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It's an adventure. Our family of five is taking a year off from... the normal. Less work. More travel. Even (gasp!) homeschooling! We invite you to come along with us as we head West. Then on to Europe. Even grand times at home in between! Our goals: Rest. Connect. Experience. We hope to grow closer as a family and gain a deeper appreciation of all that God is, does, gives. Scaled back commitments. Scaled up adventure. Come along with us as the story unfolds!

Learning the hard way

It looked so innocent.

I took this picture before I knew what was to come.
We had stopped a small restaurant while driving through Normandy.  There wasn't much choice of restaurants, so we decided to be brave and try this one out.
And I was so proud of myself for ordering food in a restaurant where the waiter spoke NO english.  The kids even ordered their own food "saucisse" (sausage).  Kevin got a ham and cheese galette (wholewheat crepe, basically).


I also got a galette, called "la Normand," or something like that.  Although the menu was in French, the ingredients that were listed looked pretty familar - jambon (ham), camembert (cheese), andouille (sausage), normandy sauce (cream sauce).

We received our food, and I excitedly cut into my food.  It had an unusual smell, that I thought smelled like....Well, no, it couldn't be, surely not.  I'm just being overly sensitive.  So I take a bite.  Ughh, not so good.  Maybe it's my imagination.... I'll try another bite.  Hmmm, no, still yuck.  Was it the cheese? the sauce?  I got Kevin to try it.  The look on Kevin's face as he lunged for his coke was priceless.  It confirmed my fears.  Later I googled to see if any French food has the particular flavor that I tasted.  And sure enough, I found something.  Turns out, andouille and andouillette are not the same thing.  One is sausage, and one is intestines.  And well, if you eat, intestines, I'll let you figure out what that might taste like.

Lesson learned.  Be more careful studying the menu.

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On our way to France

To get from England to France, we decided to take an overnight ferry.  So we packed up from Chipping Campden, took a bus, three trains, and a taxi to get to the port in Portsmouth!  It was quite a long journey, but we survived it.  We were all very excited about riding the ferry.

on our way to board our boat
The cabin rooms were tiny!  And there weren't rooms big enough for five, so we split up into two rooms.  Kevin and the boys' room looked just like our room, except there were also two pull down beds.
 As soon as we put our luggage in our tiny rooms, we went up on deck to check out the view of Portsmouth.  It was quite beautiful to be leaving at sunset!




After exploring the boat a little, having some dessert, and then loading up on dramamine, we went back to our rooms to sleep.  And the next morning, when we woke up, we were in France!
the port in St. Malo
 


Got our passports stamped!
 Here's Kevin and Anna studying up on some French!


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Our UK Top Five

Kevin here.  Believe it or not, this is day 45 of our trip.  Forty. Five.  Let that sink in.  We've been trying to do the same.

And we're about to head into our final chapter of this great adventure: France.  First we head to Normandy for a few days.  And then to Paris for the month of May.

Sorry.  I've got to say that again just so I can convince myself:  we'll be in Paris for the month of May.

Outrageous!

Ahem.  So... since we're ending one chapter of our trip I think it's worth looking back at some of the things we've done so far as well as mention a few favorites, some things we've missed, even a few disappointments.  Here goes...

A few of the things we've done over the past 45 days in the UK:

  • Visited Edinburgh, including the great Edinburgh Castle, St. Giles Cathedral, and the Palace of Holyroodhouse
  • Explored Stirling Castle, the Falkirk Wheel, and the William Wallace Memorial
  • Visited Kelly's ancestral homeland in Oban, Scotland including Dunollie Castle of Clan MacDougal
  • Took a car ferry to the Ilse of Mull; then visited Iona
  • Drove up to the Highlands to see Loch Ness and Inverness; ate haggis
  • Took a train through the British countryside from Scotland to London
  • Attended worship at All Soul's Langham Place on Easter Sunday
  • Rode on a double-decker bus through London
  • Saw the changing of the guard at Horse Guard's Parade; and tried to at Buckingham Palace as well
  • Ate ice cream in St. James Park
  • Visited the London Aquarium
  • Went on a Harry Potter-themed walk through London and saw platform 9 3/4 at King's Cross.
  • Shopping on Oxford street, at Harrod's, Liberty, Boden, and at Hamley's Toy Store
  • Had Afternoon Tea at Kensington Palace
  • Shopped the Portobello market in Notting Hill
  • Visited the London Science Museum
  • Saw an English Premier League soccer game at Craven Cottage in Fulham
  • Visited Parliament, Big Ben, and Westminster Abbey
  • Ate LOTS of fish and chips; drank LOTS of tea
  • Saw the crown jewels at the Tower of London
  • Two visits to the British Museum
  • A day trip by boat on the Thames to Greenwich to see the National Maritime Museum
  • Spent time in Covent Garden watching buskers, searching for huge easter eggs, and visiting the London Transport Museum
  • Rode the tube.  A lot.  Taught the kids how to use Oyster cards.
  • Took a day trip to Canterbury to see the Cathedral, Canterbury Tales, and play in the park
  • Went to Hyde Park to walk around, paddle a boat on the Serpentine
  • Saw a musical (Wicked!) in the West End
  • Let the kids buy way too many M&Ms at M&M World in Leicester Square
  • Visited the London Zoo
  • Saw the Churchill Museum and the Cabinet War Rooms
  • Saw the annual Oxford-Cambridge rowing race on the Thames
  • Visited London's Olympic Park
  • Took a night walk with the kids by the Thames
  • Took a train and a bus from London to Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds
  • Visited the great city of Oxford to see Christ Church College, the Natural History Museum, Blackwell's bookstore, and the Eagle & Child Pub
  • Got a haircut in Chipping Campden (me and the boys)
  • Took a day trip to Bath to see the Roman Baths
  • Took a day trip to Stratford-Upon-Avon to see Shakespeare's birthplace, take a cruise on the Avon river, and see The Tempest at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre
Wow.

