getting up early to go. Carol suggested we go in the afternoon. Parking fills by 10am, but usually opens up around 1pm. We left home at 2:30 and arrived at Crane Beach at 3:15.

It was absolutely lovely. It was still crowded when we arrived but people were steadily leaving. The water was delightful at 72 degrees (it was over 90 outside). We swam a lot. Then the girls and I went for a long walk up the beach and Carol took a little nap.

Where we come from in Washington there is no such thing as swimming in the ocean - too cold. We still find it a real treat to be able to stay in the ocean for prolonged periods without getting hypothermia.

The tide was coming in. We saw it break through the sand bar in a few places and make new little pools that grew quickly. As the water flooded a new area we could see bubbles from clams. The girls made many attempts to catch one. No luck.

Then, when we were almost back to Carol we came across a large pool made by the incoming tide that had been heated by the hot sand it had flooded. The water was very warm. Tons of kids were having a blast in it. The girls played in it for at least half an hour. Then the sun set and it was time to go home.

We picked up a bucket of fried chicken on the way home and, eating it at the kitchen table, it seemed like the most delicious dinner ever.

Days, and weekends, like this leave me on a Dad high. I'm always trying to give my kids great memories and today was one of them.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

First Day of School 2015

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Today was the first day of school. Audrey is in sixth grade this year, starting middle school. Charlotte is in fourth grade.

Even though they were sad about the end of summer, at the same time they were very excited for school to start. Audrey was excited about the "team" she's on in the middle school (there are three - they travel through the year as a group), and Charlotte was very excited about her teacher assignment.

They were so excited that they were completely ready to leave 30 minutes before necessary this morning.

Audrey got her hair trimmed and freshly colored yesterday to prepare. She's got plans to rotate the color throughout the year. I think green is next, and then pink.

The middle school starts 30 minutes earlier than the elementary, so our routine will change a little. Earlier to bed, I guess.

After school both girls were very happy. They had great first days. Charlotte thought the biggest troublemaker boy was going to be in her class again but he isn't (although he sits right next to and has a locker right next to one of her best friends, in a different class). Audrey was really excited about the expanded lunch options at the middle school compared to elementary school. She stays in her home room all day the first two days so she won't get a real sense of the schedule until Thursday. In addition to the core subjects she's taking French and Band!

The year seems to be off to a great start.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Lake Dennison Camping

Lake Dennison Camping

When we arrived in New England in the summer of 2009 we immediately learned that one cannot go camping on the spur of the moment, at least during the main season. All of the public campgrounds and many of the private ones accept reservations six months in advance and if you don't book well in advance you're out of luck.

Six months ago our neighbors Molly and Brendan invited us to join them for a camping trip in August. We chose Lake Dennison. We were supposed to camp there with other neighbors in 2013 but something came up and we couldn't make it.

As this particular trip approached, the weather wasn't looking promising. Early in the preceding week, it looked like it would rain all weekend. But the forecast slowly improved as the week went one, and by Friday it looked like it could be OK, with just a few showers. We decided to go for it. Brendan and Molly were wavering but they were infected by our resolve.

Friday as we were packing it was one of those really gross New England summer days with high temps and very high humidity. I left work a little early and took the train home, and after just the 7-minute walk from the train station to home I was soaked in sweat. Ick. Meanwhile, the cold front that was bringing the worst of the rain was passing slowly over the campground about 60 miles west of us.

When we arrived at Lake Dennison, the campground was wet but it wasn't raining. We immediately set up lots of shelter. We have a canopy that we always bring, and I had borrowed a very large tarp from a neighbor to give us more dry area in case it rained a lot.

We were prepared.

Well, the weekend turned out to be fantastic.

The weather on the other side of the front was much more pleasant - warm but not too hot, and much less humid. And it didn't rain again during our entire visit.

There is a public swimming beach on the opposite side of the lake from our camp site. I paddled there in the canoe with Brendan and Molly and Anna, and Carol and the girls rode bikes there. We hung out at the beach for a few hours. The lake temperature was perfect.

We enjoyed our campfires and the girls played and played.

The rain arrived just as we were finishing packing on Sunday morning. It was still pleasantly warm out, so the girls and I went for a swim in the rain before we departed. It was a perfect ending.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Warm Summer Rain

We're getting ready to go camping. Rain is in the forecast - potentially heavy - but the worst of it should be past by the time we get to the campground.

The girls love a warm summer rain. They're out playing in it.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Circus Camp and Montreal

Circus Camp and Montreal

Okay, this combination of trips to and from circus camp gets a little complicated. Here's the itinerary:

Wednesday Evening Drive from Boston to Danville, VT and camp.
Thursday Morning Drop Charlotte off at 36-hour camp.
Thursday Afternoon John, Carol and Audrey hike Mt. Mansfield. Then visit Ben & Jerry's factory!
Friday John, Carol and Audrey visit St. Johnsbury, VT
Friday Afternoon Pick up Charlotte at camp, attend demonstrations.
Friday Evening Drive to Montreal.
Saturday Have an awesome day in Montreal. Run into our goof friend Ken from Seattle.
Sunday Drive back to Greensboro, VT to drop Audrey off at week-long camp.
Sunday Evening Drive home. Charlotte enjoys week of being only child.
All Week Go to work blah blah blah.
Saturday Morning Drive back to Greensboro, VT to pick up Audrey from camp. Attend demonstrations.
Saturday Evening/Sunday Morning Stay in a fun cabin in Barton, VT. Have dinner in St. Johnsbury.
Sunday Afternoon Attend opening performance of Circus Smirkus summer tour - in the Big Top in a pasture.
Sunday Evening Drive home.

And here's the looooong story...

We've lost track but I think this is the fourth year that one or both of the girls has gone to Smirkus Camp. Audrey went to the 36-hour Smirkling Camp twice and this was her second year of week-long camp. This was Charlotte's second time at Smirkling Camp. Smirkling Camp takes place over a Thursday night and camp is more than three hours from home, so we make a vacation of it.

In past years camp has been held at various boarding schools that they rent. But over the past few years Circus Smirkus raised $2 million, purchased a farm near their headquarters and finally were able to build their own permanent home. They were in a mad dash to get it ready for the first camp session. They held a work party in early June and seemingly half of the population of Greensboro (population 700) showed up to help. They barely made it! The dorms were still in a somewhat unfinished state but no campers or parents cared.

After we dropped Charlotte off, Audrey and Carol and I headed to Stowe. I had scoped out possible hikes and Mt. Mansfield, the highest point in Vermont, sounded doable. Unfortunately the forecast said we'd get rain in the late afternoon so we were under some time pressure. The hike was steep, rocky and muggy. Audrey was not enjoying it. A few hundred feet below the summit we came across the Green Mountain Club's Taft Lodge. It was a great stopping place. After some lunch and a rest we headed back down.

