Monday, September 20, 2010

New Jobs, New House, New Trimester


Last Thursday, I entered the third trimester and I believe my belly has increased by almost double since then. My belly is big enough now that I can give the baby light squeezes, which I do on a regular basis. I always thought being able to feel a baby moving inside would be creepy and alien, but it's way cooler than I anticipated, I find it reassuring and fascinating.

I've been asked by multiple people if we're registered anywhere for our baby needs. The registry is listed in our baby hootenanny invite, but maybe it's just too buried. Anyway, here it is:

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/baby/1V48M35QFLS3B
AND
Deposit A Gift: http://stumbaughbaby.mydagsite.com/

If you're wanting information about our welcome baby party on October 17th, it can be found on the Deposit A Gift site, under "Event Details" or in the last post on our blog.

Speaking of our registry....
Someone(s) bought our baby their infant car seat and had it sent to our apartment. We have no idea who it came from. Thank you very much to whoever sent it, please let us know who you are so we can properly thank you.

Last Thursday we also signed official loan docs. Our mortgage broker says we're set for funding tomorrow or Wednesday. We'll be getting the keys to our new house on Wednesday or Thursday. I'll spend Thursday and Friday cleaning the house in preparation for our big move on Saturday. So far we haven't received many positive responses for folks being available to help on Saturday, we're sure it will work out though. People are super busy these days, which we totally understand. We have large pieces of furniture that all need to be moved on Saturday, in five different locations. At least all five of those locations are within 45 minutes of our house!

Tony started his job at Whole Foods about a week and a half ago, so far he's loving it! Turns out Whole Foods is a great company to work for. I worked my last day for the landscape architect last Wednesday and am so relieved to be working full time from home now.

We went to an exceptionally beautiful wedding in Mendocino County on Saturday. Congratulations Matt and Leila Madrone! Their ceremony was genuine, heartfelt and very emotional. Still feeling extremely honored to have been present. Wow!!!!

I'm feeling pretty overwhelmed by the amount of stuff that we need to take care of before our baby arrives, kind of makes my head swim...wish us luck!

love,
~melanie (and tony).

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Welcome Baby Stumbaugh Hootenanny

The evite for our baby's welcoming party was sent out by Xochitl today, but just in case you have a difficult time with evite or something screwy happened and you didn't receive it. Here's all the details. If you want to come, either rsvp on the evite or send an email to: orangemelon@gmail.com

Welcome Baby Stumbaugh Hootenanny and Country Potluck!

Sunday October 17, 2010
Starting at 1pm
Ending at 5pm

It's a potluck, please bring something to share and let us know what you're bringing so we don't end up with ten versions of potato salad or a ton of hummus.

Here's the link to the potluck spreadsheet:
https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AmNoBrlyi9uRdDBwWEk1RFhpQVF1U2RZV0E5TC0ta2c&hl=en&authkey=CPC-x_oB

If you'd rather not deal with the google spreadsheet, send an email to Melissa at melissimo@gmail.com, letting her know what you'd like to bring and she'll update the spreadsheet for you.

Please mark your dish if it fits into any "special needs" food categories (vegan, vegetarian, gluten-free, etc.), thank you!

We're encouraging everyone to bring their own plates/bowls/cups/utensils, for the sake of the environment. We will have some extras on hand, but please bring your own and if you happen
to have some extra camp meal necessities and wouldn't mind bringing them, that would be great too! If you do bring your own for sharing, please write your name on the bottom just in case we need to return them to you.

There won't be any games...aside from bocce on the massive lawn! If you have other lawn type games, please feel free to bring them. You won't be subjected to any "baby shower" type games.

There will be music, djs and a performance or two.

Children are welcome and encouraged to come! There's an amazing playground very close to the picnic site.

Here's where it's taking place:

Howarth Park
Gazebo Picnic Site
630 Summerfield Road
Santa Rosa

If you've never been to Howarth Park, check out their website:
http://ci.santa-rosa.ca.us/departments/recreationandparks/parks/cityparks/neparks/Pages/howarthpark.aspx

More than anything we want our family and friends to join us for a celebratory day in the park!

If you feel so inclined to help out with our baby needs, we are registered at the following two sites:

Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/baby/1V48M35QFLS3B
AND
Deposit A Gift: http://stumbaughbaby.mydagsite.com/

Friday, September 3, 2010

Can you believe it's been over two years?

