Monday, May 28, 2012

New Experiences and New Dreams


It's baseball season, folks, and I'm living in a baseball town.  Let the good times roll!

Okay, well, maybe not really.  I mean, the Mariners aren't very good.  They sort of remind me of  my hapless Pirates:  a ball club with not enough money and not enough talent.  The baseball field, however, is amazing, and the very big benefit of having a not-so-great team is that tickets are cheap.  Lorelei and I went to a game through her school on May 4 (Happy Birthday, Jack!).  It was really fun and I foresee the Shraders hitting the baseball field more as summer arrives.


Our seats were toward the top, but it wasn't too bad, we could see pretty much everything.  If you enlarge this picture, you will be able to see the Space Needle out the other side of the stadium.


This display is made of baseball bats.  It's at the main entrance to the stadium.  Pretty cool.  I loved it.  I think that baseball might come alive for me again out here.  Oh, and did I mention that Mike McCready played the National Anthem at this game?!?  Mike McCready!  From Pearl Jam!  Just wandered into a more than half empty stadium on a cold night in May and played the Anthem.  Sure, why not?  I love that.  There are a few celebs here who are very much a part of the community.  Eddie Vedder, too.  (Um, he lives less than a mile from our house.)

Lorelei loved the game, too.  Though for different reasons:


Nothing like a bunch of elementary school kids hopped up on cotton candy.  Whew.

At the game we went to, the Mariners played the Twins.  The Mariners were up by 2 runs by the time Lorelei and I left in the 7th.  Of course by the time we got home they had lost the lead and the game.  <sigh>


Next up was Mother's Day.  We spent the morning at the West Seattle Farmer's Market.  The picture above is Megan and Dave - friends out here in West Seattle.  Dave is a friend of Shawn and Ed's from Toledo.  He and Shawn went to high school together and Dave and Ed were in a band together.  How funny - if Toledo's population goes down, it's because they all moved here.  Ha!

After the market, we went to the park.  It was a glorious day, complete with soaking feet in the Sound and swings and playing on the beach.


The above picture was taken from one of the trails we followed in the park.


A meadow on the same trail.

The beach!

The water!  (A bit chilly!!)


Big playing on the driftwood.  It was a lovely day!

After mother's day, it was crazy work until May 20 when I left for a conference in Palm Springs/La Quinta, California.  I was gone for about 4 days.  It was a jam-packed 4 days of seminars, receptions, networking, dinners, and becoming more educated about what goes on in my line of work.  I found it very educational (believe it or not) and enjoyed some of the seminars a lot.  I also liked meeting people that I had worked with but never met; it's always good to put a face with a name.

But that's really just a cover for the fact that I was in constant awe of being in southern California and in the desert.  It was nice to stay at this fabulous resort, but the overwhelming part of the whole thing was that I absolutely fell in love with the desert.


This is the resort.  Pretty much what it looked like outside my room.  Very nice.  They were having a May heat wave, though.  Temps were about 106 degrees each day that we were there.  They came down right after we left into the 80s and 90s, but yeah, well over a 100 each day we were there.  Telling yourself it's a "dry heat" only gets you so far.  At about 105, who cares.  It was damn hot.

I also got to see Pauline, whom I worked with at MDK.  I have missed her so much - it was fabulous seeing her.  For all who who know her - she looks amazing and is doing great!  I'll have pictures next time!

One night we went to a dinner in the desert.  We had the opportunity to go on jeep tours of the desert and they also had some amateur astronomer with his telescope (oh, how I hate to say it, but Shawn's is bigger and better), and we saw Saturn and its rings.  Very, very clear sky.  It's hot in the desert, but once the sun goes down, it's really different.  I fell in love with the formations and stark landscape.  It's just so different than anything I've ever seen.


The above formation is Elephants walking in the desert.  My angle isn't great but you can see the front "elephant" - see the trunk?


The sun is beginning to set here.  Just gorgeous.


You might have to click on this one to make it bigger to see it, but it's the desert wave.  Pretty amazing.

