Saturday, May 31, 2014

Surprise Sweet for our Sweetie

Walking to school every day we pass by several bakeries.  For Alessandra, the cakes in the San Martin bakery have always caught her eye.  She would always.  tell us that she wants the cherry cake.   When they would display cupcakes, she would want to try them too.  We would have our daily excuses, most of the time it would be "maybe another time".

Well, the "another time" finally arrived.   We told her that we had a surprise for her. She of course loves surprises, so we went for a walk, but took a different route. Turning back onto our street, Salguero, she asked where her surprise was and was adamant that "we can't go home yet".   

Several steps later we arrived in front of the bakery and said "Surprise-You get to pick out your cake."  






Monday, May 19, 2014

Alessandra's parks

Tony and Gianluca have scouted out almost every park in buenos aires for Alessandra.  We based our apartment location on the proximity to a park.  And she has certain criteria for a good park: Does it have a swing?  Monkey bars?  Slide?  Does the play structure have a rock wall with a bell at the top?  Most importantly, does it have a merry go round?

There are about four parks that she likes.   They are called:  Alessandra's park, Monkey Park, Apple Park, and Church park.   

We go to the park every day, sometimes two or three times. (The church park is half a block away).  The only time I went to the park that much was spending the summers in japan to keep from driving my grandmother crazy.  

Alessandra's Park- this was the first park we went to on our first morning in Argentina


Monkey Park

Apple Park

Church Park






Lions, and tigers, and bears! Oh,My!

Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more.

This trip abroad is supposed to be an adventure, right? Tony and I have seen much of Buenos Aires on our two previous trips.  Ah (sigh) the buildings in Recoleta are still breathtaking, but with three kids, ther are only so many buildings we can admire before they start asking us where is the nearest park.  

On the top 10 things to do in Buenos Aires with kids, it mentioned a nice day trip to the Lujan Zoo.  This sounded pretty appealing to us as we have never been to Lujan (about 30 miles outside of Buenos Aires) and the kids love the zoo.  

The kids had a day off from school so off we went.  The adventure started off by taking an 1 1/2 hour bus ride.

This is the bus stop at Plaza Italia.


Thankfully, we had the back of the bus all to ourselves for much of the trip.

Luckily, the girl told us our stop or we would have missed it.

Did I forget to mention that Lujan Zoo has been called the world's most dangerous zoo?  Alessandra was pretty excited to pet the baby tiger.


So was Anthony.  I was nervous.

Of course, Alessandra wanted to pet the lion cub too.

Having no fear, Alessandra petted the python.

And now we are feeding the animals.  They loved feeding the camel carrots.
 
Feeding the tropical birds.

And of course, feeding the bears.  Here's a little video of it. http://youtu.be/01U5Z36OPxA

Alessandra, Anthony and I got pictures holding an iguana, tropical bird, and Python.  I purchased a cd with the images, but my computer died.   I will post them when I am back in CA.   

Right before leaving, I decided that I should take a picture with a big cat.  When was I going to have this opportunity again?  I noticed that the line to the beautiful white tiger was short, so I told Tony that I was going in.  Alessandra got upset because she was too small to enter (they do have safety standards here (ha ha)...you have to be 16 years old to enter).  I gave her a kid's Clif Bar and she felt a little better.  

I got in line and a worker told me to come back in 30 minutes.  He said that they were going to feed the tigers now.  I tried to play dumb and not understand what he meant and stood in line.  There were people still ahead of me going in.  Then, the tigers started to roar and play with each other.  Yup, I got out of line really quickly.  Did not need to be in there with them.  

No, I didn't have my picture taken with a big cat and I am OK with it.  It was late in the day, the kids missed there nap and we had a long bus ride home plus I did not want to be their snack food.



Random pictures of Lujan Zoo

As luck was on our side, the bus came quickly and we all got seats.   The kids were able to take small naps and traffic back to Buenos Aires wasn't bad.   With the new found energy, we decided to take advantage of being out and about.  Of course, our first stop was a park near Congreso.

Making our way to the Casa Rosada aka The Pink House (similar to our White House), we stopped off for a quick dinner where Gianluca passed out.

We made it to the Casa Rosada with a beautiful full moon in the sky.  Alessandra lit up when she saw the pink house.
































Thursday, May 15, 2014

The third child

After getting over the shock of being pregnant again (about week 23), I called my little one "the Bonus Baby".   Tony and I have been blessed with one girl and one boy, this baby was quite simply a special bonus.

Similar to what I have heard, Gianluca is a typical third child.   Alessandra was put on a schedule right away.   We stuck with the schedule very closely.  Heaven forbid if she took a late nap.  Tony's and my life revolved around it.  We were rewarded with her very good sleeping habits.  Anthony came along and we tried our best to stick with a schedule, but things slipped just a little.  