Tony and I started looking for a house to purchase back in March of 2008. We started off looking in the Santa Cruz mountains and after figuring out there's not much in the Santa Cruz area in our price range, we did some major soul searching and decided to try our luck living in Sonoma County. We've been looking in the Santa Rosa area for almost a year and a half and finally...

Our mortgage broker gave us the green light on giving our 30-day notice at our apartment today, which we did. Looks like we're moving into our new house midway through this month. We're scheduling our big move for the weekend of September 25-26. If anyone out there is interested, able and available that weekend, we could sure use some help! I'm not going to be of much assistance in this move as I won't be able to lift many boxes. This will be the first time all of our belongings (which are currently in five different locations) will be housed in the same place for over a year and a half! If you're interested and available, please let one of us know, we'll provide some beer and food to those who volunteer their time to our worthy cause.

There's some minor work that needs to be done to our new house, painting, floors (master bath needs new tiles and living room hardwood floors need to be sanded and possibly stained?), minor electrical, minor plumbing. If you are skilled in these ways or know someone reputable and reasonably priced who is, please let us know.

After working for Beckmanns Bakery since the beginning of 2003, Tony is moving on! He's accepted a position at the Whole Foods in Petaluma as the Bakery Team Leader. He starts next week. We're very excited about him having a local job, not making the two and a half hour commute down to Santa Cruz and he won't be gone from home two to three days a week. He's sad to be leaving Beckmanns, they've been great to him and us. He's happy to be taking on a new challenge career-wise.

Not much has changed in our pregnant world. I'm still feeling good. My belly's getting bigger and my passenger is still cruising around like crazy. What else can I say?

The evite for our welcome baby party will be sent out by Xochitl this weekend. If you're evite "challenged" be on the lookout for a blog post coming soon with all the details.

Until then...
Here we are at Plunge two weekends ago...



love,
~melanie (and tony).

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

But wait, there's more...


I'll be 24 weeks pregnant tomorrow. Things are going great in the pregnancy world. The baby is kicking and cruising around like mad. Tony was finally able to feel the baby action the other morning. I'm to the point now it feels "normal." I've heard from many moms and pregnant women that are further along that the movement only gets more and more intense from here. Last Friday Tony and I went in for our ultrasound. It's the only one we're planning on having done. It was a truly amazing experience, so cool getting to see the baby! Our ultrasound technician was extremely knowledgeable and pleasant. I felt elated during and after the experience, a feeling of a large weight being lifted off my shoulders, finding out that all is groovy with our baby. I'm so excited to meet him/her (nope still didn't find out the sex). It's so crazy how much is going inside that belly of mine.


The date that the bank had set for the short sale we've been waiting on to close escrow was September 13th. Which means, we should have heard something by August 13th about them moving forward. Well, we still haven't heard anything. Two weeks ago Tony and I went to see a house in Rincon Valley, which for those of you that aren't familiar with neighborhoods in Santa Rosa, it's one of the nicer neighborhoods heading further east out toward Sonoma, really good school district. The house was listed a bit out of our price range, so I didn't really get my hopes up about it, thinking there's no way they'd accept any offer we'd be able to afford. The house was brand new on the market, so we waited about a week and put in an offer. They countered, we countered back...the countering back happened last Friday. We heard on Monday that they accepted our offer. Our agent came over on Monday night and we signed all kinds of official paperwork. They now have our official paperwork and the title company has our deposit check. The home inspection is scheduled for next Friday. We'll see where it goes, but things are looking promising on this one. At least it's not a short sale! Maybe we'll be having a house warming and welcome baby stumbaugh gathering at our new house...let's hope!


I've officially been laid off from my office manager job with the landscape architect in Sebastopol, which honestly, is a relief. It looks like I'll be able to pick up more hours with Yourdictionary.com, so I think I'll be fine. I've also filed for unemployment.

Tomorrow we're leaving for Plunge! Three and a half days at Camp and Sons, looking forward to seeing and spending a relaxing time with many of you there... Tony and I celebrate our six year anniversary this Saturday while at Plunge, I can't believe it's been six years. He's still my most favorite person!

Our Welcome Baby Stumbaugh Hootenanny and Country Potluck is coming up in less than two months, October 17th. Xochitl will be sending an evite soon, if you don't receive it and you're wanting to attend, please let me or Tony know.

More soon...until then, we hope you're all doing wonderfully!!!

love,
~melanie (and tony).

