Sunday, December 27, 2015

And now a pause...

A pause from this blog.

We have a new little one joining us next June, and I'd like to continue the trend of logging my pregnancies with their very own blog. Please see Tiny June Bug Knoll to follow his/her progress for the next 6-7 months. You can find the link under the homepage  title here, too.

And keep us in prayer, please!

Christmas!

We showered up from travel, dressed up, and went to 8:30pm Christmas Eve Mass with Nana & Pappy Braud. In Houston. We started the day in Melbourne 26 hours earlier. Weird.


Everyone sacked out nicely by about 11pm, and Dylan and I woke at 10:30 on Christmas morning! And the kids were still asleep!! Mom and Dad kept laughing that it was the most anticlimactic Christmas morning ever - who has tiny children in a house and gets going with presents after noon?! It was really lovely, though, when they did wake. We didn't have to worry about when to get them to nap, and we went through the present piles each person had divvied out to them by Paul slowly and nicely. What a fun time with the littles! Santa brought Pauly his first big-boy bike and Ada a doll house + a driveway scooter each, which will stay here because of Nana & Pappy's excellent driveway.




We enjoyed a delicious pork roast dinner with roasted veggies and crawfish cornbread - yum! It was bizarre to sit down to a meal I took no part in preparing! It was beautiful and yummy. We just slowed the afternoon away, reading books, playing with toys, and snacking.

And we finally got to ham it up with Christmas carols! What a beautiful way to celebrate Christ's birthday!

And then, glorious sleep. A very merry - jet-lagged - Christmas, indeed.

Australia, Parts II & III: Cudgee & Melbourne

So, I already mentioned that Friday the 18th was a packing morning in Smokeytown and travel day to Cudgee with a cuppa stop in Mortlake with Wayne. The kids had a short play with their big cousins, Reuben and Grace, and everyone had a relatively early night, ready for a long day at the beach the next day.

We spent the whole of Saturday morning through midday at Sting Ray Bay in Warrnambool (reference last post's map, if necessary). A horribly ugly place with dirty beaches, and it rained the whole time. Or the opposite of that ... except for some of the rain. Once we were all finished playing and tired, a couple of random rain clouds broke down on us and passed away just as quickly. Gosh, what a beautiful place this is! There's a river that meets the sea (with Antarctic [cold] water), so there are several shallow, kid- and baby-friendly places, plus beautiful rocks for nook-climbing and exploring. It really was freezing water, which doesn't stop the kids, of course, but it sure did keep this Gulf Coast gal in the shallows. I dunked once, yes, just to participate, but I enjoyed that 100º+ sun afterwards. Ada had a nap on the beach, too. This night was the scream-y night, for some reason; took poor Dylan ages to get them nice, quiet, and asleep, and then the four adults had a nice chat over cuppas til bedtime.

We spent much of the last Sunday of Advent in Mortlake with Wayne, starting with Mass at his local church. This church is quite small and, clearly, not terribly full of young families; nearly every old church lady talked to us afterwards, complimented the kids, asked about travels, and showered the kids with hot chocolates and bikkies. It was really cute. Then we got some much-loved playground time before heading to Wayne's for a lamb roast. We travelled over nap time so the kids could sleep in the car (again), and spent the afternoon and evening back in Cudgee with cousin time. The big kids were so awesome with our little kids - there was lots of laughter as Reuben played with his self-professed "mini-me" and Gracie sprinkled Ada with lovely girlie attention. I loved seeing them together and wish they could be together more often.

Monday was a much-welcomed slow morning before a big, big lunch out with all three Knoll siblings, their children, and Wayne for his 62nd birthday. It was wonderful having this group together, and course we forgot to take a picture. But it was a yummy time!

Part III
Tuesday was already packing day - again! While it was sad to leave the Cudgee crew, Paul and Ada were excited to take the train from Ballarat to Melbourne. We arrived at the huge Southern Cross Station mid-afternoon, and Dylan and I were pretty pleased with ourselves for planning a day in the city; we both love Melbourne! Without any immediate family directly in the city, though, we rarely get a chance to revisit the things we love there. Because of clever credit card usage, Dylan scored us a fabulous hotel room with a beautiful view of the Yarra river and city, and we ended this busy, busy day with an Indian dinner, yessssss.
Next up, our last full day in Australia and a full day in Melbourne. We started it with trams, and I'm pretty sure we ended it with trams, too. Much to the delight of two little public-transport-deprived children. Our first stop was scrounging up some breakfast from bakeries, and then we headed to the Myer windows. Myer is a big department store, much in the way of Macy's, and, like Macy's has  its holiday "thing" in the Thanksgiving Day parade, Myer decorates its street-front windows elaborately with a story you can follow from one window to the next at Christmas. We stood in line for about 40 minutes at 9-something in the morning, and I may have been a Debbie Downer ... but I apologized afterwards and admitted it was definitely worth it. What a treat! Then we spent some time just walking through the city semi-strategically to squeeze in a café stop on Degraves St and a look at the Fed Square Christmas tree - this year made out of Lego's! We went back to the hotel for well-earned naps, and then headed out for dinner once everyone was awake. Dinner didn't disappoint either. We met Susan & Gerry and Great Nan & Great Pop for pasta & pizza in Melbourne's little Italy on Lygon  St. and hit up an amazing café for gelato dessert. Pretty good run in just 30 hours. Well done, Melbourne.




