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Archive for the ‘Airstream Living’ Category

Bonjour, Croissant!

02 Sep

The scenery on the way to Quebec City.

I do not speak French. At all. I am ashamed to say that I hardly know even the basic French phrases. Beyond “Bonjour!”, I’m at a loss.  Oh, and I know “Croissant” but how many conversations involve this word? Not many, I assure you.  So, I had “lost tourist” written all over me a few weekends ago when we took a trip up to Quebec City. It didn’t stop me from having an amazing day, though. I just did a lot of smiling, nodding, and giving my best “I’m so very sorry I don’t speak your language” look.

Being in Burlington put us less than an hour from Canada and that was just too tempting.  So, I did my research on what documents were needed for Emerson to cross the border and off we went!  (FYI: For one’s own children under 16 years of age, a certified birth certificate is the only document needed if traveling to Canada via land. All other persons require a passport. If you are traveling with other people’s children under the age of 16, the rules are different. And, if you are traveling via air, all persons need a passport, including children. Make sure you check out the State Department’s website before traveling!)

One of the many beautiful parks.

We departed for Quebec City once Chris was finished with work on a Friday afternoon.  We got to the border and for some reason this always makes me nervous. I find I start lecturing Chris miles before we get there; telling him not to make jokes and to answer their questions seriously.  I have all of our paperwork in order and ready to hand over.  We get up to the booth, hand our papers over and Chris begins answering questions.  He threw in a joke or two…I’ve decided he can’t help it. He doesn’t even realize what he’s doing. I give the agent the “Please excuse my husband’s bad jokes” look. I’ve gotten really good at that one.  Thankfully, the border agent tolerated the joking and wished us well on our journey as our 7 week old daughter screamed bloody murder from the back seat.

Downtown Quebec City.

We proceeded on to Quebec City with no reservations and no clue where we’d stay the night.  By 9:00 p.m., after a few stops along the way to eat and feed Emerson, we were about an hour away from the city. (Hmmm…that last sentence is so poorly worded and makes it sound like I’m eating my child. I should remove it but it made me chuckle, so I’m leaving it in.  And, no, I’m not eating my child.  I’m feeding myself and my child on these stops.)  Anyways…we were exhausted by 9pm. Emerson was crying and we needed to stop and try to soothe her to sleep.  So, we did what other RVers and truckers were doing.  We stopped at a rest area for the night. Is this allowed in Canada? Anyone? Anyone? I suspected to hear a knock on the door through the night from officials asking us to leave but no one did.  We slept peacefully (as peacefully as expected with a 7-week old) and continued on our journey the following day.

Downtown.

As you may know, Chris and I approach travel a little differently. I usually like a plan while he prefers spontaneity.  I don’t dislike spontaneity — this method has provided many entertaining and wonderful travel memories.  But, sometimes (like when traveling with a trailer into a foreign city where parking may be an issue), I like a plan.  So, as we got closer to the city I continuously called out, “there’s a campground!” only to be ignored.  His thought was that there would be street parking for us and we could just park and walk into the city.  I had my “I told you so” speech all prepared for when we could find no parking.  I mean, come on! Parking a trailer within walking distance to a popular tourist destination? On a Saturday? In the summer? Not possible! And then I heard, “Look! There’s a parking lot with plenty of spots! And, it’s free!” D’oh! My “I told you so” speech was never delivered. Chris was right. Again. I cannot even begin to tell you how tired I am of him being right.

Playing with Emerson in the park.

Quebec City is one of my favorite places. It’s full of culture, life, beautiful parks, fabulous shopping, delicious food, and entertainment.  If only I knew French so I could easily converse with Quebec’s lovely people! We spent the afternoon walking the beautiful and crowded city streets. We watched the street performers do their break-dancing, magic acts, hula hooping, and creepy mannequin/statue poses. Seriously, those statue people both intrigue and creep me out.  We listened to a great band perform. We had incredible falafel wraps followed by delicious gelato.  We sat in one of the many parks, playing with Emerson and people watching. We witnessed not one, not two, not even three, but four wedding parties getting their pictures taken around the city. Finally, we ended our afternoon with some tasty Tim Horton’s coffee (my first ever!) before walking back to the Airstream.

We made our way back to the states that night, crossing into Maine but not before Chris joked around with the border agent.  Again.  And, once again, the border agent did not laugh.  Shocker.

We also learned a valuable lesson that night.  When traveling from Quebec City into Maine, always remember to make sure your gas tank is full.  Just as we crossed the border, our fuel light came on.  It was dark out. We had no cell phone service. We were in the middle of nowhere.  And, at one point, we were towing a trailer up hill fearing that the truck would die at that moment.  We passed a moose and I’m pretty sure he was laughing at us.  Thankfully, we made it to the town of Jackman, Maine on fumes and found a gas station.  Phew! We called Jackman home that night and boondocked at a lovely roadside park.    It was a fun-filled, exhausting day.

