Friday, February 24, 2012

30 days of Art


Another week has passed but nothing too exciting has happened. Went to Lanchkhuti on the 16th to get new insurance cards. While Kenneth and I were there we bought ingredients to make spaghetti and meatballs and raisin bread. School during the week and Kenneth had school on Saturday to make up the snow days. Evidently they don’t factor snow days into the calendar here. My school will make them up on the 25th and 3rd. I will only have to go to one of those. But it will make a new record for weekends spent in the village. Three weekends in a row, without so much as a trip to Ozurgeti or Lanchkhuti. It’s unheard of. After Kenneth finished with school on Saturday I went to his house and we made pasta sauce(aka red gravy by some) and meatballs. We cooked the meatballs in the sauce and quickly cooked some spaghetti. It was a fair attempt and it satisfied a craving but I’ve made better before. I don’t know if Kenneth’s family liked it or not. Maybe they were just eating it to be nice to us.  The next day Kenneth came over to my house and we made raisin bread. I burned it a little on the top but I blame that on me not knowing much about cooking in a wood-burning stove. It was still tasty.

School this week has been less than exciting. Grades 3-6 will have a test next week. I’m in charge of writing the 3rd and 4th grade tests. I have a funeral to go to tomorrow, the 25th. Aniko’s (my host mom) aunt died. It seems like people are dying around here all the time. I don’t particularly care for going to funerals of people I don’t know but I also don’t want to be home alone all day tomorrow. There is also school tomorrow but no lessons for me because they will be on Thursday’s schedule. I have to go to school next Saturday. I have also requested leave for Easter holidays to go to Rome. I don't see why they would decline but it is possible. I'm excited. Orthodox Easter and Non-Orthodox Easter fall on different days this year. Orthodox Easter is a week later on the 15th so I have to request a few days off from school. It would be an amazing end of Lent and maybe a once in a lifetime opportunity.

In other news I have finished my 30 day drawing challenge. Some days I put a lot of work into the pictures and other days I didn’t. Some of the drawings don’t look like what I wanted but the quality of pencils I was using doesn’t really allow me to change much. I took pictures and you can see them below. I hope you enjoy it. In order the 30-day challenge asked me to draw the following. It was a good creative exercise for me.

  1. Yourself, 2. Favorite Animal, 3. Favorite food, 4. Favorite place, 5. Best friend, 6. Favorite book character, 7. Favorite word, 8. Favorite animated character, 9. Favorite TV show, 10. Favorite candy, 11. Turning point in your life 12. Most recent accomplishment, 13. Comic, 14. Favorite fairytale, 15.family picture, 16. Inspiration, 17.favorite plant, 18. Just a doodle, 19. Something new, 20. Something orange, 21. Something you want, 22. Something you miss, 23. Something you need, 24. A couple, 25. Scenery, 26. Something you don’t like, 27. Something you love(I just realized it said actually someone you love but when I copied it to my notebook I obviously copied it wrong), 28. Anything you’d like 29. Somewhere you want to go 30. Congrats banner

Enjoy! Bonus points if you can tell me what is in the photos. Especially if you can figure out number 14.I had to take the photos in an odd way, sorry for that. But you get to see some of them twice. 

1. Yourself, 2. Favorite Animal, 3. Favorite food, 4. Favorite place

3. Favorite food, 4. Favorite place, 5. Best friend, 6. Favorite book character

7. Favorite word, 8. Favorite animated character, 9. Favorite TV show, 10. Favorite candy
9. Favorite TV show, 10. Favorite candy, 11. Turning point in your life 12. Most recent accomplishment

13. Comic, 14. Favorite fairytale, 15.family picture, 16. Inspiration

15.family picture, 16. Inspiration, 17.favorite plant, 18. Just a doodle


19. Something new, 20. Something orange, 21. Something you want, 22. Something you miss
21. Something you want, 22. Something you miss, 23. Something you need, 24. A couple

25. Scenery, 26. Something you don’t like, 27. Something you love(I just realized it said actually someone you love but when I copied it to my notebook I obviously copied it wrong), 28. Anything you’d like


27. Something you love(I just realized it said actually someone you love but when I copied it to my notebook I obviously copied it wrong), 28. Anything you’d like 29. Somewhere you want to go 30. Congrats banner
And it really would be cool if you gave some of the pictures a guess as to what they are or what they mean. Leave comments!


Have a great day!