It never did rain.

In the evening we headed to St. Johnsbury to eat at a new restaurant I had found while researching: Kingdom Taproom. We had a great flatbread and a fancy salad. We liked the atmosphere.

On Friday we returned to camp to pick up Charlotte and attend her demonstrations. My favorite thing was the tumbling: watching Charlotte use a springboard and do a somersault.

Every year when we do this trip I ponder the idea of going to Montreal. It's a five hour drive from home, but only two hours from camp. This year we decided to do it. We departed camp about 4:30 and took the scenic route to a minor border crossing at North Troy, VT. We ended up getting delayed there because we had a bundle of firewood in the van. After a search, they made us drive back into the US to drop the firewood at the side of the road, then enter Canada again.

After a stop at a mall to buy a Canadian SIM card so I could use my phone for navigation and to find restaurants and attractions in Montreal, we finally arrived at our hotel downtown around 10:30.

On Saturday we first headed for Old Montreal to find some breakfast. We stopped at the first tourist crepe restaurant we found. It was alright. It served the purpose.

While we were eating we kept hearing jazz from the place next door. It also seemed like a constant stream of people was entering that establishment. But we went on our way.

We explored Old Montreal, which is very quaint. We went into several art galleries and Audrey, in particular, enjoyed that. We saw a lot of very cool art. We also stopped to listen to a great duo on the street and bought their CD.

At some point one of us posted on Facebook that we were in Montreal and our dear friend Britt commented that our dear friend Ken, her husband, was there for a conference. We eventually made contact and made a plan to meet for dinner.

Meanwhile, we took the subway to the Olympic Village from 1976 and the nearby Botanical Gardens. In the gardens is a place called the Insectarium which is a museum of sorts devoted to bugs. We had been told it was popular with kids. All of us loved it! Very fascinating.

One especially cool exhibit was a viney tree that had been trained to grow in a long horizontal arch from its pot to another pot about 10 feet away. At one end was an ant colony, and at the other end was a food source (a flowering plant). There was no glass. One could watch the ants chew off bits of plant (often in a team) before one of them took on the load and carried it all the way back to the nest. There were thousands of ants all making the round trip. And the most fascinating thing? The ants don't eat the leaves: they feed them to a fungus that lives in their nest, and the ants farm and eat the fungus!

I was blown away by the variety of insects. Even just among beetles and moths there were hundreds and hundreds of different species. It is a fantastic illustration of the power of natural selection to drive specialization toward a species' unique niche.

After that we went up in the slanted observation tower that was built as the centerpiece of the Olympic Village for a great view of the city. Back at the base, we discovered the Olympic swimming and diving pool is "hidden" under the tower.

Then it was time to go find Ken and find some dinner.

Ken had been busy at a technical conference all week and hadn't seen much of the city. We took him back down through Old Montreal, looking for restaurants along the way. We ended up back at the square where we had breakfast and guess what looked best? That place with the jazz.

It turns out the place has a lovely courtyard and the jazz is live.

There was a long line, but a strange thing happened. I went to the front and asked the greeter how long the wait would be for a party of five. He told me to wait right there. We were confused for a minute or two, but then he told me to go back in line and get my party and in we went! To a fantastic table overlooking the stage! We're not sure what happened, but we didn't complain.

The setting was magical: a beautiful garden courtyard with a lively crowd enjoying a gorgeous summer evening while listening to live music. I was on cloud nine.

We really enjoyed hanging out with Ken. After dinner we watched some street performers, the girls had their sketch drawn and we ended with some ice cream. By the time we walked Ken back to his hotel and took the subway back to ours it was pretty late.

It had been an absolutely perfect day! Thank you for the nice introduction, Montreal!

Sunday morning we drove back to Vermont in order to drop Audrey off at camp at 3:00. Then we drove home.

Charlotte really enjoyed being the only child for a week!

Saturday morning we got up at 6:00am and drove back up to Greensboro to pick Audrey up at 10:00.

For this one-night stay I had reserved a cabin next to the river in Barton, VT, about 20 minutes from camp. The girls loved it. There was a pool, and we could walk up the river a short distance to a stone railroad viaduct that was picturesque. That night we drove back to St. Johnsbury to return to the Kingdom Taproom.

On Sunday we slept in a little and laid around. Then we had a late breakfast and visited a yard sale in Glover just down the road from Barton. We bought some dishes and an old shoe shine kit.

Then it was back to Greensboro for the 1:00 performance of Circus Smirkus - this was the initial performance of the 70-performance summer tour. I really like going to the inaugural performance because it is held in a big top in the middle of a pasture at the circus headquarters, which is an old farm down a long dirt road.

The performance was great, as always.

Finally, all the fun was over. it was time to drive back to Melrose once more and get back to normal life.

The part of Vermont we visit every year for camp is called the Northeast Kingdom. Every year when we're there I spend a lot of time fantasizing about living there because it is such a gorgeous landscape: very green, rolling hills with surprise vistas, scenic little rivers. Of course, we always see it in June. I bet the winters there feel pretty damn long.

We'll do it again next year! Although next year both girls will go to week-long camp so the logistics will be a little easier.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Pawtuckaway Camping

Pawtuckaway State Park

In Mid-June we went camping at Pawtuckaway State Park in New Hampshire with our friends and neighbors Dana and Rachel and the boys: Miles, Linus and Zack.

We usually go to Pawtuckaway in September a couple weeks after school starts. At that time it is less than half full and peaceful. It can also be a little cool for swimming (although that never stops Audrey). This was our first time in the middle of summer. We loved it.

We had camp sites across from each other and Dana and Rachel's was on the water. There's a great swimming spot there with some large boulders the kids can easily get out to. They love to perch on them and jump off.

The weather was ideal, with warm but comfortable temperatures. Not too many bugs. We got in lots of swimming, some canoeing and at one point the kids all disappeared for a while on an adventure of their own.

We'll definitely have to go back in high season next summer!

Oh, I almost forgot. At one point we gave the girls a few dollars so they could go to the camp store to buy candy. Audrey came back with crickets! And she ate them!

Monday, July 27, 2015

Audrey's 5th Grade Graduation

Audrey and best friend Mia

Audrey's class had a graduation ceremony and party on June 9. There were three fifth grade classes at her school, so a little more than 60 kids.

Several of Audrey's teachers from other grades were there as well. It was fun to see them again.

Our little wallflower hung out mostly with her Mom and Dad. She would make little excursions into the crowd but not for long. I think Audrey's shyness is endearing. I was quite shy as a kid and I turned out alright, so I don't worry about it in my kids.

Audrey did spend some time celebrating with her best friend, Mia. And they've spent a lot of great time together this summer.

