Oh, snap! I just learned that today is Siblings Day in the U.S.A.! More excuses to send goodies to the two ladies largely responsible for my enchanting childhood, incomparable adolescence, and atypical adulthood.
Here's to Springer's, suspiciously shrinking jaw breakers, stolen cut-off jean shorts, ice cream soup, wet french braids, human clay balls, the pink brush, 100,000,000 piece puzzels, Clearly Canadian, sherbert, Hold On, green light bulbs, dance parties, Seattle, the Crissmas Cup, and spending all of our money on international flights so that we can be together as much as financially possible.
You complete me.
By the way, I just watched all of our music videos from Kiawah 2008. Can't. Stop. Laughing. I'm tempted to put our dance to Ice Ice Baby on here. You know, the one where Timmy dances with a body pillow, Lyd cools off by rubbing ice packs all over herself, and I bring back the Butterfly dance. It's just so good. Either that, or Baby Got Back.
Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Turning 30 in Paris: Part Deux
Good Americans, when they die, go to Paris. ~Thomas Gold Appleton
Brunch at Café Le Piquet and a stroll through the 7th arrondissement with our brilliant and inspiring friend Katie, whom we met when we taught English together in Japan almost 8 years ago (Gasp! Has it been that long?)
Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Église Saint-Sulpice
He's the best to chuckle with
Future French national football team training in front of the Pantheon
La rue Saint-Étienne-du-Mont in the 5th arrondissement
View of the Notre-Dame from Pont de l'Archevêché
Notre-Dame de Paris, again
Pont Marie
French speaking animals
Scenes of Montmartre
Colors of Montmartre
Carrousel at Jardins du Trocadéro
Last morning in Paris
The plaque and Vel' d'Hiv Monument. We should neither accept nor forget.
See you next time, mon Paris! Until then. . .
Labels:
Holidays,
Outside of Vienna,
Spring,
Travel
Friday, April 6, 2012
Turning 30 in Paris: Part I
As most of you lovely readers know, I turned 30 one week ago. I was quite bummed about not being with friends and family back home (a common feeling amongst us expats). However, despite the ache in my heart to be with some special people in my life, David and I flew to France and celebrated the beginning of my 30s in La Ville-Lumière (The City of Light). It also helped that I received a dozen clever video messages from my sisters throughout the day.
There are no words to describe my love affair with Paris. My relationship with this city is much like my marriage with David. It's not that I love them. It's a matter of how much I love them. The connection is soulful and real. I'm a lucky lady.
David + Paris = My Paradise
Scenes around Place Cambronne in the 15th arrondissement
No words.
Birthday dinner #1 at La Place
Rue Saint-Louis en I'Île
Le Sully
Transport in Paris
Place des Vosges
Birthday dinner #2 at Le Suffren
Life. Is. Good.
Stay tuned for Turning 30 in Paris: Part Deux!
Le Sully
Transport in Paris
Place des Vosges
Birthday dinner #2 at Le Suffren
Life. Is. Good.
Stay tuned for Turning 30 in Paris: Part Deux!
Labels:
Holidays,
Outside of Vienna,
Spring,
Travel
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Women's Day
Happy International Women's Day to all of the ladies worldwide! While I may not get to see or speak to many of you amazing women in my life as often as I'd like, I love you all and I thank you for being my sisters. Your strengths, talents, intelligence, and hearts deserve to be celebrated today and always.
Thinking of you all! Here's a virtual hug and kiss to you! Mmwwaah!
Monday, February 6, 2012
Celebrating our anniversary (with Austria)
This past weekend marked our one-year anniversary in the Land of Mountains, Music, and Schnitzel. So to celebrate, we packed our bags, grabbed our heavy coats, boarded the new Westbahn train, and headed to Salzburg, a world-famous, incredibly charming little city in Austria that we had yet to visit.
Salzburg was not unlike Vienna in that it was COLD!!! Double-digits below zero in Celsius-speak. So cold that most of the city was frozen solid, including this fountain at Schloss Mirabell. Peering through the foot-thick ice, we could see hundreds of coins laying at the bottom of the pool - wishes to be granted in the spring when the ice thaws.

