Saturday, April 26, 2014

White House Easter Egg Roll

After three years of coming up empty-handed in the White House Easter Egg Roll lottery, 2014 was finally our year!  By the end, it completely won me over.

4-21-14 - White House Easter Egg Roll
However, it started out rough.  9,000 people packed like cows in a feedlot, then some walking, then another staging area for 30 minutes in the hot sun and THEN, we were allowed onto the glorious White House lawn, which was also packed with people.

That + 2 young children = almost assured disaster

Waiting
Not quite there yet

Still Waiting
We're In!


















Once we got in, we walked right up to the Egg Roll, which was listed under "classics" in the program.  While standing in line in the shadow of the Oval Office, out came a handful of staffers with none other than Sunny & Bo, the First Dogs!  Once I caught my first glimpse of someone famous, there was no going back.  This was a fun event!

Sunny & Bo
Alison did the Easter Egg Roll:

Excellent Technique
Eggcellent Technique

She also did an obstacle course, listened to someone from American Idol sing, saw an astronaut, got her picture with the Cat in the Hat, decorated a shirt, and learned about organic gardening.  Maddie hung out in my pouch just as cool as a cucumber.  She is the best baby!

Add caption



Michelle's Organic Garden

There was a lot more to do, but we'd had our fun and were hungry for more than just the free peeps they handed out.  So by 6pm we wandered out and picked up our souvenir wooden eggs.


In the car on the way home I posed this question to Nathan, "So, are we going to enter the lottery next year?"  He just laughed, which I think meant, "Of course!"  By then we'll have forgotten about the crowds and will only remember how cool it was to see two famous dogs.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

San Francisco

Last month Sara, Marie, Amanda, and I met up on what has become our yearly girls' getaway.  This year we went to San Francisco.  California had been having a drought, which meant perfect weather for weeks on end...until we arrived.  It downpoured the entire time we were there, but the trip was still fantastic.   

Day 1:  We all met in Denver and got to navigate the BART subway system which is filled with happy, inventive homeless people (one had fashioned a chair out of a cardboard box and duct tape) and hipsters.  We didn't quite fit in and the BART makes a horrible noise like it's about to tear itself apart as it re-enters the atmosphere.

Day 2:  We bought a cable car pass and rode to Coit Tower to have breakfast at Mama's, only to find the line for the restaurant, which might have had six tables total, was halfway down the block.


We quickly abandoned that plan, rode to Fisherman's Wharf and ate breakfast at Hollywood Cafe.  It had such good food and the world's largest fruit bowl as a side dish with everything imaginable and, in true California style, it was all sustainably grown.  This is the moment I realized that I live on the wrong coast.

Because it was raining, we decided to wait it out at the Cable Car Museum, which is the workshop where they run all the cables for all the cable cars.  It was unexpectedly very cool.


Still raining.  So we headed to Ghirardelli Square, thinking we could probably kill hours in the shops.  I do so love a shop that offers you a square of chocolate EVERY time you enter the door!

Marie, Sara, and Amanda not staying dry.


Next stop was the Boudin Sourdough Bread Factory for a tour.


There were two things I wanted to do before we came 1) See the Golden Gate Bridge and 2) See some wild sea lions.  I SORT OF took care of both.  I could just BARELY see the bridge....



....and these sea lions are KIND OF wild, I guess.


Friday night we took the sunset cruise to Alcatraz.  We couldn't see the sun, but we did get to see the hospital wing, which is normally not open to the public and doesn't have electricity.

Escape to Alcatraz





San Francisco from Alcatraz (I'm sure this is normally a lovely view.)


Day 3: We gave up all hope of seeing the sun and decided to rent a car and leave the city.  On our way to Big Basin Redwoods State Park, we stopped at an In-N-Out Burger and tasted their soggy cardboard fries.  I had never seen a redwood before and this was an amazing deviation from our original plan of staying in the city.  However, like everything else on our trip, the rain made it tough to do things like look straight up to see the tops of the trees.



Amanda, the Treehugger
A fallen tree goes allll the way down past a tiny Sara.

Redwoods make Marie look especially tiny!


We drove back along the coast and, through the fog, could see patches of the famous rugged coastline.  The farms that line the road are all organic.  I love them.