Thursday, July 8, 2010

18 Weeks and Counting...


It's been awhile since we've updated our blog. Now that we have bigger news to share these days, it seems the appropriate time to do so.

As many or all of you know, I (Melanie, not Tony) am pregnant. I guess Tony is pregnant in a way too, since he has to tolerate and support my various aches, needs, food cravings, food aversions, mood swings, body image issues, anxieties, etc. The baby is due on December 9th, I'll be 19 weeks on Thursday. So far my pregnancy has been relatively easy. I was exhausted the first trimester and couldn't really eat many vegetables, they just sounded terrible to me, but never vomited. Now that I'm in the second trimester much of my energy has returned and almost all of my food aversions have gone away, hooray! Pregnancy brain has begun and my short term memory isn't at 100%. Also with the second trimester, the baby bump has appeared, which you can see in the above photo.

We haven't had an ultrasound done yet, but will be getting one in a couple of weeks. So many people have asked if we're going to find out the sex of the baby, we are NOT going to find out. It will be a surprise. With that we're also keeping any name ideas to ourselves. I feel very lucky to have timed our pregnancy with my second trimester during the summer. We're looking forward to our non-traditional baby "shower" hootenanny on October 17th and hopeful that many of our friends and family will be able to attend.

Tony and I moved into an apartment in Santa Rosa two weeks ago. It's nice to be in our own space again after staying with friends and family for the past year and a half (thank you Sabin, Xochitl, Gerry and Laurel). Our new address is: 1165 Evans Drive, Santa Rosa, CA 95405. We'll be at this address until October 1st at the latest. We're still waiting to hear about the short sale that we've been in contract on since February 25th. The first time home buyers tax credit has been extended until September 30th, for those that were in contract prior to the deadline of April 30th. Which we were, so if the short sale goes through (and we're hopeful it will), we'll still get the tax credit. In the meantime, we've started looking at other houses in the Santa Rosa area, since there's less competition out there on the housing market now that the April 30th deadline has passed. Our new deadline for entering into official 30-day escrow on this short sale (or another house that we fall in love with) is September 1st. If we're not in official 30-day escrow by then, we'll be finding a house in Santa Rosa to rent long term. I have nesting to do!

Tony is still working for Beckmann's, driving down to Santa Cruz on Tuesday mornings and coming home on Thursday, working from home a couple days a week and driving out to bay area farmers markets on the weekends to train his employees. I'm still working as an office manager for the landscape architect in Sebastopol four days a week. Which is likely going to either end or get drastically reduced soon, since his business isn't doing so hot. I started working from home about a month ago for yourdictionary.com fifteen to twenty hours a week, so far I dig it and am hopeful it will go to full time or close to, so that when the baby comes I'll have a work-from-home job.

Other than being pregnant, moving, looking at houses and working, we've been keeping ourselves busy with our usual summer outings and planning the first fundraiser for the Out There Project (with the other six members), called Plunge.

Hope life is treating you all well and we'd love to see you soon!

We'll be updating our blog more regularly and they'll likely be shorter posts.

love,
~melanie.
(and tony)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

So long, and thanks for all the fish......




As the the final sun sets over the Peruvian coastline, our two month extravaganza finally comes to a close. Our lasy days here we have been killing alot of time and eating scrumptious food. Well, I have been eating well, Melanie is dreaming of eating gallons of cooked chard. We had dinner last night at Astrid y Gaston, one of the most famous restaurants here in Peru. ww.astridygaston.com



Everything about the meal was top notch. Excellent service with dudes in suits, heavy plates and flatware, and 5 different types of home-made bread with three different dipping sauces. Melanie even got an armed escort to the lieu. She had a house salad with avocado and thinly sliced asparagus that was perfectly moist and seasoned well. She also had a risotto made for her that wasn´t on the menu, veggies and cream. I had the triple sashimi appetizer, little cuts of fish in three different spicy sauces. For dinner I was supposed to have blue marlin, but they ran out and I had some other giant ocean fish instead with jumbo gulf prawns cooked in a tangy bbq sauce with a chili mandarin risotto with potato. We accidentally didn´t bring all of our cash and were keeping our fingers crossed about the bill total, in hopes we wouldn´t have to run 15 block back to our hotel for more cash. It worked out, and was a great meal to have on our last night out.








In a way, our brains are already home. We´ve been checking out craiglist for jobs and future houses, talking about the possibilities. Our summer calendars are already starting to fill up with events, and now that we will be positioned in the north bay closer to family, it doesn´t look like it will slow down any time soon. But we are looking forward to being closer to most of you (sorry Santa Cruz friends), and hope we will have easy adjustment to the new (yet old for me) surroundings.