Gianluca has a schedule. It just isn't set by time.   It is set by whatever activities his older siblings have.  He doesn't know differently.  Rather than taking him straight home from the hospital, we stopped off at the race track so Alessandra and Anthony could ride their Striders.  Not more than 10 days old, he was off on a family road trip to Reno (again for Strider racing) and South Lake Tahoe.  

Gianluca has worn only a handful of new clothes, plays with Alessandra's old baby toys (yes, some are pink), and cries a little longer before getting picked up. I have been trying to keep up with a baby album.  When he was younger and didn't talk much, I would get distracted with Alessandra and Anthony and forget that he was even there.  He was content just hanging out.

The poor third child.

But he is pretty darn smart.   As the third child, he put this whole trip in motion.   Huh, you say?  We would have not sold our home (our place was too small) and I would still be working part time if he hadn't come along. 

But now he is getting attention- and lots of it!

From the moment Tony started taking Gianluca on walks with the baby Bjorn, people would stop Tony to say hello to Gianluca.  In Cafayate, a very sweet older couple "Los Abuelos" would play with Gianluca at breakfast, which was a lifesaver, as Tony and I were able to eat a little.  His abuelos would affectionately call him "Gordito".  Gianluca would squeal with delight.

On several occasions, Tony would mention that people would comment on how happy and cute Gianluca is.   I didn't believe it.  Yes, he is cute and sweet and yummy, but he is also my son.  Then, I took him to  the store a couple of times.  Sure enough, people would ask me if he was my son and comment on how cute he is.  

I guess Tony was right.  I am thankful that Gianluca is getting all the attention that he deserves.  It is truly a blessing to have such a happy smiling little "Gordo".

Gianluca is all smiles when he is with Daddy






Saturday, May 10, 2014

Meal time

No matter where I am, one of the hardest parts of the day is planning our meals.  If I could make the same meals every day, I probably would.  Life would be so much easier.  Trips to the market would be quicker.   Costco would be my new best friend.  This of course would last about 3 days.  Not two days as our family thankfully eats leftovers.

In Buenos Aires, it has been hard for me to get into my cooking groove.  I must be doing something wrong as it is dreamy to be able to eat pastas, pizza, and empanadas while sipping wine all the time.  These foods have almost become a staple for tony and me.   We used to eat pizza about once a month and pasta only to energize ourselves before a century (100 mile) bike ride.  I feel like I am in a spinning wheel making the same meals for everyone.

Gianluca: bananas, pears, butternut squash, avocados and kabocha. 

Anthony and Alessandra: cereal, bananas, apples, eggs, oatmeal, cucumber, hamburgers, pasta and pizza.  Anthony has decided that he prefers baby food.   He points to what Gianluca is eating and asks for it.  My go to foods for him have been carrots and yogurt.   He eats them at least once a day.

I have experimented making new things.  Some turned out really good (black bean soup) and some were big failures (bird food mush). It's called bird food because I soaked  pre packaged mixture of split peas, rice, corn, barley, and lentils for Gianluca's baby food.  If it tasted good, I would have branded it vegetable soup, but since it tasted horrible, it is forever called bird food yuck.  Poor Gianluca.  

Tonight the plan is to have hamburgers.   This might change as there might be a festival at a local park.

Stocking up on the weekly fruits and vegetables 

It's labeled "garden of vegetables".   I call it bird food.





Friday, May 9, 2014

Life in the big city.

Buenos Aires is about 1/3 the size of SF in area, and has about 4x as many people.

Enough said.

Okay, I'll elaborate on this when I get a chance, but after a month of living in the big city I'm pretty sure that this guy won't be living (even part time) in a big city any time soon. That means never!

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Walk in the Park

Yesterday evening was moving time again.   Thankfully Carlos, the owner of the apartment we were staying at, offered to drive us in his car.   Wow, he is such a nice guy (especially considering we cancelled our reservation 4 weeks early).   We were able to pack all our bags in Carlos' car (this doesn't include the two suitcases tony took over earlier). The kids and I took a taxi while tony rode with Carlos.  

Our new home, at least for the next five weeks, seems like a walk in the park.

Side by side comparison of the two places(old vs new):
Third floor vs fourth floor
Two bedrooms vs three
Two twin beds vs king bed
Eight minute walk to the supermarket vs five
Fifteen minute walk to the park vs three 

What I like best is that I don't constantly need to watch where The kids or I step nor smell unpleasant aroma.

The kids will certainly miss watching the train gates drop and the trains roar by.  I think that is all I will miss, too.

Last day in Villa Crespo

The castle building

Jesus and a giraffe in the building.   Though no Elvis sighting