365 days

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menu
m ?
t Black bean tostadas
w Asian shrimp noodles
t breakfast
f ?
s Mexican chicken pizza

Nichole's WW journal

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reading

...

the books of 2007
  • "The Children of Men"
  • "A Spot of Bother"
  • "At First Sight"
  • "The Night Gardener"
    the books of 2006
    books to read

    ...

    The Best Ribs
    Dad's Ever Had
  • Jimmy Buffett's Margaritaville
  • The Alton Brown recipe Nichole made
  • The ribs at that place in Branson
  • Carolina Barbecue
  • FireBonz
  • ...

    Thursday, August 24, 2006

    And ... we're here.

    Departure

    We sat on the runway in Atlanta for an hour and a half.

    The journey

    Piper slept for about 5 hours of the 8 and a half hour flight. She’s a peach of a traveler. I watched “Over the Hedge” and then slept for a little while – maybe an hour – and Alex didn’t sleep at all. But he did watch “16 Blocks.” I don’t think that’s an even trade.

    Arrival

    We got off the plane to find that KLM’s baggage handlers had broken our stroller. They snapped one of the legs in half. After we showed our passports to the guy at turnstile, I went straight to the KLM service counter to file a claim. The lady there typed something up and printed it out for me, but we have to mail it in to the KLM office ourselves. After I finished up there and Alex gathered the luggage that actually made the flight, Alex went to find the Martinair baggage claim office to see if our fifth bag had made the trip. It hadn’t. Martinair says they never got the bag from US Airways, US Airways says they gave it to Martinair, and it looks, for now at least, that we’ve lost most of our clothing. They gave Alex a phone number to call. It’s a US number. And we don’t have a phone.

    First impression

    The cows are taller here.

    The apartment

    Downstairs isn’t so bad. It’s entirely Ikea-furnished – and we’re not averse to Ikea. But the toilet is in a tiny closet just inside the front door, and the only sink downstairs is in the kitchen. I can’t figure out how to open the door to the “patio” – which, by the way, was the first thing to make me think “tenement housing” – and there’s no oven. The living room area isn’t horrible. It’s just sort of empty and sad.

    And then I went upstairs.

    There are three bedrooms. This, we thought, was a good thing. I think we were mistaken. The rooms are numbered 1, 2 and 3. The people who arranged our housing put a crib for Piper in Room 3, the smallest of the bedrooms. A very kind gesture, but the crib is about a foot and a half deep, and it’s broken. Rooms 1 and 2 are basically the same – two twin beds and a tall Ikea bureau in each. Room 2 has 2 big Ikea desks in it, too – perfect for scrapbooking. But all of my scrapbooking stuff is in Charlotte.

    The bathroom is pink tile with a sink on one wall, a showerhead on the other and a drain in the floor. When I was first exploring the place, I was worried we didn’t have a toilet at all, that we were just supposed to use the drain in the middle of the bathroom floor. So finding the wee WC was actually a nice surprise.

    posted by Nichole @ 12:32 PM  

    . . . . . comments . . . . .

  • Kristi says, "So, what's your mailing address? --Kristi Ellis" (1:28 PM, August 24, 2006)  

    post a comment

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