Wednesday, January 22, 2014

The Long Run...

Our trip back to the Lower 48 was pretty uneventful, once it got going. We stayed in hotels, played in the pool with the baby, and generally relaxed and had a good time. I got to meet one of my wife's high school classmates in Seattle, and we hung out with him and his family. I got reminded of how nice it is to fly first class. We had it for each leg of the flight. Free drinks, real china and flatware...such luxury.

Alice did very well with the travel, for the most part. She does not, however, like to be in a car seat. She made these feelings especially evident on the ride from Atlanta to my in-laws' house in Jacksonvlle, Alabama. Much crying and fussing. Of course, she had not been confined like that in over four months. Village life can do that to you.

We actually arrived in Alabama on the evening of Christmas Day, two days late, but happy to be in one place for a little while. We opened presents, had yummy food, and drank a few toasts. Ah, civilization...

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

There and Back Again

I think it was actually the original working title for The Hobbit, or something like that. We did see the latest installment of that series over the holidays. It was fun to watch, which is not a horrible recommendation these days.

We have been back since January 14. Our trips were long and eventful. On the way out, we had our originating flight from Bethel canceled because of inoperative runway lights. We had an idea that it might happen, because it had happened on the two previous evenings. We decided to go to Bethel anyway, reasoning that any rescheduled flight might be early in the morning, and we didn't want the aggravation of trying to fly across the river in time for that. The river never did freeze up well enough for us to drive.

We had gone to the terminal and checked in all of our stuff. We left to get some dinner. As we returned, I could hear the cancellation announcement coming over the loudspeaker outside of the terminal. Damn.

My wife went inside and got on the phone immediately with Alaska Airlines to make alternative plans, while I stayed in the car with a mercifully sleeping Alice. The process took her an hour. Alice continued to sleep in the car with me. She can be a very adaptive baby at times, and I am thankful for that.

The bad news: the cancellation had knocked all of our connections awry. We could either stay in Bethel for two days, and then fly three legs back to back, as was the original plan, or we could fly to Anchorage the next morning, overnight there, fly to Seattle, overnight there, and finally fly to Atlanta on Christmas day. We chose the latter alternative. We decided to make a mini-vacation out of the trip itself...

Thursday, December 19, 2013

It's Done...

Well, we are, anyway. Another semester in the books. Some good, some bad, but a relief to be done, if only for a short while. The period from August to December always feels longer, and more of an endurance race than the second semester. I suspect that there are all kinds of reasons why this is true, and I have thought about them over the past five school years, but I am not inclined to stir them that vigorously at this point. The fall semester is just harder. It is always nice to have it over with.

The weather has not been conducive to river freezing, at least not for automobile traffic, so our car remains in Bethel for now. I thought that we might drive out for vacation at one point, but people much smarter about this subject than I are keeping their vehicles off of the ice at this point. Good enough for me. Maybe we will drive back down after the holiday.

Many of the staff members have departed for their back home climes already. Because this is our home now, we will be in less of a hurry. Our reservations were originally for Friday, but they had to be rescheduled after a mixup involving the dogs. We now leave Sunday night, but we have the comfort of flying first class all the way from Anchorage to Atlanta. Nice. My in-laws will be there at the ATL with our new Chevy Traverse-the baby and dog toter. They live a couple of hours from the airport. We get to Atlanta at about 3:30 in the afternoon Monday. I hope that some of the fearsome Atlanta traffic will be somewhat reduced by the proximity of the Christmas holiday.

We are also planning a quick trip to Detroit after the first of the year in order to visit family in Michigan. As Alice continues to grow and do cute stuff, we felt increasingly guilty about the thought that the rest of her family would be left out. This helps to solve that a little.

There are still some details to be dealt with before we leave town. I am finishing grading, and my wife has been finishing up two weeks of lesson plans, so that she does not have to deal with them when she returns. I am not so ambitious at the moment, but I have about four hours or so tomorrow with Alice while she is over here watching some professional development videos. I will get my plans done for our return. I may get ambitious and do them for the following week as well.

For now, though, I am just going to relax and enjoy life at a calmer pace for a while...Merry Christmas and Happy New Years to all...

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Two Weeks Left...