Sunday, July 26, 2015

School Play - Cinderella

School Play - Cinderella

Way back in January, Amy, another mom at the school, started organizing the school play, which takes place just before school gets out in June. Amy has produced the play for several years and the result is far better than I would ever expect from an elementary school play. It always has great costumes, great sets and amazing singing. This year both Methot girls decided to participate.

Charlotte had no interest in a speaking part but was quite happy to be a mouse in the chorus. Audrey also didn't want to appear on stage but really liked the idea of being a stage hand. Fine with us - that meant quite a bit fewer rehearsals they had to attend!

Carol volunteered to help paint the set. She did a great job sketching the furniture (other volunteers painted it in), and painting many of the detail objects in the backdrop. I thought it looked wonderful.

The girls worked all three performances the first weekend in June. We all enjoyed the experience.

Why look! Here's a video!

Saturday, July 25, 2015

May-July 2015 Miscellaneous

The local pool

Once again I've gotten way behind in posting family photos. Well, now I've got a bunch in the queue and will get them to you forthwith!

I'm going to start protecting the photo albums with a password to prevent search engines from crawling them. I don't want people to be able to google the girls' adolescences in the future. I'll use the same password for all albums going forward, and it's easy to remember - my last name, all lowercase. If you forget, there is a way to get a hint on the screen that asks for the password. Let me know if you have problems; if there a lot of problems I'll reconsider.

We've had a pretty busy late spring and early summer!

The girls finished up the school year with the school play: Cinderella. Charlotte was a mouse in the chorus and Audrey was a stage hand. They both did very well. The school plays are put on by a mom from the school and are surprisingly good!

Since Audrey was in her second year of taking flute, she was eligible to participate in the Melrose Youth Band. She practiced a lot. The first band concert was June 2 in the middle school auditorium with a large crowd. It was Audrey's first time on stage in front of an audience and she was nervous. She said later she felt like she might faint. But we couldn't tell from the seats - she did great. Here is some video of the concert.

The free state pool is just a few blocks from home and it opens mid-June. The girls have already visited many times. Sometimes I join them after riding my bike home from work. It's a great way to cool down.

Continuing in the musical theme, we've been to a couple of concerts as a family.

The Rockport Music Society received a large donation just before we moved to Boston, and they used it to build themselves a fantastic, state-of-the-art performance theater that seats about 400 people. It was designed with exceptional acoustics. But the highlight of the space is the 30' tall wall of glass that forms the back of the stage and looks out over Rockport Harbor. I read about it when it opened but hadn't yet found a concert to see there.

We went to see Pokey LaFarge, who's 7-piece band of wonderfully talented musicians play old-timey, folky, bluesy music. The girls thought it was fantastic. I loved showing them quality live music.

Later the same week we drove to Portsmouth, NH to see one of my favorite bands play on an outdoor stage in a park: Thao and the Get Down Stay Down. There's a common thread through my favorite musical acts through time: interesting instrument combinations and creative arrangements. Thao has them both.

The evening was absolutely perfect and the setting was gorgeous. We all enjoyed the concert very much and ended it by all dancing together to the last few songs, right in front of the stage. The girls learned how to clap and yell until the band comes back for an encore.

The girls have also been off at a plethora of camps this summer, and we've had a couple of camping trips. Those will be the subject of more posts in the near future.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Italy 2015 - Ciao!

Italy 2015 - Ciao!

This is the final post about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto
  7. Roma
  8. Pompei and Napoli
  9. Pisa
  10. Cinque Terre
  11. Cinque Terre

Well, life got in the way for a couple of months there, but I finally got back around to writing the last few posts.

We shot a lot of great video on the trip. Now that the photos and blog posts are all done I'll find time to work on that.

This trip was perfect in every way. We had perfect weather every single day. We saw all the sights we wanted to see. We enjoyed great food and gelato every day. We stayed in wonderful lodgings and found our way around when we wanted and got lost when we wanted that. We spent two very enjoyable days with my old friend Phil in Venice.

The girls got to be immersed in a different culture and language. Audrey, in particular, got adjusted to the Italian meal traditions.

Carol's favorite memory is all the great family conversations we had over meals.

We pushed the girls much harder than we originally envisioned when imagining this trip, but for the most part they remained energetic and enthusiastic. Of course we had moments where they were weary but we would take some down time and they recovered quickly.

It was a wonderful family experience. We've already spent time discussing our next international trip. The current consensus is England and Scotland.

We're already saving for it!

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Italy 2015 - Genova

Italy 2015 - Genova

This is post number eleven about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto
  7. Roma
  8. Pompei and Napoli
  9. Pisa
  10. Cinque Terre

We actually tried to rent a car for our last-day journey from Vernazza to our late afternoon flight home from Milan, but we had terrible luck with rental cars on our trip. They kept messing up our reservations, or claiming we never had one. So we went with a train itinerary even though it involved four trains. But the train itinerary had the benefit of a 2-hour layover in Genova where none of us had ever been. It's the birthplace of Christopher Columbus!

We wandered down toward the waterfront and enjoyed a stroll through a flea market and past the aquarium. Then we stumbled across a beautiful church, the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata del Vastato.

Soon it was time to find a snack and board our next train to Milan. Maybe we'll get a chance to explore Genoa more in a future visit.

Monday, July 20, 2015

Italy 2015 - Cinque Terre

Italy 2015 - Cinque Terre

This is post number ten about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto
  7. Roma
  8. Pompei and Napoli
  9. Pisa

Our grand tour of Italy was sort of a clockwise loop starting and ending and Milan. The Cinque Terre is along the "9 o'clock" arm of that route. While planning the trip, we decided to spend two nights there so we would have a full day to hike the trail between the villages. We also decided to splurge a little and go above our nightly accommodation budget to get a deluxe Airbnb lodging right in the village center of Vernazza. We were very happy that we made both of those decisions.

We arrived at Vernazza just before sunset, which added to the considerable charm Vernazza already possesses. We met up with our host and climbed the steps to our lovely apartment (I meant to count those steps but I kept forgetting). Then we had a delicious dinner outdoors in the main square.

The trail that links the five villages is famous. In 2001 Carol and I hiked the entire length, starting at Monterosso in the north and ending at Riomaggiorre in the south. This year, however, most sections of the trail between the villages are closed due to recent landslides or maintenance. The most scenic portion, between Monterosso and Vernazza, was open. That's the hardest portion, but also about the right length for a hike with the girls.

We got up Friday morning and had breakfast in our apartment. Then we made our way up to the train station for the short trip to Monterosso. It only takes five minutes or so to travel between villages by train!

Monterosso is also charming, although in a different way since it is not in a ravine like Vernazza but instead has two wide beaches along with beachfront architecture and restaurants. We started our hike along the boardwalk and then ascended out the south end of the village. The views start out nice and just keep getting better.

Once the trail leaves the village it starts to climb fairly steeply. We took a couple of breaks.