Perhaps the most striking part for me was that we were on the San Andreas Fault line.  There are these lines of vegetation that you can see kind of traveling through the desert - that's what our guide said was the actual fault line.  Everyone got a lesson in plate tectonics, which of course, I loved.  I can't wait to bring Shawn and Lorelei to the desert.

We are starting to make our plans.  The shock of moving has worn off and things are beginning to settle down.  We are planning to hit the Washington coast, Olympic National Park and of course, my beloved Hurricane Ridge in August.  I think...maybe if we can swing it...during Lorelei's mid-winter break in February, we'll go to Hawaii, or southern California.  I'm sure Yellowstone and Yosemite are next up.


It's perfect timing that today is Memorial Day, as I'm struck by how amazing and different this country is.  We are truly fortunate to be able to see as much of it as we are.  I wish everyone could experience this.  My eternal gratitude to those who sign up to protect it for us.

Love and blessings to all!

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Now You Are Seven!

Lorelei is seven years old!

How on earth did this happen?  When did she get to be so big and grown-up??


In true form, and consistent with her previous birthdays, we celebrated at a nearby park.  These two are her classmates who came to celebrate with her.  Aren't the three of them lovely?


They had fun.  We played on the beach, ate some lunch, hit the playground, and played some more.  And yes, that's the Sound out there.  The rain was threatening but it held off so Miss Lorelei could have her birthday party.  Fabulous.

Lorelei is amazing.  Of course I think that, I'm her mom.  But she is truly a wonder and so much fun.  She's an only child of perhaps unconventional parents, so she regularly watches TV with me.  That means she watches "Bones" and reruns of "X Files".  Funny enough, I have seen all the X-Files episodes about a hundred times and still get freaked out.  Lorelei's first time through and she's telling me it's ridiculous that I have to hid my eyes in a pillow.  Really, Mom, grow up.  Goodness.  In a few years I think we'll have our hands full.

All those girls are amazing.  I remember 7.  I received a book for that birthday from my first friend, Kerrie.  It was called Now You Are Seven.  I loved that book and I gave it to Lorelei this year.  <sigh>

As well as Lorelei's Birthdaypalooza, we have also trekked out a bit in the last few weeks.  We went to Bainbridge Island a couple weeks ago with Ed and Amy, and of course, Miss Maya.  It was a gorgeous ferry ride:


That's looking west toward the mountains as we are heading that way. It was a beautiful day.  Here's a look back toward downtown:


I like that one because I like the seagull hanging out with us.  Here's a better picture of downtown:


Kind of a neat picture.

Bainbridge had some pretty good BBQ, which means it looked like a dive farmhouse with a little too much hayseed going on.  Sure, it looked wrong, but the beer was cold and the BBQ was sweet-sassy-molassy-amazing.  We sort of ate and drank our way through Bainbridge.  It was decent and it's clearly got the island-town thing going on.  I liked it, but I have to admit, I like the hustle and bustle of Seattle.  One thing is for sure, Shawn and I chose well in deciding to move here.

Here is Mount Rainier from the ferry.  Very nice.


When it's sunny and clear, this place is transformed.  I can't say enough about it.

In other news, Shawn has been crazy busy.  His spring semester and summer semester overlapped so he had double the amount of classes and work for a couple of weeks (what the hell).  Of course, he is very engaged in his work too - there was a lot going on for him for awhile.

Ed and Amy continue to adjust to life with Maya.  Oh, the joys of new parenthood.  I had the pleasure of babysitting recently and here she is, letting those animals talk to her and tell her how it is:


She's precious.

Finally, it's really starting to hit home that we live in wine country.  A coworker of mine has informed me that it's rose (as in rose-ay) season.


I'm going to like this season.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

April 12, 2012: And Out of the Darkness, Comes a Great Light


Do you see that?  That's the beach a few blocks from our house.  That's what it looks like on a clear day.  Go ahead, click on it.  Make it bigger, enjoy the view.  It's amazing.

Yep, the beach again.  But that white stuff in the distance is the Olympic Mountains.  My beloved Olympics.  In just a few short weeks all tire restrictions will be lifted in the Olympics and we can travel at will to Hurricane Ridge and the other sights the Olympics hold.  We can already tell that the mountains aren't quite as snow-covered as they've been.  Truly, it's a sight to behold.