I mentioned the speed of time in my last post. Nothing about that has changed. We finish the first semester two weeks from today. We will spend tomorrow afternoon making sure that our grades are reasonably current. There are only two more sets of lesson plans to prepare, and then it will be time to spend an extended break with family.

Our holiday breaks encompass both Christmases, Western and Russian Orthodox, and for that reason, it runs 3 1/2 weeks this year. Although we do not have the autumnal breaks or the spring break that many schools have, the extended Christmas break truly feels like a luxury.

We will be taking Alice to spend the time with her grandparents in Alabama. She also has cousins there now, and we anticipate a joyous reunion. I am hopeful that some of my family members will be able to make it down as well. We faced a difficult decision when it came to the geographical split in family groups. Because of the unpredictable weather at that time of the year, as well as the 1500-mile round trip involved, we concluded that Alabama in the winter and Michigan in the summer will have to be the practical solution for the forseeable future.

For my part, I am looking forward to sleeping in. It is possible that I will spend the first vacation day doing just that. Wait, I am the father of a nine-month old child. It isn't going to happen....oh, well, I can dream, can't I?

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Sunday...

The sun came out this afternoon. We haven't had much of that lately. Yesterday, it rained horizontally and the wind blew all day long. This morning, it snowed. Now, the sun is streaming in the windows and shining off of the new snowpack.

Fall has been weird. By now, the river would ordinarily be frozen, maybe even enough to operate a snow machine on it. There would have been snow that had been on the ground long enough to get good and dirty. But the river is still open. I have seen some recent video that showed it in a slushee-like state, but I am sure that yesterday's hours of rainfall ended that. I saw a boat moving down the slough yesterday at a decent rate of speed. No suggestion that the captain was picking his way around ice floes.

The baby has discovered the delights of guacamole and even could be sighted sucking on a lime this afternoon. My wife is determined that we will not have a "kid's menu" kid. It looks as if I will have to compete for the guacamole with an 8-month-old from now on. There are worse fates, I suppose...

Week number thirteen begins tomorrow. Nothing real fancy this week. Maybe kickball in PE, but that's about it. Thanksgiving is a little over two weeks away, and then it is a fast downhill run to Christmas. I am amazed at how fast it seems to go each year. Each year seems to be faster. Before we know it, the years will fly by and Alice will be in pre-school. Okay, maybe I am getting a little carried away.

I think that we will skype with the kids back in Traverse City, and then I need to get up and do some vacuuming around here. Three dogs worth of hair to contend with. On to the holidays!

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

11 Weeks Down...

The mad rush is beginning to ease a little. Since the last post, we have had our Halloween carnival, and things will be relatively quiet now until I take high school kids over to Bethel for the district high school speech contest. That is always intense, but fun at the same time. I do not care all that much for the part that requires me to sleep on a classroom floor for two consecutive nights, but the event is generally entertaining, and I enjoy watching the kids rise to the occasion.

After that, we have Thanksgiving week, which features a big lunch for the community at which we serve. Of course, we also have a nice, long weekend. From there, it is a short rush to Christmas vacation and a long break in Alabama.

The kiddies are coming along reasonably well, although it seems that one of my seventh graders has broken his arm this afternoon. With any luck, it will be resolved simply. We shall see.

I have some kids in here enjoying some free time on their computers. Time to kick them out and go home and snuggle the baby. Night, all....

Monday, October 28, 2013

False Start...

In our last exciting adventure...there was snow in the air. That is all that turned out to be. In the air. Nothing accumulated. There was some snow this morning that did stick for a while, but it is gone now. We are mostly going through a long phase of rain, followed by more rain, with intervals of rain. It is soggy here, in a serious way.

This is the week of Halloween, which means Carnival and costumes. My wife and the baby and I are going to come as the Three Bears. Cute, huh? We have parent conferences as well, today and tomorrow. I think that this should keep all of us busy. It is also making the days fly by. We are in the eleventh week of the semester now, and the weeks just keep piling up one atop the other.

The baby gets bigger and more interesting. She sits up on her own, and it is just a matter of time until she begins creeping around the house. Our happy, quiet life will be a thing of the past in short order at that point. No escaping it.

I am sitting in a teacher development class, and my wife is at home taking a class of her own. Mondays are long, and I am waiting for this one to be over.