Our trip home was mostly smooth, just long. It was the first time any of us had travelled on Christmas Eve, and we had typical waits in lines, typical stress in LAX (least favorite airport), and a sacked out last-leg from LA to Houston. We were just so happy to have the plane-ing behind us.

Let Christmastide begin!!

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Australia, Part I: Smokeytown



Did you know that there's a place Down Under called Smokeytown? And that Dylan's mom, stepdad, sister, brother-in-law, and nephew live there? On Smokeytown Road? Sounds magical, dunnit? The customs people always ask us if it's for-real, too.

We spent our first days here saying hellos, having cuppas, (doing lots of laundry), and meeting the resident chickens, sheep, and kangaroos. Paul, Ada, and 2yo cousin Ahlwan took to each other pretty quickly and enjoyed each others' company for the remainder of our stay. Of course there were bickers here and there about this toy or that, but they always smiled seeing each other and hugged or waved goodbye. Very sweet. Dylan's mum, Susan, treated us to a yummy lamb roast - per D's request - and we took a ride on the ferris wheel they put up for Christmas in Ballarat, the big town nearby. Also, there were meat pies for lunch, of course.

Allow me to interject some silly commentary on Australian weather here before we get going with photos; I say "silly commentary" because it's not silly at all to an Australian, particularly one from Victoria, but it's be a bit of a shock to any visitor who stays for 2 weeks in December expecting the sort-of equivalent of a Midwestern summer but really gets any combination of temperatures between a-little-above-freezing to yes-quite-hot-indeed. So, some pictures, even from one day to the next, have us either in coats or sweating in as little as possible. 





That first weekend was a busy one. In fact, we were almost nonstop the whole week, but it only very rarely felt like too much. Perhaps because our two kiddos still nap, we have this scheduled midday low, even if that's multi-tasked with driving 2 hours to get somewhere. Anyway, that first weekend had us driving a couple of hours to the other side of Melbourne for Susan's side of the family's Christmas 'Do on Saturday and then celebrating Susan't 60th birthday with a gigantic party at their house on Sunday. Now, we don't do things by halves, as you know, so of course we planned more on the Saturday than just the Christmas party: we scheduled a visit to some of Dylan's cousins at their very own café and coffeehouse, Store House Mt. Evelyn and we visited Granddad Knoll in the home where he lives now that he's suffering from dementia and his wife's died earlier in the year. Those two important things managed, we headed off to the party for a big get-together of that side's extended family. Lovely! Adeline got to meet her namesake, too: Joyce Adeline Nelson, Susan's mother. Great Nanna said she was "chuffed", which I love. 



The next day's party was  awesome, too, as it combined Susan and Gerry's families, and we got to catch up with Dylan's brother, sister-in-law, and niece and nephew (before going their direction the following weekend anyway). After two days of chilly weather, finally some warm breezes for the outdoor party under tents. Guess what Australian rite of passage I, then, encountered! Out goes the cool weather, in come the flies. Waving the flies from your face is called the Australian Salute. Nice.


Monday was a bit of a slowish day with late brekky and more cuppas - always with the cuppas - and after naps, Susan had Ada and Paul's help picking the most amazingly beautiful, perfectly ripe cherries from her backyard tree. Honestly, how many times, unless you grow cherries yourself, do you get to have a whole week with chock-full bowls of fresh-picked cherries sitting on the table where you can actually have your fill? I didn't know that there was even a level at which I'd have my fill of cherries. Yum. After the cherrying, we went yabbying. Not familiar with that? Ah, well that's the Aussie term for catching crawfish in a pond, like the one at the bottom of Susan & Gerry's hill. And take a wild guess who's good at it: Pauly-D! He couldn't get enough, and his skill of throwing out the net or meat-on-a-string got better and better. He was one proud yabby-catcher. They taste almost exactly the same as crawfish (especially when Dylan throws together some cajun spices to cook them), but their claws are a bit fatter and meatier; yes please! We yabbied a couple of times during the week in the the lull between naps and dinner.


