Traffic Knows no Borders (05 Aug 2016)

The flight to Dublin from Newark was very easy.  It’s only 6 hours, which is great, quick, but doesn’t really provide much time to sleep.  By the time they served dinner (mostly yuck), I’d say we got about 2 hours of sleeping.  I did something Ryan hates, booked an isle and a window on a 3 seat row.  (Thank you Nicoleo for that tip).  We lucked out and no one booked the middle seat, so we were able to spread out, and I got to sleep across two seats.

The flight landed before 7am in Dublin and getting through the airport took all of about 10 minutes.  All our luggage was carry-on, so no waiting at baggage claim.  No line at immigration.  And no customs.  I don’t mean no line at customs, I mean literally, we could see where the customs check should be, but there was no one there, so no customs (this island is VERY different than New Zealand).

We picked up our rental car, a pretty sweet manual Volkswagon diesel Golf and headed off.

Nicole sizing up our TDI Golf

The plan was to stop at one site outside Dublin and then head straight up to our first night’s lodging in Bushmills, about a 3.5 hour drive total.  The drive to Bru Na Boinne was easy.  Good thing we got there early!  When we arrived at 8:45am, there was already a line at the door for tours, and the visitor center didn’t even open till 9am.  We got a spot on the 9:45am tour for Newgrange.  Bru Na Boinne is a valley in the Bend of the Boyne River known for passage tombs.  Newgrange is one of the three largest tombs, that you can actually walk into, and dates back to 3200 BC, which is crazy to think about.  The rest of the area is also dotted with much smaller tombs, which are identifiable by the mounds in the middle of the fields.  There is a window above the entrance to Newgrange, and during the Winter Solstice, the sun lines up directly with the window and lights the passage all the way into the tomb.  They replicate that with artificial lights for visitors, and you can enter a lottery to be on of the 150 people or so that gets to visit the tomb during the actual Winter Solstice.

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After the tour of Newgrange, we headed back to the visitors center for a quick snack and a short ‘audio-visual’ (movie) about the tombs, where Ryan and I both promptly fell asleep.  Oh well.  Once at the car, we decided it smart to take a short nap prior to more driving, considering we had only slept 2 hours the past night (and only about 4 hours the night before for Ryan, since he was busy trying to get the new router and VPN working).

Friendly European Robin following us outside the visitor's center

Friendly European Robin following us outside the visitor’s center

We hit the road at about 2pm for Bushmills, for what should have been a 2.5-3hr drive.  Unfortunately, the primary motorway A1 was shut down for a short part a little bit south of Belfast due to a traffic accident.  In Ireland, as we learned later, the roadway is shut down for 24 hours after a traffic fatality.  The ‘diversion’ (detour) turned into a 3 hour ordeal of crawling traffic.  Shout out to Ryan at this point.  He not only was awake and taking part in activities the first day after arriving, but was patiently sitting in traffic for 3 hours when I know he was exhausted.  He was really a trooper, and luckily, still not sick yet on this trip :-).  After way too long, we finally arrived in Bushmills at 8pm.  Our lodging for the evening, Lismar B&B, was owned by a nice older couple, was very clean, with a nice bathroom.  We opted for a fast food fish and chips so we could get to bed as quickly as possible.

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Bumpy transition to vacation life

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So, apparently it takes a while to get the hang of the “life” part of work-life balance.

  • Step 1: stop working
  • Step 2: try harder to stop working
  • Step 3: Nicole books trip to Ireland and says “I’m going with or without you”
  • Step 4: purchase new router and figure out how to set it up as VPN server.  After trying forever to figure out the details of server certificates vs. client certificates and preventing man-in-the-middle attacks.  Okay, this step is a little gratuitous, but it at least shows that I’m not working.

Morning of flight: wake up 20 minutes late…rush to stuff suitcase, realize I need to cut a few things off the list (sorry no jacket & tie for fancy dinners).  Strap into my boots just to realize the entire tread has separated from my left foot!  Change to hiking shoes, close laptop to pack in bag & run out door except Windows decides to download some updates: “this could take a while … please don’t turn off.”

Finally make it into the car at 7:35 for a 9:05 flight.  No sweat (I was sweating): made it to Fastpark and through security with at least 10 minutes to spare…I guess it’s nice not having to waste time at the airport.  3 hours to NJ, 6 hours in NJ, 6 hours to Dublin (hate United Airlines jam packed seating).

You can barely make out 1 World Trade Center in the background behind our plane:

Our plane

1 World Trade Center

P.S. Crisis in EWR averted — Ryan decides not to eat the mango and papaya salad chock full of peanuts (yes, Nicole packed an EPI pen).

Guest Room Makeover (Christmas 2015)

Our biggest adventure to date!  Ryan and I have lived in our house for 11 years now.  About half of the interior has been painted and almost none of the rooms have been decorated.  Since we were spending this holiday at home with not a whole lot planned, we decided to paint and decorate the guest room.  On closer inspection, this quickly turned into a larger project than expected.

  • Day 1: Christmas Day
    • Tape the moldings with blue painters tape
    • Realize that the drywall tape has separated from the walls in at least 2-3 wall/ceiling or wall/wall corners -> Trip to Home Depot for drywall tape, joint compound, and necessary tools
    • Spend a typical Jewish Christmas with Les and Steve – Catch the new Star Wars movie and enjoy some Chinese food for dinner
Holes in the ceiling

Holes in the ceiling

  • Day 2:
    • Pull down all the peeling dry wall tape
    • Sand away excess tape and joint compound
    • Find that there are large gaps (1/4″ to 1/2″) between the drywall at the corners of the room -> Trip to Home Depot for spackle
    • Rent The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (Nicole’s choice) and eat leftovers for dinner
  • Day 3:
    • Fill in large gaps with spackle – Wait 12 hours for it to dry
    • Rent Antman (Ryan’s choice) and make mushroom barley soup for dinner
Filling in gaps with spackle

Filling in gaps with spackle

  • Day 4:
    • Sand spackle
    • Apply layer of joint compound, smooth drywall tape on top, apply a second layer of compound on top of drywall tape – Wait for it to dry
    • Rent The Woman in Gold (Nicole’s choice) and make vegan spinach and mushroom quiche for dinner (not bad, needs some work)
  • Day 5:
    • Sand joint compound
    • Apply a second layer of joint compound – Wait for it to dry
    • Ramen dinner out, followed by trip to Home Depot for paint
Sanding joint compound

Sanding joint compound

  • Day 6:
    • Sand joint compound
    • Spend 2 hours trying to match the texture on the ceiling and walls – Finally give up and do the best we can
    • Paint the ceiling – Wait for it to dry
Vacuuming up the mess

Vacuuming up the mess

Texturing experiments

Texturing experiments

  • Day 7: New Year’s Eve
    • Tape the ceiling and go over edge of tape with the ceiling paint (cool trick I learned to get nice clean paint lines between the ceiling and walls) – Wait for it to dry
    • Paint the walls -> Ryan makes a trip to Home Depot to get another gallon
    • New Years celebration with friends!
  • Day 8: New Year’s Day
    • Homemade breakfast tacos and mini cinnamon sugar muffins for breakfast
    • Decide I want the shelves in the closet painted white – Repaint shelves in closet (Ryan is a saint)

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  • Day 9 and 10:
    • Clean-up and put the room back together

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Furniture and decor still a work in progress . . . 7 months later.  Maybe we will get to that next Christmas.