Thursday, September 1, 2016

A visit to Rapperswil


Today's blog post will be mostly told in pictures. We had a long, full, excellent day exploring more of Switzerland!
We boarded a train to Rapperswil.
Map of our route across Lake Zurich.
Joey riding the train (photo by Mary)
Crossing Lake Zurich (photo by Mary, from the train)
Katie enjoying views from the train (photo by Mary)
In Rapperswil, view of the castle in the background.
I'm having trouble embedding video, so try this link to a vlog Mary made of us walking the old streets of Rapperswil.

Outside of the church (photo by Mary)
A short exterior video tour by Mary, with self-produced sound track.

Family photo in one of the exterior archways of the castle.
View from the castle looking over Lake Zurich towards Pfaffikon, showing the bridge we crossed.
The kids got a close up look at some of the deer that live on the castle grounds.



A short video of the kids playing on the small playground on the castle grounds.

Got one of all three of them in the air at once!
"Everyone stand together in the doorway for a picture!" ......or not!
There was an organist playing beautiful music inside the otherwise empty chapel. Also Mary dances. Check out the video.

Interesting wooden spiral staircase inside the chapel; there was one on each side.
Joey and Lily climbing a staircase up towards the castle.
Large leaves.
After the castle we visited Jucker Farm, where Mary found "the flattest pumpkin I've ever seen!"
Mary took a selfie from on top of the climbing structure at the farm playground.
Joey's selfie.
An interesting play structure.
Looking at the goats.
There were lots of squash sculptures of things related to ancient Rome. I didn't photograph all of them, but here are some gladiators and an aqueduct.



"Driving" a tractor.
Here is a link to a video in which Malorie makes a pitiful attempt to catch a goat which she accidentally let out of the goat pen. Spoiler: she doesn't catch it. Also, during the filming of this video nobody was watching Katie. Oops. Luckily she didn't wander too far off and we quickly found her. Without her hat. So then we had to hunt for that too. When I asked her where it was, all she would say was, "I don't like hat!" We found it though.

Snacking on watermelon while we walked to the playground near Malorie's house.
The playground is small, but fun and interesting.
"There are only three things to play on, but they are all good!" say the kids.

The playground is missing a few safety bars in key locations, so I was a little bit nervous. But Katie was able to climb up and down the ladder to the top level all on her own, and seemed to have the sense not to try to climb through this gap and fall to certain injury.
Peek-a-boo!
I see you!


This isn't the first time we've found ping pong tables in playgrounds - maybe we should buy a set of paddles!
Here's Katie going down the big slide. She didn't want to at first, but after watching the other kids doing it over and over she finally decided to give it a try, and totally loved it!

Mary shows off her gymnastics skills.

Tomorrow morning we are waking up early to take a train to Geneva! Stay tuned for updates on our adventures into the French speaking portion of the country!



Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Lutzelhof

Today we didn't do very much as we are all still a little jet lagged. We did walk to a nearby farm called Lutzelhof though.

Not a great photo, but you can see a little of the view of Lake Zurich as we walked to Lutzelhof.
We had planned on buying lunch there, but sadly we learned that the restaurant is only open on weekends. We did buy some fresh fruit to munch on though, and the kids looked around at the animals. There was also a playground, trampoline, and a whole fleet of ride-on tractors and cars to play with.








Later that afternoon we noticed a neighbor boy playing outside, drawing with sidewalk chalk. Malorie made brief introductions and Mary, Joey, and Lily all played together with him for awhile. Then they decided to walk to the park to play soccer along with a few other kids. Katie and I stayed behind to try to nap. They played all right, despite not being able to talk to each other!

Also, Katie decided today she did not want to use the toilet, so we've used up all the diapers I brought along and had to get some more. Everyone has good days and bad days, I guess. 

It's nearly midnight, but three out of four kids are wide awake. Katie went to bed for a few hours, but now she's awake and won't go back to bed. Joey and Mary insist they are not tired. Lily seems to be the only one not affected by the time change, lucky girl. I think tomorrow will be rough! Hoping we will all get some sleep soon!

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Our trip begins!

We left for the airport on time, despite the fact that nobody started getting dressed until 10 minutes before we were supposed to leave. Joe dropped us off, kissed everyone goodbye (more than once), and we were off!




I’m still amazed that we are carrying everything we’ll need for the next six weeks on our backs! It was nice not to have to worry about checking bags, losing bags, baggage claim, etc. Plus easier to maneuver through the airport! I did have one flight attendant tell me that I was very brave, traveling alone with all of these kids, and that I really should get a suitcase, so I could have my hands free. I was a little confused, because at the time I wasn’t holding anything in my hands...haha!


