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.
Monday, March 3, 2014
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Feb 9th. A weekend in Berlin
The world being small as usual, on the plane we were seated next to a Russian guy from Vilnius who now lives in the UK for quite a long time. He told us interesting stories about buying houses in the UK. In his last house, the descendants of a noble family who owned the land still retained the hereditary right to mine coal in his basement and keep the proceeds.. and the farmer who bought the land from the nobles retained the hereditary right to run cattle through his land before selling it to developers. We are having it easy in the US :)
We spent the weekend wondering what part of Berlin we are in: formerly belonging to the West or to the East Germany. It was substantially damaged in WWII and complete reconstruction of a former Nazi capital was probably not on top of anyone's agenda. So the city is filled with ultra wide boulevards, with soulless concrete buildings and more than a few of lovely Soviet type block constructions looking like a carbon copy of the other such buildings in the former Soviet block.
| Not Nefertiti |
We wandered through the Roman gallery marveling the differences with Greek sculpture and stopped at the museum coffee shop to complement the cultural fulfillment with some excellent apple strudel. It was very different from the style used at home. The German version featured very thin slices of apple between the many layers of dough, and some heavy cream and caramel custard to balance things out.
| Zombies! |
By lunch we met up with Dan and took a stroll through some modern art by visiting a street market along the museum island. Lots of beautiful works by Georgian painters and some local artists. We continued our walk and saw Brandenburg gates.. rather unimpressive, but the colorful demonstration against the Japanese killing of dolphins made for an interesting experience. We saw Reichstag, the seat of Nazi Germany and presently the seat of Parliament, walked past the Gypsy genocide memorial, over to the Jewish memorial. Our plan was not to cover any of the Holocaust topics during the trip because the kids are too young for the subject matter. Even though Georgia covered WWII in school, she did not know who Nazis or Fascists were.
At first we did not know that we were at the Jewish memorial. We saw a huge square filled with rectangular concrete blocks in parallel rows. They have different heights and at some point when you get too deep in you can get "lost" in this strange forest. Other tourists were playing "hide and "see" and we followed their example trying not to lose the kids. Only when we came out and read the plaque we learned what this place is. The confusion was there by design. It is a kind of cemetery for adult games. Strange..
We continued our walk and finished our tourist activities for the day at the Potsdamer Platz. We wanted to walk to the Berlin wall but the day was drawing to its close and we decided to seek the physical replenishment again.
Makes every sense considering that taxi should not be less safe for kids than a personal car. But that also means that you cannot necessarily count on hailing a car on the streat that actually has these on board. And public transport required 3 transfers to get there. So the poor kids walked some more to get their dinner. The walk though some new interesting streets was actually pleasant. Fortunately they let us in into the restaurant too. Apparently it is a very popular place, we got lucky. Schnitzel with a barrel of beer followed by a Sachertorte! How many way are there to describe perfection! We did try a few other things and they were excellent as well :)
We did our final walk through town and got our ride back to the airport. Nice weekend. Have to get some pictures up tomorrow.
Monday, February 3, 2014
Feb 3. Lost in translation in Kingston
Continuing to cover funny things said by our daughters..
"Georgia is not letting me sleep!!" were the first wails that broke the day. I ran into kids' room. Isabella complained that Georgia is not letting her climb up on the upper deck of the bunk bed to sleep there. Despite the rude awakening Georgia was in good spirits and tried to calm Isabella down by suggesting it would be OK to visit on weekend and she now just wanted to get a little more sleep. "If you ever do that to me again," said Isabella, "I will not love you for two more days to come."
Went to Isabella's school for the parent teacher conference in the afternoon today. The review was slightly better than Georgia got around the same age: "Isabella is very nice and social, can count, can draw some letters, but her vocabulary is so limited. Sometimes it looks like she is trying to tell and joke and laughs but we cannot figure out what the funny part was." It is sad that they cannot see what great kid she is and what awesome sense of humor she has. At least no developmental challenges reported so it is as good as it ever got.
As we did our evening stroll through town, we saw the mannequins in Benthal's mall dressed in their finest undies with the signs welcoming the Valentine's day.
Sometimes the ability to read is not that handy... "Why are they all undressed for the Valentine's day?" asked Georgia. Dan signaled it was my turn. "I guess they are trying to show off their healthy bodies they obtained through exercise and diet." A bit lame, isn't it? I'll need to come up with something better than that if the trend continues in town.
