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Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA. Show all posts

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Show and a Tell

One of the joys of teaching was always the Show and Tell sessions with the children...especially in the Early Childhood classes I worked with.
In 2011 when DH and I went on our driving holiday of the US, I took great delight in buying little items for my neighbour's grandson as we went along. Jay had always helped his grandma with feeding our cats and he loved watering my veggie patch when we were away so it was a thank you to him. I sewed a drawstring bag and placed all the souvenirs in it and he was set for Show and Tell for weeks!

(That post is here and I was horrified to see how long it took me to make the bag and give it to Jay)

Well this year saw 2 of our great nieces starting school, so another opportunity for collecting little 'bits and pieces' was there. 
And over the last day or two I finally made 2 drawstring bags for each girl's collection. 
Inside Alex's bag...

Lucy's bag...


And her goodies...

Both bags have a list...
The bags are made with strips from a jelly roll I bought in Wallmart in 2011; Jay's bag was made with the same jelly roll. The lining for these latest bags is some San Francisco fabric that came in a Scrapbag from eQuilter years ago. 
However there were another couple of items bought which have not gone into either of these Show and Tell bags, but which DH and I say will eventually go to the young people in our family...
DH wants to play with the school bus for a while before it goes to Lucy's little brother Max.
And I bought this moose puppet ostensibly for Lucy but I want to play with it for a while too! Lol
I'm probably a bit greedy hanging on to the moose for a while because when we unpacked after arriving home, DH produced another puppet which he had secretly bought for me after I had fallen in love with it but wouldn't buy because we already had bought so much 'stuff'. 
Another Moose puppet!
But that's not all!

Turn the moose over and pull down the 'glove' and voila! A black bear!! Love it!!!

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Looking back 12 months...

Twelve months ago, DH and I set off on our USA holiday; a holiday of a lifetime. Because we crossed the International Dateline, we ended up having two March 5s. We arrived early in the morning at LAX (which is enormous to a couple of Aussies from Brisbane), and got a shuttle bus to where we were staying at Santa Monica. As soon as we checked in, we went in the hotel's courtesy bus downtown to explore.





Remember how I was fascinated with the store in Santa Monica that had the windows full of old sewing machines? here :-)



It was a lovely warm day and we walked down to the famous Santa Monica Pier. What a beach! It was so wide; and how busy was the funfair on the pier?





I was captivated by this old carousel/merry go round


We visited the Information Kiosk as that was where an elderly cousin of DH's mother, Thelma, had worked as a volunteer for many years.

The information booth and the Route 66 sign showing the other end of the famous road system




Sadly she died a matter of weeks before we arrived; she was 97! It was lovely to see that there is now an award in her name for outstanding employees in the tourism industry of Santa Monica.

So where has this past year gone? It doesn't feel like it all happened 12 months ago! lol

Monday, March 14, 2011

Making our way to Utah...

On Sunday we left Vegas and headed to the Hoover Dam. It was certainly a magnificent example of engineering. It was built in 4 years, 1931-1935 and was built using huge concrete blocks as to pour that much concrete would result in problems with it curing at different rates. Sadly, I have no photos of Hoover Dam as I did a very stupid thing. I left my camera’s SD card in the hotel at Vegas and guess what? The camera doesn’t work without it. DH rang the hotel but they obviously didn’t find it as they didn’t ring back. So at the first opportunity I bought a new card and that wasn’t until Mesquite later in the day...sad I know but DH has photos but he’s not uploading photos as we go like I am. So maybe some time later I’ll show the photos I took with his swish camera.
This is the Virgin River

The road seemed to stretch into the distance and come to a dead end at the mtn range. As we got there, we found this amazing road through the pass...it took about 10 minutes to get through.
Our journey took us through beautiful country; the scenery was breathtaking! In many ways it was like the Grand Canyon. The colours were amazing, as were the landforms. Some of the land was obviously used for ranching, although we didn’t see cattle, we did see quite a few sheep. We also noticed more and more snow on the mountains as well as drifts near the road and the temperature dropped significantly  as the day moved towards nightfall.

After the Pass, we went through country with canyons like this

Snow-capped mtns on the way to Cedar City
Our overnight stop was at Cedar City; a lovely town. It was amusing to discover that upon checking in, DH had to sign an agreement that we wouldn’t smoke or bring alcohol into our rooms. ( We always ask for a non-smoking room but we've never had to 'sign the pledge' before! lol) Dinner was at Sizzler and no alcohol was served unlike the Sizzlers at home. There was snow in the garden beds near our room last night but no new snow this morning. It (the temp was supposed to drop to 29 F which is below freezing, during the night, but it didn’t)
This morning we headed off to Salt Lake City (SLC) with more and more snow on the landscape. We passed more ranches and did see lots of cattle today. We noticed a speed advisory sign of 80 miles per hour which is ca 128 kph! It was a good road but the fastest legal speed at home is 110 kph.
We lunch at Nephi in a Wendy’s restaurant. The girl serving us asked if we were Australian. She told us that her sister is moving to Oakey (in Qld) as her husband has a job there. And to digress a bit, a woman at Hoover Dam, asked us where we came from then said her son had been a Rotary Exchange student for a year in Warnambool (Victoria) and that’s my grandparents’ home town!
Back to the travelogue...we arrived in SLC mid an hour or so later and found a hotel etc after we’d stopped at the Visitor Centre. We wanted some brochures so we could work out our itinerary for tomorrow. The hotel looked ok but as DH said, it’s not as good as last night’s...we had to ring the office and complain about the loo (toilet); it wouldn’t flush. A guy came over and fiddled around with it and it worked...once. When we came back after dinner (after 9) wouldn’t work would it...we should have complained but being those ‘tough’ queenslanders that we are, we took the lid off the cistern and pulled up the wire ‘thingy’ and flushed like that. Tomorrow morning we will have a serious talk with management.
The capitol building in SLC

Arriving in SLC


Anyhow, I’ve meandered off the topic again! This afternoon we drove out 20 miles to Olympic Park where the 2002 Winter Olympics were held. It was great...the actual snowfields are still there despite it being Fall.

Just before Olympic Park on the lower level

Outside the Visitors' Centre at Parkview just below Olympic Park


Just showing how much snow is still around in the 'arena' area of Olympic park


Another view inside Olympic park
After that we came back to SLC and went straight out to dinner. I couldn’t face a Fast food place again and said dinner was ‘on me’!  I didn’t care what it cost as long as we had some healthy, well-cooked nutritious meal. We went to Cucina Toscana and the meal and service were sublime. A lovely restaurant with cloth napkins and tablecloths, free breads and olive oil, coffee, and hot chocolate. The waiters wore smart shirts and aprons just like my dad used to wear when he ran a milkbar in the 1950s! I asked our waiter John, to explain what the word ‘entree’ means on a US menu. At home it means a tiny sized first course usually after the soup. Here it apparently means, ‘main course’! There you go! Yet something else I’ve learned!