We had almost a two hour drive to O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, and I was sure Katie would sleep the whole way there. No dice though. Also she really didn’t like being stuck in the Beco baby carrier when she would much rather have gleefully had me chase her all over the airport. So she was pretty fussy and loud when we were standing in line to check in and standing in line to go through security. It felt like it took forever, and we were all relieved and happy when we finally made it to the gate. We had over an hour to wait before we could board, but the kids were super excited to open the snack bags and activity bags I had packed, and time passed quickly. They all said I was the best mom ever - success!








Everybody used the toilet in the airport before boarding the plane - even Katie! We had officially put all of her diapers away and started potty training exactly two weeks before this trip, and while she was doing really great with no diapers, I decided it would be a lot less risky for her to wear diapers instead of underwear on this trip. But she seemed to do great in the diaper, and consistently kept telling me when she had to pee. She used the airport toilet once, the airplane toilet three times, and the toilet on the train in Zurich once, and we made it all the way to my sister’s house in Pfaffikon in the same diaper she was wearing when we left home!


We boarded the plane without a hitch, nobody cried during takeoff, and everybody’s ears seemed to adjust well as we rose into the air. It helped that everybody had their own in-flight movie screen with lots of choices of things to watch and do. Katie started fussing a little bit, but I was able to nurse her and that seemed to help with her ears and she went right to sleep. A little while later Lily (in typical Lily fashion) turned to me and said, “Can you shut off my movie? I’m tired.” and promptly went right to sleep. Fortunately there was an open seat next to her so she could lay down. I was super stoked that the two youngest were both sound asleep less than 45 minutes into our red-eye flight! But before I could settle in and go to sleep myself, Joey handed me his glasses. They were broken. Sigh. Fortunately I think they are repairable, and I’m hoping we can get them fixed in Switzerland after we get settled in. Mary and Joey were too excited to sleep right away (even though I had doled out some low dose melatonin for everyone), but eventually they were all asleep.


Unfortunately this didn’t last very long, and I only slept about half an hour before Katie woke up. And stayed up. The whole rest of the flight. She wasn’t crying or fussy at least, but she was awake and wanting to be entertained.






So when we finally arrived in Zurich I was completely and utterly exhausted. I felt like a zombie trying to get everyone off the plane, and I was taking my time, double checking to make sure we hadn’t forgotten anything. The kids had unpacked a ton of stuff during the flight, and it all had to be repacked. Everyone had their shoes off. So it was kind of a mess after 8 hours and 40 minutes in the air. Suddenly there were a couple of flight attendants around us helping shove things and backpacks and hustling us off the plane. I didn’t realize what the big rush was, until we got to the gate and found they had closed the door already. With us on the outside of the airport. Oops. It all worked out though, somebody made a phone call to somebody and we were escorted to some other door and we finally made it in, and then through customs, and then we were at the exit and Malorie and Cecilia were waiting to greet us!


We got on a train and rode for about 45 minutes to get to where she lives outside of Zurich. The kids had fun playing with their felt play scenes again, and Katie and Cecilia gave each other lots of hugs and kisses.



After the train ride, it was a short bus ride, and then a short walk, and we were there! Hooray! It was late morning in Switzerland, but the middle of the night back home in Wisconsin. Mary, Joey, and Lily seemed in good spirits though, and were so excited to explore their cousin’s house and backyard. Katie and I, on the other hand, were desperately in need of a nap. Thankfully, after a quick lunch, Malorie took charge of the three older kids while Katie and I crashed for a couple of hours. I’m not sure exactly what they all did, but I’m pretty sure they walked to a park, met some local kids and talked with them in German and English for a little while (“Sprechen Sie Englisch?”), and walked to a small store and bought some yogurt and cheese and fruit for a snack.


After I woke up, Malorie and I walked with the babies to a grocery store and bought some food for the next few days. Their family is vegan so their diet is far different than what we are used to, plus all of the foods are a little different here - it’s hard to read labels, and the brands aren’t the same as what we are used to. So we will be having lots of food adventures too! We agreed to not eat meat in the house while we are visiting, but we will be eating some other animal products (milk, eggs, butter, and of course, CHEESE!). For dinner we had a kind of fresh Swiss pasta called spatzle With tomato sauce and fresh tomatoes from their garden, and later some Edamer cheese and figs and toast with butter and jelly for a snack.