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Batumi and Turkey


So much has happened since I last wrote. I went to Batumi for an overnight, I had no school for two days because the government declared snow days, I went to Trabzon, Turkey and I helped fix the water pipes that bring water to our house.

On Saturday the 4th, I woke up early to catch the marshutka to Batumi. At that time I didn’t know if I would be coming home that night or not. It depended what I found to do in Batumi. It was a quick one-hour ride. The weather was cold but sunny and that made all the difference. I had been to Batumi briefly on an excursion with other English Teachers but it didn’t leave much time to see anything. So here I was again in Batumi and determined to see what I could. While Kenneth and I were walking around we stumbled upon the tourist info box. They gave us a map and circled all the things we must see. They were extremely helpful. We walked next to the beach that was covered in snow. We wandered through the city and saw the churches, the mosque, the statue of Medea holding the Golden Fleece, the new Piazza that is modeled after an Italian square, we went to the “Zoo”, we ate at the Chinese restaurant next to the fountain show, we walked, a lot. It was eventually too late to take the marshutka directly back to our village so we found a place to stay and haggled the price down from 70GEL to 50GEL. I was quite proud of that, and I did it in Georgian.

Beach in Batumi


Roman Columns
Colorful Batumi


Medea holding the Golden Fleece

Piazza tower
Eagle at the Zoo

Guinea pigs in a Zoo(who would have thought)

Lemur!

Chinese Restaurant

Art on the boardwalk at Sunset
The next morning we got up and made our way to Gonio Fortress. It was founded in the 3rd Century BC and the Byzantines and the Ottomans used the current fort. St. Matthias is also buried there(or so they say). He was in Georgia around the time he died so it is possible. The Fort was pretty cool, very old but I could definitely see how it would be much nicer looking in the summer when everything is in full bloom. A little bit of history and some cool artifacts were in the museum part of the fort. It made for a nice trip. From there we went back to Batumi, wandered around a bit, ate some delicious food at a random restaurant that we found and then went to the bus station to head home. It had been a nice weekend trip but it was good to be going home. We also started looking at possibly going to Turkey in the near future but didn’t know if it would be a viable option or not.

St. Matthias's Grave
Walls of the fortress
 Monday was just a normal funday Monday. School, kids and cool weather. After school I went to English club at Kenneth’s school and the idea was to teach them the cha cha slide. We taught them all of the vocabulary for the song but when it came down to it we had some technical difficulties, so we couldn’t play the song. We promised the kids we would do it next week. On Tuesday I did nothing except laundry. The weather was pretty windy and I knew we could expect some bad weather the next day or so. Wednesday was the day that changed my weekend. I was at school just getting started with second period and the bell rang. I thought that was weird but it had rung randomly earlier in the day so I ignored it. A few minutes later the Russian teacher comes in and says that school has been cancelled for today and we don’t have to come back to school until Monday. It had started to snow outside but I hadn’t given it much thought, as it didn’t seem too different from usual. I called Kenneth and we talked about the fact that we should leave for Turkey right now. I really want to visit Cappodocia and we had talked about it but were going to wait to do it until later when we had a long weekend. Well here was our long weekend but we were not ready to go. After much deliberation we decided not to go to Cappodocia. But we still wanted to get out of the village. So instead we decided that if the weather looked fair on Thursday morning we would go to Trabzon, Turkey. Kenneth looked online and saw that there would be a soccer match, and there was a cool monastery nearby that was built into the cliffs. Something cultural and something historical, sounds like a plan to me.  We made it to Batumi right at 11AM, caught a bus to Trabzon and headed on our way. The border crossing was pretty chill and we still had valid visas from when we made our little trip into Istanbul from the airport there. Unfortunately it seemed that we were on the slowest bus ever. From the border it is only supposed to take three hours. It took 6 for us. We stopped at every small town along the way and drove really slowly. It was frustrating because I was getting hungry but we never stopped long enough to get any food just long enough to load or unload passengers. I had a few snacks but those didn’t last very long on the trip. We finally made it to Trabzon and got dropped off near the main square. I had the address of the Tourist info office written down so that was going to be our first stop. We did make it the office but it was closed. We went into the hotel next door and asked if they knew when it would open. They said the manager of the Tourist Office had died and everyone was at the funeral, it might open later today but definitely tomorrow. Great, I thought. Here we are in a new city with no idea on where we actually are or where anything else is.