It's good to write it all down.  You forget so quickly.  We're only about half way done, too. 

OK.... so which have been the most memorable for us?  Tough, tough call.  But let's see...

Kevin's Top 5 UK experiences (in no particular order):
  • The British Museum in London
  • Cruising the Thames to Greenwich and seeing The National Maritime Museum
  • Morning walks in London and Chipping Campden
  • The Fulham game in Craven Cottage.
  • Canterbury.  The city was cool but the best part was how much the kids enjoyed this day, particularly in the park.  The weather was good and they had such fun.  Their joy made for one of the most memorable days.
Kevin's Honorable Mentions:  Edinburgh (the whole town is just cool), boating in Hyde Park, seeing Wicked on the West End which the kids enjoyed so much, visiting the MacDougal castle Dunollie in Oban, Iona, Afternoon Tea at Kensington Palace, cruise on the Avon in Stratford-Upon-Avon.

I could add others.  Like Tea.  We've really gotten into drinking tea.  The kids love it.  Oh... and the train ride from Edinburgh to London.  I loved that too.  See... this is difficult.

Kevin's Disappointments:
  • Pubs.  I've been disappointed in how few let in families with kids.  I expected to hoist a few more pints than I actually did.  We normally had the kids with us when out and about in the UK and it was pretty tough to find a pub that would service us all.
  • Pubs.  I was warned about this and it was true:  the quality of beer available in UK pubs is pretty low.  Now, I'm a bit of a up-and-coming beer snob, it's true.  So keep that in mind.  But what a friend of mine said a few months ago has turned out to be true:  nothing beats the American Craft Beer scene for quality beer.  Sigh.  So, towards the end I often went for a reliable -- if unimaginative -- fallback that was always available: Guinness.
  • I wanted more time in the following museums (in order):  The British Museum, the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, and the Science Museum (especially to view their collection of old instruments).  It was frustrating leaving without seeing everything I wanted to.  No matter.  Next time, next time.
  • Weather.  It has not surprised us that it would be cold and rainy in the UK in March and April.  Nevertheless, we're tired of being cold and wet and always having on our coats.  I could probably live in the UK someday if it weren't for the weather.
  • Overplanning.  I have a habit of overplanning.  My ambition far outstrips both my capacity and my talent.  So I over-planned our time in London.  We were just too busy and tried to do too many things.  It was all still fun.  But we hope to not repeat that mistake in Paris.

Kelly's Top 5 UK experiences (in no particular order):

  • Canterbury - ditto what Kevin said.
  • Oban - I loved experiencing MacDougal history!
  • Afternoon Tea at Kensington Palace (The Orangery)
  • Hanging on the rare sunny days at Hyde Park or St James park, and watching the kids run around and laughing as Anna tries to alternately make friends with the pigeons and chase them.
  • Seeing REAL castles (that includes Edinburgh, Holyrood, Stirling, Tower of London, etc.)
I know it's says top five, but I can't leave out our stay in Chipping Campden.  I've loved being in this small town.  It's so pretty, and we can walk anywhere.  Two weeks has been the perfect amount of time to stay here.

Kelly's Disappointments:

  • Definitely the weather, like Kevin said
  • That we had to keep homeschooling.  I wish we could have just done the history and not had to worry about math, grammar, journaling.  But I just couldn't, in good conscience, neglect those basics.  And I really wanted the kids to journal so that they could look back on it and remember our trip!  Also, homeschooling is what helped make this trip possible!  (yes, I'm convincing myself).

