We are an American family from New Jersey who works from outside United States every summer. This year, Georgia is taking over the chronicles. Prior years' entries cover Kingston, UK, Lisbon, Vilnius, Tallinn, and other locations.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Oct 30th. Edinburgh
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Oct 29th. Stirling Castle
Early in the morning we got on our way to Edinburgh with a stop at Stirling on the way. Stirling is a beautiful town complete with its own castle perched up on the hill, just like Dumbarton yesterday made from a volcano plug.

The views of surrounding hills were picture-perfect. The nearest featured a monument to William Wallace - a huge, lone-standing tower. The guy on the right is not it. We walked through town and returned back to the castle. As with most of other castles Mary of Scots was there too.

In the last few centuries it was used as a military facility so other than the walls nothing remained of the prior splendor. It was restored, and walls were whitewashed and painted with some medieval designs but after seeing a few others with their décor intact this one was not as impressive inside. We did like the marvelous children workshops that showed how different paints were derived, medieval clothing, and jesters.

We were hoping that we would be able to work from a lovely medieval tavern in town. But when we checked in, they did not have Internet available any more so we transferred to our final destination. I rented an apartment for us in Edinburgh. It turned out to be nothing like it was on the pictures. It is a giant two bedroom apartment in an old building. Five minute walk away from the center.
But did I say it is giant? Ceilings alone must be 6 meters tall. Kids were afraid to go to Dima's room level reachable by a stone staircase. It is a bit like fishbowl though because it is on the ground floor. Unfortunately the Internet here is questionable as well. However home electrical appliances and shower facilities are much better than in England. Flushing the toilet is no longer an act of faith.
At night we got out for a short walk. Isabella fell asleep halfway through it so we called it a day.
| William Wallace looks nothing like Mel Gibson |
At night we got out for a short walk. Isabella fell asleep halfway through it so we called it a day.
Monday, October 28, 2013
Oct 28th. Glasgow, Dumbarton Castle, Loch Lomond and too much work
| We met with the locals |
The final stop by the lake was at Tarbet. We visited the tea shop and had some coffees with hot egg and black pudding (a.k.a my favorite blood sausage) bugs.
Oct 27th. Glasgow
When we got back outside we decided to re-start. We ran back to the apartment and put on our warmest clothing. That made our walk substantially more comfortable. We wandered through the lovely center stopping to check out the third oldest subway in the world, one circular line, lovingly restored to complete newness. Had scones and clotted cream at Willow Tea Room and visited another Charles Renee Machintosh creation: the Lighthouse. Walked through the lovely center filled with truly magnificent red brick buildings. Went to Kelvingrove Art Gallery. It is a weird combination of taxidermied animals, mummies, paintings, kids' workshops. As much as Liverpool maritime museum was superbly organized this was not. I guess finding interesting random facts can be appealing too.
Ghost Busters were on TV. We all dropped into the comfortable sofas and spent three hours glued to them emerging once only to replenish our food supplies. So much for the top Scottish. However I can confidently attest to the fast that we are not desensitized to the joys of relaxing on the on the sofa for hours to end.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Oct 26th. Liverpool
It was exceptionally well done. Lots of interesting and informative exhibits about the maritime industry. Georgia is learning about WWII in school this year. The museum presented a great coverage of the events from Liverpool perspective as ship building town. Finally, there was an exhibit of gay life on ships. It was done with a great deal of honesty and sensitivity.
Ronnie from Principal Apartments had met us and guided us to the parking lot inside the building. The apartment is lovely. We were so happy to finish working through our food supplies from home and drop into the comfortable beds. Hurray!!
Oct 25th. Amsterdam
I left off in Amsterdam. We walked around after dinner. The streets were busy. We ended our walk at the large square. There was a carnival set up there. The sight of Harris wheel and a number of lift, rotate, and drop attractions were threatening the comfort of our dinners.
My room on the second floor, two stories further up the winding staircase on the attic occupying the entire floor was like the cavernous gates of hell. It was too big. I could not fall asleep for a while.
In the morning the cab took us down to the expo center. It was 8am on Friday and barely a person in sight. They must have been all waiting in an enormous line to get their iPnone 5S. It was launching in Amsterdam on the 25th. HRTech Amsterdam was much smaller and less showy than its US counterpart. We were done with our agendas in about 3 hours.
We headed back to town and continued walking around waiting for our afternoon flights/train rides. My colleagues, Paolo and Veronica, respectively from Italy and France were great to hang out with. We really liked Amsterdam. The city seemed to have infinite amount of and combinations of narrow alleys and wide streets crossing the canals. By 2pm the streets finally filled up. The weather was cool and comfortable.