We ended the trip at Church Chow with our friends Jossie and Brian.  I forgot to get a picture, so I guess that means that we'll have to go back soon to get one!

It's been really hard for me to figure out how to describe San Francisco.  It's not beautiful, but it's not ugly.  It's not somewhere I'd want to live, but it was fun to visit.  The architecture of each little city block is so varied and interesting.  The cable cars are novel and fun.  Plus, you can't beat a place with "wild" sea lions.  I'd go back, but maybe next time I'll go when it's sunny.

Friday, October 18, 2013

International Spy Museum


Of all of the museums that cost money in DC, we've discovered that the International Spy Museum is, by far, the best.  You're greeted by the Green Jaguar XKR from the James Bond movie Die Another Day with the clip playing in the background.  Then they shuttle you into a movie theater via a flashy blue-lit elevator to learn about a spy's life.  The whole entry experience makes you think spying is glamorous and fun, while the rest of the museum explains why it's really not. 

You're encouraged to assume a new identity when you first enter the museum and then are quizzed and handed an assignment along the way.  I thought this part of the museum would have been more fun had there been actual actors posing as security to quiz you along the way and let you know how believable you were.  It's actually pretty difficult to memorize a bunch of pieces of information about someone in just a few minutes (although, luckily, I'd just finished the book: Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything by Joshua Foer, which made it much easier).

I thoroughly enjoyed the first exhibit all about tricks of the trade, complete with lots of handy (and outdated) gadgets, plus another Bond car.  Then, it dives into a history of spying from the Greek-Trojan Horse incident to the current threat of cyber-attack.  In the basement, there is a Bond Villain exhibit, which would have been excellent had I actually watched all of the Bond movies since the beginning of time.  With the kids, we spent two hours in the museum, but agreed that you could easily spend four because it is so incredibly interesting.

Alison learning about the Trojan Horse

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Jamestown & Yorktown

Jamestown 1607: The Virginia Company sends over some colonizers to exploit the riches in a new land.  They fail, but that doesn't stop more and more people from colonizing in the exact same spot for decades to come.  The Jamestown settlement location is packed with information, a reconstructed church, a fascinating archaeological museum, a walk with signage through the different parts of town (with excavated buildings that are now just piles of stones), a glass-blowing demonstration (which was under renovation when we arrived), and great views of the James River.  It's a good place to wander about on a nice day.  I liked the archaeological museum the best, which houses the remains of some of the settlers and is built over the spot where the New World's first democratically-elected leadership body met.

Jamestown's Church
The Governor of Virginia and Some Other Guy

Main Road Through Jamestown
Jamestown is connected to Yorktown via the scenic Colonial Parkway.  Although the Yorktown museum is a bit dated, they do have a huge ship that you can walk through and the video makes it pretty clear that Yorktown was a major turning point in the Revolutionary War ("His majesty will be most annoyed.").  If you like battlefield drives, Yorktown has two loops that show the main encampments and troop movements and the historic section of town is also preserved for you to take a stroll through.

Yorktown Victory Monument

What's a battlefield without a bunch of cannons?

Both sites are fairly interesting, but if there were only time to see one of them, I would definitely pick Jamestown.  I haven't gotten the opening song in the movie Pocahontas out of my head since.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Claude Moore Colonial Farm

Originally, the only reason I made everyone get into the car and drive over 30 minutes to see the Claude Moore Colonial Farm, was to get another stamp for my NPS passport book.  However, this little place, nestled right outside the heavily armored gates to the CIA, turned out to be a perfect short walk and even better kid outing.

The farm is a historically accurate, working farm from the year 1771.  So accurate, that the goose and turkey cages are a PETA attack just waiting to happen. 

7-31-13 - Geese
Turkeys
The farm has a beautiful, short path past a tobacco house and field, pigs, and chickens, all leading to the farmhouse where actors sit and answer questions about what life was like in 1771.  The whole farm doesn't take long to see and the walk through the forest is scenic and fun.  It is also interesting to compare the farm to those of today.  This farm was mostly forested with small areas carved out for various plants and animals, unlike field after field of corn with little tree coverage left. 

Tobacco House
Baby Pig
Living History
Free-Range Chickens
Inside the Main House
Alison spent a lot of time trying to capture this rooster.
Main House
If we're ever in the area, we'd go back since Alison really enjoyed seeing the animals up close.