Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Working for the weekend

I have a job where I have very flexible hours in the months of June and July. However, these are my husbands busiest times of the year. I find the shift from the daily job during the rest of the year to the flex schedule in the summer (and I only have to put in about 15 total days in these two months) is hard to adapt to. I have so many things that I put on hold until I have the summer "off" and then the weather is so nice and I have each day to myself and before you know it, the time flies by with only one or two of my goals for the day accomplished.

One way I cope is to treat every morning like work. When I have finished my "paid" work there is time for my saved up goals. I have my list, I give myself a start time and an end time. I have my big list on a tablet and check them off as they get done and I write my short list on a white board and erase what I get done and add other things as I go. I call it Long Term To Do because I feel better when I get things done that summer.


 

The afternoons are for outdoor projects like lawn and flowerbed maintenance and appointments or running errands.

Then, before I know it, it is August and time to get back into the regular work routine. And when winter arrives I am ready for vacation!


Monday, June 10, 2013

Preparing for a Grant trip

Often, the best travels are ones that don't come about quite the way you expect.


This is the blog of two best friends who will be teaching in El Salvador for 3 weeks. Lots of pics.

Their story goes....

Preparing for Departure

A couple of years ago, we (Angie and Lara) discussed getting a grant to go to Mexico. We wanted to learn a little more about what our students from that region experience before they get to our little school in Nebraska. That discussion was put on the back-burner until last fall, when we decided that we really wanted to follow through with the application for this grant.
Once we decided to apply, we defined our mission, enlisted proofreading and guidance help, and spent about 35 hours drafting and refining our application, which we sent in the end of January…then it was time to sit and wait…
and wait…
and wait…
Lara had a few speech tournaments, Angie found out she was pregnant (It’s a girl!), we each received other grants for our classrooms, but we continued to wait for the big one…
and wait…
and wait…
Finally, on the Monday after Easter (in APRIL!!) we received a letter from the grant providers, Fund for Teachers, and they had denied us.
Just kidding!!
We had received the money we had asked for, plus more!! The reality hit us. We would be spending three weeks of our summer in El Salvador working on teaching English to students of all ages with the program Travel to Teach.
We soon received our checks, set up a joint checking account (adorable, we know), ordered our plane tickets, school ended, Angie traveled to Florida, Lara to Europe…and that brings us to today…
We leave the US in two days!
Follow Angie and Laura here:  http://searchingelsalvador.tumblr.com/







Friday, May 31, 2013

I love a good sunrise

I am such a spoiled brat. I FINALLY got my dear husband talked into traveling 5 years ago, and now I want to go all the time. What is it with travel that I crave like chocolate? even when I am not planning a trip I am planning a trip. I am home for 3 months and even though the weather is nice, I dream of the beach or jungle or pool side lounging! The sound of waves on the sand and the smell of the leaves decomposing on the forest floor call me. Little blue birds, long legged guinea pig things, iguanas soaking in the heat of the sun call me. I close my eyes for a few minutes, and then get back to pulling weeds! Sustained for a few more days.






Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Our Guide

One of the many guides that make our trips to other countries so rewarding. Guides (and drivers) know the lay of the land and the important points of any sites. At first, many sound like they are the airline stewardess who recites by rote the safety speech with no emotion or thought. But once you start asking questions they respond by expanding into areas that they save for the people who are actually interested in the site. Our lively group gave our man Heber an entertaining audience and he gave us an entertaining tour. We all had a great time. Be sure to tip well according and let them know you appreciate them.

COBA

 The Coba ruins in Mexico are not as visited as Chichen Itza, and not as manicured, but are magical in their own half hidden way.

The site dates from AD 600 to 900 and that makes it older than Chichen Itza. The ruins were discovered in the late 1800's and were not excavated until 1973. In truth, they are not fully excavated even now.
Many of the mounds you see in the jungle just off the pathways are actually buildings and other structures still buried.

 It is a huge complex with many walking paths through the jungle and pedicabs for those who find the walk a bit much. We were there for 2 hours and barely saw anything but the most convenient sites. We started with a guide who gave a brief introduction and cautioned which trees not to touch and then turned us loose.
 At the time of our visit, the tallest pyramid in the Yucatan (Nohch Mul) was open for climbing. Be warned, it is steep with very tall steps. Once you get to the top 130+ feet up, the view is breathtaking. There is a rope to help with the descent, but many opt to use the "toddler" decent and sit on their rears and go down one step at a time. Check with my girlfriend at Rekre8r Travel if you want to book a trip and explore your own corners of the world. (http://rekre8rtravel.com/)







A carved "Stela" or stone tablet
 The pyramid (above)
 The Mayan ball court (at right) 




Sunday, March 10, 2013

Shipwreck museum in Puerto Aventura

 This little museum in Puerto Aventuras is worth the half hour you will spend there if you enjoy diving or sailing, history and culture. The artifacts recovered by a diving club are well displayed, documented and varied. There are Spanish shipwrecks as well as Mayan artifacts from offerings thrown into underground pools called cenotes as well as a history of the diving club. Free will donations are greatly appreciated. You will find it on the back side of the mall surrounding the dolphin plaza area in Puerto Aventuras.

Reconstructed canon carriage for a recovered canon. Other artifacts shown below.













Winter Escape

Back home winter is pushing one last (I hope) assault, trying to leave a lasting impression of cold and wind. But in the warm of tropical ocean breezes it is ages away.
 I used to check messages and email a couple of times a day, but the last couple of trips I lasted 3 or 4 days before I had to get my internet fix.
 Beautiful colors, although it is probably new construction. This is what the world is like outside of the cookie cutter subdivisions.
My last sunrise by the ocean until the next trip.