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Monday, April 16, 2012

Wild Wales and Friendly France--The Epic Blog Post You've All Been Waiting For ; )

We arrived home from France at 1:30am this morning, and after a day full of unpacking, forcing filthy children into bath tubs, and working through 8 loads of the smelliest laundry ever--I've finally carved out a few moments to relieve my flash cards of their beautiful burdens.  We have been insanely lucky to be able to take two awesome trips in the past month--one long weekend in Wales and one week in France--which ended with a combined total of about 1,000 pictures snapped by Yours Truly.  I promise I won't post all of them, just a few hundred : )  

Caswell Bay, Wales




 Casey's baby tooth literally hung in there forever, but finally did fall out while we were in Wales

 The boys were inspired to write their own beach quotes.  Typical low-class behavior from them.


Three Cliffs hike--we had hazy weather and my pictures absolutely do not capture how breathtakingly beautiful the view was from the cliff line







 This next picture captures the relationship between these two so well.  As much as I feign emotional injury every time Marley tells me in her sassiest voice that she "wants to be a daddy, NOT a mommy" when she grows up because "daddy's are nicer," I love that they have this special bond. 

Rhossili Bay, Wales

We spent an entire day at this beach and would gladly have gone back again if we had more than a weekend to spend in Wales. 



















We spent spring break week in the southern Brittany area of France, which was a choice we made by default.  We originally planned to spend the week in Switzerland, but the friendly gal we were hoping to rent a house from mentioned that there would "still be plenty of snow for skiiing and snowboarding" this time of year. . .so we opted out.  Skiing in the Swiss Alps sounds awesome (at least to Dave it does; I'm more interested in hanging out in a chalet mid-mountain, drinking hot alcoholic beverages and people-watching).  It just wasn't what we had in mind for spring break time of year.  We looked at our options that were driveable, and chose Brittany.  No regrets at all--it was a wonderful week!

Our seasoned road trip crew, loaded up and ready to start whining about who controls the DVD players, whose DS battery is dying, who sat/stood/farted on whose snacks/shoes/game



D-Day Museum in Portsmouth, England near where our ferry departed from




Pizza/Kebab house in Portsmouth We tend to gravitate toward these pizza/kebab/anything-else-you-might-possibly-want-to-eat places when travelling---the kids can fill up on pizza, I can get vegan goodies like falafel, and Dave can eat a whole bunch of whatever his metabolism seeks at the moment


We took an overnight ferry ride to St. Malo, France




Drove to Mont St. Michel  which was crazy-crowded and very commercialized, but awe-inspiring nonetheless

passed this en route






 
Worth braving the crowds to see something so beautiful and old


Casey got to celebrate his 7th birthday in our comfy "caravan" (read:  mobile home) at Ty Nadan in Arzano




Random beach in Lorient where we spent an hour or so and had a picnic lunch




 I love these next two of Dave and his Mini Me



Guidel, near Lorient



 I like to call this sequence "Blissed to P*ssed"










Hennebont market where we bought the best bread ever baked by anyone in the history of bread









St Cado, an amazingly picturesque islet with only about 20 houses and a beautiful old church.  This was one of the off-the-beaten-path spots that took a little detective work to find, but so worth the effort

my absolute favorite scenic picture from the trip







Carnac Megaliths an arrangement of about 3,000 giant stones that are believed to have been part of an ancient astrological charting system.  Unfortunately, they held about as much entertainment value for my kids as. . .well. . .a bunch of giant stones.





Plage du Beaumer at Carnac




 When Keller saw me with my fancy new hair wrap from the Hennebont market, he said, "One, two, three. . . wait--I'd better count by fives" and I quickly realized he was counting my grey hairs.  That's my thanks for a spring break trip to France.  Brat. 

 Coco, our world-travelling monkey, makes an appearance in France


Quimperle town and market, where we bought some more incredible bread, some tasty (and very non-vegan!) cheeses, and Dave treated himself to a giant serving of paella with local mussels in it







Ste Barbe Chapel, another off-the-beaten-path locale we read a tiny blurb about in our guidebook, and then almost gave up on finding.  It was so beautiful and serene, a fifteenth century church perched on a rocky cliff overlooking a river

skies that greeted us







 I can't describe how cool it was to search for this chapel with no idea what it might look like, and then to be rewarded with this view 

We passed this cottage on the way to Ste Barbe and I made Dave stop across the street on the way back so I could snap a quick picture

 
Adventure Course at Ty Nadan (our 'glamping' resort home for the week).  Dave and I were super proud of both boys for taking on the challenge (and kicking arse!).  Dave signed up and did the course, in case Casey needed any help (way to take one for the team), but he was hardly needed at all.  Marley decided to launch an un-contested campaign for Naughtiest Cheerleader Ever, running through all of the 'muddy puddles' she could find, throwing rocks, and at one point she even disappeared for a few heart-stopping minutes when she apparently decided she was going to walk back to the camper by herself.












