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Entries in travel (174)

Monday
Sep292014

Cali part 2: San Francisco, and a wedding

I have always wanted to visit San Francisco, but the impetus for this trip was my cousin's wedding.

On day 3 we spent the better part of our day taking in the traditional San Fran sights: the cable cars, China Town, and Fishermans Warf. After that, we spent the night partying with family, celebrating a marriage. Weddings are possibly my favorite event. Calvin was a regular dancing machine.

We spent day 4 saying goodbye to family, and revisiting some favorite San Francisco haunts (those being the cable car because...Calvin).

You have to really suck it in when passing the opposing cable car...

Hurray for indie book stores

clams and chowder and mussels oh my

dashing

siblings

Monday
Sep292014

Cali part 1: mostly Napa

Thursday afternoon was sunny and warm in California. Apparently September is a summer month for the people of San Francisco, who often experience chilly and foggy weather the rest of the year. September, when the kids are already back in school, would appear to be a great time to visit. We were fortunate to have warm, sunny weather for most of our visit, although even then the bridge was obscured by thick fog for all but our last day in town.

Day 1 for us was mainly travel, a stop by Pier 39 for our first taste of west coast seafood and a peek at the famed sea lions, and a delightful family dinner—a reunion with many far flung members of my family.

Day 2 took us into Napa Valley for some wine tasting.

Monday
Jul212014

The Pacific Northwest: a flight, some pools, and a family reunion

I have this branch of the family—removed by a couple of generations—that has always been sort of a distant blip on the radar for me. Genealogy interests me greatly. I have boxes of this stuff—copies of birth, marriage, and death certificates, census pages, extremely old photos, etc.—that I painstakingly entered into a fancy computer program eons ago, before my own marriage and family rearing took a front seat, and the boxes of stuff went into the closet. It's still carefully stored, and on occasion I still access it to look up a date or to check a branch of the family tree. I love old stuff. I love the connection it gives us to our past. I love to gaze at old  pictures and take in all the details—not just the faces, but the background details that give away so much information about the world our ancestors lived in. Some of my most prized possessions are the photographs and letters from my maternal family line that have been entrusted to my keeping.

My Aunt Wendy, my dad's sister, is the ancestry researcher of my paternal family line. She has details going back at least seven generations. In the past she has spent hours with me going over records and letting me gaze at photos. All the information I have on my paternal side came from her, and I learned a great deal from her not only about the family, but also about research, record keeping, and the safe keeping of keepsakes. It is because of her that, about fifteen years ago, I knocked on a stranger's door outside of Grand Rapids to ask if we were related (we were, and that introduction lead to an exchange of Christmas cards for many years, but that's a different story). She ignited in me a great curiosity that, in addition to knocking on doors, took me into distant libraries in distant towns, chasing ever elusive details in newspaper clippings and census records.

But about the Pacific Northwest. I have this branch of the family out in Oregon, connected to me through my father's mother, that we almost never see. The line was originally from Wisconsin, and my grandmother stayed in the midwest when the majority of them moved to Oregon, beginning a physical separation that has lasted through the years. My father knew his maternal cousins only slightly, and I knew them, and their children, my second cousins, even less. Just one of them, who came to visit when I was little and became a penpal for quite some time, can I count amongst my regular friends. But I feel a great attachment to family, and because my parents understand this about me, this sentimentality and interest in ancestry, when this year's family reunion was planned, they made sure that we could go along.

My only disappointment about the trip was that Jon was unable to secure the time off to join us, but being able to bring Calvin out to meet that part of the family was wonderful. In particular it was special that he could meet my grandmother's brother, with whom we shared dinner on each of our evenings in Portland. And we got to spend all of Friday afternoon with my second cousin as well, and seeing Calvin connect with her eight year old daughter was heartwarming.

The reunion itself lasted for several hours on Saturday afternoon. Reconnecting with family I knew, and connecting with others for the first time, was very special for me. Seeing resemblances and recognizing inherited traits contrasted with differences that have grown greater in the years that the branches have lived separated by almost a whole country. Though I visited with many, I also spent a lot of time standing back and considering the connections, imagining for myself the times my dad has talked about spending with these cousins one summer when he was in high school. Or considering the fact of our shared distant past. It's an awesome consideration.

Calvin greatly enjoyed the pool.

It was also his first trip to the Pacific Northwest, his first time in the mountains there, and on top of one when we had lunch on top of Mount Hood. We also had a chance to visit our good friends in Seattle, and to have lunch at the market there before heading to the top of the Space Needle. The weather was phenomenal while were there, and the peaks were all visible except on our very last day, when were fortunate to have enough clouds to give us the perfect view of Mt. Ranier above the clouds on our flight out. It's one of my favorite memories from childhood trips to the area.

This has certainly been the summer for travel.

Tuesday
Jul152014

A midsummer dream 

When I said we were on the few days between travels, I really wasn't kidding. Back from Chicago on Sunday, headed to Stratford on Friday. Calvin asked for tickets to see A Midsummer Night's Dream and Alice Through the Looking Glass for Christmas, and thanks to his grandparents we all got to go. This was our second summer trip to Stratford, and we hope to make it an annual tradition, especially now that we've found the perfect place to stay, and the perfect place to stop for ice cream.

The shows were both completely wonderful, of course. I think my favorite part was watching Calvin totally eat up A Midsummer Night's Dream. When we walked into the theater and took our seats next to two gentlemen, I think they were a little surprised, possibly even a little concerned, to see Calvin seated there. I can imagine they were concerned about wiggling and attention spans. I noted that all through the show, the man sitting next to me kept looking over him, perhaps surprised at his delight, because I have never seen Calvin quite so into a show. He loved it.

Alice Through the Looking Glass was also done very well, but it was a little more abstract or eccentric than I think I had expected. Fascinating, though. As a special treat we made reservations to have lunch with the characters before the show. Stratford, it seems, is taking notes from Disney. The lunch itself was a little on the weak side, but Calvin had a great time playing croquet, competing in knight races, laughing with the characters, and, most of all by far, trying on the costumes from previous plays in previous years. We had a hard time getting him out of the costume trying area even to eat lunch.

We couldn't have asked for a more wonderful weekend.

Monday
Jul072014

Independence weekend in Chicago

(A photo essay)