By late afternoon I grabbed a cab to the airport. We passed the line for the iPhone again. The taxi driver lamented that so many people seem to have a computer/mobile addiction. To keep the conversation going I agreed and mentioned my brother's withdrawal symptoms whenever away from Facebook for more than three hours. The driver countered that Facebook is absolutely not the right example of dependency but rather a "valuable tool to stay in touch with family and friends a few times a day." He whopped out his iPhone and started to type furiously. I bit my lip, my hands started to grope for the seatbelt, and I hoped that there won't be any cars around. In a little while he turned around and thrust his phone at me. "There how is this an addiction??" It was the carpark cartoon :)
The border patrol agent in Gatwick scanned only one of my fingers and did not pry too much - they much be getting used to our comings and goings.At last I was at home. was great to see everyone at home!! We said good night to kids and got out to have a couple of drinks to celebrate Dima's 38th birthday. We are happy and honored he chose to mark the occasion with us in the UK. The evening started out very nice. At night we got a hold of Dan R. and though he would not crack had correctly guessed the reason for the mandatory corporate training on Monday. That provided room for discussions late into the evening.
My room on the second floor, two stories further up the winding staircase on the attic occupying the entire floor was like the cavernous gates of hell. It was too big. I could not fall asleep for a while.
In the morning the cab took us down to the expo center. It was 8am on Friday and barely a person in sight. They must have been all waiting in an enormous line to get their iPnone 5S. It was launching in Amsterdam on the 25th. HRTech Amsterdam was much smaller and less showy than its US counterpart. We were done with our agendas in about 3 hours.
We headed back to town and continued walking around waiting for our afternoon flights/train rides. My colleagues, Paolo and Veronica, respectively from Italy and France were great to hang out with. We really liked Amsterdam. The city seemed to have infinite amount of and combinations of narrow alleys and wide streets crossing the canals. By 2pm the streets finally filled up. The weather was cool and comfortable.
By late afternoon I grabbed a cab to the airport. We passed the line for the iPhone again. The taxi driver lamented that so many people seem to have a computer/mobile addiction. To keep the conversation going I agreed and mentioned my brother's withdrawal symptoms whenever away from Facebook for more than three hours. The driver countered that Facebook is absolutely not the right example of dependency but rather a "valuable tool to stay in touch with family and friends a few times a day." He whopped out his iPhone and started to type furiously. I bit my lip, my hands started to grope for the seatbelt, and I hoped that there won't be any cars around. In a little while he turned around and thrust his phone at me. "There how is this an addiction??" It was the carpark cartoon :)
The border patrol agent in Gatwick scanned only one of my fingers and did not pry too much - they much be getting used to our comings and goings.At last I was at home. was great to see everyone at home!! We said good night to kids and got out to have a couple of drinks to celebrate Dima's 38th birthday. We are happy and honored he chose to mark the occasion with us in the UK. The evening started out very nice. At night we got a hold of Dan R. and though he would not crack had correctly guessed the reason for the mandatory corporate training on Monday. That provided room for discussions late into the evening.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
October 24th. Life in the fast lane
It was another busy week and before we plunge into an equally busy weekend, here are a few highlights.
Dima came on Monday. Hurray!! Then Dan's parents left on Tuesday. It was very sad. They've made a ton of farmer cheese pancakes and rice pilaf before they left. Kids are consuming the first one at enjoyable rate while lamenting that they are no longer here and asking when we can return back to US.
On Tuesday I went to the work conference in London. It was interesting to watch team members from all around the world show up - India, China, Spain, France. Very cool. Watching how a large global company builds commitment and motivation internally was a learning experience. The CEO is very charming and is liked universally. After the keynotes ended I went back home to get some work done. At night we had dinner @ Brown's downstairs. It was very relaxing and enjoyable.
On Wednesday I went back for some more networking activities and in the evening Dima and Dan came up and we walked around the evening London. Our first night out in London actually. We started with some beers at some local bar for the locals and them moved over to Great Queen Street restaurant for dinner.
This was the first time in many years on living in the English speaking country that we actually had to whip out our smartphones to look up what the items on the menu meant. Literally every other item. Of course in the past it was not smartphones but the dictionary but you get the idea. Really interesting English food. Way better than roast on Sunday. After getting loaded on the dictionary words and some dishes, we rolled outside and continued our walk toward some good desert. On the way we accidentally stumbled into China town. Interestingly the streets were filled with gypsy women selling flowers. We walked upstairs into Candy Café and discovered that it was serving traditional Asian sweets. As we were craving something heavier we got out and kept going eventually finishing our explorations back at the hotel.
