Friday, March 4, 2016

Grant's Graduation Trip


In honor of Grant's (anticipated) graduation, he got to choose the family vacation spot this year.  So we all headed up to Lapland in Finland for a week.  It was Grant & Mark's third time there; for the sun-loving Kate and Lori it was their first.  We were at Saariselka, a small town located 250 km north of the arctic circle.  



First activity was snowmobiling to a lake to ice fish.  Temperatures were around -10 degrees C so we were pretty bundled up.  



At one of the breaks, Grant got off the trail -- you can see how deep the snow was.  And it snowed more every day that we were there.



Kate looks like a cross between a bedouin and an eskimo.  Grant (below) took his normal approach to fishing.  The ice fishing was fun, but unsuccessful.  In the three years that we've gone, Grant has snared one fish; Mark zero.  One of the other members of our group caught three good sized fish in 5 minutes.




After thirty minutes of sitting on a cold lake not catching fish, we gladly departed for the warming hut.  Our guide had a warm fire, hot sausages and tea ready for us.  The sign on the building below says "Arctic Toilet".  It should have said "Dark Arctic Toilet" because there was no light inside so you had to leave the door open to see.  Ask Kate if it was cold.




We saw a small group of reindeer foraging for food.  


Kate practiced some yoga in the snow...snoga.  We also did a snowmobile trip at night to view the Northern Lights.  It was a beautiful evening.....if you like to watch it snow.  It was not a beautiful evening for seeing Northern Lights.  As we were waiting to go, one optimistic member of the group said he was keeping his fingers crossed to see the Northern Lights.  The Bulgarian guide's response was fairly straight forward "you can cross your fingers, you can cross your arms.  We're not going to see the Northern Lights with all the cloud cover and snow".  






We cross country skied every day.  The Finns approach skiing like the Dutch approach bicycling.  There are 250 km of groomed ski trails near this town.  They have warming huts and restrooms along the trails.  You see 5 year old kids skiing and you see 75 year old people skiing.  It's very impressive.


No, Lori and I did not share a coat.  


The warming hut.  The firewood is stacked nearby and the first one there is expected to get things going.

It was Kate's first time cross country skiing; once she got her boots in the bindings, she did great.  














The light post outside our cabin gives you an idea of the snow volume.  

Since it was Grant's trip, he got to choose the food.  So we ate at the same restaurant every night; the Laanilaan Kievari.   It's a family run place serving local food.  The braised reindeer shank was delicious.  Nobody disagreed with Grant's restaurant selection.


On the last day Grant & I went winter swimming.  We spent 15 minutes in the sauna getting our bodies as warm as possible.  Then we ran (carefully) down the steps to the outdoor pool, which was really just a diversion pond from a stream.  We chipped the ice off the pool, lowered ourselves down the ladder and stayed in for the count of 10.  Then we high-tailed back to the warmth of the sauna.  We did this for a total of three times.  The Finns claim there are tremendous health benefits from winter swimming.  I think it was more like one of those things that builds character.  
This is the top of the downhill ski mountain.  The wind never stopped blowing here  Looks cold, huh?  


The Dutch Royal family was also vacationing that week.  But not in Finland; they were in Austria.  


No, I did not take this picture of the Northern Lights.  A friend of mine was in Norway the same week and this is what his family saw.  Grant & I went up to the mountain top on the last night and saw a few wisps of Northern Light so we can claim to have seen them.




Grant & I had an 8 hour layover at the Helsinki Airport on our return.  After a week in a cabin with no internet he had no problem passing the time until our flight.


After a week in the kennel, Graber was happy to go on his park walk.  

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Happy Thanksgiving


Thanksgiving in The Netherlands doesn't mean much unless you live near Leiden, the city where the Pilgrims lived for 15 years before they decided to venture to the New World.  And of course Thanksgiving means something to the kids at the American School because they get Thursday and Friday off and no other school does.

