Saturday, August 20, 2016

End Of Summer

First, let me say that The Rockport Art Show was great. The weather wasn't bad. Hot but not miserable. The show has a new director and he did a bang up job. All went smoothly, sales were good and we were once again located next to Joey and Paula Blazek from Beaumont. Besides Joey being this year's poster artist, they are just very nice people.
We managed to sample the meals at several great restaurants and checked out one of the marinas for a possible new home for our boat!

Back at home, we have survived the mini drought and then the wonderful rains. Weather gets weirder and weirder. We have had one "norther" and are expecting another? In August? Crazy.

Next up on the bell agenda will be Septemberfest in Midland in mid September. I think the museum grounds are back to being able to be used again after their refurbishment. I'll post again about the show.

Finally, for those of you who have followed our personal life and know about our boat adventures and plans.... I am going to wake up that other blog listed in out "links" - A Relevant Life. I started that blog early in my retirement which coincided with the purchase of Hey Jude, our trawler. Lots of plans have come and gone, but we now have made a big kick start to a  commitment to her and to ourselves.  She is going to leave her home at Lake Travis and be transported down to the Texas coast.
If you want to know more, make your way over to that other blog and I will fill you in.

Saturday, June 25, 2016

ROCKPORT - Be There or Be Square!!

What a great way to celebrate the 4th of July!


Come to Rockport and visit this art show. We hope to see all of our regular customers. Dress cool cause it is always hot.

We are very excited that our regular artist neighbors Joey and Paula Blazek will be our neighbors again. However, more importantly to know.... Joey is this year's poster artist of the show!!


We are working hard to be able to leave early and enjoy Thursday night in Rockport.
If you are reading this and thinking you want a 6 dot bell, email or call us and make sure we reserve one for you.

Wednesday, June 22, 2016

We Told You So!

Just to make sure you were paying attention when we warned you about those darned yellow jackets. This bell hangs on the side porch of The Big House on our property.  I looked up inside this bell this morning and this is what I saw.


So.... be careful out there!!

Monday, April 18, 2016

KING WILLIAM SHOW

Yikes! So I totally missed posting about the Woodlands Waterway Show!! Well, it was great, as usual! The weather was probably the best we have ever had there. Thanks to everyone who came to the booth to buy or order a bell or just to say hi.


Now, we are getting ready for the King William Show this next Saturday. The Fiesta River Parade is tonight and sadly, it has been raining on and off all day. It's raining here in Boerne right now; not sure about downtown San Antonio. Hopefully the weather will be good Friday for set up and Saturday for the art show (and funky parade).


I was working in the shop yesterday and uncovered the one and only sail left from our initial Fiesta experience many years ago when King George Fisher ordered a nice number of small bells to give as his official Fiesta gift that year. I promptly grabbed up that sail and framed it.






Somewhere we have pictures of the shop packed full of these sails laid out waiting for the adhesive that was holding those little round decals onto the sails to dry. Nice memories.


Happy Fiesta!!

Sunday, February 14, 2016

The End of a Journey

Well, it's over and we are home. I could say that now that we are "seasoned" travelers in handling lengthy air travel and that the trip was so much easier because of that. However, the truth is that the  second and longest leg of our journey home was easier mainly because the seat next to me on the airplane was EMPTY!! We were therefore able to spread out which enabled us to sleep considerably more than we did on the way over. Now, let me add that Philip has slept 16 out of 24 hours since we got home, so that has helped also!
We had a memorable trip and have already discussed what a second trip might look like. But it is nice to be home. Our cat remembered us and the two Texas grandkids seemed very happy to have us back. 
Tomorrow, we will be back in the bell shop and our thinking will turn to getting out those orders that came in while we were gone. 
As I took a quick look back over my pictures, I thought I would just share a last few highlights.
Colors of a robe on a Buddha in Anghor Wat.


In all the little towns we travelled through, pots full of flowers and plants were in front of all stores, business and most homes.


Beautiful pool full of lily pads in Cambodia.


A street sign in Kanchanaburi.


A sad commentary, but a more positive use of a bomb casing.


Some homes were on the immediate side of the road.


Others were high in the air. 


Buddhas were, of course, everywhere.

Philip found street food where flavors were coded by "Little Dots" just like our bells. 