So, there you go.  A few thoughts as we wrap up the first half of our family adventure of 2012. 

A très bientôt!


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Stratford-upon-Avon

Now that we've finished up on things we did in London, here's an update on a more recent trip. On Monday we took a trip to Stratford-upon-Avon.  It was only about a thirty minute bus ride away from where we've been staying in Chipping Campden.


We were excited to be in William Shakespeare's town, even if it was cold and rainy (no, that's not him in the middle above). We were thankful that at least the rain mostly held off until the late afternoon.
This memorial statue of Shakespeare was done by Lord Ronald Gower back in 1888.  It was pretty impressive, well except, Will needs to get the bird poop rinsed off his head!
After eating lunch, we headed over to the Avon (river), and we were amazed and delighted by all the swans, pigeons, ducks, geese, all kinds of birds!



We bought some geese and duck food, and we had fun feeding the birds.  They all seem pretty used to getting food from people!
Anna was trying so hard to make friends with birds.  


Once our swan food was gone, we walked around town and made our way to Shakespeare's birthplace. This was the place where he was born (obviously from the name) and spent the first five years of his life. Before we went in the house, we saw a short film about Shakespeare and the impact he's had on the world with his plays.  We also saw one of the original books with all his plays in it (his Folio, stored inside a glass case).  It was so cool.  It's just amazing to think about how talented he was. The home was pretty humble, and most of what we saw was recreated as to how the home was thought to have looked in Shakespeare's time. One of the rooms was set up as a glove-maker's shop, which was what Shakespeare's father did.




Inside Shakespeare's childhood home (I took this picture before I realized that photos weren't allowed - oops)
the garden outside the home
After some dessert (and tea of course!), we took a river cruise along the Avon.  Even though a light rain had set in by this time, the boat was covered, and the view was beautiful.  There were lots of barge type boats parked (moored?) along the side of the river, and Kevin was imagining how fun it would be to live on a boat like that, stopping at different towns.  Well, he was imagining that until I reminded him that I get seasick.  Oh well.  There were also lots of beautiful weeping willow trees along the riverbanks.  So pretty!





We had a yummy dinner of fish and chips.

To finish off the evening we, of course, had to see a play!  We had been looking forward to this since before our trip.  We chose to see "The Tempest," since Daniel had been in a school play of it.  The story is a bit complicated, and it wasn't the easiest to follow, but we all mostly knew the story, so it turned out great!  Daniel was particularly excited when he heard lines that he had memorized for his part!


The Royal Shakespeare Theater
This shirt seemed fitting for Anna (the quote is from "Midsummer Night's Dream")

Inside the theater with the set behind Daniel and Justin
Despite the weather, it was a really fun day!  There were more things we could have seen (the home of Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare's wife; Nash's house; Hall's croft; Mary Arden's cottage; I'm not even sure what all those are).  We chose a slower pace, and so that made for an enjoyable day.  We even had time to visit a Christmas shop and a teddy bear shop.

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A Walk Through Middle Earth

Kevin here.

As I mentioned in a previous blog post, we were constantly on the move in both Scotland and London.  I don't think there was a single day over that 4 1/2 week period that we weren't out and about.  And on many of those days in London, we also came back to our flat so that I could do some work while Kelly worked on schooling with the kids.

It was all fun.  But exhausting.  So it was with not too little anticipation that we arrived in Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds hoping to slow down and get some rest.  And that's what we've been able to do (well, mostly.  I've still had to work and there's still homeschooling to do).

We've been able to sleep in many days, go on walks, and watch some TV.  Kelly and the kids found a playground nearby that they've visited several times.  We've done a small bit of shopping, taken a few day trips via bus and train (Bath, Oxford, and Stratford-Upon-Avon), and eaten some great fish and chips.  We've popped some popcorn and played UK versions of Monopoly and Clue (called Cluedo,  it was originally invented in London during WWII as something to play while underground in shelters during air raids).

It's rained quite a bit, which has been unfortunate, if unsurprising.  And I had a nasty cold that saw me stay in bed quite a bit for several days last week.  But apart from that, it's been a great time.  This part of the world really is one of the most beautiful places we've ever seen.  The pace of life here is dramatically different than from, say, London.  Or even from Atlanta.  It's much slower.  But it's been the perfect spot to crash for two weeks.

But I think that one of the highlights has been walking the town and adjacent countryside.  (In fact, as I write this, Kelly is out and about walking through the towns and fields of the Cotswolds.)