At one point we passed a trailside house with a mute old man selling fresh oranges, water, wine and baked goods. We bought an orange from him and stopped a bit down the trail to enjoy it. All of us thought it was the best orange we have ever eaten. I think the setting contributed to that perception. But we wished we would have bought more. And some wine!

We had brought a lunch and a while farther down the trail we came across a beautiful grotto where a stream tumbled under a bridge carrying the trail. We stopped to eat our lunch on a flat rock in the grotto. It was another of many enchanting moments of the trip: eating our lunch listening to the burbling of the stream in the shade.

About two thirds of the way along the trail the picturesque views of Vernazza begin. We kept stopping to take more photos because around every corner was a view that seemed more beautiful than the last.

Immediately after we arrived back in Vernazza the girls decided they wanted to go swimming. We found a little shop with a cute old man who spoke no English and bought swimsuits for the girls. We hadn't packed any, on purpose, because it was Spring and we figured it would be too cold for swimming most places and we weren't staying anywhere with a pool. But they needed new suits anyway for the summer.

A few minutes later both girls were swimming in the Mediterranean.

Carol and I lazed on the rocks with our feet in the water.

After swimming we decided to explore one or two of the other villages. We took the train (again, for about five minutes) to Manarola and walked around a bit. It's center is very small and we didn't see a restaurant that rang our bell. So we got back on the train the other direction and returned to Monterosso to try the beach restaurants we had seen in the morning.

We found a great tavern with a patio overlooking the beach, where we enjoyed a lovely, leisurely, last dinner in Italy.

The next morning we departed early to take four trains that would eventually deliver us to the airport in Milan for our afternoon flight.

But along the way, we got to see a little bit of Genoa...

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Italy 2015 - Pisa

Italy 2015 - Pisa

This is post number nine about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto
  7. Roma
  8. Pompei and Napoli

In addition to the canals of Venice, the ruins of Pompeii and the splendor of Rome, the other place that caused both girls to choose Italy as our destination was the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Pisa lies right on the rail line between Rome and our final stop of the grand tour: the Cinque Terre. So we stopped there for a few hours along the way.

On the train from Rome to Pisa we happened to have a compartment with fold out sleeper seats. Even though it was only 10:00 am, we of course had to fold out the seats just for the novelty. Italians gave us some strange looks, but it sure was comfortable!

Once in Pisa we walked about 20 minutes or so from the station to the complex where the Duomo, Baptistry and Tower are. When Carol and I were there in 2001 the tower was still undergoing its most recent stabilization and it was not open. Now the restoration and stabilization are complete and it is open to tours. Entry costs a fortune ($18 each), but of course it's what you've come to see so you fork it over.

It's interesting climbing a tilted staircase. I leaned against the wall many times. There was one terrified woman at the top who had been convinced to climb it by her friend but was subsequently paralyzed by fear.

There are great bells at the top. Unfortunately we were only allowed to stay at the top for about ten minutes (entry to the tower is timed, every half hour) and they kicked us off the top very shortly before the bells rang.

After the tower we toured the Duomo. It is filled with gorgeous paintings.

Then we spent a few minutes recreating photos from 2001, shopped for souvenir t-shirts and then found the bus back to the train station to continue our journey to the Cinque Terre.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Italy 2015 - Pompei and Napoli

Italy 2015 - Pompei and Napoli

This is post number eight about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto
  7. Roma

Pompeii

Wanting to see Pompeii was one of the main reasons the girls chose Italy as the destination for our first international trip. On our third day staying in Rome we took a day trip to Pompeii and Naples.

The Italian train system has three levels of fast train: Frecciabianca ("white", goes 120mph), Frecciaagento ("silver", goes 160mph) and Frecciarossa ("red", goes 180mph). The Rome to Naples route was our first chance to ride a red train and go really fast. Then from Naples one takes a much slower regional or commuter train to Pompeii.

However, it turns out there are two train stations in Pompeii served by different lines. We ended up at the station that serves the modern city of Pompeii and then we walked about a mile to the entrance to the ruins. We turned down a taxi ride but it would have been worth it. Oh well, live and learn. Every foreign trip has to include a death march or two.

The ruins were great. We visited a bakery with grain mills; a city gate; walked along the town walls; visited a merchant's house with very pretty murals; and a huge public bath complex. We finished up with a visit to the two large amphitheaters. The girls were too hot and tired to make it to the largest amphitheater in the far corner of the ruins, but we saw a lot and got a good sense of life in the ancient city.

We enjoyed a snack back at the train station before taking the train back to Naples.

Naples

Naples

Naples has a reputation as a rough city with a particular problem with pickpockets. Carol was nervous but I wasn't too concerned about it. I just move my wallet to my front pocket and keep my hand on it when I'm in a crowded area of high risk.

Naples is famous for pizza. I read online reviews and found a place that sounded promising only a few blocks from the station.

We headed there but arrived about 5:30 and they told us they opened at 6:00. We walked to a nearby square to hang out and people watch until they opened.

But when we returned at 6:00 they told us they didn't open until 6:30.

Stupid tourists wanting dinner at 6:00pm!

I thought the neighborhood was pretty cool. Rick Steeves describes Naples as a "beautiful mess" and that pretty well describes the parts we saw. For one thing, there is laundry hanging everywhere.

I especially liked the street we walked down near the station that was filled with stalls selling all kinds of everyday stuff. We also walked past a couple of auto parts "stores" that were very small spaces crammed with parts from floor to ceiling.

Since we had to bail on our first choice, we ducked into a snack bar that also had Neapolitan pizza. It was really good! That shop was also a bakery that had lots of treats so we stocked up on those for the train trip back to Rome.

Saturday, May 30, 2015

Urban Hike

Urban Hike

I've had a plan in my head for a two-part urban hike with the girls. Part 1 would visit a huge piece of public art that is suspended above the park right outside my old office. Part 2 was to explore some parks and bridges that I can see while I walk to and from work.

Today we finally did it.

We started at the Greenway right in front of my old office, to see Janet Echelman's huge suspended sculpture, "As If It Were Always Here".

It was worth the trip. It's beautiful; a very inspiring work of public art. They have even placed a few hammocks in the park so you can relax in them and enjoy looking up at the sculpture.

Of, if you're 9 and 11-year-old kids, swing in them.

Here's a cool time lapse of the installation of the sculpture.

Then it was on to Part 2.

When I don't ride my bike to work I take the train from Melrose to Boston's North Station and then walk 25 minutes to my office in Kendall Square in Cambridge. There's a direct shuttle bus, but I prefer the walk.

After leaving North Station I walk along the Charles River for a short distance and then cross the Charles River Dam Bridge (the "old" dam). Along the way I can see the new North Point Park across the water, and also the very new North Bank Bridge. For a while now I've wanted to take the family on a little excursion to visit those sites, as well as cross the "new" Charles River Dam.