 

I’ve Got a Golden Ticket!

31 Aug

Burlington Waterfront

I knew I liked Burlington, VT. We had been to this lovely city a couple of times but they were always short visits–a couple of hours or so.  Just as our previous visits, we had not intended to stay in Burlington for long. In fact, we had not really intended to go to Burlington.  But, somehow we ended up changing our very tentative itinerary and going there. Those spur-of-the-moment decisions usually prove to be great fun. And, this one did not disappoint.

It all started, of course, with our ice cream and farm tours. We also lucked out with our campground. The City of Burlington has a great campground just north of the city and on the shores of Lake Champlain. North Beach Campground is large and when we were there, it was packed.  I was doubtful we could get a site having no reservations but we when we inquired at the office about availability, we learned there was one spot open for the week.  We chatted briefly about our plans and decided to call Burlington home for the week.  It was an excellent decision.

Chris and Emerson at North Beach

The sites were tight but the location of the campground and its amenities (laundry, beach, bike path, and proximity to downtown) made up for the closeness to our neighbors.   (Not that we don’t love our neighbors….) We had  lovely week.  We spent our evenings walking down by the beautiful beach or in downtown at the pedestrian mall and waterfront.  During the day Chris worked and I tried to keep Emerson content. It was her sixth week of existence. I had read that fussiness generally peaks at the six week mark.  My child was right on schedule. At the beginning of the week she was fussier than normal.  She spent a lot of time in her carrier tight against my chest (her happy place) and we walked around the campground. By Thursday, I needed to get away from the Airstream and campground but to some place other than the grocery store.

I had read in our tourist information about the Lake Champlain Chocolate Factory and after a few days of little sleep and a somewhat unhappy baby, chocolate seemed like a good idea. So, I took a chance and Emerson and I made our way there. Just before tour time, I fed her and she seemed content. But, would she stay that way?

The "Chocolate Waterfall" Machine at Lake Champlain Chocolates. Yum!

The tour was free and included a video and an explanation of how chocolate was made. From an observation booth, we watched ice cream being made and saw the chocolate waterfall.  That’s right! They have a machine that has a chocolate waterfall. It’s the chocolate that covers the truffles.  It’s obviously not the Willy Wonka type waterfall a chocoholic such as myself would like, but it was neat nonetheless.  If I worked there, I’d be way too tempted to send random foods under the waterfall and then eat said random foods.  (e.g., pretzels, nuts, berries of all kinds,  turkey sausage,  etc.)

During the tour, they also provide chocolate samples, beginning with white chocolate and ending with dark. These samples are passed around in small bowls and each person can take a spoonful of chocolate.  I was the last person to get each sample bowl before it returned to the tour guide.  My willpower was tested this day. I could have easily emptied those bowls of chocolate. I, however, was a good girl and only took one heaping spoonful. From each bowl.

Burlington made Emerson happy!

I walked away from the tour a happy mom with a bag of dark chocolate, an ice cream, and a very content child.  Seriously, after that day, she’s been very content and smiley.  Clearly, she’s my child. (Although, she was also happy after Chris’ tour of Magic Hat Brewing and Otter Creek Brewing. Uh oh.) Again, it was a great week.

If you find yourself in Burlington, take the time to explore the area. It has a lot to offer! In fact, we’d love to go back and explore the region a little more if time allows.

 

500 Calories

25 Aug

This is why I find ice cream tasty.

Did you know that while a woman is breastfeeding she is supposed to consume an additional 500 calories in her diet? This is 200 calories more than a woman should consume during pregnancy.  This makes me happy.  I’m going to assume that whoever came up with these numbers expected those extra calories to be in the form of ice cream.  Who’s with me? Anyone? Anyone?  I suspect my good friends Ben and Jerry would support my assumption.  So, I paid them a visit last weekend.

We arrived in Burlington, Vermont and had some time to spare before checking into our campground so I proposed to Chris that we take in the Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream Factory Tour.  In previous trips to the area, we had always passed right by the factory, which I consider a form of punishment.

Why, yes. Ice cream does make me very happy!

Being lactose intolerant, Chris doesn’t eat ice cream, doesn’t like it, and had no interest in seeing this factory.  But, clearly he loves me because for this trip to Burlington, he endured the nearly one hour of learning about the history of the chunky, delicious ice cream, the sample tasting, and the walk through the retired flavor graveyard.

The tour mainly consists of a video and since we were there on a Sunday, the factory wasn’t in operation. Bummer! But, the video was interesting and we were able to see the factory floor from an observation booth and learn about the ice cream making process.  We also learned that employees get to take home three pints a day. THREE! That’s 15 pints of ice cream a week! Sheesh! If I worked there, I would need a bigger Airstream.