 Doesn't that little smirk just scream "NAUGHTY!"?

 Canoe trip at Ty Nadan, which involved a lot of Keller trying to steer us under hanging branches, Casey complaining that Keller was elbowing him, Marley crying because she thought Keller was trying to take us under water, and ok, I'll admit that I used a little of my 'French' while out on the river.  Not the high point of our vacation!





D-Day sites--Omaha Beach and the American cemetery at Colleville-sur-Mer, we visited these sites briefly on our way back to the northern coast to catch our ferry back home.  It was a grey and rainy day, which added to the somber ambiance.  (Dave gets full photo credit for the pictures from the cemetery and memorial)








If after scrolling through the million pictures above you find yourself tempted to think that vacations are all rainbows and unicorns for the Huffman crew, let me lay that to rest with a few anecdotes:

1. We arrived in France at 7:15 a.m., disembarked from our ferry, and quickly realized that we brought the GPS that only has UK maps on it, not the European continent.  We found a McDonalds with free Wi-Fi, and figured we'd stop for a little breakfast, load the maps and be on our way.  Alas, McDonalds in St. Malo, France does not actually open for breakfast until 10a.m., so we spent an eternity in the parking lot, being tortured by our caged animals children and trying Wi-Fi.  After spending 2+hours outside and inside of McDonalds (during which time we ordered a bunch of food and drinks that we literally were not sure how to assemble) we finally gave up after having a whopping 14% of our maps loaded on to the GPS.  By some miracle, it was just enough to get us through our whole trip, although we did find ourselves at the end of more than a few farm driveways and one one road that we're pretty sure was meant for cattle only :)

2.  I took two years of French in junior/high school, followed by a couple years of Spanish.  I have since taken Spanish in a variety of settings--college, private tutor, immersion experience in Guatemala, and have also used it with my ESL students (adults in Fairfax County and students here on base).  Needless to say, I have completely forgotten even the most rudimentary French, and found myself using Spanish words a bazillion times.  Example:  approach the fruit seller at Hennebont market and hand him my chosen specimens; point to my reusable grocery bag and say "aqui" (Spanish for "here") to which he says "ici?" (French for "here") to which I respond "Si" and he responds with a friendly chuckle "Oui?"    Dave had himself convinced at one point that he was pulling off a pretty convincing "Bonjour", but he sounded more like a big dude of German descent, who has mastery of toddler Spanish (minus the 'r' rolling) trying to say "Bonjour."  Kind of like Steve Martin in the Pink Panther.

3.  We travelled home across the English Channel, by ferry, on the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic.  About 10  minutes into our ride, the captain came over the intercom and announced that due to engine failure in 1 out of 4 (he emphased the "out of 4") engines, we would be sailing slower than planned and would reach Portsmouth an hour behind schedule.  Something about the Titanic anniversary and our boat's engine failure left me feeling a bit uneasy.

I'll leave out other gems like how the boys were forced to 'go commando' for a day because they both ran out of clean underwear and how we realized after crossing the channel that Dave had forgotten to put the van in park on the overnight ferry.  We are still getting the hang of this world-traveller business and although each trip is slightly easier, we are far from having our multi-lingual international ducks in a row.
Seriously, though, Dave and I want our kids to understand how fortunate they are to be on this grand adventure, but we also realize that at their ages, they don't have the perspective that it takes to really wrap their brains around it all.   We try to put it on their level--like telling Casey how cool it is that he lost a tooth in Wales and then less than three short weeks later, celebrated his 7th birthday in France.  We talk about how fun it is that Marley was born in China, adopted by an American family, moved to England where she attends a British school (and has picked up a cute British accent), and has stamps on her passport from places like Malta and France.  I try to drive it home to them that all of these places and things they are experiencing are firsts for me, too, at age 38.  We hope for the best, which is to say that it would be awesome if they grow up realizing how much there is to see and experience in this great big world, and how lucky they are to have been able to dive right in at such young ages.

Until next time. . .adios Au Revoir!

1 comment:

ChouchouPoussin said...

Hi the Huffman family,
thank you for this nice pictures.

We would like to meet you but Draguignan is very far from Normandie.
My Husband is from Normandie, St Malo is a very beautiful town isn't it ?

What an american family think about the very old french hous, castles, church ?
We wen't in Canada when i was young and i was surprise because of there was most new constructions.
The only old one i saw was the beautiful Jacques Cartier Castle in Montréal.

Séverine