Tuesday was a beautiful day with beautiful weather, and we spent it superbly. Susan, Gerry, Shalome, Fehraz, Ahlwan, and the 4 of us went to the Ballarat Wildlife Park, and what an entrance we had! You walk in to feed the roaming 'roos! We saw all the regulars: kangaroos, wallabies, emus, koalas, cockatoos + some special ones: awake wombats, echidnas, a massive crocodile, and even a Tasmanian devil. For the very first time, Paul spent money of his very own on something of his choice; Great Nanna and Great Poppa (Nelson) gave him and Ada each some Christmas money, and Paul's first request was a tiny clock with a kangaroo face. He even handed the cashier his money and got his change. Ironically, Shalome made us kangaroo spaghetti bolognese that night, and P was okay with that thought; we said, thanks, kangaroo!
The next day - that brings us to Wednesday, yes? - started with a beautiful scavenger hunt in a maze of a garden in Smokeytown. I was looking forward to a nice garden-y walk, but when I learned that there was a hunt (read: competition) involved, it got a lot more fun! You had to take all the dead-end-y paths to find the clues. It was really very well-done and really pretty. Paul had Dylan running everywhere, and I could hear him giddily laughing from a couple of unseen paths away. Paul, not Dylan. So cute. After all that expelled energy, we had the best real croissants and pastries Victoria has to offer, which happen to be in Smokeytown's neighboring village of Creswick, where Shalome works a couple times a week. The owners are French and French-trained, and they serve the most authentic croissants I've ever had outside of France. That evening, Dylan and I went out for a pub meal just the two of us, and we hear Gran & Pa had a good time with Paul and Ada. While D and I were driving home, though, we came uncomfortably close to hitting a roo. They're behaviorally much like deer in the US, so it's a scary thing should you hit one. Anyway, our heart rates down a bit, we saw an echidna on the side of the road! That's always a treat, as they're shy little things that keep to themselves.
Our last full day with Susan and Gerry was unplanned, which felt great. And was very hot. We just lazied around the house poking around the different trees and animals and playing near the pond again. I did more laundry in preparation of our shifting places, and we stuffed ourselves; Susan made Cornish pasties for lunch and Gerry made a huge lasagne for dinner, per my request. Oh goodness - we just ate the day away. But when it's so hot, it's hard to do much else other than sit around a table in the shade eating and drinking.


We packed up the next morning, already Friday the 18th, and headed during nap time down to Cudgee, where Timshel, Shelley, Reuben and Grace live in their very own, homemade straw bale house that works. I probably said the same 2 years ago when we stayed there, but it's truly amazing how they've made this house work for them to stay cool inside in the summer and warm inside in the winter. Hats off. But first, we stopped in Mortlake for a cuppa with Dylan's dad, Wayne, and reintroduced Paul to him and first-time-introduced Wayne to Ada.
Leaving Smokeytown was a bit of an ordeal for Paul, quite honestly. He was very much looking forward to playing with Reuben and Grace, but somehow, he thought that leaving here was leaving Australia ... and, therefore, didn't understand why we weren't flying to Nana & Pappy's in Houston right then. It does make sense in one way; much like when he says something about "Texas", he often means specifically at Nana & Pappy's house. In the same vein, he associates "being in Australia" specifically with Smokeytown now. We didn't hear it until afterwards, but he did ask, once we were already landed in Melbourne and at that hotel last week, "when are we going to Australia?" It's all a lot for an almost-4-yo to take in, really. Time travel and visiting family in places you don't remember is a bit full-on. Considering, they've both done beautifully. With the exception of one scream-y bedtime at Timshel & Shelley's, they've been pretty breezy.

Now, I'm about to push that publish button before I put photos in because I'm sitting in a dark hotel room during nap time, and I'm not guaranteed enough time to work on photos. I do want to hit "go", though, before we start to fly back ... tomorrow ... on Christmas Eve. It's all very bizarre. Have no fear - there are tons of photos.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Deutschland!

A little about the flight before we get to business:

We flew New Orleans -- Dallas -- London -- Düsseldorf from Wednesday evening to Thursday evening. We were all comfortable; on the long-haul, we had a full row of 5 seats to ourselves, so the kids stretched out, and then we had just one skip over from London to our destination. The only hiccup was that Paul may have received my unfortunate leaning towards motion sickness; he lost his breakfast at the end of the long-haul flight. It was after landing, so all were unprepared. Oh well.
On to the good stuff. We arrived - after a detour regarding carseats that didn't arrive with us - at Ulli & Klaus' around 8:30pm Thursday night, had a bread+cold cuts dinner and then slept. like. champs. We all went down around 10:30 local time and slept until 8am. I woke and wanted both to stay in such a comfortable bed forever and get up to do all the things right away.