On Thursday I went back to the conference while Dan and Dima worked in London until lunch and then went home for their calls. After lunch a couple of co-workers and I boarded a plane at the city airport and went to Amsterdam for a tradeshow. The ride into town on the taxi took longer than the flight. We are staying at Dikker en Thijs Fenice Hotel. It was pretty funny about our rooms. Our room numbers range from 200s to 400s. The reception clerk told us that our rooms are on the second floor. Hmm, elevator does go to the second floor but then you have to go through the maze of corridors and climb a winding staircase (love those) up another 2 stories. My room seems to occupy the entire building attic. Just a huge space with a humble bed and a TV. My co-workers said they got the same. For dinner we've stayed at the hotel restaurant. Highly recommended. Equally great as last night's place.
Tomorrow we are going to the trade show and then heading back to our homes in the afternoon. On Saturday we are going to Scotland to work from there for a week. It feels like we are changing gears all the time. It is very enjoyable but I hope it will not desensitize us to the joys of just sitting at home one weekend and watching TV while doing absolutely nothing else.
Dima came on Monday. Hurray!! Then Dan's parents left on Tuesday. It was very sad. They've made a ton of farmer cheese pancakes and rice pilaf before they left. Kids are consuming the first one at enjoyable rate while lamenting that they are no longer here and asking when we can return back to US.
On Tuesday I went to the work conference in London. It was interesting to watch team members from all around the world show up - India, China, Spain, France. Very cool. Watching how a large global company builds commitment and motivation internally was a learning experience. The CEO is very charming and is liked universally. After the keynotes ended I went back home to get some work done. At night we had dinner @ Brown's downstairs. It was very relaxing and enjoyable.
On Wednesday I went back for some more networking activities and in the evening Dima and Dan came up and we walked around the evening London. Our first night out in London actually. We started with some beers at some local bar for the locals and them moved over to Great Queen Street restaurant for dinner.
This was the first time in many years on living in the English speaking country that we actually had to whip out our smartphones to look up what the items on the menu meant. Literally every other item. Of course in the past it was not smartphones but the dictionary but you get the idea. Really interesting English food. Way better than roast on Sunday. After getting loaded on the dictionary words and some dishes, we rolled outside and continued our walk toward some good desert. On the way we accidentally stumbled into China town. Interestingly the streets were filled with gypsy women selling flowers. We walked upstairs into Candy Café and discovered that it was serving traditional Asian sweets. As we were craving something heavier we got out and kept going eventually finishing our explorations back at the hotel.
On Thursday I went back to the conference while Dan and Dima worked in London until lunch and then went home for their calls. After lunch a couple of co-workers and I boarded a plane at the city airport and went to Amsterdam for a tradeshow. The ride into town on the taxi took longer than the flight. We are staying at Dikker en Thijs Fenice Hotel. It was pretty funny about our rooms. Our room numbers range from 200s to 400s. The reception clerk told us that our rooms are on the second floor. Hmm, elevator does go to the second floor but then you have to go through the maze of corridors and climb a winding staircase (love those) up another 2 stories. My room seems to occupy the entire building attic. Just a huge space with a humble bed and a TV. My co-workers said they got the same. For dinner we've stayed at the hotel restaurant. Highly recommended. Equally great as last night's place.
Tomorrow we are going to the trade show and then heading back to our homes in the afternoon. On Saturday we are going to Scotland to work from there for a week. It feels like we are changing gears all the time. It is very enjoyable but I hope it will not desensitize us to the joys of just sitting at home one weekend and watching TV while doing absolutely nothing else.
Monday, October 21, 2013
October 21st. London, London, Canterbury
Trying to catch up real quick. The weeks are speeding by as we enjoy the company of our guests and cultural and work related program.

After we came back from Paris, Dan left for Brussels office for three days. At the same time Dan's mom's friend came over from Vilnius to visit. It was great having t. Liuda. Kids loved her. At home we worked on catching up with kids' homework.
On Thursday we worked from a coffee shop in London. What a great way to view the city - sitting in a coffee shop and watching the people go by.
London crowd is truly one of the "smartest dressed."
For lunch we went to the British museum to check out the mummies. They have a pretty intense collection. I had no idea of the many mummification style. Images are really incredible. It would be good to come back with Georgia. May be a bit to graphic for Isabella though.