This trip has been a blast, and we are glad to know that we conquered yet another continent. Next stop, Antarctica! Not really, anybody who knows Melanie well enough knows that she would not endure that kind of cold.


Much love to all of you, thanks for reading and we hope to see you soon.

TnM inc.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

coming close to the end.....







Greetings friends and family, you will be happy (we hope) to know that we have much more to report compared to our lazy beach time.

In Lima we struggled a bit to find a place to stay in Cuzco. It ended up being way too much time on the internet and on the frustrating pay phones to go in explicit detail. We ended booking a reservation with the backpacker super company Flying Dog. Our taxi to the Lima airport was scary and exciting. Our hostel had called for a taxi to pick us up at 115pm, we needed to be there by 2 and it takes close to 45 minutes with all the traffic. At 145pm with the taxi being a no-show, we started to panic. It´s advised to only take registered taxi´s here in the big metropolis of Lima. There are unregistered taxi´s, tiny little car like things that appear to be on their last legs, that are much cheaper but have a much higher incidence rate of burglary and crime. We´ve avoided them up to this point as we were desperate. Our gracious front desk man at the hostel picked one out of the crowd and seemed to have some sort of stern private talk with him in spanish.

At first the guy seemed pretty normal, I think our feelers were a little off due to the airport panic. The guy ended up making brief small talk with his limited english and our short bus spanish. Within several blocks the intensity of his driving had picked up, honking his horn and driving through intersections when he had a red light. His speed increased and ran stop signs in the residential slums, the bounce over speed bumps made me hit my head on the car´s ceiling. Every time he would do something crazy he would clap his hands and laugh, saying ¨ahhhhhh Peru¨. When we got to the very busy 6 lane avenue, he began to drive on the curb and parallel walking paths to speed ahead of the traffic. He would jump the curb and re-enter the avenue when a small amount of space opened up during the times when the traffic accelerated. Packed buses, small and large, would honk their horns at him when he would magically appear in the cloud of black smog that emanated from the vehicle in front. As we neared the airport he removed the taxi sign on the roof of his car as it is illegal for unregistered taxis to enter the airport. I don´t know how he convinced the guard with the big gun that we were his gringo friends and we just happen to be riding in the back with large luggage, but I didn´t ask any questions. When he pulled into the heavily trafficked drop-off area of the airport, he honked and yelled at a car full of nuns to get out of his way so he could park. As maddening, frightening, and insane the ride was, he got us there in one piece in only 20 minutes. We would have missed our plane if it weren´t for him. We had to be specially escorted to the front of large lines so we could make our plane, they were boarding when we arrived at the gate.


Okay, I know that was a long description but it I feel it needed to be well documented for future generations.

The ride to Cuzco was really nice, and a little scary at the end. With the city being over 4,000ft in elevation, and being located in the middle of a valley with even much larger mountains, the landing is extremely difficult with the heavy winds and the airlines only use their best pilots for the job, at least so they say. It was a little dizzying, kind of like being on kiddie-style roller coaster full of foreign tourists.

The first steps getting out of the plane was a good preview of the new few days to come. Adjusting to the altitude is a strange experience. I hate to use another rollercoaster/theme park reference, but anybody out there ever go on the Gravitron at your local country fair? You know how when you get out it´s hard to walk and your chest feels like it´s falling? Well, it´s like that only it last 2-3 days. Slow steady steps, sleep, and lots of Coca tea help tremendously.

It was raining buckets when we did our senile walk outside of the airport terminal. Luckily we had a taxi waiting for us from our hostal, holding up a sign that said ¨Melany¨. We arrived at our hostal and had our first introduction to Luigi the ¨Jungle Boy¨. Luigi worked at the hostel, but spent most of his nights going clubbing with foreigners and working the following day with little sleep. Luigi the jungle boy was from Iquitos, the jugle city capital in north eastern Peru that isn´t accessible by car, only plane or boat. He had long curly hair and could speak very muffled english, but his enthusiasm for the language did not slow him down.