It was a pretty warm day and the girls were not too excited about a "hike". But they were soon distracted by the locks in the dam. Then by the cool sloped concrete pillars of the Zakim Bridge, by the skate park under construction next to the North Bank Bridge and then by a huge playground I didn't know about in North Point Park. That playground also had a spray park that was very welcome.

We finished up by stepping into the Museum of Science where we know they sell Dippin' Dots. A sweet reward.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Italy 2015 - Roma

The Spanish Steps

This is post number seven about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi
  6. Orvieto

OK, life got in the way of the Italy blog posts. We left off in Orvieto on the way to Rome...

As always, click on the image to go to the photo gallery.

By the time we got to Rome we were all looking forward to it. Not just because Rome has so much great history to see, but also because we had been moving around a lot and we were looking forward to six nights in the same B&B.

Upon arrival we needed to return our rental car near Roma Termini, the main train station in Rome. We had a little drama trying to find the car return. It was on the top floor of a 7-story parking garage with no signage whatsoever. But we found it.

Then we headed for the Metro to get to our B&B. It was rush hour and the Metro was absolutely packed. A followed me onto one train but Carol and C couldn’t fit. We waited at our destination station for them to emerge from the next train.

We navigated easily to our B&B and found it to be quite comfortable. It had a kitchen and there was a grocery store nearby. We were pretty tired of eating in restaurants so A and I went shopping and bought ravioli, sauce and salad and then found a nearby bakery for bread.

Funny story: I asked a stocker at the grocery store which of the jarred sauces was his favorite. He pointed one out but also tried to tell me that this sauce “is not ready”. I thought he meant I needed to cook it. Duh.

Once we were eating it I realized what he meant was that it was plain tomato sauce, not “pasta sauce”. I don’t know if they even sell prepared pasta sauce in jars in Italy.

We enjoyed our dinner regardless of the lack of seasoning in the sauce. It was nice just to eat “at home”. Then we relaxed and went to bed early.

Our friend Kelly from Seattle, who recommended that we visit the Leonardo Museum in Florence, also highly recommended that we reserve an 8am tour of the Vatican Museum. The museum doesn’t open to the public until 9am, and the 8am tours get to enjoy the galleries at a leisurely pace. The highlight is a much less crowded and rushed visit to the Sistine Chapel.

We had reserved such a tour for our first morning in Rome so we got up early and made our way to the Vatican by 7:30.

Kelly was right: that 8am tour is The Bomb. We loved it. Worth every penny.

Talking is not allowed in the Sistine Chapel. We used our phones to type our thoughts, then we’d pass the phone for the other person to read. Here are some of the messages we typed to each other:

I love the colors. Her orange dress. Pretty. I like the white dress

See the guy wrapped in the snake above the door we entered? He was a guy that didn't like the painting that Michelangelo was doing. He got painted Into the picture as a jerk with the snake biting his crotch.

The top of this church is flat right? True. A vault. But there are no beams. That part is called tromp l’oeil. It is also curved.

Adam and eve...the snake winding up the tree turns into a person.

Other than the Sistine Chapel, the highlight of the Vatican Museum was the Room of the Masks.

In the center of the room’s floor are four mosaics of theatrical masks that are made of tiny tiles. They are referred to as “worms’ work”. Quite beautiful; and not accessible to the general public.

In the evening we headed out to the tourist highlights: Piazza Navona, the Pantheon, the Tivoli Fountain and the Spanish Steps. The Tivoli Fountain is undergoing heavy restoration but the rest of the sights were great. Of course we enjoyed a tartufo at Tre Scalini in Piazza Navona. Along the way we also ducked into the Church of St. Louis of the French which was beautiful.

We lounged on the Spanish Steps a bit and then decided to get dinner. Right at the top of the steps we found the American Bar. Have I mentioned that most evenings our choice of restaurant was determined by whether they featured ravioli on their displayed menu? A wanted ravioli every night of the trip and we strove to oblige.

Sunday our destination was the catacombs, of which there are several. We chose the Catacombs of St. Callixtus because they were easily accessible by city bus.

We needed to catch our bus at Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano, which was very near our B&B. We stopped in the basilica on our way. San Giovanni is the actual cathedral of Rome (not St. Peter’s) and it is the church of which the Pope is the pastor. Predictably, it is spectacular inside. We visited it twice during our stay. We also visited its lovely cloisters.

We got to the catacombs well before they opened, so we wandered around the park and visited the church of St. Sebastian: more modest than San Giovanni, but very pretty nonetheless.

The catacombs themselves were very cool. Photos were not allowed but I turned the screen off on my phone and took some discreet photos from waist level. They even look like secret camera photos!

We were finished with the catacombs by 2pm. I had been tinkering with the idea of renting a scooter and taking the girls for a ride around Rome. Carol had no interest in trying to drive a scooter in an unfamiliar city. I figured Sunday afternoon was a perfect time, while traffic was calm. We caught the bus back into central Rome and made our way to the scooter rental shop.

I was obviously concerned about safety with my most cherished people on the back. At first I drove like a car, waiting in line at traffic lights, etc. But I soon decided that “while in Rome, do as the Romans do” was the best philosophy and I started following other scooters through stopped traffic. It was quite fun, and in fact felt very safe.

A and I made a grand circle of the city. In fact, the first time we circled the city twice because I kept missing the turns I wanted. Central Rome is full of one-way streets that are very long, so if you miss a turn you go a for a long trip out of your way. Fortunately the scooter rental agent had given me a paper map and drawn some key points on the route back to the shop, so we found it right on schedule and I picked up C for her tour.

Monday we went to Pompeii and Naples, which I’ll write about in a separate post.

On Tuesday we decided to visit the core Roman historical sites: Palatine Hill and the Forum and Colosseum. That was a bit of a death march for the girls as it was fairly warm and constant ruins aren’t very exciting. We tried to get them to imagine the victory parades down the Via Sacra but their imaginations were on the blink that day.

We ended the visit with a lovely lunch at a very nearby tourist restaurant where Carol drank a gallon of beer (well, a liter; and I helped).

Then guess what? We had had so much fun on the scooters on Sunday that we decided to do it again. In rush hour! This time C went first, and I finally managed to find my way to Trastevere and up onto the Gianicolo - a large hill west of Rome that affords a great view. Now that I knew my way I of course came back on my tour with A.

Riding in rush hour traffic was even more fun. A started egging me on: “C’mon, Dad! You can fit through there!”

Those scooter rides were one of the highlights of the whole trip for the girls.

We went back to our room to rest a bit. Then we dressed up and called a taxi to take us to Trastevere for dinner. It’s the part of Rome that is famous for romantic restaurants with outdoor seating.

We wandered a bit and found ourselves watching a very charming performance by a young guy with shadow puppets on his homemade stage. After a bit more wandering we found a nice looking restaurant with ravioli on the menu. Then we strolled some more before catching a taxi back home.