Lily and Katie had a bath, and then we decided to watch a show on Netflix to help everyone calm down and settle in for the night. We were all surprised to learn that the Netflix selections are different over here than they are back home! Katie was excited to find that she can watch Peppa Pig now, and Joey started watching Adventure Time.


The kids all fell asleep pretty early, and then I stayed up unpacking and organizing everything, and then writing this blog post update for all of you, and now it’s nearly midnight here and I really must get to bed. Unfortunately I forgot to ask Malorie and Siraj for their WiFi password before they went to bed so I’ll have to wait to post this until the morning.


Can’t wait to update you on our Swiss adventures!

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Well, getting final preparations finished up for our family vacation overseas that is coming way too fast.

We've been trying to get into the minimalist-packing mindset, and decided to only pack one backpack for each member of the family.  So the three oldest kids are carrying their own clothes and bags.  Melissa needs to not only carry her pack (loaded with mom's and baby's clothing, toiletries, etc), she also has Katie in the carrier on her front.  She tried being fully loaded up for the first time this evening, and she claimed she felt like a pack mule!

I'll be taking them to O'hare tomorrow afternoon, they have a nonstop flight to Zurich since she's taking all four kids alone... I'll be meeting her in Paris in a few weeks time.  I'll have to turn over the blog to her and trust she will fill us all in with her adventures with her sister's family in Switzerland.  Good luck honey!



Mom, Mary, Joey, Lily, and snack/activity bags


Sunday, June 2, 2013

Sunday May 26, 2013


We woke up at 8:00, as we needed to pack all our bags before the bus left on the Stonehenge/Bath tour at 10:30.  We actually got packed quicker than I thought, although I ended up throwing a few shirts and socks away to make room for things that we had accumulated during our vacation.  We had some breakfast at the restaurant with Melissa’s grandma and aunt Karen, went upstairs for the last time to grab our bags, and checked out.  We boarded the coach bus after putting our bags below, and we all headed out on our farewell tour.

When we finally got to Stonehenge, whoever had the tickets thought they were only brochures, and either handed them to random people or went in with multiples.  Eventually we all made it in to see the stones, but because we had pre-booked tours in the city of Bath, we only had about 15 minutes to enjoy Stonehenge.  It felt similar to Poulnabrone Dolmen, how it was basically just rocks in a field, but the scale of it was actually bigger than I had expected.  We quickly walked around the place, boarded the bus again, and headed to Bath.

There were two tours set up in Bath: one was a walking tour with a guy dressed in 18th century costume, and the other was to tour the Roman hot baths discovered in the middle of the city.

Melissa and I ended up on the walking tour first, which I found very enjoyable.  The guy had studied history so he knew his stuff.  We wound all over the city, and the guide had arranged for us to see one of the private gardens of one of the houses on “the circus” (Nic Cage recently sold house no. 7 on the circus), so that was an added bonus.  The Roman Baths tour was extremely interesting.  It turns out that the baths were buried and only rediscovered in the 1700s; how something so extensive could be covered up by the expanding town and not found for so long is beyond me, but there you go.  Again, the bus was due to leave the city around 5:30, so we couldn’t see absolutely everything but still saw most.

We bought our train tickets to London Paddington at the Bath Station for 30 pounds each.  TRAVELLERS TIP: WHEN THERE IS A LARGE GROUP TRAVELLING, CHECK FOR GROUP DISCOUNTS!!!  Turns out we could have joined in with everyone else, and although the first person’s ticket would have been 30 pounds, all additional tickets sold for 15.  Oh well.

We arrived at Paddington Station around 8:00, and took the tube to Swiss Cottage, where Adam, Devin, Alex, Alan and Madonna had a hotel reservation.  After Adam and Alex got the keys to the room, we smuggled the other five of us in, and settled into the room for the night.  Madonna and I stayed in the room while the rest of the gang went out for some food.  We ended up having pizza, Chinese, and pasta, along with some convenience store snacks and soda.

The highlight of the night came at bed time, as Melissa and I needed to leave at 6:30am.  With 7 guests and only 2 twin beds, we needed to be creative.  Alan fell asleep on the floor, but we ended up pushing the two beds together, and the other six of us slept on these mattresses somehow!  Yes, you can try and picture it, but I was there and still don’t know how it worked out.  Devin, Adam, Madonna, Melissa, and me sleeping transversely (across the crack) and Alex was along the wall below everyone else’s feet (except me who shared a pillow with him).   Melissa and I only made it part of the night until, due to uncomfortable conditions and snoring, moved to the floor.  We had a horrible night’s sleep, but came away with a very funny story.