¨I am jun-gol boeee! I am (mumblemumblemumble), and strong in heart. Do you guys like to party? I have been (mumblemumblemumblemumble) for long time (laughs loudly).....I am jun-gol boeee!¨





The other person working the hostel looked like an ex-con. I didn´t catch his name but he wasn´t very friendly and also alerted us that we only had a reservation for 2 nights instead of 3. One of the few bad things Flying Dog has on their report card. We had an email confirmation but the ex-con didn´t sympathise for us at all and merely shrugged his shoulders.

The place is relatively new and has lot´s of shiny looking toys around the common areas. New kitchen, new computer with huge monitor and fast internet, big flat screen tv with lots of bootleg dvd´s, and a plush couch to curl up on. The place was crawling with backpackers, which sealed the deal in our minds as we realized we are too old to be staying in places like this (at least when traveling together, I can probably be satisfied with cramped floor space on a Vietnamese kitchen with the right group of guys, you know who you are). Our room was nice enough, an okay view of the colonial city and green hills as far as the eye can see. The shower has a tiny electric heater for it on the ceiling, only it´s dangerous for tall people because the metal tube that connects to the shower head is known for electrocuting when touched.

After some time catching our breathe and trying not to think about moving to another hostal for a night, we headed into town. The cobblestone streets and alleyways with people selling crafts are charming. Lot´s of teeny tiny little women walking around in colorful garbs, carrying heavy looking sacks of miscellaneous items on their backs. Some walk around with their daughters and baby alpacas trying to have tourists take photos of them for small change. Cuzco has the most reported incidences of theft and crime in any other city in Peru. We were on guard with our money stashed in secret pockets and we stuffed socks in the shirts of our arms to make us look buff (not really). It was hard to keep our wits about us when a small man with a dirty stained baseball cap was chasing his small heard of runaway donkeys down a busy street.

The food. Lot´s of fine dining options in Cuzo that cater to the upper class travelers here for Machuu Pichuu. Speciality food includes alpaca, cow testicle, guinea pigs, and corn beer that is made from the fermented saliva of local villages. They chew on dried pieces of corn and spit it into a giant pot, a tradition that dates back hundreds of years in this region.

The first night I had some trout from the nearby Rio Urabamba with a spicy passion fruit glaze and citrus mashed sweet potatoes. There is a local Cafe called ¨Jacks¨ that has a line going outside at all hours of the day. Really good breakfast and a great atmosphere, very reminiscent of a good breakfast spot from the states. So far we´ve had, giant banana pancakes with a maple infused caramel sauce, egg platters with home fries and and home-made bread with grilled tomatoes and pesto with a hint of mint, huevos rancheros with real salsa and tasty local beans, nachos made from frito corn chips (I know, sounds sacrilegious but it was incredible), and a grilled panini with smoked trout and caper cream cheese with real potato french fries and house made aioli. Yup, Jack´s is awesome and has fulfilled our craving for tasty breakfasts rather than the national standard, white bread and jam.




A few other food highlights to get them out of the way and to make you hungry. Pineapple coconut curry shrimps (Melanie had a version of this that had apple in it, very interesting combination of flavors and something that will be experimented with in the kitchen at home), mint risotto with smoked cheese, teriyaki trout skewers with panko crumbs and pepper rice.....and to our delight, we just found an Indian restaurant that is cheap as sin and deliciously spicy. Had two different kofta dishes with raisins and nuts, good korma and Melanie had some great creamed lentils.

Just thought I´d get the food portion over with so I can try and remember the rest of the many little details about our trip.

We took a long walk to the Mercado Central and were overwhelmed by everything it had to offer. The place was the size of the cow palace and took up 8 city blocks. The fragrant smells mixed from luscious to putrid. Rows upon rows of exotic jungle flowers, and then rows upon rows of butchered meat that sweltered in the claustrophobic heat of the building. Equally sized rows of breads, cakes, sweets, vegetables, potatoes (I list this separately as there is a separate isle just for taters as taters are rule the farm supreme here) hand bags, kitchen utensils, fruit juice (yup, it was like a swap meet for small time Jamba Juice junkies) food carts, and stinky fish. I was planning to get some vegetables and exotic spices as it was going to be our last night with kitchen access. I ended up not getting anything as walking still made me dizzy and I didn´t trust myself with my knife and also didn´t trust the backpacker kitchen.

Lot´s crafts here, better than any other place on this trip yet. We bought a few nice little things, a painting, and some small gourds that have incredibly detailed hand carvings on them. I fulfilled a long time dream of getting a hand-made chess board, Inca´s vs. Conquistadors, very cool except we know the sad outcome of the real battle.