From there we walked to a kebab place that we had seen. It was really good but maybe just because I was really hungry at that point. While sitting in the place I saw a sign that pointed to a church. I thought it was weird that there was a church in Turkey (for those who don’t know Turkey is a Muslim country) so I suggested we make that out next stop. We walked down the road and rang the bell to get into the church. It was really beautiful. Capuchin monks who had been forced out of Russia and Georgia built this church, and several others in Turkey but only a few of them are currently still used as churches. Many are mosques or museums.

Entrance to the church

Inside the church 
Baptism Font


We wandered around some more and then headed back to the main square to start looking for accommodation. We figured it would be more expensive right on the square so we walked down one of the side streets to inquire about prices. We arrived at Otel Evim and the owner/receptionist gave us a slight discount for two nights. He also knew a bit of English and could answer our questions about the town. He also told us that he would try to find us tickets to the soccer match the next night and we could go with him. He suggested we walk down on of the main streets just off of the square for something to do. We wandered around, had some tea (one of those must do things in Turkey) stumbled across the bazaar that was closing down and eventually called it a night. There is a two hour time difference between Georgia and Turkey so even though going to bed at 8:30 PM sounds ridiculous it had already been a long day and our sleep was well earned.

Atatürk in Atatürk Square

Symbol for Trabzon Spor FC(Soccer Team)


The Black Sea. She was a bit feisty today.
Aya Sofia
Friday’s plan was to get up early and take a bus to the monastery about 30KM from Trabzon. We talked to the owner’s dad who takes the late night early morning shift at the front desk and he called a company to see if anyone would be going. Unfortunately there had been big snow in that area and no one was going anywhere. We even walked to different bus companies to ask just to make sure that it wasn’t just the one company not going. Nope. No one was going. Just one more thing to add to the list of things that weren’t going according to plan. After that we went to the Tourist Office, which was open today, and got our map and some suggestions of things to see in the city. Good thing too because otherwise we would have just been wandering around. After realizing that we weren’t going to the Monastery we decided to go to Aya Sofia. It was a church turned monastery, later turned into a museum. The art on the walls was mostly gone but in certain places the frescoes were still very visible. In other places it looked like the pictures had been scratched away, which is possible. I imagine it must have been beautiful in it’s heyday. 

Inside Aya Sofia Museum
From the Aya Sofia we walked back to the main square. We passed the soccer stadium, several mosques, several statues of Atatürk and lots of little shops selling anything and everything you can imagine. It was quite a hike but the weather was nice and we could do what we wanted. We grabbed some food and then headed out on our next adventure to Boztepe. This is the overview point of the city. There was snow up there, it was cold and windy but the view was pretty, really worth the trip up there. While we were there we also sat and had some tea (yep more tea). Turkish style tea is served in glass cups and you put a sugar cube into about 6 oz of tea. So it ends up very sweet. It’s all part of the experience.

View from Boztepe
 
 We spent some time just sitting and enjoying the view and getting warmed up before heading back out again. We decided we would walk down because again the weather was nice and why waste the money on a ride. We found a set of stairs and wandered through some neighborhoods on our way down. The path was fairly steep in some places and I couldn’t imagine having to walk that everyday. We were a bit turned around once we got back down but we eventually got our bearings to head back to the hotel to change, charge my camera batteries and our batteries for a bit then head out with the owner from the hotel to the Soccer match.

This was an experience. We took a bus to the stadium and thousands of people were milling about. We were waiting for his friends who had the tickets for us. It was only going to cost us 10 lira to go to the game. It would have been 50 if we got them from the ticket booth. After going through two security check points we made it into the stadium and found our seats. We couldn’t have asked for anything better. We were in the middle of the fan zone. As Kenneth pointed out later this town is a crazy about their soccer as most universities in the south are about their football. And as I learned at the game you never can get away from home. Just before the teams came out of the tunnel they played the Car Chant. You heard me correctly; the song that makes an FSU sporting event was played in Trabzon, Turkey. They didn’t do the chop but they did raise their arms up and down so it looked a bit like the chop. Our host, Ali(we finally learned his name just before going into the stadium) was so surprised that we knew the song. We had to explain that is was from our university. Us chopping along with the rest of the fans became part of the story he continued to repeat through the night. 