A great find was the 220 GRAD coffeeshop - a modern, cozy little place serving up a number of drinkable delights using fair-trade beans that they roast on site. For this and several other local tips, we would be remiss if we didn't acknowledge the recent "36 Hours" article on Salzburg that was recently (conveniently for us) published in the New York Times.
St. Peter's Cemetery. Apparently where some of the flight scenes of "The Sound of Music" were filmed. We thought the architecture was pretty cool; note how one of the chapels is built into the precipice behind it. The latter leads up to Salzburg's famous medieval fortress on top of the Mönchsberg mountain.
Looking out over the city from atop Mönchsberg.
After a short 1.1 km stroll along the ridge from the fortress, one arrives at the Museum der Moderne, which showcases rotating exhibitions of 20th and 21st century art. A highlight of the museum is the restaurant M32. It's a great place to rest the legs, warm up / cool down, and enjoy a snack. The best part is the view over the city, especially as dusk sets in.
One Sehenswürdigkeit ("sight worth seeing") that is off the beaten tourist route is the Hangar-7 complex out at the Salzburg airport. The glass-domed building is a piece of art in and of itself. But the collection of Red Bull-emblazoned airplanes, Formula 1 cars, motorcycles, and helicopters is the real draw. All are the property of Dietrich Mateschitz, the founder of Red Bull, who shares his treasures with the public for free. The plane behind David in the photo is a WWII-era B-25J bomber, and the racing car to the right is the actual one driven by Sebastian Vettel when he won his very first race as a professional some years back.
And this picture was snapped on the train ride back to Vienna as we rode past the Wallersee. I'm in love with the idea of freely ice skating on top of open, albeit frozen, waters. Isn't that how ice skating should be enjoyed anyhow? I must admit that neither David nor I have ever tried it, but I think it's time for us to purchase our own pairs of ice skates and join the winter sport club.
Salzburg was not unlike Vienna in that it was COLD!!! Double-digits below zero in Celsius-speak. So cold that most of the city was frozen solid, including this fountain at Schloss Mirabell. Peering through the foot-thick ice, we could see hundreds of coins laying at the bottom of the pool - wishes to be granted in the spring when the ice thaws.

Salzburg's historic district certainly deserves its UNESCO World Heritage title. We didn't have a great deal of time to explore this part of the city, but minus the throngs of "Sound of Music"-crazed tourists, we felt like we pretty much had the city to ourselves. (The cold weather probably also had something to do with keeping people indoors.)
A great find was the 220 GRAD coffeeshop - a modern, cozy little place serving up a number of drinkable delights using fair-trade beans that they roast on site. For this and several other local tips, we would be remiss if we didn't acknowledge the recent "36 Hours" article on Salzburg that was recently (conveniently for us) published in the New York Times.
St. Peter's Cemetery. Apparently where some of the flight scenes of "The Sound of Music" were filmed. We thought the architecture was pretty cool; note how one of the chapels is built into the precipice behind it. The latter leads up to Salzburg's famous medieval fortress on top of the Mönchsberg mountain.
The mighty fortress -- Festung Hohensalzburg
Looking out over the city from atop Mönchsberg.
After a short 1.1 km stroll along the ridge from the fortress, one arrives at the Museum der Moderne, which showcases rotating exhibitions of 20th and 21st century art. A highlight of the museum is the restaurant M32. It's a great place to rest the legs, warm up / cool down, and enjoy a snack. The best part is the view over the city, especially as dusk sets in.
One Sehenswürdigkeit ("sight worth seeing") that is off the beaten tourist route is the Hangar-7 complex out at the Salzburg airport. The glass-domed building is a piece of art in and of itself. But the collection of Red Bull-emblazoned airplanes, Formula 1 cars, motorcycles, and helicopters is the real draw. All are the property of Dietrich Mateschitz, the founder of Red Bull, who shares his treasures with the public for free. The plane behind David in the photo is a WWII-era B-25J bomber, and the racing car to the right is the actual one driven by Sebastian Vettel when he won his very first race as a professional some years back.
