Friday, March 28, 2008

Vacation

Pictures to follow; we didn't bring our camera wire. As most of you know, we're vacationing on the East Coast. We spent about a week in Maryland with Austin and Chantel having fun and laughing with their two kids. Lillian loved Soren and followed him around all day. It was pretty mutual until Soren got tired of all the love. We explored all over DC and are totally pros at the metro system.

Tyler's favorite memory of DC: Soren was saying family prayers and half-way through the usual "bless mommy and daddy" he starts saying in a completely different, high-pitched voice, "I'm an alley cat, I'm an alley cat," and started dancing his cat stuffed animal around.

Amanda's favorite memory: We were getting ready to go watch Chantel perform, I came upstairs and was puttering around waiting to get the show on the road. Owen walks over and asked why people wear see-through pants. I look at Austin to see if this is some sort of family joke and he looks at me like "I have no idea what he's talking about." We finally figure out that he was referring to my nylons.

We left and drove up the coast through Pennsylvania (Philadelphia is totally overrated) and Amish country where we found out that the fancy candle maker no longer makes fancy candles, a devastating blow, and bought some black raspberry jam made by real Amish people. We drove through New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut before reaching our current destination of Boston.

Here are some highlights:

While driving through New York, Tyler exclaims "Wow, New York is ugly!"

We've found that most driving rules like 'stop at red lights,' 'stay in one lane,' and 'cross at designated crosswalks' simply don't apply here in Boston. Instead, they have a lot of extra rules like 'honk immediately as soon as the light turns green,' 'hazard lights mean you can park anywhere, including the middle of road,' and 'if necessary, extra lanes can be created by driving into oncoming traffic.' Also, every intersection has at least five streets coming together. Some go through, some don't, some are one way, and all are ambiguously labeled, if labeled at all.

We've been here for a few days and we've been all over. We walked the freedom trail and saw Paul Revere's house, the site of the Boston Massacre, the old North Church, and the church where they sat and waited for word to start the Boston Tea Party (along with 500 graveyards and/or churches.) We also saw (my favorite) the U.S.S. Constitution, also known as "Old Ironsides." We also decided that Boston has the first of everything: first hotel, first tavern, first statehouse, first public park, first school, first port. And they all have their own plaque. Tyler's favorite was our tour of Fenway Park where we saw the green monster and sat in the original hundred-year-old bleachers. We also really liked the Duck tour where they take you around the city and into the Charles river in a WWII amphibious car. Our tour guide was hilarious and we had a lot of fun, even if it was only in the high thirties today.

Lillian had a breakdown today; her first of the whole trip. I think it was the cold the finally got to her. We had just finished our tour of Fenway Park and were trying to figure out how we were going to get across town to the childrens' museum (which was fabulous if you are ever in the area). It was windy and in the high 30s, and she all-of-a-sudden lost it.

We're leaving tomorrow after visiting Walden pond and Louisa May Alcott's house. I'll post pictures probably Monday or so.

1 comment:

Myriah Cohen said...

Oh man, a most excellent post!

I'm sorry to hear that New York is ugly, as i just sent a bunch of resumes over there. But i'm not to worried, with my track record i won't get those jobs. Maybe by the time someone hires me, the city will be pretty.

Also, as you know i am very proud of your visit to Fenway, and i am stoked you get to check out Walden Pond! I hope it is fabulous.

Related Posts with Thumbnails