They sang different songs and chanted the whole game. They jumped up and down, they swayed back and forth and it was amazing. I have also learned that The Wave is for the weak. True fans start a chant in one section and send it around the stadium with each section filling in a different part. One interesting thing about the game was that the crowd was probably divided 20/80 women and men. However most of those women sat in the covered section of the stadium, so when the chant made it to their area the tone was much higher. It was really interesting. That game was probably the most fun I’ve had in a long time at a sporting event. Best 3 dollars I’ve ever spent. Trabzon Spor won the match 4-1. 

Cheer leaders of a different sort(It was below freezing)
 After the game we went with Ali to his friend’s house and we watched the replay, talked about the game. I already love soccer but being able to talk about something even with a language barrier makes me love it even more. Another friend, Salim, who spoke much more English than Ali, showed up a little bit later so the conversations were a bit more fluid. We ate some delicious food that his friend said would make us want to eat our fingers. Evidently eating fingers is the Turkish equivalent of something being finger-licking good. We got nice long laugh out of that one for quite a while.

From Left to right: Ali, Salim, Kenneth, Me and Ali's Friend

 We eventually left his friend’s place and went back to the hotel. Ali and Salim were going to go to their other friend’s bar and asked if we were tired or wanted to come too. We went. The bar had a great view of the city and the sea, which I think must be even better in the daylight. The owner was very funny. There were a few other people there as well. One of them was a girl who had spent a year on a study abroad in Lafayette, Louisiana. After a long day and night we went said goodbye to our new friends and went back to the hotel to sleep.

Saturday we tried to go to the monastery again, but the roads were still impassable because of the snow. It looks like we will have to come back when it is warmer if we want to go there. Instead we wandered towards the old city, walked through the bazaar when it was working in full force. We did some small shopping. While Kenneth was in one shop trying on jeans the shop owner insisted on getting me tea. I don’t know exactly where the tea comes from but you can see men walking around with tea on trays and delivering it to different shops. It was very nice to sit there and sip on tea. Almost nobody in the bazaar speaks English but they don’t seem to care that you don’t speak Turkish; they will just keep talking like you understand. We killed a lot of time and we went to the shopping mall too and finally took a 9PM bus to Batumi. We arrived in Batumi around 3AM Georgia time. We got some food at a 24 hour restaurant then went to the bus station. The first marshutka showed up around 6 but wasn’t going to leave until 7. We got in, slept a little bit until he left. From Supsa we walked back to our houses. I slept for a while and then got up to eat some food. I also went to bed early that night because I had school the next day. It was an amazing weekend. Nothing went the way we thought it should but everything turned out perfectly.

Monday was again pretty average. I can’t say much about school. Four lessons and done. Went to Kenneth’s school and taught English Club the Cha-Cha Slide. We got our technical issues figured out and I think the kids really enjoyed it. Some of them were a bit embarrassed about dancing in front of each other but that’s part of being 15 and 16 years old. I love doing that to them.

Today was good. I woke up late, I did laundry, I cleaned my room, and I wrote, I read a book outside in the sunshine and I drew pictures. It was a great day to be home and outside. The weather was practically perfect. After Aniko came home we went on another small excursion. This time just to the backyard to readjust some pipes that had moved during the last snow and freeze. It wasn’t too exciting and I spent most of my time standing next to the house and turning the pump on and off a lot of times until the water started to flow. But good news is the water is fully working again. Yay. Let’s just hope we don’t have to fix it again any time soon.

Happy Valentine’s Day. I love you all and thank you for your support and prayers during this journey.


Friday, February 3, 2012

One more week gone by

Things are staying pretty much normal here in the village. Not too many exciting things happen very often. I either go to school and teach then come home and do nothing or do nothing at all on the days I don’t have school. Generally those are Tuesdays and Thursdays. This past Thursday wasn’t any different. Salome and my host mom left to go to Kutaisi for something. This left me at home to do nothing. So I sat around and watched TV in English. I read my book. I did laundry. I played games on my computer. These are all very exciting things for me. When my host sister is visiting at home I rarely get time to myself so I have to take advantage of it when I can.  It was a nice day.

On Friday I want to school as usual. The kids seem to have forgotten some of the things we learned in the fall but I expected as much. Not to mention my co-teacher seems intent on getting them through things as fast as possible without waiting to see if the kids know the material and then blaming the kids when they don’t know it. Yeah, really effective teaching that is. It’s also great when she doesn’t wait until all of the students have finished one task before starting the next one. Then we just have to repeat ourselves a lot. Superb. I really just want to teach on my own but that will have to wait.