On Wednesday we started at the Colosseum. The line had been too long the previous day but on Wednesday we went earlier. Carol and I tried to re-enact a few photographs from our honeymoon and we took some photos of the girls holding the Melrose Free Press.

Then we hopped on a open top bus tour to see the city tourist style.

We hopped off at the Vatican. After the Vatican Museum tour on Saturday I had bought some shirts in a local men’s shop, but one was the wrong size. We found the shop again and made an exchange (although too quickly, because I came home with a shirt whose size is even more wrong!).

We intended to visit St. Peter’s but when we returned to the piazza the entry line was all the way around the perimeter! We didn’t have the patience for that. We hopped back on our bus and did the remainder of the open top tour.

We were departing Rome at 10am Thursday morning on a train to Pisa. St. Peter’s opens at 7am. Wednesday night I took our bags to the train station and checked them at Left Luggage. Thursday morning we got moving early and we were in line at St. Peter’s by 6:40.

That worked out well. We had St. Peter’s to ourselves, with only a few tourists. The main people in the church were visiting priests saying their souvenir mass at the numerous altars (and then sneaking their phones out from under their vestments to take photos of each other).

After the church we did my favorite activity in Rome: climb to the top of the dome of St. Peter’s.

We took the elevator up to the roof, then walked over to the base of the dome. The climb of the dome is cool because the roof slopes more and more as you go up, making the stairs feel like a fun house. The girls thought it was very cool.

The early morning view over all of Rome was a great way to say goodby to the city. Then we descended, made our way to Roma Termini, and were on our way to Pisa.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Goodbye, 1970s Basement!

After

Ever since we bought this house six years ago we've wanted to refinish the basement.

It was finished in the 1970s with shag carpet and panelling. It was quite dark. Plus the basement has had water issues so we were sure there was rot and mildew and probably mold under the carpet and in the wall insulation and framing.

That project has finally made it to the top of the list. We've gotten bids from a few contractors, but it was hard to envision a new space while the old walls were in place. We just wanted to clean the slate so we could imagine the full range of possibilities.

Today a demolition company came and removed the 1970s from our basement.

We're not going to do anything fancy. It will mainly be a TV/recreation room with an electronics workbench in the corner for me and some kind of art and craft area for Carol, plus some partitioned-off storage in the rear portion. We are hoping to add a 3/4 bath (we currently only have one shower, and we'll soon have two teenage girls), but we'll see how much that costs. Plus finish out a laundry room and enclose the boiler and water heater. Keep it simple.

Having the dark, musty surfaces removed has made us happy today.

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Goals

This morning Audrey announced, "Today I want to do two things: bake something, and go on a bike ride with Dad."

We accomplished both goals. Audrey and Carol made the cupcakes and the custard and set then aside to cool. Then we went on a long bike ride and stopped in to visit some friends across town. After we returned home she filled and glazed the Boston Cream cupcakes.

Now it's time to eat them!

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Italy 2015 - Orvieto

Duomo di Orvieto

This is post number six about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio
  5. Assisi

On Carol and my honeymoon in 2001 we visited many hill towns - that would have been exhausting for the girls so we picked just a couple. One of my favorites was Orvieto, and it happens to be both very near Bagnoregio but also near the autostrada to Rome. I was excited to show it to the girls so the morning we checked out of our lovely Bagnoregio apartment we stopped in Orvieto on the way to Rome.

One of the coolest things about Orvieto is the funicular one rides to access the old city. The girls loved it.

The highlight of Orvieta is its Duomo. The striped pattern in its stone construction is striking, as is its dominating presence in its piazza.

The interior of the Duomo is not bad, either. It has gorgeous frescoes that even captivated the girls. And it’s huge. We had told the girls how big St. Peter’s would be and in Orvieto we could say, “See how huge this church is? St. Peters is a lot bigger!”

After visiting the Duomo we were hungry so we looked for a lunch place. We didn’t feel like a sit down meal. Then we stumbled upon a casual pizzeria. The very nice lady who spoke no English dished us up a variety of tasty slices.

Before boarding the funicular for the trip back down to the car we explored the Albornoz Fortress. It has dramatic views of the cliffs that protected Orvieto, and of the well-defended old approach road.

Then it was off to Rome!

Italy 2015 - Assisi

Rocca Maggiore - the castle in Assisi

This is post number five about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze
  4. Bagnoregio

We rented a car for the portion of our trip between Florence and Rome so that we could enjoy exploring the hill towns.

I love driving in Italy because the roads, the signs and the rules all make sense and drivers consistently follow them. The roads in the hill country of Tuscany and Umbria are curvy and fun, and the small cars (with manual transmissions!) handle well and are fun to drive.

Of course, curvy roads and dad having fun driving on them aren’t necessarily compatible with girls who get car sick. But we survived.

I had a loose plan to visit Perugia. None of us had ever been there and rumor has it that it is a lovely town. When we told our B&B host Marta in Bagnoregio that we would visit there her father suggested we visit Assisi. Assisi and Perugia are very close together so I thought we might visit both. We headed for Assisi first.

Assisi’s main claim to fame is its basilica with frescoes by several artists but most notably Giotto. But before we got to the basilica we explored the town.

The first thing I noticed is that the tufa that Assisi’s buildings are made of is a distinctly different color than the other hill towns I’ve visited. It’s lighter.

We had fun exploring the town. It’s very picturesque.

We could occasionally see a the castle on the top of the hill but it looked far away and I wasn’t sure if the girls would make it that far (it was a warm day). We kept wandering, going generally upward, and next thing you know we were approaching the castle.

It’s called Rocca Maggiore. It turned out to be the only castle we visited during our trip and it was a pretty good one for the girls’ first castle since it had a tower, tunnels, interior rooms and secret passages: all the components that make a castle cool for kids! (And for me!)

After the castle we made our way back down into the town and then to the basilica at the far end.

Those frescoes really are beautiful! Unfortunately no photography is permitted but in the photo album I included two photographs of postcards we bought.

The afternoon turned into a comedy of errors. It felt like a long hike the length of town between where the car was parked and the basilica, and the girls were hot and tired. We split up, and I went to get the car with a plan to meet Carol and the girls at a parking area near the basilica while they stayed put. My first trip to the car I managed to go without taking the keys, which were in Carol’s bag. Back I went. When I finally did retrieve the car and attempt to drive around the town to the other parking area, I was thwarted by police officers blocking the main road out of town. I found a tiny road through vineyards, only to discover that one cannot then drive to the destination parking area. So back around town I went, blocked again by police at a different intersection (so back up the tiny vineyard road), parked again and hiked back to the girls.

Side note: when we arrived in Italy we discovered that Carol’s phone was in fact not unlocked like I thought, so we only had one working phone and no way to contact each other.