The graveyard was full of retired flavors. Some popular. Others...not so much.

After that, came the moment every person on the tour was waiting for: the samples.  Yes, we all paid $3 for the tour but what we really paid for was the “free” sample.  Whatever. It was totally worth it. The day’s sample was a chocolate caramel chunk and I devoured my sample and Chris’ sample. And, I just realized I should have gotten a sample for Emerson and eaten that one, too.  Next time.

Once I consumed all those extra (and, necessary) calories, we walked to the ice cream graveyard to pay our respects to those flavors that were no longer in existence.  R.I.P. Coffee, Coffee, BuzzBuzzBuzz.

It was a delightful tour and I  can finally check this off my “To Do” list.  Now, where are my stretchy, maternity pants? These jeans feel tight…

 

A Tale of Two Campgrounds

23 Aug

An empty but beautifully kept campground.

Remember when we first arrived at the Ashuelot River Campground? I noted how beautiful the campground was and how conveniently located it was to Keene, NH and our birth center. Those were two big factors in why we chose to call that campground home for the season. But, I also noted that there were a few challenges that we hoped would work themselves out over time. Unfortunately, that didn’t seem to happen so we had to move on a few weekends ago.

Like I said, it was a beautiful campground. The owners did an excellent job of keeping the grounds immaculate and the facilities clean. When we first arrived there in May, however, Chris and I both had a bad feeling about the management. They didn’t seem to want us there and we felt more like a burden than welcomed customers. We thought that with time, we would earn their trust and we (and they) would feel more comfortable. As the summer progressed, we knew that would not be the case.  They just were not very pleasant people and did not seem too interested in having campers come to their campground. And, we still seemed more a burden to them even though we were quiet and had few requests.

Hello KOA! So nice to see you again!

Perhaps other visitors to this park have felt the same way as I’ve never seen a campground so empty during the peak summer months — and I’ve been to a lot of campgrounds.  Even during July 4th, there were few campers at this campground.  So, it was a lonely summer.

Chris and I grew accustomed to the lack of people and unpleasant management.  We could tolerate it although we did long for the happy campground camaraderie that we have come to know and love. We thought we could continue on with the way things were primarily because we’ve met so many awesome people outside of the campground and we really  enjoyed the area.  Our patience, however, was tested when we had family members come visit us  to meet their newest family member.

Halloween Night at the KOA.

The majority of our family stayed at the campground. It was great to have family around to help us out with a newborn baby and keep us laughing and sane at a time when Chris and I were severely sleep deprived and overwhelmed.  But, this so-called “family campground” wasn’t very welcoming to our family. The treatment our families received from management made our their’ visits awkward and uncomfortable at times.

I won’t go into the specifics of everything that happened but the actions of management did frustrate us to a point that we felt it was best for us to leave the premises despite the fact that we had paid and intended to stay through October 31.  So, with the help of family (to whom I am eternally grateful), we packed up and somehow managed to get the Airstream out of our campsite–not an easy task!

We decided to go back to the KOA in Brattleboro, VT–the campground we initially started out at when we first arrived in this region.  We were instantly greeted with smiles. The owners, who remembered us, ogled over my child and welcomed us and our family members.

"Okay, Mama and Daddy, I'm ready to do some Airstreamin'!!"

As we were setting up camp, the owner came by on his lawn mower/tractor pulling a wagon and offered my nieces and nephews a ride around the campground. As noted by my brother-in-law, it was as though we had entered a new universe. The campground was (gasp!)…happy and fun. Sure, it didn’t have a river and gigantic campsites but it had people. Friendly people! And, activities! Now, I’m not one who seeks out social activities or requires kids’ events when searching for a campground (at least not yet), but the Halloween in July events that took place while we were there were a welcomed change (as was the free ice cream night!)  While I wasn’t sure if I could handle the sudden  move in my emotional state (hello, baby blues!), it turned out to be a very positive change for us.

So, we are officially back on the road again. Let’s hope Emerson a) doesn’t get us kicked out of campgrounds for excessive crying, and b) likes her car seat for extended periods of time.  Oh, please let her like her car seat.  Please, oh, please!

 

“Ma’am, Did You Know You Have a Baby in Your Pants?”

26 Jul

Our first walk around the campground.

It’s been awhile since my last blog and we have a lot of catching up to do and a lot of pictures to share.  I’ll try and catch up but it may take some time. For now, here’s the most exciting news we have to share.

The week I found out I was pregnant, we were in Virginia at a campground that had cable.  We spent an afternoon cleaning out the Airstream and while doing so, watched a show called “I Didn’t Know I was Pregnant.”  I know, right? Crazy. How does one NOT know she is pregnant? We were intrigued, of course.