After school I went home but then Kenneth called to say that he was going to church with his host brother and sister and wanted to know if I wanted to come to. I wasn’t too keen on the idea but it gave me something to do. It was a lesser feast day, Ninoba (St. Nino’s Day). We walked to church, stayed for about an hour, lit some candles and then walked back home. The weather was extremely windy and while we were in church the power went out but then came back on again. I was happy that it wasn’t raining yet because last time I went to church it was windy and rainy and I fell and skinned my knee. No injuries to report this time.

On Saturday the plan was to go to Ozurgeti to visit with one of my teacher friends. The weather wasn’t great. It was still windy and slightly rainy but we went anyways. My host mother was going to Poti to baby-sit while my host sister went with her niece and sister to a dance competition in Zugdidi. They would be gone all day and be back later than I would. My host mother was worried about me but I told her I would be okay. Kenneth and I took a bus to Ozurgeti and met up with our friend, Harriet, in a café. We drank hot cocoa, ate pizza and just sat around and talked for a long time while enjoying being out of the weather. There is a new teacher in Oz so Harriet called him to meet up with us too. After enjoying our lunch we headed out to the Bazaar in search for some rain boots. It became very apparent that even though I have nice leather boots I could wear that are waterproof that just isn’t going to be enough when the snow melts. Everything gets very muddy and slippery and wet. I found a nice pair for about $15 dollars. Just a side note in Georgia they call rain boots welingtonies. I couldn’t believe it when I first heard it but hey it works for me and makes it easy to remember. After successfully finding rain boots for Kenneth and myself our group headed to the local supermarket, The Modern as we call it. As we got closer we noticed lots of people standing in the street staring at the Modern and lo and behold it was on fire. So much for more shopping. We stopped and just watched for a really long time. We were all amazed at how antique the fire trucks were and how ill equipped the firemen seemed to be. They extended a ladder and the first man to climb up didn’t have anything more than normal clothes on. The next man had what appeared to be a fireman’s pants and jacket but who knows.
Check out high tech firetruck on the left


Yes let's climb on top of a burning building...



It was interesting to watch to say the least. After a while we were all pretty chilly from just standing out in the weather so we headed to another café for tea and coffee. Eventually it was time for Kenneth and I to head back to the village on our bus so we said goodbye to our friends and walked to the bus station. I got home just before dark and there was no electricity. I lit the stove, ate my dinner and sat around with my book and a flashlight until Aniko and Salome got home. It was pretty late when they got back and of course the power came back on within minutes of their arrival.

Sunday was another typical day at home. I woke up late. I had brunch. I sat around and watched TV. My host mom wanted to rearrange some bookcases so she asked me to call Kenneth to come help because he is tall. The rest of us are pretty short around here. We talked, we moved furniture, we ate food and eventually Kenneth went home. I didn’t do much the rest of the day.

Monday was Monday. School was school. After school I went to Kenneth’s school for our first English club of the New Year. We had about 15 kids show up. It was fun and at the end of it we made them all sing head, shoulders, knees and toes. It was great watching 15-17 year olds do it. They are all at the age where they are too cool for that kind of stuff but we weren’t going to let them leave until everyone did. Power of being a teacher or at least a tutor of sorts.

Tuesday was yet again a boring day. I woke up late, sat around watching TV with my host sister, I peeled some kiwi fruit, she made plavi( a rice dish with fruit bits and lots of sugar). I read some more of my book. That night we had grits for dinner. Served a bit differently than they are at home but still tasty. It was served along with cauliflower that had been cooked and then soaked in a garlic, hazelnut, and something else sauce. Very interesting way to eat cauliflower. When I told them that I like to eat cauliflower straight (either without cooking or just after being steamed) they looked at me like I was crazy. I made them try it steamed though and they said it wasn’t bad but they preferred it in the sauce. They like their food heavily flavored. Salty, peppery, spicy, sweet but nothing is ever bland.