The whole thing took more than an hour. I expected to return to a very grumpy family. I was grumpy! But when I found them at the designated parking area they were happy as clams. They had found a swing set, some feral cats and a cat lady. They were relaxed, rested and happy. Phew!

By now it was late in the afternoon and we were hungry and an hour away from our B&B. So we found a little bar with a view, had a snack, and then drove back to Bagnoregio. Perugia will have to wait for the next visit to Italy.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Italy 2015 - Bagnoregio

Civita

This is post number four about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia
  3. Firenze

Bagnoregio was one of the places I was most excited to show the girls. From a distance it looks like a fantasy and once you enter the town it oozes history. It’s easy for me to imagine living there in the distant past when its perch must have made it feel quite secure.

We made reservations for all of our accommodations well before the trip. When Carol and I traveled Italy 2001 we made almost no reservations but with kids we didn’t want to risk having trouble finding places to stay.

Our accommodations for this trip were a mix of small hotel (Venice), traditional B&B (Rome) and four apartments reserved through Airbnb (Milan, Florence, Bagnoregio and Vernazza).

They all turned out quite well but the Airbnb apartment we reserved in Bagnoregio was probably the winner due mostly to our hostess: Marta. She greeted us so warmly when we arrived and showed us to our lovely apartment in a charming historic house with a peaceful and scenic garden. Marta sent us to the restaurant of a friend a short walk away and we enjoyed a delicious dinner (Carol had rabbit!). Then in the mornings Marta and her parents laid out a spectacular breakfast. The highlight of breakfast was home-baked chocolate cake!

There are two towns: Civita di Bagnoregio is the picturesque, 2500-year-old Etruscan hill town, and its former “suburb”, Bagnoregio (now the active town), is a mile away. We stayed in Bagnoregio. From what I could tell, there are very few places to stay in the Civita and they are quite expensive. Wikipedia says only 12 people live there year round, and only 100 people in the summer.

The Civita was severely damaged by an earthquake in the 18th century and then underwent two centuries of decline. Erosion was causing the houses at the edge of the town to fall off the cliff. More recently, the town has been recognized as a world heritage site and measures are being taken to save it.

The day after our first night in Bagnoregio we drove to Assisi for the day (subject of the next post). When we returned to Bagnoregio that evening we walked from Marta’s B&B down to the Belvedere (“pretty view”) where there is a small bar/cafe with a garden overlooking the Civita. The light was great and we captured some pretty photos. We decided not to eat at that bar and instead wandered back through Bagnoregio and found a pizzeria.

Along the way we encountered a falcon just sitting out in the open near a tour office.

The next morning we ascended the steep causeway and entered the Civita. The buildings in the hill towns are all made of tufa - the native volcanic rock. It has a distinctive, attractive look. Very “romantic” to my eyes. The whole town feels like such a time capsule, and the views in every direction are dramatic and look like paintings.

The girls’ favorite part was that the Civita is home to many cats. They made friends with all of them.

Friday, May 1, 2015

Italy 2015 - Firenze

Roof terrace

This is post number three about our Italian trip. The previous posts are:

  1. Milano
  2. Venezia

After Venice we took the train to Florence. Upon arrival we walked to the Airbnb apartment we had reserved a few blocks from the train station. This was a cool apartment with a private roof terrace accessed by a cool steep staircase.

Once we were settled we walked to the center of town, stopping first in the Piazza della Repubblica where Charlotte and I rode a carousel and then a strange man made a balloon animal bear for her. From there we wandered in the direction of the Duomo.

Our main goal in Florence was to have dinner with Isabel. She's the daughter of one of my best friends and she has spent the school year attending college in Florence. She met us at her dad's favorite restaurant and we had a very pleasant dinner and visit.

Afterward Isabel walked back to the center of town with us and took us to her favorite gelato shop, Eduardo's, behind the Duomo. It is quite popular and we had to wait about half an hour. Carol and Audrey ordered a crepe filled with pistachio gelato that was messy and excellent.

The next morning we dropped our bags at the train station "left luggage" so we could sightsee some more. We went to a coffee bar in the station and tried to order hot chocolate but they were apparently out of whatever they use to make it normally. The barista custom-made steamed milk with chocolate for the girls.

Our friend Kelly in Seattle and her kids had visited the Leonardo da Vinci Museum in Florence and Kelly had recommended it. That was our goal for the morning and we also thought it was great. The museum contains working models of many mechanisms invented by da Vinci that you can manipulate to see how they worked. I was amazed by the breadth of his inventions.

Also, completely by coincidence, we were visiting the museum on Leonardo's birthday 563 years after his birth!

After the museum we walked back toward the Duomo. We would have liked to go inside but the line was very long. The line for Giotto's Campanile (completed in 1359), however, was very short so up we went. 414 steps. The view from the top is fantastic.

We happened to be at the top at the stroke of noon so we enjoyed/endured very loud bells tolling! We jumped out of our shoes at the first bell.

We walked around the city more, visiting the Ponte Vecchio and the piazza in front of the Pitti Palace. We experienced one of our few rip-offs of the trip when we made the mistake of buying gelato right by the Ponte Vecchio. We paid €16 for three smalls (typical price would be €6 or less). Oh well, what's travel without getting a little ripped off now and then? Live and learn.

In the late afternoon we picked up our rental car and headed south through the hill country of Tuscany and Umbria.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Italy 2015 - Venezia

Gondola ride with Phil

This is post number two about our Italian trip. The previous post is:

  1. Milano

A day after landing in Milan we took a two-hour train ride to Venice. Venice was the city both girls most wanted to visit and they loved emerging from the train station next to the Grand Canal.

We walked 20 minutes to our hotel where we checked into a lovely room. It was conveniently located about 10 minutes from the Rialto Bridge and 15 minutes from Piazza San Marco. It was also relatively close to the vaporetto (boat "bus") stop from which we would go to the other islands.

While exploring the neighborhood we found ourselves at a bar near that dock and we sat down for a snack of pizza and drinks. The pizza was fantastic. Perfect crust and sauce. I told the girls we'd be enjoying food that good for our entire trip. I was wrong, though. We certainly ate plenty of good food, but that was the best pizza we were to find anywhere.

From 1983-1986 my boss in my first professional job was Phil K. Even though I was a very immature and in some ways terrible employee, Phil and I somehow became friends anyway. We had many outdoor adventures together.

Phil is Swiss, and in the 90's he moved home. I saw him a couple of times in Switzerland back in the days when I travelled to Europe regularly for business. The last time we had seen each other was in 2006 while Phil was in Seattle. I always fantasize about visiting Phil again in Switzerland but of course with a family that is difficult.

When we made the plan to visit Italy I let Phil know our itinerary and invited him to join us for part of our trip. He decided to join us in Venice. He arrived two hours after us and we met near the hotel.