Highly recommend the chain Kimchee for lunch - beautiful as well as tasty and light.
At night we went to Rose Theater downstairs to see Oedipussy, a modern irrelevant side-splitting remake of a classic Greek tragedy complete with infanticide, incest and full frontal nudity. Not only was it incredibly funny, a few drunk locals sitting next to us provided additional dose of humor by breaking into thunderous bouts of laughter regardless of what was going on on stage. So far Rose Theater was so good I am starting to fear for that one bad show that will restore the normal order of things in the universe.
Finally on Friday, we went out for dinner to Sushi and Sticks in Wimbledon with Irina and Ricardo. It was really relaxing and we enjoyed spending time with them. The restaurant is somewhat reminiscent of Ruby Foos in NY. Maybe not as tasty but definitely a great place to go to with friends.
But wait, there was also Saturday. Georgia waited so long for this day. Every day she would wake up and complain that today is still not Saturday or Sunday.
Dan's parents and kids and I joined Dan at an outdoor market neat the Waterloo station for lunch. Then Dan's parents went to an art gallery and we tried to go to Regents' park. I've been trying to go there for some time. Unfortunately this Saturday was not meant to be. As soon as we got to Baker street it started to pour. We sought refuge at the Sherlock Holmes museum but it too was closed because it lost power. So we headed back and went to the Museum of Science instead.
Dan and Georgia took their own route, Isabella and I took it slow - working our way through the third floor coffee shop. This museum is really great for kids aged 6-7+ but does not do much for the little ones. Isabella enjoyed looking at the planes in the third floor. Georgia and Dan went to a really cool exhibit/experiment run by the college of London. They are trying to evaluate how learning works in kids by teaching them the "Alien" language. Georgia did very well both from the visual and auditory learning. Got two stars. Was very very pleased.
As we were in the French quarter we did a run through the nearby bakeries collecting each person's preferred choice of sweets. I have GREAT news for the lovers of real brioche and merengue. I think the same exact bakery where Georgia and I get our fix is opening in NYC. Now that's a blessing :)
Finally finally, on Sunday.. it was Isabella's birthday. We gathered all her gifts near the bed and handed them out to her one by one when she woke up. She was very happy. Georgia got her a large kitty, we got her magnetic doll, hairbands and a little backpack, and Dan's parents got her a Lego set and a pretty dress.


It was raining but we headed out to Canterbury anyway hoping for the best. And fortunately the weather was good over there. It is a very beautiful town. We walked for a long while around the ill-famous Canterbury cathedral. They had services going on so we could not get in to see some parts. The old center has fascinating buildings. They are not picture-consistently-perfect like some of the old German towns but each one looks pretty different and unique.
We had traditional Sunday roast for lunch at Millers Arms pub. We've been here since July 3rd so it's nice to finally pay homage to the local customs. I still fancy (:)) Korean, Japanese and Indian better but this one was very enjoyable.

When we got home we got a lot of calls from friends and relatives congratulating Isabella. At night we got 4 candles on one of the mini-cakes from Patisserie Valerie and sang Isabella a happy birthday song. She really liked that and asked us to do it a few more times. It was a very nice :)
On Thursday we worked from a coffee shop in London. What a great way to view the city - sitting in a coffee shop and watching the people go by.
London crowd is truly one of the "smartest dressed."
For lunch we went to the British museum to check out the mummies. They have a pretty intense collection. I had no idea of the many mummification style. Images are really incredible. It would be good to come back with Georgia. May be a bit to graphic for Isabella though.
Highly recommend the chain Kimchee for lunch - beautiful as well as tasty and light.
But wait, there was also Saturday. Georgia waited so long for this day. Every day she would wake up and complain that today is still not Saturday or Sunday.
Dan and Georgia took their own route, Isabella and I took it slow - working our way through the third floor coffee shop. This museum is really great for kids aged 6-7+ but does not do much for the little ones. Isabella enjoyed looking at the planes in the third floor. Georgia and Dan went to a really cool exhibit/experiment run by the college of London. They are trying to evaluate how learning works in kids by teaching them the "Alien" language. Georgia did very well both from the visual and auditory learning. Got two stars. Was very very pleased.
When we got home we got a lot of calls from friends and relatives congratulating Isabella. At night we got 4 candles on one of the mini-cakes from Patisserie Valerie and sang Isabella a happy birthday song. She really liked that and asked us to do it a few more times. It was a very nice :)
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