So, I thought I would share some of the pictures (click on them to enlarge) I've taken as I've walked around:

Chipping Campden High Street, looking to the West 
Chipping Campden High Street, looking to the East
Chipping Campden is not a large town.  But there are certainly smaller towns in the Cotswold region.  Chipping Campden, after all, does have a bus that comes through here, two tiny grocery stores, a school, an indoor swimming pool, and a several shops and restaurants.  But, it consists mostly of High Street (what we in the US would call "Main Street") with a few side roads.  That's about all.  It can apparently get crowded during the summer -- tour buses do come through --  but it's been pretty quiet for our visit.

There are not many pubs here; mostly nicer restaurants.  In many ways, Chipping Campden is -- like many Cotswold villages -- a retirement community.  Many people -- some American expats, but mostly British retirees -- make their home here.  And while places in the Cotswolds do have their share of subsistence farmers and work-a-day folks and those who service the tourists in some way, not a few of the cottages have Jaguars, Porches, and Audis parked behind their gorgeous, manicured garden entries.  (A taxi driver remarking on all of the beautiful gardens said that it was because the retirees had all of the time and money to spend on them).  And a quick gander in the realty offices tells the tale: most of these quaint cottages -- most made of golden-hued "Cottswold Stone" -- are quite expensive.  And, during summer months, there are apparently a few arts and music festivals both here and nearby.



It's not an understatement to say that virtually everything in Chipping Campden is beautiful.  And a lot of it looks the same.  But the sameness is of a quality that is invigorating rather than boring.  I've heard similar things said about places like Tuscany in Italy:  no one ever goes to Tuscany and complains that they were bored since it all looks the same.

The beautiful stonework, the thatched roofs, the manicured hedges, the colorful gardens... it takes me to descriptions that Tolkien uses for Middle Earth.  It has a feeling of oldness to it.  Not the American-kind of oldness that is equivalent to something no longer worth using, ready to throw away.  But an oldness that speaks to longevity and value.  Transcendence, even.  You can tell that when people build buildings here -- or, more likely, refurbish a really old one -- they are building something not just for themselves.  The building is intended to outlast the builder and, even so, is a kind of a gift to the community (the current one and the ones to come).  Everything is to human scale here (as opposed to cars).  It feels invigorating to me.  More humane.




I once caught the very end of a wedding at the local Catholic church in town.

As you head out towards the countryside you can't get far before you see beautiful fields of yellow:


Rapeseed fields
This is rapeseed.  It's planted to produce rapeseed oil, what we in the US would normally call canola oil.  Another cab driver (you learn the best stuff from cabbies) told us that about 10-15 years ago there was an explosion of interest in biofuels and it was thought that rapeseed/canola would lead the way and be a tremendous cash crop.  And so virtually everyone in England began to plant rapeseed.  So much so, that people said that you could fly over England and see the "yellow brick road." But, like all manias, the biofuel reality turned out to be less significant (at least, so far).  Plus, since everyone was planting rapeseed, the value of the crop began to fall dramatically.  Still, there remain many miles of rapeseed fields which are quite beautiful in the early spring.

But even without beautiful fields of yellow, every direction offers great views of the surrounding countryside.


And most Cotswold villages have an ancient Abbey or two visible in the distance.  Chipping Campden has St. James Church (which we've attended twice) along with it's resident graveyard.






And, of course, sheep.  Sheep everywhere.  We've been told that Cotswold wool is basically too rough and coarse to be worth anything (unlike, say, Merino wool).  So the value comes primarily from their meat.


One cool thing about the Cotswolds is all of the public footpaths.  Cotswold is known for it's 100-mile hike known as the "Cotswold Way" that begins in Chipping Campden and winds it's way through the villages and countryside until it reaches Bath.  That's a trip -- either by foot or with bikes -- that we have to do some day.  Sounds awesome.

Until then, we took the local public footpaths wherever they would take us.  And normally that would be through a field of sheep or rapeseed.

  


I'll take their word for it.
One of my favorite hikes was over to another little Cotswold town called Broad Campden, a little over a mile away.  There's not much there.  But it's beautiful.


Along the way, I found a posting for a father-and-son molecatching business.


And came upon this small, gorgeous little church (seen below).  Under the tree to the left is a bench where I would sit for quite a while and pray, reflect, journal.  One of my favorite spots.


And... uh... here's a dead badger I saw on the road.  This guy is bigger than he looks in the picture.  Apparently their are quite a few badgers in these parts.  And I gather that they can be mean, mean, mean.


And I thought this was one of the coolest looking old fences I've ever seen.  They don't make them like this anymore:


And, finally, one of my favorite cottages along the way.  Remember to click on the picture to see more detail.

I could post more, but I'll stop there and trust that you've gotten a feel for the Cotswolds in general and Chipping Campden specifically.  One regret I have is that we haven't seen more of the Cotswolds:  places like Stow-on-the-Wold, Bourton-on-the-Water, and Wychwood.

But we have to leave something for next time.



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