We moved into our new room the following day. Even though the view wasn´t as nice, it made up for it on every other level. Nicer people, reliable hot water, tv, and much closer to the Plaza De Armas aka the town square. It was really nice since we were going to spend two nights in the sacred valley and come back to the same hotel, that way we could leave items with no hassle.

We had some problems with our train tickets from Peru Rail. Peru Rail has a monopoly on trains going to Machuu Pichuu and the Sacred Valley. Besides charging exorbitant prices for short distances, they aren´t very friendly to boot. I was having a problem with their website as they would only let me buy a one way ticket from Ollayantambo to Agua Calientes (aka Machuu Pichuu Pueblo), and no access back to Cuzco. We tried going down to the office but it was closed for Jesus day, Sunday. We went the first thing Monday morning, the day were to leave on the bus for Ollayantambo, crossing our fingers really hard in hopes we would get this sorted out. If the tickets were then sold out, we would have to change our plan drastically and miss out on part of the Sacred Valley in order to get to see Machuu Pichuu. I will also note here that at this point of our trip, going to Machuu Pichuu seemed like a necessary hassle, and we were looking forward to getting it over with.

The office was loaded with people. We took a number and had to wait an hour just to talk to somebody. Seeing irritated travelers at the rows of desks was doing nothing to get our hopes up. When it was finally our turn the lady told us that the return trains to Cuzco on the day we wanted to travel were now full and that there was nothing she could do. I asked if she could change our ticket for the following day, but she said she needed a printed copy, which we didn´t have, even though they had all of our information including our passport numbers in their system. We took another number knowing it would be at least another hour as the office was over filling in the late morning.

During that time, Melanie and I were cursing every other word and trying to figure out our options. I was convinced that there had to be another way to get to agua calientes besides the expensive train, 4 wheel drive Jungle bus? Ziplining through the trees? Hanglide? Melanie and I split up. She went to an internet cafe to print out our tickets and I went to a nearby travel agent to inquire about alternative means of transportation. The first travel agent told me in broken english that it was possible, but was trying to sign us on to a package that would include lodging and meals. We really just wanted a ride back to cuzco as we already paid for a train ticket to Agua Calientes as well as lodging. I tried another travel agent and she dispelled my hope of taking some sort of extreme jungle vehicle, as there really are no roads to Agua Calientes, just the train tracks and hiking trails. She did somehow manage to get us a train ticket, not sure how since Peru Rail itself couldn´t provide one but we weren´t complaining. The only thing was that the ticket would be waiting for us in Agua Calientes, one of their guides would meet us at the train station holding a sign with our names. Seemed to be a decent plan? Keep reading.

Stoked that we wouldn´t have to drastically change our plans, we took a mini-bus through the Sacred Valley to Ollayantambo. The valley was gorgeous, lots of high tiered farming over luscious green canyons and clear lakes. Lots more tiny women in brightly colored clothes and strange non-functional hats (Non-functional because they didn´t seem keep any sun out of one´s eyes). Lot´s of donkeys, cows, and giant sacks of potatoes were other common sights along the valley road.

We arrived in Ollayantambo just before dusk. The towering mountains and ruins loomed overhead of the tiny village. There is a great photo here where you can see the contrast of the village to the mountains. We unpacked our bags for our one night stay and loaded up on ibuprofen since our heads were pounding from the drastic altitude change and windy roads on the bus. We had some french fries and coca tea at small restaurant with a nautical theme, big ropes holding up antique chandeliers and old black and white photos from years past in the valley while we played dominoes. We walked around the town lined with cobblestone streets that was dimly lite from old style lamps. They had a great little plaza with overgrown sunflowers and monstrous datura plants that surrounded a bronze statue of an Inca warrior. We looked at many restaurants in hopes for some Melanie friendly food, found a nice place that she could settle on right next to the roaring river that seemed good but decided to keep looking just in case. Our guide book recommended a place at the edge of town, had nice patio garden and colorful lights that matched the funky decor inside. It was pretty dead, and after looking at the menu we didn´t think it was the right place for Melanie food but the owner was there and insisted that we stay and that her chef could make her anything she wanted. Seeing this as some sort of omen, we stupidly decided to stay. The food was awful and boring. Melanie was supposed to get rice and veggies cooked in basil and spices with a tomato based sauce. The result was plain steamed veggies and white rice. I had a small sampler plate with bad cheese and cold beer. Good thing they didn´t make the beer!