Saturday May 25, 2013


I was alone in the morning.  It was nice that Melissa’s uncle kept calling to make sure I was alive.  At least one person cared…

We needed to be ready and waiting for one of two shuttles to take us to Highclere castle, leaving either at 1pm or 1:15.  I got downstairs around 12:45 and waited around with the other ‘smarties’ that showed up early.  After boarding the 1pm shuttle, we were informed we were stopping at a church instead.  We pulled up to see a fleet of period-style cars to give us a truly memorable experience pulling into Highclere.  Except I had no date.  So I just rode with some random people.

Melissa and Malorie woke up at the Vineyard to find they had no running water.  They had to wait for a repair man to fix the water, shower, and needed to order breakfast to the room as they missed the breakfast downstairs.  They got to Highclere with the girls around 9:30 to get ready.

I got to Highclere as they were setting up tea and finger sandwiches, so I got my first food of the day.  We then played some lawn games and walked around the castle until the ceremony began, sometime around 3:00.  The first time I saw my bride was when she was walking down the stairs, immediately before Siraj saw his bride.  They were both beautiful.

After the ceremony was time enough for a tour of some of the rooms, and then into what I can only describe as a library (maybe a lounge) for dinner.  The food was excellent, as was everything the entire day.  We then went into the main hall which they had transformed from the ceremony to the dance floor, and danced the night away.  We got back to the Donnington hotel around 1am, and I collapsed into bed and fell asleep before Melissa had finished taking her hair pins out.

Friday May 24, 2013


Melissa and I woke up around 9:00.  I just sort of laid around in the bed while Melis worked on the computer and answered some emails.  We thought the breakfast provided by Donnington went until 10:00, but around 9:45 we realized that the note slipped under our door the night before said that it only went until 10:00.  We rushed down and arrived in the hotel restaurant in time to have a hurried breakfast. 

There was a taxi waiting to take me to the nearby golf course, and at 10:25 I went to the lobby where we were supposed to meet.  The other guys stayed up the night before extremely late, drinking at the hotel bar, and were also meeting there, albeit groggily.  We finally left the hotel at 10:45, and with a 5 minute cab ride, got to the golf course embarrassingly late for our tee time.  And we were the first guys there.  I don’t know exactly when wee teed off, but the staff had to put us off the back 9, which had less water, but more trees and hills than the front.  The three foursomes each ended up playing a sort of best-ball round, but we ended up quitting after 7, 7, and 5 holes respectively, due to the cold temperatures, rain, and lateness for the scheduled luncheon (I say this in my head in a very English manner, you know shhhejuled…)

The steak sandwich that I ordered in the course bar was excellent, the Guinness on tap sat a little flat on my palate (but still good) and we had a great time all getting to know the rest of us a bit better.  Melissa’s brothers and I took a taxi back to Donnington while the groomsmen went with Siraj to the wedding rehearsal at Highclere castle.

I began to feel a little weird, almost like I ate something bad and felt a bit sick to my stomach.  I laid around until Melis came into the room before the dinner.

Meanwhile…

Melissa met up with the other girls and went downstairs to the Donnington hotel spa.  Each of them got back, neck, and shoulder massages.  The girls staying at the Vineyard hotel went back, Melissa got ready for the rehearsal upstairs, and she then took a taxi with Melanie to the Vineyard.  A van took Melissa and the wedding party to Highclere for the rehearsal.

After the rehearsal, the van took everyone back to Donnington for the rehearsal dinner.

We both came down to the hotel restaurant again for the dinner, my rather reluctantly, and after some table shuffling ended up sitting next to Adam and Devin.  Melissa probably has more to say about the dinner other than “the food was good” but it’s not really her blog, its mine, so I’ll just say that the food is good.  I was continuing to feel sick more and more throughout dinner, and just as the servers brought out dessert, I reached the threshold of my tolerance.  I excused myself from the table, said a quick word to Malorie and Siraj, and headed to my room.  I only had one close-call in the hallway, but I got to the room and laid down on the couch.  For the next 5 hours.

Melissa came up, packed some stuff, and went with Malorie to the Vineyard for the night.  As the matron-of-honor I gave her my permission to abandon me for the night, and off she went.  I was alone with my sickness.
I eventually fell asleep around 1am, once my stomach finally left me alone for a while.  I felt sure that Melissa made a good decision to comfort the bride-to-be.  And there was nothing she could have done for me anyway, other than listen to me gripe and groan.  I just hope Malorie appreciated my sacrifice…