And this picture was snapped on the train ride back to Vienna as we rode past the Wallersee. I'm in love with the idea of freely ice skating on top of open, albeit frozen, waters. Isn't that how ice skating should be enjoyed anyhow? I must admit that neither David nor I have ever tried it, but I think it's time for us to purchase our own pairs of ice skates and join the winter sport club.
Labels:
Holidays,
Other Places in Austria,
Outside of Vienna,
Travel,
Winter
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Holiday Highlights
Happy 2012, friends! How was your holiday break? David and I had an epic 3-week trip home for the holidays. It goes without saying that just being in the presence of my family was the highlight of the trip, but here are some memorable moments worth spotlighting:
Crissmass Cup 2012
Mexican food
The green light bulb in church
Mom's bluebirds
Dad's breakfasts
Kimmy's new glasses
Mexican food
Grove Park Inn, Asheville, NC
Grove Park Inn, Asheville, NC
Malaprop Bookstore/Cafe, Asheville, NC
Lydia's cross-stitch
Mattress on the living room floor
Andrew's poached eggs
Kisses from Lilly in the hot tub
The Wire
Meeting Hilton
The Richardson's Party
Getting lost in Decatur, GA
Family "Renunin"
Mexican food
Her family
His family (with our new little addition!)
The Spa at Grove Park Inn, Asheville, NC
The famous family light bulb (only imagine it green, with a few more silicon spikes).
I hope your holidays were full of good times too. Und ich wünsche ihnen einen guten Rutsch und ein gesundes neues Jahr 2012!
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Mariazell
We took a little Ausflug with friends this weekend to see how Christmastime is celebrated in the Styrian Alps. We spent all of Sunday in Mariazell, an unspoiled, old-world, enchanting mountain village about 150km from Vienna, situated on the border between the states of Niederösterreich and Steiermark.
Mariazell is a sacred destination for Catholics. Legend has it that in 1157, a Benedictine monk was searching through the forest for a place to build a monastery. At one point, his path became blocked by a giant boulder that was too big to move or even go around. Not knowing what to do, the monk pulled a small wooden statue of the Virgin Mary from his bag, knelt in prayer, and asked the Virgin Mary for guidance. Suddenly there was a great noise and the rock split down the middle, allowing him to pass through. As he passed, he placed the small statue respectfully on a nearby branch. Soon thereafter, he and some of the local people constructed a small chapel to house the statue. Word of the miracle and the statue quickly spread across the countryside and the pilgrimage that continues today, had begun. Over the years, more religious events have occurred here and the size of the chapel has grown into a giant Gothic-turned-Baroque basilica that it is today. It is certainly one of the most beautiful churches I have ever seen.
In addition to visiting the church, we also enjoyed seeing the town, roaming through the Adventmarkt, and shopping at the famous Pirker Lebkuchen shop.
Ah, Mariazell. Sie sind so schön.
Mariazell is a sacred destination for Catholics. Legend has it that in 1157, a Benedictine monk was searching through the forest for a place to build a monastery. At one point, his path became blocked by a giant boulder that was too big to move or even go around. Not knowing what to do, the monk pulled a small wooden statue of the Virgin Mary from his bag, knelt in prayer, and asked the Virgin Mary for guidance. Suddenly there was a great noise and the rock split down the middle, allowing him to pass through. As he passed, he placed the small statue respectfully on a nearby branch. Soon thereafter, he and some of the local people constructed a small chapel to house the statue. Word of the miracle and the statue quickly spread across the countryside and the pilgrimage that continues today, had begun. Over the years, more religious events have occurred here and the size of the chapel has grown into a giant Gothic-turned-Baroque basilica that it is today. It is certainly one of the most beautiful churches I have ever seen.
In addition to visiting the church, we also enjoyed seeing the town, roaming through the Adventmarkt, and shopping at the famous Pirker Lebkuchen shop.

Ah, Mariazell. Sie sind so schön.
Labels:
Holidays,
Other Places in Austria,
Winter
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)