We woke up feeling motivated, first to find some good food to re-layer our sumptuous palates, then to hike up to the ruins and explore for several hours before our train to Agua Calientes. The ruins entrance was a short walk from town, the hike up is what takes time. The tiered stone walls were impressive, even more so when you reach the top and appreciate how long it must have taken to haul up the large boulders and how many people it took. It was a good preview to what was to come in Machuu Pichuu. At the same time, after walking some ways within the ruins, our brains started gravitating to thinking ¨it´s just a bunch of rocks¨, albeit impressive history, but a bunch of rocks nonetheless, and much more impressive looking at them from a distance to see their intricate layout and design. We had a good lunch, Melanie with a hearty bowl of miso soup, and me some local trout skewers with panko crumbs and teriyaki sauce.

We got the aftenoon train to Agua Calientes and it had spectacular scenery. More giant mountains with mist and fog around the summits edges, along with lush jungle forests with colorful birds and the roaring Urubamba river. We were starting to feel the Machuu Pichuu buzz, getting really excited about the expensive portion of our trip.

We arrived and the train station was packed. Tourists in all shapes and sizes flooded the area waiting to catch their train back to Cuzco as most visitors make Machuu Pichuu a day trip from the 3 hour ride to Cuzco. We saw a handful of people holding up signs at the entrance area, none of which had our names on it. The tropical rain started to pound, the herds of tourists ducking for cover under awnings, rain coats, and trash bags. Melanie watched our stuff while I stood in the rain trying to use the pay phone to call our contact person who had our return train tickets. The number wasn´t working, and after several frustrating tries, we marched through the rain to our hotel in hopes we could figure this outthat evening.

Our hotel was nice, a huge group of American teenage girls from Melrose on a high school trip lounged around the lobby which was good eavesdropping entertainment while we tried not to freak out about our tickets. The boy at the counter was really nice, and helped us get ahold of the travel agency in Cuzco where we purchased our return tickets. They said the guy with the tickets would be there in 30 minutes and to not worry. 1 hour later we called back and they said he would be coming by our hotel in the morning, and to not worry. Pretty miffed, since we called them back, and if we didn´t, how much longer were they going to keep us waiting in our hotel lobby before they called?

We went out to an overpriced vegetarian restaurant and ate a small plate of food. Soon we discovered that everything in Agua Calientes is 3 times the cost of anywhere else in Peru given the remote locatation and high density of tourism, knowing they would have no choice but to pay up. We were exhausted from our day, and knew the following day would be even longer with waking up at dawn for Machuu Pichuu and the train and bus back to Cuzco in the evening.









Our train ticket arrived sometime in the night. We were very relieved but also wanted to curse the guy out for being a flake. The early bus in the morning climbed steep up the mountain that was shrouded in mist. The entrance gate was already crowded, several hundred people looking for coffee as they completed the 3/4 day trip hiking the Inca trail.

Okay, we hope not to dispel any of the magic of Machuu Pichuu here, but we have some gripes with our experience. It was pretty, it was, very impressive again about moving rocks up this mountains and how the lived. The mountain scape is gorgeous, the surrounding area is too, but the whole thing was over in 5 hours, and could have been done in 2 hours if we didn´t hike up the adjacent mountain side for something to do. We did this trip pretty cheaply too, most people pay 400 dollars for their plane tickets to Cuzco from Lima (because they buy the tickets from their native foreign counties rather than buying them once in Peru), and we paid 150 two days before our flight, with more planning it can be 80. Anyhow, we dropped alot of cash on top of that, and don´t think it was worth it. It was beautiful, but like we said earlier about the ruins in Ollayantambo, it was much prettier from a distance. We would be more than happy to talk more about this with any of you in person, but thats it in a nutshell. It´s pretty much like disneyland for south america.

The way back to Cuzco was long. The train was dark and crowded. Then our packs were on the top of the bus and it started to pour rain. The driver pulled them down for us and they managed to crunch on our laps in the very crowded space. A sick Korean girl next to us was sympathetic and provided good conversation. I got a massage in Cuzco the following day, today I´m nursing my wounds. She beat me up pretty bad, nail marks and bruises.

We´re back in Lima now, counting down the days to our departure. Not much left to do here, gonna meet up with a friend of a friend, and also go to the gold museum. Melanie is stoked to return, last night a restaurant put steak in her beans on a ¨vegetarian¨ taco.

Much luv everybody, this might be the last post, maybe one more.

TandM