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Dole Plantation, Oahu

09/08/2014 by Jamie 30 Comments

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Since we were trapped in the house all day yesterday while the hurricanes past around Hawaii, we had to get out of the house today! So we drove north to the Dole Plantation in Wahiawa. My sister is visiting this week and she wanted a Dole whip, and my son wanted to ride the train, so it was the perfect afternoon adventure.

PicMonkey Collage

The Dole Plantation has a botanical garden, corn maze, train ride, farmers market and a big store with lots of pineapple paraphernalia. There’s also food, drinks and Dole whips!

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When we were in line to buy our tickets on the train, a boy found a gecko and put it in a plastic bag. As he closed the bag the other people in line gasped and said the boy was going to kill it. I tried to get the family’s attention but they didn’t speak English and didn’t seem to understand. My sister said someone walked over and saved the gecko while I was purchasing our tickets.

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In line for the train ride (a 30 minute wait on a Saturday) a family with a little boy around my son’s age told us we had to go feed the koi fish in the pond afterwards. She said they went to the store beforehand to buy fish food because it was too expensive to buy it from the machine by the pond. Then she grabbed a paper bag and filled it with about 3 cups worth of fish food and handed it to us.

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After we threw large handfuls of fish food at the pile of koi, we were done, but still had some left in the bag. There was a little boy next to us who was grabbing fish food off the ground that others had dropped and throwing it to the fish. So we offered him our leftover bag, and he looked confused and said “Why?” I told him we were done and he took off running with the bag. As we walked away from the pond he came running back with his sister and yelled “Thanks!” as they ran to the pond.

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After the train ride and fish feeding, we went to get some food! My sister got the traditional Dole whip in a bowl, my son got a Dole whip cone, and I got a huge bowl of pineapple. While he was stealing my pineapple he dropped his cone and didn’t seem too concerned. He ended up eating almost all my pineapple! If you have never had pineapple in Hawaii I can’t even explain how amazing it is. You just have to try it. At least he didn’t get upset about the dropped cone!

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There were even a few chickens and a female peacock that showed up. It was a great afternoon at the Dole Plantation!

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Filed Under: Oahu Tagged With: Dole Plantation, Hawaii, Oahu

Bagmati River, Nepal

06/08/2014 by Jamie 13 Comments

Nepali women

|Image Source|

In May 2001, I traveled around Nepal for two weeks. We walked around Kathmandu, visited temples, and fought off the monkeys that chased us.  One afternoon as I walked near the Bagmati River, I heard loud wailing surround me as a funeral procession slowly made its way towards the water. The dead body was carried above them on a mat; flowers and white sheets covered the body. The crowd wailed their way to the river, and they lit the body on fire. Hair and flesh burned, a bonfire blazed in the daylight. To be honest, I was kind of terrified, but I was trying hard to appreciate the sacredness of the ceremony.

Hindus believe that burning the body releases the spirit, and the flames represent the creator. They believe that touching a person’s body after death pollutes them. Family and friends will gather near the body immediately after the death to pray over it, even though they can’t touch it. Then the dead body is often paraded through the streets of the city, to places that were important to the person while he or she was living. Most traditional Hindus believe in reincarnation, that the spirit moves on to another body, so the funeral is often a celebration of a new beginning as well as a memorial for the deceased.

According to Hindu tradition, they must dip the corpse in the Bagmati River three times before cremating it. After they say their prayers, they dump the charcoaled remains into the river. The Bagmati is considered holy (by Hindus and Buddhists alike) and mourners often bathe in the holy river or sprinkle it on them after the cremation. Further downstream women collected river water in jugs. Two little boys kicked a ball around and it fell down into the river. One of the boys ran splashing into the river to retrieve it.

Kathmandu Burning Ghats Bagmati River

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Travel Tuesday

Filed Under: Encounters Tagged With: Nepal

LET’S BE FRIENDS!

05/08/2014 by Jamie 2 Comments

 

Welcome to the Let’s Be Friends Blog Hop!

 

A blog hop is a set time frame for current or aspiring bloggers to find new blogs and quality content. It is a great way to make new friends and find inspiration! It is also a fabulous way to promote your own blog and posts.
 
Dear Friends,
 
What a day to celebrate! This is the 77th week of the Let’s Be Friends blog hop! Thanks for joining us on this special day. Chelsee and Tiffany are extremely delighted to see the way this hop has grown and love to see your faces each week! 
 
Join us every Tuesday at 7am (MST). This blog hop focuses on content. LINK UP YOUR FAVORITE POST from last week in this fun content-sharing blog hop! I love the idea of blog hopping, but I love the idea of reading posts and quality content on new blogs I’ve never been to even more. Instead of simply linking up your blog button, you are now able to link up your favorite post you recently wrote. Have a delicious recipe to share, DIY tutorial, or heartfelt post? Share it with us! All hosts and co-hosts put up some unique and fun content from the past week. Make sure to check them out. P.S.- you may still link up your blog button and blog name, but it is encouraged to link up your favorite post instead. You will get more page views and interest if you do so! Some of the most successful blog hops I have participate in focus on content rather than just exchanging follows. You never know who will become a loyal follower or pin that delicious new recipe you posted!
 
The BEST part of this blog hop? Each week there will be a WINNER! That’s right, each week we will choose one lucky blog to feature from the previous week’s hop. This hop receives thousands of page views every week, so your blog will have the chance to be center stage for free. You must follow all the hosts and co-hosts in order to win. Only those who link up a specific post are eligible to be featured! *You must follow all the hosts and co-hosts in order to win.
 
The last exciting change is that the co-host spots will now be available to all sponsors of  The Dwelling Tree or Southern Beauty Guide. If you are interested in co-hosting the blog hop, email Tiffany or Chelsee about sponsorship opportunities and how to co-host the weekly hop!
 
