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Family Adventure in Kauai

25/06/2014 by Jamie 5 Comments

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On Monday we got back from a weekend adventure to Kauai! The little man had a blast and this was our first family vacation that was actually fun for the whole family. The 45 minute flight was fun and easy, although I was pretty sure I was going to die on that rickety, turboprop plane.

I have lots of photos from Waimea Canyon State Park and our amazing little cabin on the beach at Barking Sands, but I’ll post those later, because today IS MY BIRTHDAY and I have to go do whatever I want all day…

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Filed Under: Kauai Tagged With: airplane travel, Beach, Hawaii, Kauai, travel with kids

Kicking kids on airplanes

19/06/2014 by Jamie 2 Comments

IMG_5472First of all, are we talking about kicking kids or kids who kick? I’ll let you guess, but really anything goes on long, crowded flights.

Check out this funny article about how to keep your own kid’s feet to himself on a flight. Among the best advice she gives is to have one parent sit in front of the kid, and also to tape a picture of grandma to the seat in front of you: “You can’t kick Grandma!”

I have never offered to buy another passenger a drink, but I might if my son was clearly ruining their flight. Sometimes you just have to avoid eye contact and literally count down the seconds, while restraining tiny arms and legs that are flailing around.

I’m working on a post of all the tips and tricks I have tried for flying with kids (some were stupid and others worked great.) Please comment or email with any advice you may have on flying with kids and/or babies – thanks!

 

Filed Under: Airplane Travel, Travel with Kids Tagged With: airplane travel, parenting, travel with kids

Hanauma Bay Nature Preserve, Oahu

14/06/2014 by Jamie 5 Comments


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My boys went on a Father/Son adventure to Hanauma Bay Nature Preserve! After a 10 minute video of the history and rules, they were off on the tram for the 1/4 mile trip to the bay. The entrance fee is $7.50, but it’s FREE for Military, local residents, and children under 13 years old. Closed on Tuesdays.

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This kid loves the beach.

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It’s $2 for all day tram usage, worth it if you have a lot of stuff to haul the 1/4 mile from the parking lot.

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Don’t forget your sunglasses or you will have to squint like this.

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They saw “lots of fishies” and a sea turtle “THIS BIG!”

 

 

Filed Under: Oahu Tagged With: Beach, Father/Son Adventure, Hanauma Bay, Hawaii, Oahu

Cultural Compassion Through Travel

10/06/2014 by Jamie 3 Comments

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When I visited Cashel, Ireland in the fall of 2003, my friends and I stayed in a comfy, rural hostel that seemed more like a bed and breakfast. There was a separate floor for men and women, a kitchen where people left their extra food when they left, and a living/smoking room where I watched a soccer game with a few Irish travelers. I don’t remember the exact teams that were playing but it was essentially Ireland vs. England. The room was thick with emotion, perhaps the beer aided the excitement.

cashel group 1One friendly Irishman sat down next to me and asked who I was rooting for. I told him I was currently living in England, but as I was visiting Ireland I would be happy with either winning. This was the wrong answer. Slightly drunk and with tears in his eyes he gave me an Irish earful about how he felt about England transplanting protestant English people to live in Ireland and augment the widely held catholic beliefs, how it damaged part of Ireland’s national identity, and how he could never forgive England for it. It was as if this sporting event could either redeem his homeland or drive another nail in its coffin. The conversation took place over 10 years ago and I can’t remember his exact words, but I remember the tears in his eyes, the smoky smell of that room, and especially that heavy sadness, the terrible feeling of something very special taken away. In a 2011 talk for Global Washington, Rick Steves said: “People have struggles, people have heroic struggles that we’re pretty much clueless about, and when you travel you gain an appreciation for that” (30:54).

IMG_7600Sitting with that Irishman in the smoking room, watching the soccer game was my first introduction to the harsh realities of the relationship between England and Ireland. Years later, for a project in a Nineteenth Century Literature class, I was browsing old copies of “The Times of London” looking for advertisements that shed light on the culture at the time. My eyes fell on one from June of 1846, nestled in the text of the ad was this: “No Irish Need Apply.”

DSC01791When I went back to Ireland in 2010 with my husband, and pregnant with my son, we walked through part of the National Museum of Ireland – Collins Barracks. The “Soldier and Chiefs” exhibit tells many stories of Irish fighting at home and around the world, including letters, replicas, and Irish military memorabilia to show how war affected the lives of Irish people. I read so many of the letters on display, of men that knew they were going to die, but that THEIR Ireland was worth dying for – to retain their heritage, for honor and freedom. My Irish friend from the hostel flashed in my mind and I understood the letters so much more deeply than if I had never met him. In Debby Lisle’s book The Global Politics of Contemporary Travel Writing she argues that the very nature of travel writing is from a superior perspective, whether we are trying to glide graciously away from imperialist sentiments or not. “Think of it this way: travel writers must go somewhere else and meet strange people for their work to be considered ‘travel writing’ in the first place” (260). The core idea of travel writing assumes authority over those that are written about. She raises the question of why do we have the authority to represent them – “What right do I have to speak for others?” (269).

DSC01724Some nations are proud of their heritage and their ability to rise from the bottom in order to recreate their identity – without outside help. In Sheikha Al Mayassa’s TED talk “Globalizing the local, localizing the global” she says: “Qatar is trying to grow its national museums through an organic process from within. Our mission is of cultural integration and independence. We don’t want to have what there is in the West. We don’t want their collections. We want to build our own identities, our own fabric, create an open dialogue so that we share our ideas and share yours with us” (5:52). They want to define themselves.

I have many stories to write of the travels that I have done over the years. I’m trying to situate myself in a way that is respectful to the people and places I visited, but showing a true depiction of the things I saw. I have opinions about them too, many of them have changed since first visiting a place. Sometimes digesting what has been seen after arriving home creates a better picture of what was actually witnessed. But in almost every case, I go home with deeper compassion for all people, knowing just a little bit more about other people’s struggles for honor and meaning.

Beneath the small daily trials there are harder paradoxes, things the mind cannot reconcile but the heart must hold if we are to live fully: profound tiredness and radical hope; shattered beliefs and relentless faith; the seemingly contradictory longings for personal freedom and a deep commitment to others.” Oriah, The Invitation

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Filed Under: Encounters Around the World, On Travel Writing Tagged With: Cashel, Debby Lisle, England, hostel, Ireland, Museum, Rick Steves, soccer, TED Talk

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