Our breakfasts consisted of Brötchen, cheeses, hams, jams, and delicious coffee. On Friday, we just took a little walk between breakfast and nap, but Saturday we went into the city center of Krefeld after Philipp joined us for breakfast. The kids enjoyed our little Stadtbummel to hunt for Christmas yummies to share with family. After short naps, we headed to Burg Linn for a most beautiful Christmas market, where the children had a run-in with Sankt Nikolaus, enjoyed the heck out of roasted chestnuts, and had their first Weihnachtsmarkt Reibekuchen (fried potato pancakes with applesauce).
Ulli's spread a lovely table two days in a row with 2 delicious cakes, and while all of the table-sitting might be right up Dylan's and my alley, the kids eat and want down. Good thing they had Eddy! Eddy the beagle is a regular peer for them, complete with playing, annoying, and snatching things ... mostly food. Mostly from Ada.

Sunday was St. Nikolaus day and the 2nd Sunday of Advent; we went to Mass at Sankt Anna, the kids' first Mass in German, but only after they were pleasantly surprised by goodies left in their shoes by St. Nick overnight! 

Paul had a bit of a rough attitude day - jetlag must be really weird for little ones. Ulli and I had Kaffee & Kuchen at Philipp's apartment, which was really sweet; he even gave me a St. Nikolaus treat, and then we went back home to have 2nd Kaffee & Kuchen with Klaus, Dylan, and the kids. As soon as we were finished, we packed up the cars for more Christmas markets! Now, one generally doesn't attend more than one market in a weekend, let alone 3, but we had to manage to squeeze in all of the best things in just 4 days. So, we spent an hour or so at a market in Lank, where there was a free carousel for kiddos ... but apparently was earlier in the day ... and the bookshop where Ulli works where we'd hoped to find birthday books for Paul & Ada ... which apparently closed sooner than expected. Sigh. After that little disappointment, we all sort of wanted to go home but pushed through and met up at the Krefelder Weihnachtsmarkt. And it was a good thing! I remember the Krefeld one being wonderful, but everyone was talking about how much better it's been getting each year. This year's was beautiful and by far the most delicious. I almost could have only visited that one, but I'm glad I can compare, of course. We had a ball, and the kids love Bratwurst. Duh.
 Monday was an up&at'em early day because just the Knolls trekked over to Cologne! This city is what got the whole party started anyway, really. Remember when Paul saw my old coffee mug with the Kölner cathedral on it? with that bridge? for trains? Well, it was then that we decided to make a stopover in Germany, so here was the day!
We trained from Krefeld to Köln, which was amazing; we visited the massive, gorgeous, impressive cathedral, walked through Köln's market for some yums, strolled the pedestrian shopping area, walked along the Rhein for the view of that bridge, hit up a bookstore for birthday books for the children, and took a café break. It was awesome. We trained back home for our last Kaffee & Kuchen with Ulli and Klaus and then a lovely parting dinner at home.
Unfortunately, on the last night, Paul and Ada broke a flower pot on a side table in the living room. Cringe. They were being really well-behaved, too; it was a complete accident, and Paul was very good about apologizing. I'm still mortified, though ... they've got really fancy things.

Then we woke at 4:15am on Tuesday the 8th for our trek to Melbourne! It was the start of a very, very long journey. Our layover in London had us meet up with a Father Jude who prayed with us on the feast of the Immaculate Conception before travelling to Dubai and on to Melbourne. The flights were really wonderful - the pilots steered clear of Syria and Iraq - and the kids slept. And ate. But, man, they slept. Just an fyi for when you next plan a round-the-world trip with toddlers: saving the longest leg of a 6-part journey for last is pretty rough, but mostly it was rough on us because we knew what was going on and were getting antsy to arrive. Seriously, Paul and Ada were amazing. I should make them little foil stars or something. We spent that first night in a hotel since we arrived so late, and then our Australia experience will take up a post or two of its own.
Overall, our short stint in Germany was everything we could have hoped, most especially for Paul. Of course it was wonderful for us to reconnect with Ulli & Klaus, but watching Paul ease in without blinking was a massive affirmation of our speaking German at home. There is no way I could believe my sometimes-shy big boy would have otherwise been so comfortable in a foreign experience. Watching him interact with people, ask for things, order in a café ... it was amazing and exciting. In fact, I've even wondered since if it was quite easy for him because everything was in German, and therefore only one language. There was no second anything to have to process. A funny thing, of course, was that it wasn't our "secret language"; I noticed that we spoke (especially reprimanded) more quietly and kept normally private-like topics under the radar, like potty visits or that man over there who's ... Anyway, it was awesome, and we need to do it every year ;).