Isabella was talking non-stop during our walk. She is going through the phase of "having to provide for the family" by finding coins on the street and giving them to us so she was describing how it is a bit difficult to look in the dark but she will try again tomorrow.
"Georgia is not letting me sleep!!" were the first wails that broke the day. I ran into kids' room. Isabella complained that Georgia is not letting her climb up on the upper deck of the bunk bed to sleep there. Despite the rude awakening Georgia was in good spirits and tried to calm Isabella down by suggesting it would be OK to visit on weekend and she now just wanted to get a little more sleep. "If you ever do that to me again," said Isabella, "I will not love you for two more days to come."
Went to Isabella's school for the parent teacher conference in the afternoon today. The review was slightly better than Georgia got around the same age: "Isabella is very nice and social, can count, can draw some letters, but her vocabulary is so limited. Sometimes it looks like she is trying to tell and joke and laughs but we cannot figure out what the funny part was." It is sad that they cannot see what great kid she is and what awesome sense of humor she has. At least no developmental challenges reported so it is as good as it ever got.
As we did our evening stroll through town, we saw the mannequins in Benthal's mall dressed in their finest undies with the signs welcoming the Valentine's day.
Sometimes the ability to read is not that handy... "Why are they all undressed for the Valentine's day?" asked Georgia. Dan signaled it was my turn. "I guess they are trying to show off their healthy bodies they obtained through exercise and diet." A bit lame, isn't it? I'll need to come up with something better than that if the trend continues in town.
Isabella was talking non-stop during our walk. She is going through the phase of "having to provide for the family" by finding coins on the street and giving them to us so she was describing how it is a bit difficult to look in the dark but she will try again tomorrow.
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Feb 2. The last post continued... onto cultural & other exploits in London & Cotwolds
The street is 1.5 lane wide for 2 directional traffic. Cars can park on the sides 2-3 at a time in an alternating pattern. To get through you drive up to the parked cars, wait behind them for the incoming traffic to pass. Then drive up to the next set of parked cars and hide behind them until the open next window.
We found a new Russian cartoon: The Mystery of Suharava Tower (probably incorrect translation). It seems like a Russian derivative work of French Dragon hunters and some Asian cartoons. It is pretty nice. We are looking forward to more series. Hope it will get translated - it can impress the international audience.
It is small exhibit but awesome. Wall panels covering the subject of bloodletting, to feed the great serpent and facilitate communications with ancestors, by passing the rope with thorns through the tongue or using a perforator on some other body parts were particularly dramatic.
We tried to squeeze in the Courtauld gallery to cover some impressionists but were arted out. We will have to come back to both of them.
| Did anyone try? |
Say "Yes" to the British faggots! Sadly we had reached our saturation point earlier last week. When we saw this sign we just took a picture and kept going without stopping to read the ingredients and learn more about this delicious dish. Maybe we will get another chance to try in on our other trips.
Feb 2. Keeping all the senses busy @ art galleries, museums, Cotwolds, and over a half a dozen restaurants
Kids are missing home and wanted to taste their NJ grandmother's curd cheese pancakes. So I went it trying to reproduce the exact flavor. Every morning I tried a different combination of farmer cheese, sugar, eggs and flour. They ate all of it every time but it never hit the mark. So finally, on Friday night Dan's mom shared the magical formula: 250g of farmer cheese + 1 egg + 2 tablespoons of sugar + 2 tablespoons of flour & vanilla. Then you have to drop a tablespoon of the mixture onto a plate with flour and then shape it into disk and fry on a warm frying pan. That's it. Perfection achieved. We still have to go back home in a couple of weeks :)
On Wednesday we went to Rooster Piri Piri that opened up near the train station. They still have to train the staff to hand out utensils with food. And they can't do a real American chicken wings but the owner was really sweet - he came over and tried to get Isabella to try various things. He said he was a picky eater too but his mom always tried to make special things to get him to eat. He ultimately brought ice-cream for both girls.
We did not miss our favorite weekly haunts at the market Asian restaurant & GTK burger down the street. Those are always good. The staff know us and it feels very welcoming.
Deep dieting is due.. Let's move on to the other senses..
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