In one scenario, a woman showed up at the hospital complaining of severe abdomen pain. That pain moved down into her pelvic region and then suddenly disappeared while she was on the ER bed.  When the doctor cut open her pants, they exclaimed with great surprise, “Ma’am, did you know you have a baby in your pants?”  Seriously. And, given the title of the show, of course the woman was all’ “Wha? No! A baby?”

Emerson loves her Daddy!

In another scenario, a woman went camping and woke up with stomach pains.  She rushed to the campground bathroom only to discover the baby was making its entrance into this world. In the bathroom stall.  On the toilet.  Obviously, I’ve seen my share of campground bathrooms.  All I can say to this is “Ew. I SO wouldn’t want to have a baby in a campground bathroom.”

Thankfully, I neither had a baby in my pants or in our campground’s bathroom.  On July 5, 2010 at 2:53 a.m., Chris and I welcomed our beautiful baby girl, Emerson Skye, into this world…at our designated birth center near Keene, NH.  It was an intense, magical, crazy, humorous (now), and beautiful moment. (For those not interested in my birth story, you should probably stop reading now….)

Traumatized after bath time.

My due date was July 3, and coincidentally, I woke up that day with early signs of labor.  I told myself for months that I would not be THAT woman that panicked and called her midwife too early.  Alas, I was totally THAT woman.  I called her right away actually. I felt she needed the warning that labor was underway.  I’m polite (and annoying) like that.

On July 4, the contractions grew more intense so we met Mary the Midwife at the birth center that morning only to learn that I was only in the very, very, very early stages of labor.  She sent me home. D’oh!

The day progressed slowly but the contractions grew worse.  I was sure I was moving along at a good pace.  I was doing an exceptional job of using my breathing techniques learned in class and my hypbirth CDs.  I considered myself the model woman in labor.  Seriously…I was thinking positive at that point.

Emerson Skye

Mary called around 8:30 that night and asked if we wanted to come back in to be checked.  You bet I did! This was it! I knew it!  We got there and I had only dilated one more centimeter…to a big, whopping 2.  Mary said it could be quite awhile before active labor began (days, even) and recommended we go back home.  But, I refused.  I didn’t want to go back home.  We got permission to stay the night and we all agreed that I would probably be going back home in the morning.  All this happened around 9:30 p.m.

At 11:30 p.m., my water broke.  Mary checked in on us and told me to try and get some rest.  We all still believed it was really early. I promise, I tried to relax.  Chris was amazing at helping me try to breathe properly.  I was listening to the hypbirth sessions on my iPod and struggling to take those deep breaths that the woman in my ear kept telling me to take.

Our first outing was to our pick up our CSA share at the farm.

In my perfect labor dream, I was silent throughout labor. I had fears of being vocal.  In one of the birth videos we watched in class, one woman yodeled her way through labor.  I didn’t want to do that.  And, I didn’t yodel.  But, somewhere around 12:45 a.m. or so, I became demon-possessed, channeling my inner Sigourney Weaver from the movie, Ghostbusters.  You know, “There is no Lani, there is only Zuel.”  And, I did what I really did not want to do…ever.  I screamed.  At the top of my lungs. Probably the loudest I have ever been in my life.  I began telling Chris in my Zuel-like voice to take me to the hospital.  I needed the drugs.  If this was early labor, I was so not prepared for natural childbirth.  Yes, we both still believed this was early labor.  I had visions of Mary coming into the room and saying, “You are only dilated to a 4.  Get some rest.”  Right. Rest? I don’t think so. So, we both avoided calling her into the room.

Introducing her to farm life early.

My screams continued and Chris tried to calm me down.  Around 1:30 a.m., however, the screams and my pleading for a hospital and drugs became too much.  Chris finally called Mary and we waited for that dreaded news that I had not progressed into active labor yet.

Mary came in and once again I screamed like a baby and begged for drugs.  In her calming voice, she, too, told me to relax and then checked my progress.  As I yelled out, “I can’t do this!” Mary uttered words that were music to my ears.  She said, somewhat shocked, “It’s not that you can’t do this! You’ve already done it!” No, there wasn’t a baby in my pants but it was time to push.  And, pushing I could do! My superhuman strength kicked in at that point (just ask Chris) and my screaming ceased.  And, it’s true…a woman immediately forgets the pain of labor once she sees her baby for the first time. The experience was incredible.

So, that’s my story.  Emerson is beautiful.  We are blessed.  And, really, really tired.  We look forward to seeing how this next chapter of our lives progresses.  For now, we continue the Airstream life and are very excited to start our travels once again with the newest member of Aluminum Bliss.  Stay tuned…

 
 
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