Each year there is a service in the Pieterskerk (shown above), the church where the Pilgrims worshipped and where John Robinson, their leader, is buried.  Grant's high school choir sang, the boy scouts led us in the Pledge of Allegiance (which was totally new to the non-Americans) and a Dutch descendant of one of the Pilgrims spoke.  This person was Dutch because the father of the family left on the Speedwell, made a connection to the Mayflower in England, braved the Atlantic crossing to the New World and then died.  His family who had planned to join him later, wisely decided to stay in Holland.

Grant's Choir

The Mayor of Leiden addressing the service

This guy was watching me the entire service


The Leiden canals. 

What a great reflection

Christmas and Heineken; what a great combination. 


Grant & his friend, Arnold -- Men in Black.  




Since there were only two of us there was no Thanksgiving Turkey.  Instead we had tacos.  Plus a pumpkin pie and cheesecake from the NHS at school.  So while the menu was slightly unorthodox, the result was still the same -- Grant ate too much.  


Happy 18th Birthday Grant!





Grant turned 18 this month.  In The Netherlands that means he can legally drink and obtain a drivers license, two activities that he has very little interest in.  So it wasn't that big of a deal for him.   He did receive a letter from the Dutch government that Google translated to "you are now mature".  Once again Google translate is not always accurate. The rest of the letter informed him that he had to get his own health insurance now (it's free for children under 18 in Holland) and that his parents would no longer receive the quarterly payment for raising a child (it was never compensated for all the stress anyway).

Grant is also at that age where his wish list is pretty limited.  However, we managed to come up with a few gifts.  But as you can see in the picture our wrapping was pretty pathetic....little boy paper with cars and trucks and a Lululemon bag.  We did deliver on a delicious cake -- tres leches -- for the third year in a row.  

Friday, November 27, 2015

Great Company, Lousy Weather



My brothers, Tom & Dave, were in town recently.  It was great to be together, but I have to admit the weather was pretty bad.  Lots of November wind, rain and cold.  It limited our outdoor sightseeing agenda but as you can see we still managed to enjoy the Dutch national pastime -- cycling.






Tom came for a week, so he & I cycled to Den Haag to visit the Mauritshuis, an appropriately sized art museum.  It's set in a beautiful 1600's home and you can view all the paintings in about an hour -- perfect.  Of course one of the most famous paintings is the Vermeer's "Girl with the Pearl Earring".  As you can see, unlike the Louvre, at the Mauritshuis you can get quite close to the art.





We visited the Leiden market where Tom & Dave could witness raw herring preparation first-hand.  After a walking tour of the city we warmed up with another Dutch tradition, pannekoeken.




Pannekoeken -- large thin pancakes with ham, cheese or fruit.  
Graber loved having visitors.  He got two walks every day.  



But he was sad when all the people left.  

When the weather was bad I taught them how to play cribbage.  Dave won every time.  
On Sunday Sinter Klaas came to town with Zwarte Piet.  




Grant spent most of the weekend in London which worked out well -- it gave us enough beds.  
This was Dave's first visit to see "residential Holland" so he took many more photo's than I did.  Many are of things I now consider "everyday" but were new for him.  When I saw the photo's I said "these are great shots.  I'll include them in the Blog".  So here they are.


Dutch Limousine:  Tandem bicycle for mother and child plus a child seat in the back and a shopping basket in the front.  Note the Mother steers from the back.  Given that an eight year old is up front that seems like a good idea. 

A wooden bicycle.  For real.  



Site of the first V-2 Rocket fired at England in September 1944.  Located right here in Wassenaar about 2 km from my house.  

The stairway to our top floor.  


Most of the time I find cooking things I need in the Dutch grocery stores.  But when I can't (Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ Sauce) this is where I go.  A box of Life Cereal is 8 euros ($9).  

The shopping street in Wassenaar - butcher, baker, cheese shop, nut shop, fish shop, chicken shop, wine shop, green grocer plus a grocery store.  


A great tree swing

Second choice after the pannekoeken house.