I keep thinking that maybe we should look at some of the other neighborhoods in Seattle and consider living there.  For instance, Ballard, which is close to Lake Washington and houses the Locks where the boats come in from fishing in the Big Water.  Also, Ballard is home to the Scandinavians.  I do love Ballard.  And then there's Magnolia and Queen Anne, both with amazing views, amazing homes, and also close to the water, but on the east side of the Sound, the downtown side.  Fremont has the water of the Lake and also its own brand of funkiness that feels homey to me.  There are also about 5 or 6 other neighborhoods with equally fantastic attributes and surroundings.  But...I love the west side of West Seattle - I love that I am so close to the beach I smell the sea just about every morning.  I also love that there is very little obstructing my view of the Olympics.  Some mornings, when it's crystal clear, they are close enough to touch.
Seriously.  Look at that!

I seem to be hitting the beach lately when the tide is rolling in or rolling out - not sure which - and I get the loud waves.  It's been really gorgeous.  Check them out.

And of course, I would be remiss if I didn't acknowledge that Lorelei has overcome her rather recent fear of barnacles enough to check out the tide pools at the beach.  I have no idea about the barnacle thing.  I didn't even know what they were until she was suddenly afraid of them.  But look!  She's obviously over it.


I guess that's probably enough about the whole "Seattle is so beautiful" thing.  You get the point.  But wow.  When Spring arrives in Seattle it arrives with bells, whistles and a parade.

In other news, things are going well.  I'm busy at work.  So busy, in fact, that I'm headed to Palm Springs for a seminar or something in May.  Looking at a map, Palm Springs is in southern California, in the mountains on the edge of the desert.  I'll let you know how it goes.  I'm interested to see what this new place is like.  Otherwise, work is good.  It's challenging, busy, crazy and never a dull moment.  I'm happy to work with some really amazing people and I've begun to embrace Washington law and feel a part of it.  It's good.

Shawn continues to catch the eye of his coworkers at Allrecipes.com - they are really accommodating about permitting him to shadow the web developers as he wants while he's in school.  They are excited about having someone on board who is studying web development.  They see bright things for him, and really, that's what it's all about.  He landed a pretty good gig there.

Lorelei is doing well at school, though she still exists a bit apart from her classmates.  No real friends, at least in her class.  I fear this move has been hardest on her.  She has more fun in her extra-curriculars with kids in different classes than among her actual classmates.  Sometimes I think she would have been like this in C-bus, too.  She approaches this world from a different perspective than a lot of kids her age.  All in all, though, she seems to be having fun, and that's all that counts.

We are all feeling more a part of things here.  It helps that the weather has turned, and the light!  Well, and of course, Steve having layovers here has been nothing short of amazing.  It's lovely having family on a regular basis here - more than I could have hoped for.

It's 8:49p as I write this and still not quite pitch dark yet.  It will be in another 5 minutes, but wow.  This is the payoff for the darkness in the winter.  Also, Lorelei and I booked our tickets to come back to Ohio for a week in July.  Very exciting times indeed!

Until next time - happy spring!

Thursday, March 22, 2012

March 22, 2012: Arrivals, Departures and Delays


We had our first visitor in the Pacific Northwest!  Leigh Ann came for an extended weekend on my birthday weekend.  It was a fabulous, whirlwind of a time!  The day she landed, Seattle weather showed off for her and gave her great views of the mountains, the beaches and everything in between.  Above is Lincoln Park, walking distance from our house and a favorite running spot of mine.  The big boat off in the distance is Fauntleroy Ferry, which takes you to Vashon Island and some other islands that I don't know the name of yet.  We will work on that as we explore when the weather breaks.

The day after Leigh arrived, the rains came.  Of course they did.  It's March in Seattle.  It didn't stop us though, we spent time at Pike Market and downtown, even caught the Buckeyes in their first game of the Tournament.  It was a great time even though it was wet.

Above is the very first Starbucks.  It's at Pike Market.  The line for coffee there is usually ridiculously long.  I mean, seriously.  The coffee isn't going to taste different there.  Although, how would I know when I can't ever get in there....

