Friday, November 18, 2011

Remembrance Day in London

We have had the most glorious autumn weather! We took the boys into London on the Sunday of Remembrance Day. The weather was a perfect cool, crisp and sunny. We drove in and parked on Bayeswater Road next to Kensington Gardens where artists set up along the sidewalk to sell their work. The boys are dying to buy something. We took them to the Diana Princess of Wales Memorial Playground to start the day, then we walked through Kensington Gardens, Hyde Park, and past Green Park to Buckingham Palace.





There was a lot of Remembrance Day celebration activity. Everywhere there were elderly men dressed in decorated uniforms. We saw lots of medals, and we also saw a uniformed Prince Charles in a very fancy car pulling into a very fancy building! After Buckingham Palace we walked down the mall to Trafalgar Square and watched two young guys play Amazing Grace in front of the National Gallery.


Our boys were troopers and were entertained with leaves and sticks and sight seeing. Mike gave each a shoulder ride or two.


Around the corner in Covent Garden Mike navigated us to Café Pacífico, a MEXICAN RESTAURANT!



One of three signs outside restaurant reminding us we are in England.
After lunch we walked east to St. Paul's Cathedral and then north to the Museum of London.





There were protesters camped out next to the cathedral, chilly work.


The museum tells the story of London from prehistory, to the Romans, Saxons and medieval, Tudor and Stuart. We watched a video about the plague of 1665, and then another about the Fire of London, 1666. This link has information and a game for children about the fire.

The boys are intrigued by the plague, and so am I. 100,000 London residents died, about 20% of the population. I just finished Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year and I also want to ask my mommy over and over if this can happen to me.


To the boy's delight, the museum has examples of clothing which children wore in olden days.

Leather jerkin.

I happily ignored the many heads that share these items, hoping that optimism will keep us safe from a more likely plague of lice...


Liripipe hood has pointed end that can wrap around neck for extra warmth.
Wooden shoe covers are called pattens.

Bring out yer dead!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Sneaky Burger


Tucson, I love you so much! Leaving makes us appreciate our hometown so much more. It looks so good from here. Watch the video to see a charming annual Tucson event.

Amazing Grace
 Now, back to England!

An associate of Mike told him about a great burger place..."Next to the American Embassy is a brilliant spot where all the smart Americans nip in for a sneaky burger."

Wolverine pausing for a sniffy sniff on blankie.
Smart means well dressed, and our boys use it all of the time. "Do I look smart?''

Note to self, wash windows before next photo op.
Melina, Rolle, Iggy and Mimi came over for dinner. We had pies from Sweeny and Todd Pie Shop!


Sweeney and Todd
10 Castle St
Reading, RG1 7RD
0118 958 6466

We had a lot of fun at Oaklands School Guy Fawkes fireworks. The burgers were so much better, I have to shout it from the rooftops. Last year they were frightening hockey pucks. This year, Dopsons Butcher shop provided the meat. Hurray!


The Guy Fawkes Day is a pretty interesting holiday. Every year on November 5th since 1605, England commemorates The Gunpowder Plot by burning Guy Fawkes in effigy and going absolutely bonkers with fireworks. Fireworks explode for weeks from every backyard in the country.


Guy Fawkes belonged to a group of provincial Catholics and in 1604 he became involved in a plot to assasinate the protestant King James, and replace him with his daughter, Princess Elizabeth.


Following an annonymous tip, authorities searched Westminster Palace and Guy Fawkes was caught guarding a bunch of gunpowder. He was tortured and came clean. He jumped from the scaffold at the moment of his execution and broke his neck, avoiding being hung, drawn and quartered.

Dominic and Archie, one year older!

Dominic's reading book. Dad is getting a yellow card.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Jack-o-lantern

These are the people I am missing so much. Aren't they dreamy?


Early morning chess game with vampire spectator nestled in coffee table bed.


Count Dominic rising from his blankey filled tomb.


Trying to replicate Pollo Feliz, Mike and I made roast chicken, corn tortillas and salsa.


It was satisfactory.

London Pride
 I have to include these, because I think they are so adorable.

The first photo shows detail from a drawing by Michael of different animal bullies. Featured here is the shark bully.


This next photo shows Dominic's version of Michael's shark bully. Admiration for a big brother.


Happy Halloween! We had a fun night with our American friends and our neighbors. First pizza and veggie party.


Followed by traditional trick or treating.


Our American babies were forgetting the rules, shouting "Happy Halloween!" as people opened their doors.


Mike and I hissed, "It's trick or treat!"




Best neighborhood pumpkin!



There is a shortage of pumpkins in England (perhaps elsewhere as well?). I subjected myself to a grocery store search the day before, which is stupid, I know.


Pumpkins were not to be had, but watermellons did the trick!



I think they make smashing jack-o-lanterns!


Lastly, a peek at Anna in her halloween getup as Devendra Banhart.

In case you're wondering, here is the real fellow.