Now Wednesday started out as a normal boring kind of day. I am now very familiar with the term wintry mix. It snows one minute and then it is raining the next. It did that all day but it was mostly snowy but it was too warm for it to stick so it just made giant puddles all over the place. The kids love snow. If it was acceptable for me to run around in it just because it’s there I probably would too but I have to save my running around in the snow time for after school, not between lessons. Wednesdays are my favorite lesson days because when teaching 3rd and 4th grade I don’t have to compete with the 1st or 2nd graders in the same room. The younger ones get taken out into a different classroom because they only get two English lessons per week. I’ll complain about that some other day. I’ve also come to the conclusion that my 5th graders are just never going to do their homework. Whenever we assign it we almost always spend the next lesson having them do it in class because they didn’t do it at home. We might as well not assign anything. After school I went to the kindergarten where my host mother works and she fed me a bean soup and then sent me home. I was just sitting at home reading my guidebook when she came home and asked me if I wanted to go somewhere and mentioned something about pigs. She was talking quickly so I didn’t catch all of it but I agreed anyways. I knew that one of her pigs had been missing for a day or two so I figured someone had spotted it and we were going to get it. Well I was right about that part. Before we left she had me put on tall rain boots and an old coat and then she gave me a laundry basket with some old clothes in the bottom and a little bucket of corn. When I saw the basket I thought about the fact that we might be going to rescue piglets and their mother. One of our neighbors had found the pig so he was showing us the way. He also brought a small axe with him. Aniko said it was in case we came around a wolf. I’d rather not think about that part.

Little did I know that going to get this pig would mean us crossing a stream six different times and walking up the side of a hill where there was a “road” that had now turned to mud. My boot got stuck in the mud at least five times and on the last time I almost had to have Aniko pull me out. We get to the top of the hill her pig had buried herself under some bushed and when we got her out there were indeed little piglets, five of them in total. After they got the momma pig out and distracted I was in charge of picking up the little guys and putting them in the basket. Whoa did they squeal. Momma also wasn’t too happy with that but the neighbor was keeping her away from me. I didn’t think about it when I grabbed the piglets but I imagine that mother pigs could get pretty aggressive. We got the piglets in the basket and got momma pig to follow us by dropping corn kernels and occasionally picking up a little one so they would make some noise. It was an exciting adventure walking back because the snow really started to pick and the wind started to blow. It was getting cold fast and the snow was finally sticking. We made it back to the house with everyone in one piece. I do have to say that piglets sound a lot like ducks. If I hadn’t personally put the piggies in the basket I wouldn’t have believed it by hearing the noise they were making. Bizarre little creatures. This was a great experience of village life in Georgia and it beats my corn adventures by a long shot. I really did enjoy our little excursion to go rescue pigs but next time she asks me to go somewhere I will definitely get more details before agreeing.

Weather just after pig rescue

Snow covering the next morning.

When I woke up on Thursday there was about four inches of snow on the ground. Everything was very beautiful all covered in white. It was also pretty cold. Getting out of a nice warm bed to brave the cold of the house is never a pleasant experience but it certainly wakes you up quickly. My normal routine it to get out of bed, find my clothes for the day, stick them in my bed that is still warm, go downstairs, have breakfast, wash my face, brush my teeth and then go back upstairs, pull my slightly warm clothes out of my bed and get dressed. I had no lessons, which was a good thing because I heard from one of my colleagues that there were only six kids at school. It seems the parents just decide that it will be a snow day and so they don’t send their kids to school. I did walk to Kenneth’s school for an event that was described to Kenneth as an international symposium. Really it was just the tenth graders asking questions to teachers who were originally from somewhere else, i.e. the Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and USA. We were asked about becoming a citizen, civil rights and other things like that but there wasn’t anyone there who could truly translate what we said. They asked me to try but I’m severally lacking political vocabulary in Georgian. It’s also very hard to dumb down the English for that particular topic. But they didn’t seem to mind and were happy to have us talk, well Kenneth talk. I didn’t say much. Today was also Groundhog Day and I thought about trying to explain that to someone but decided it would just make Americans sounds crazy. Relying on a rodent to predict the weather… yeah sounds like a great idea. However, it’s still one of my favorite minor holidays. I walked back to Kenneth’s house and spent some time there before going back home.

On another note I’m currently working on a 30-Day Drawing Challenge. I will post my pictures at the end of my 30 days, today marks day 12 so you still have some time to wait before you get to see it. Some of the pictures are good, some of them not so much. But it is a way to pass the time in the evenings and mark the passage of time so I don’t completely lose track of what day it is. I like the idea of doing something for 30 days. If you have any suggestions for what I should do next feel free to let me know. I’d really appreciate some ideas.

 Oh and Will and Tracy are going to have a girl! Just found out yesterday. Yay!