It was a fabulous weekend and one of the best birthdays I can remember.  On Saturday we toured Capital Hill and Queen Anne neighborhoods.  Cap Hill is very trendy, hip, artsy.  Tremendous people watching.  At one point, Leigh Ann commented, "I didn't know there was a circus in town."  Oh yes, that's what it's like in Cap Hill.  Always circus people hanging about.  For those following along, Cap Hill is one of my favorite places and where the Jimi Hendrix statue is.


Of course we painted the town red.

As we were having our fun, though, the Castaneda family had just a few things going on.  Amy was due March 7, so her mom, Diane, arrived on March 4, in order to be here for the baby.  Diane brought her dog Charles.  She had this ancient pomeranian declared a therapy dog so she wouldn't have to pay extra to have him on the plane with her.  I just love Diane.  She and Lorelei are BFFs.  This is Charles with Lorelei:

Amy did not have her baby on March 7.  Or March 8.  Or March 9, 10, or 11.  As the fates would have it, this was a good thing.  It enabled Ed to travel home for his father's funeral on March 10.  My condolences, Eddie.  Our love to you.

As a matter of fact, Amy didn't have that baby until March 15.  Maya Rose Castaneda came into the world at nearly 8 lbs and over 20 inches long.  She's gorgeous.

 This picture is already outdated.  As I write this she's a week old, going on 14.

I fear Shawn has baby fever.

The most important thing, however, is that Amy, Ed and Maya are all doing fantastic.  Maya is growing and changing as babies will, and she remains beautiful.  Amy doesn't even look like she had a baby, which of course means all of us who looked like we had a baby and might still be pregnant into our kids' first year, well, we are quite envious. Ed, for all his tough talk about how he will raise this daughter of his, is already a pile of goo and wrapped around her little newborn finger.  Maya has been in the world a week and already conquered it.

With all these goings on, we continue to acclimate and become adjusted to our new hometown.  This week it seems that the Olympics are out more than they are not, even if it's not perfectly clear.  This makes us all believe that the weather will break eventually.  It's been an unseasonably cold winter and spring for Seattle, to counteract the unseasonably warm winter and spring in Ohio!  I wouldn't say it's terribly cold, but I'm ready for some sun.  This week it appears the sun is on its way.

To pass the time we've been trying to develop good habits.  Like Lorelei, here, teaching her polar bear how to floss.  There is an accompanying video, but I'll save that for later.

Otherwise, all is well.  We've had some wonderful visits with Steve as he lays over in Seattle.  That has been a welcome part of family that I've desperately needed.  It also helps to have him laying over here so that I can convince him that he needs to move here.  I'm continuing to work on that.  Shawn and Lorelei are both doing well.  Lorelei has started to turn a corner in her school and bond with more students, and Shawn is beginning to really like his job.

As for me, Shawn finally got tired of my sad face over not having cable.  He lined it up just in time for March Madness.  Very, very cool.  Go Buckeyes!

We miss all of you in Ohio and hope you come visit soon.  Until then, love to all!

This entry is for Carlos and Maya Castaneda.  Godspeed, Carlos, and welcome, Maya!

Saturday, February 18, 2012

February 18, 2012: Blogs, Dogs and Jobs


This is Gretel after training class.  It absolutely wipes her out.


This is me after training class.  It absolutely stresses me out.

Gretel is making progress, though.  She completed her first round of classes and we are now in the second phase.  This is where she learns a bunch of "tricks", like shake, sleep, and fetch a beer.  It's building on obedience training and a good filler class before she takes the advanced class.  Dog training is not the hobby that I would have chosen for myself, but Gretel is a city dog now, and she needs to learn how to live in the city; i.e., being on a leash, etc.  She's making some progress, but we still have a long way to go.  Because Gretel can be...unruly...at times, we have good sessions and bad sessions.  Today's session, being the first of a new set of classes with all new classmates, was rough.  Whew.  I'd also like to thank the 3 dogs and squirrel that taunted us on the walk home from class as well.  Ugh.