There are a couple of great giveaways going on right now at Southern Beauty Guide and The Dwelling Tree. Go check them out! :)
 
Let’s Be Friend’s Blog Hop Guidelines
1. Link up your favorite post from your week.
2. Follow your hosts and co-hosts.
3. Grab the button and post it on your blog so we can share the love.
4. Visit 3 other blogs and follow them along!
5. Tweet about this blog hop, using #letsbefriends
6. Pin the button on pinterest so we can spread the news! 
 
 
***Once a week, one blog will be chosen to be the featured blogger from the previous blog hop. 
 
Meet your hosts: 
 
The Dwelling Tree: Blog, Bloglovin’
 
Southern Beauty Guide: Blog, Bloglovin’
 
&
The co-hosts:
Krysten @ Why Girls Are Weird
Jillian @ Hi! It’s Jilly
Christine @ Life with a side of Coffee
Jamie @ North of Something
***This weeks featured post from last week’s hop:
Source
Taste of Tuesday: Mexi-Corn Dip
Home of Malones
 
Hi everyone! This is Chelsee this week. Thank you all once again for continually linking up at our blog hop. It is such a fun time and I am so impressed each week with all the amazing posts. Please continue to link up an actual post instead of your blog. We want to keep reading your content and it makes it more fun to pick a winner! 
 
… onto the winner! 
 
I admit picking a post while starving is not necessarily a great thing considering the amount of delicious recipes linked up each week. As I was panning across the linkup looking at the link addresses I noticed one in particular included the work “Mexi.” Well I am pretty much a sucker for anything dealing with Mexican cooking, so this word rather intrigued me. I of course clicked and saw a combination that I did not expect. I admit that Annie…a mom from New Orleans, raised in florida, new mom, and amazing home builder is quite simply a genius. I have never heard of anything like this, but I must say Annie is a genius! This looks so yummy and is a recipe that I will be trying soon! I highly recommend you head over and check it out!   
 
I have to say that regardless on what you like to read Annie has a bit of it all on her blog. If you have a few minutes to spare I recommend you just looking at the home she had built. It looks like something straight out of a magazine! Make sure you head over and say hello! I am excited to have a new recipe to try! 
 
Follow Home of Malones
 
Keep posting awesome content! You make it so fun for us to read all your posts! If you can, please link up a specific post. It makes it easier for us to come and visit! 
 
*Remember YOU can be next weeks winner! :)
 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

An InLinkz Link-up

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Book Review: In the Neighborhood

02/08/2014 by Jamie 4 Comments

Book Review Lovenheim

Peter Lovenheim’s memoir In the Neighborhood was more or less what I expected from the subtitle: The Search for Community on an American Street, One Sleepover at a Time. After a murder suicide takes place a few houses down from him, Lovenheim makes it a personal goal to get to know the people with whom he shares his street. Some neighbors give him the cold shoulder, but others embrace his efforts, welcoming him into their homes and sharing their own perspectives on what makes a neighborhood a community.

Lovenheim did research on communities around the world that foster a healthy feeling of togetherness among members. He quotes the Australian social scientists jenny Onyx and Paul Bullen: “Simply put, if you know your neighbors, greet them on the street, keep an eye on their house for them, or invite them to dinner, this builds connections that in good times can enrich your sense of community, and in bad times can give you someone nearby to call for help” (64). In pursuit of that kind of community, Lovenheim meets up with a few neighbors, but soon gets discouraged by the neighbors that turn him down for various reasons. I empathized with him because I’ve also searched out connections with my neighbors and sometimes people just aren’t interested.

For over two years Lovenheim gets to know his next door neighbors: the mailman, newspaper deliverer, a lady that has walked in the neighborhood for decades, and many others that he tries to nonchalantly connect over the long-term. He eventually makes the match of an ill woman with an elderly man in search of something to do with his life. When her first met Patti and discovered her illness, he asked her, “So how does it feel to be surrounded by people who know your difficult situation but who are not available to talk to, or to be of any help or comfort?” (142). This question really made me think about who of the people living near me might be experiencing extremely difficult times that I have no way to know about if I simply smile and wave from across the street. Maybe there are ways I could be helping, but I won’t know until I ask.

At the end of the memoir, Lovenheim experiences his own difficult time and his grateful for the friends he has made living all around him over the previous years of his “social experiment.” Walking through his neighborhood contemplating his life he says “All these lights, and others, taken together formed a sort of constellation for me, a picture of my neighbors inside their homes, living their lives, side by side with mine. Picturing myself as one point of light within that constellation was comforting” (220). He takes shelter in his friend and neighbor Lou’s house and feels the comfort that usually only comes from family.

My favorite part of the book was the references to communities around the world that are making strides toward creating a sense of collective togetherness. In Columbus, Ohio in a neighborhood called Old Oaks the neighbors take turn hosting “Wednesdays on the Porch” where the community can gather and spend time together (233). The Caldera Arts Organization sponsored a project in ten communities in Oregon. “Photographer Julie Keefe Joined with middle school students to interview and photograph neighbors as part of a statewide arts project called ‘Hello Neighbor.’” Then they hung mural-size black-and-white photographs with text throughout the communities to introduce the neighborhood to its children and neighbors to each other” (234). One woman suggested simply starting a garden in the front yard and being receptive to those that stroll by and want to chat (235).

Overall it was an encouraging and motivating story. We are moving in a few weeks and I’m looking forward to trying out some of the ideas in the book that will help create a network of friends among the people I will soon share a street with.

Filed Under: Book Reviews, In the Neighborhood Tagged With: Book Reviews

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