Once Phil was checked in we all went wandering. We ended up in Piazza San Marco (of course) and at the Bridge of Sighs. Then we wandered back toward our hotel but we weren't trying to get there too directly. Carol and my favorite thing to do in Venice is just get lost. There are interesting scenes around every corner: hidden small piazzas; churches; small canals and fascinating buildings.

Along the way we passed a restaurant that caught our eye. Later, when it was dinner time, we returned there and had a lovely dinner in a great atmosphere.

The next day after breakfast at the hotel we set out for the vaporetto stop. We took the boat to Burano, and outlying island known for lace and brightly painted houses. It's a beautiful place. it also has a church bell tower that is tilted by 5 degrees. We visited a lace shop and bought some souvenirs (bookmarks and handkerchiefs). We wandered around the less-travelled parts of the island and found a big lawn to relax on (in the main part of Venice there is absolutely no "green" ground).

Next we took the vaporetto to Murano, the island that is famous for glass blowing. We visited a few glass shops and then found a casual restaurant for lunch.

The vaporetto from Murano back to Venice stops at the cemetery island. Hardly anyone gets on or off there, but it's another favorite aspect of Venice for us. It's fascinating because in Venice people obviously can't be buried underground so Venice's dead are all interred in above-ground mausoleums. The cemetery island contains acres and acres of mausoleums. It's interesting to read the names and dates and look at the decorations (and fake flowers).

Of course, while in Venice one must go for a ride in a gondola. It's somewhat expensive but still obligatory. We discovered that the price goes up at 7:00pm so we went in search of a gondola at 6:30. We found one pretty quickly. He turned out to be very informative, and the timing was perfect: our half hour ride was just before sunset - during what the photographers call "the golden hour". It was beautiful, and it was even longer than usual since we were our gondolier's last customers of the day.

On Tuesday afternoon Phil would head back to Geneva and we would depart for Florence. But in the morning we returned to Piazza San Marco to see the church and go up in the camponile. I had forgotten just how beautiful the church interior is - it is covered with mosaics, many of which are made with gold leaf. The view from the camponile was cool. It's interesting to look down on the random jumble of buildings that make up the city.

One thing I learned that is obvious once you hear it: Venice is made up of something like 140 islands. Initially people used them as a way to escape from raiders on the mainland. They eventually built bulkheads at the edges of the islands. The waterways between the islands eventually became completely walled in and became today's canals. When wandering around Venice and crossing all those small canals it had never occurred to me that I was traversing a bunch of separate islands.

Phil walked us to the train station in the early afternoon and we said our goodbyes. I was so glad that we were able to meet again. It was great to see Phil and great to share Venice with him. He and the girls enjoyed each other's company, too.

Next: off to Florence.

Italy 2015 - Milano

Duomo di Milano

We just returned from a fantastic two week trip to Italy. I'll be posting the photos one city at a time beginning with Milan.

We've been planning and saving for this trip for four years. It got interrupted by cancer in 2013, although Carol wasn't quite ready to go that year anyway. But once cancer was in the rear view mirror we started planning in earnest for a 2015 trip.

We gave the girls the choice of where they'd like to go. They chose Italy. Charlotte wanted to see Pompeii, Audrey wanted to see Rome and both girls wanted to see Venice.

Carol and I went to Italy for our honeymoon a month before our wedding in 2001. We got married in June, but we decided to go to Italy in late April/early May because we wanted cooler weather and smaller crowds. We chose the same time period this time. We combined the girls' spring break with another week of missed school. We figured they were going to get plenty of education that week.

We found surprisingly inexpensive airfare for non-stop flights between JFK and Milan. We drove to New York to catch our flight on Friday afternoon after school. We departed JFK at 10pm and arrived in Milan just after noon on Saturday Milan time.

Carol and I had warned the girls that we wouldn't feel very energetic when we arrived, and that we would strive to stay awake until a normal bedtime local time. However, we all felt pretty good upon arrival even though Audrey and Carol didn't sleep at all on the plane, I slept maybe two hours and Charlotte slept about three. We took the train into the city and found our way to our Airbnb apartment a few blocks from the train station.

The apartment was lovely. Our hosts Arianna and her husband had constructed a completely separate studio apartment from a portion of their large apartment and they rent it out regularly. It was quite comfortable and had a kitchen and four beds. The building had a charming post-war elevator that could barely accommodate the four of us if we squeezed.

We rested for a brief period and then we set out to see a little of Milan. We navigated to a tram stop and took the vintage tram to the Duomo. After visiting the church we walked around a bit looking for a reasonably-priced restaurant. We didn't find one and the girls were fading a bit, so we took the subway back to our apartment. We had seen a couple of promising restaurants on our block.

The restaurant door was unlocked but no one was around. We had to call out and eventually the owners came out of the back. We were pretty early for dinner by Italian standards (I think it was 7pm) but they were willing to serve us. They didn't speak much English, but I took the owner/waiter outside and pointed at the fixed price menu that looked good to us. It was easy to ask for ravioli for Audrey and spaghetti for Charlotte.

The fixed price menu for two people turned out to be way too much food for Carol and me. It started with antipasti from a buffet that the owner chose for us. He brought a large plate of cured meats and grilled marinated vegetables. After that he brought us each a very large serving of pasta. Just the pasta would have been more than I could eat. I didn't finish it. Then he brought us the secondi course - a large steak for me and something similar to chicken marsala for Carol. I barely touched my steak I was so full. We took leftovers back to the apartment refrigerator. We ended with a single tiramisu, split four ways, that was pudding-like and delicious.

Carol and the girls slept well. I woke up at 4:30 and was awake for hours. I think I fell asleep again around 7 and next thing I knew Carol was shaking me awake at 10:30. We had a noon train to Venice to catch, so we had to scramble a bit to eat some breakfast, pack and make our way back to the train station.

We deliberately didn't spend much time in Milan because other cities were a higher priority for us. Someday perhaps we'll spend more time there. It seems like the city has a lot to offer. If we had planned ahead, we might have been able to see The Last Supper.


You'll notice that I'm using a new photo hosting site: Smugmug. I've used Picasa Web Albums (A Google product) for many years but it is no longer maintained and looks pretty dated these days. Smugmug has a much more modern design and also works much better on phones. Click on the image above to go to the Milan photo gallery. On the upper right of that page you'll see a "Slideshow" button if you prefer to look at photos that way.

Monday, April 27, 2015

Squishy Circuits at Melrose STEM Night

On April 9th the Melrose Education Foundation sponsored a STEM night for elementary students. I volunteered to present Squshy Circuits, the activity we present as a family at science-related events.

Charlotte and Audrey helped out and it was a big hit. We even made it into the local paper!

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Winter Photos

Now that winter has finally broken, it's time to go back and see what it looked like.

Here are 86 photos for your enjoyment.