On another note, I know I've been remiss the last 3 weeks about updating the blog.  Frankly, I didn't really have much to report.  We've been sort of heads down, going to work/school, and generally just getting by.  The weather has been ugly and our respective jobs/school have been keeping us crazy busy.  My job continues to get busier.  I have an intense trial schedule for the next three months.  It's great work and I love getting back into the nuts and bolts of litigation, but wow.  I forgot how exhausting it is.

Shawn is doing great in school, but he's getting busier.  He started working at allrecipes.com a few weeks ago, part time while he's in school, and they've already upped his hours to full time.  It's great from an experience and paycheck standpoint, but it makes his life that much busier while he juggles school.  By the way, for anyone contemplating a move to Seattle, allrecipes.com has 40-50 positions open.  Talk about a company with exponential growth.....

Lorelei is busy too - she's doing more and more complex math concepts in school and she's also busy with learning how to sew, drawing self-portraits, and making some pretty serious contraptions out of empty cracker boxes.


Speaking of jobs, Steve's job has brought him to the Emerald City two weeks in a row, so we were fortunate to be able to share several meals with Steve and his copilot (First Officer?), Alan.  It's wonderful to have this time with Steve.  After being so homesick for so long, to see one of my family here just as if it happens all the time was just what I needed.  Alan, as it turns out, was born and raised in Seattle, so he's showing us all the ropes a bit.  Alan is pretty cool - he decided the last time we had dinner that he needed a blast from his past:


Ha!  I think this might be Seattle's equivalent of Milwaukee's Best.  We are a classy bunch.


This is part of the UPS garden referenced above.  It's in an urban neighborhood downtown called Pioneer Square.  I love Pioneer Square.  It's kind of like....maybe German Village or the Brewery District:  a formerly sketchy neighborhood that the City has put some money into.  Probably still not a good idea to walk around alone late at night, but lots of good shops, restaurants, and neat little corners to check out.  This is one of them.  There is also a firefighter monument, a kilt shop (Utilikilts), and killer sandwiches at Collins Pub.  Oh, and a brewery or two.

In addition to Steve (and Alan) breezing into town once in awhile, we are anxiously awaiting the arrival of two people.  First, Leigh Ann is coming to visit for a long weekend in March.  Just 3 weeks away!  It's terribly exciting - I can't wait to have a friend to show around!  We also are anxiously awaiting the arrival of Unicornia Castaneda!  Also, just 3 weeks away.  Getting close!  Ed and Amy have discovered the lovely crib assembly, stroller operation, and pack 'n play mysteries.  Very fun.  We cannot wait to meet the newest arrival to the Castaneda family!

And very close to Pioneer Square are the stadiums.  A while back I promised a picture of Century Link Field where the Seahawks play.  This is the best I can do from my car - it's only a partial, but you get the idea.


I can't wait to post pictures from the inside of the stadiums!  I love living in a pro sports town!

We've had some yucky weather.  Just very wet, gloomy, dark days.  Interestingly, just about the time you are ready to jump off the Fremont Bridge because the weather is killing you, we have a marvelously sunny and clear day that gives the Sound it's perfect blue color and mountains in every direction.  It certainly makes it all worth it and reminds us why we embarked on this adventure in the first place.  On such a day, I snapped this picture on my way home from work:


Sure, it's not going to win any awards, but it was snapped from my car with my phone.  Gotta love it.

Speaking of the weather, it was cold, windy and rainy this morning.  Just biting cold.  It's now late afternoon and the clouds have disappeared, revealing a fabulous blue sky and yes, my beloved Olympics.  I think it's time we get out and enjoy it.

Love to all, and Go Bucks!

Sunday, January 29, 2012

January 29, 2012: Winter Blues and Funk


Of course by now you've all heard about the snowstorm hitting the pacific northwest right after MLK day.  Despite my skepticism regarding Seattlites and their issues with snow, this storm was one for the record books.  Seattle ended up with about 6 inches of snow, followed by an inch or two of ice, and south of Seattle they measured the snowfall in feet.  Olympia, which is about 45 minutes south, had something like 2 feet of snow.  It was truly an unusual event for this area.

The hills in Seattle are incredibly steep - think San Francisco.  The city is full of them.  I have about a 6 mile commute to work and I can think of three major hills I have to traverse, and I avoid the seriously steep hills for fear I'll get stopped in my standard shift car and roll into the car behind me.  These hills are somewhat treacherous in the rain, so adding a little snow to them creates nothing short of madness.  As if that weren't enough to contend with, the city is really not cut out for dealing with this weather.  They do not treat the roads with very much in the way of salt or the chemicals used in the Midwest for fear that it will kill the salmon population.  Seattle also does not have a lot of snow plows to help clear the roads.  This is why, on the second day of the storm, I had a pretty good commute in until I hit downtown - nothing had been done downtown.  The city allocated its resources to the bridges and freeways.  It was...an experience.



Perhaps the most interesting thing about the snowstorm was the cliche-like run on milk and bread.  We live pretty urban here - we are walking distance from several grocery stores, not to mention the little markets that are sprinkled in here and there.  In some ways, you can't really blame the masses for overreacting - the local newscasters described the storm as certain death for anyone who went outside.  It's far worse than the White Death newscasters in Columbus.


We decided to walk around in the snow, since there was virtually no traffic and not a lot to do (though of course, I was working remotely).  I love how green the plants still are in the winter.  When the snow melted, just a couple of days later, it was so pretty to see the green grass underneath the snow.  I can definitely appreciate how green it is here year-round.


They close the side roads during the bad storms because of the hills.  In West Seattle, where we live, it's hills all around.  You cannot go anywhere without heading up or down a very steep road, so these signs are everywhere.  The hills provided a lot of fun though; Lorelei went sledding with some kids from her school, and we saw lots of people skiing down the hills and getting around that way.


Of course, the beach is still fabulous, even with snow.


It's winter, so no matter where you are, if you are in colder weather, it's cabin fever time.  All of us here in Seattle are getting a little stir-crazy.  The snow has melted and the weather is a little warmer now, more normal for Seattle, but the rain is back and it's still just plain dark.  8 hours of light a day is not enough.  Gretel and my walks are consistently in the dark and the rain, morning and night.  It's depressing.  So yesterday, Ed, Amy, Lorelei and I took a day trip to Portland, OR, where it was 50 and sunny (sadly, Shawn could not join us because he had to study).  Despite the torrential snow they received in Portland from the storm, and flooding that followed after, the city looked great.



The city itself is gorgeous.  The Columbia River flows right through the city so there are lots of bridges and of course, natural beauty.  You may have heard that Portland is a very environmentally conscious city.  The picture below is of windmills on top of a skyscraper.


I think Amy put it best when she said, "Portland makes Seattle look like a bunch of uptight republicans."  However, like Seattle, Portland has all this cool, funky art out and about, and there is a real culture and beat to the city that you can't ignore.  It's a fun city.  There is a booming microbrew industry there as well.  You can't walk 3 feet without passing a microbrewery.  The beers were amazing, too.  I'd like to spend more time checking out the rest of the city.

There is this really cool bike sculpture outside of one of the stores in the Pearl District, which is where we spent the day.  Lorelei thought it was awesome.


I think we all liked the bikes a bit.

That's my self-portrait from Portland.



Of course, no visit to Portland is complete without two things:  a trip to Powell's books, which is the size of a city block (not including the technical annex which is on a separate block) and VooDoo Donuts.  Wow.  Donuts, beer and books.  Heaven.

Otherwise, we are hanging in there.  Shawn and Lorelei continue to do well in school and I'm busy at work as ever.  Shawn started working at allrecipes.com, and it seems to be going well so far.  It's a good start as he continues studying web development.  I have Gretel in training classes and despite how crazed she is on the leash (the reason for the training), the trainer loves her and sees real potential for her.  We'll see.  I know she needs this kind of stimulation and I need to be trained on how to care for a big dog that needs exercise.  I guess we are both in training.

In the meantime, we are keeping our eyes toward Spring and the weather clearing (hopefully) a bit so we can get out and about, exploring the mountains.  And of course, we await the much-anticipated arrival of Unicornia Rosabelle Castaneda!!  Amy is 35 weeks and counting.  It won't be long now!

Our best wishes to all back in the Midwest, and Go Bucks!