                                                          
That's all for now. Thanks for following our trip 


 








Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Kanchanuburi, Thailand

We have left Bangkok again by train but this time we headed northwest for the town of Kanchanaburi.
As we have progressed through our trip, our trains have become progressively more basic. This time, there was no choice in coaches or seating. It was a third class train and all basics wooden seats. 
We had to leave from the old train station in Bangkok which wasn't connected by subway or even another train, so we had to take a taxi to get there. We made it and had a pleasant 2 hour trip to Kanchanaburi. 

We made many stops at little train stations along this trip and all were very well decorated with bright colors and lots of flowers. 

Lots of farming going on along this route. Rice, corn, bananas and what turned out to be, castor bean trees. 


Some fields had just been burned off, so we had lots of smokey air to contend with, especially in the mornings. Other fields were being flooded just after planting, and yet others had a full crop growing. 

We had made reservations at the Felix Resort, which overlooks the river. We arrived at the station, took a TukTuk. This resort was unusual. 
It was older, but nice. It was obviously a prime place for a conference with lovely grounds, several large meeting rooms and lots of small palapa with seating spread throughout the area for breakout sessions. It had two restaurants, two pools, a room for movie viewing (just DVD's I think) and more. But it was eerily vacant. We were able to walk from the back of this resort into one end of town and view the new bridge which was constructed so that the rail line can work. Tourist go here, walk the bridge, take a selfie and watch the train go by. The original bridge was damaged as part of the war and has not been reconstructed. 

As nice as it was, not many folks stay at The Felix.  In fact, we only stayed one night and then moved into town to The Bridge Hotel where we could just step out of our door and be on the streets with the cafes and shops. 

The streets of Kanchanaburi look much like the streets of the other towns we had been in.

 Lots of cafes, bars, massage parlors and .....


Even in this small town there were several 7-Eleven stores. Several of the cafes and bars are oriented toward Austrailian food, since lots of Aussies come to visit. 

If you read this blog back when we travelled to Morocco and Spain, you might remember that the was a picture of Philip protectively using the ATM in a department store in Spain. And you might remember that that was our first time to use an ATM. Well, never let it be said that we aren't progressive. Here Philip is again using an ATM in another foreign country.

We met a very nice couple from England and did some our sighting with them for the next couple of days. This is Philip and David waiting for yet another train. 

You know, those Brits make conversing so nice. Those great accents make the whole conversation seem like a visit with learned people from PBS. The four of us took this train up to Hellfire Pass. 
The train trip was fine. The scenery was beautiful. These pictures are hazy because of that morning smoke I mentioned. 

The information was sobering. While yes, I saw the movie the Bridge Over the River Kwai, what we learned here was first, that the movie, as with all movies got some things wrong and second, that here is one more situation that proves how cruel man can be. We went to the Hellfire Museum and walked part through Hellfire Pass where part of the railway had been constructed. 


On our last morning, we went to the Kanchanaburi cemetery which is the final resting place for many of the soldiers who died during the building of this railway. There are two more cemeteries in the area as well. There are Dutch, British and Australian soldiers here. All American soldiers had been removed from graves and returned to the U.S. This is an extremely well groomed cemetery. Every day, there is a crew of workers tending to the plants. Every grave marker is well identified, plants are in between every marker and the surrounding ground has nary a small weed in sight. There are monuments with the list of regiments and names of soldiers.




Lots of personal messages from family members are written on little crosses or attached to small bouquets. PD just place a fresh flower cluster on the monument. A very sad footnote here is that while the Japanese honored the Geneva Convention regarding recording keeping of Allied POWs and of their subsequent deaths and internments, absolutely no records were kept regarding the Indians and Asians that were captured and forced to labor here as well. All of those thousands of people died and there bodies were dispersed of without any honor or records.

Just across the street from the cemetery is the Railway Museum. 


This museum has been the endeavor of one gentleman in conjunction with the Thai government. Lots of funding from Australian and Great Britan. In the process of touring this, we met the current manager, himself an Aussie. He has been there for 11 years and shared a great deal of "backstory" information. Research is ongoing as it is their goal to help any family whose ancestor may have been in one of the camps to locate the camp in which that person may have been interred and find out any information they can help with. Again, another moving experience. There is so much history here, so much about how and why this happened and how the Thai government has been so respectful of the remains of all of these soldiers. 
So.... That finished up our visit to Kanchanaburi. We packed up our bags and boarded the Wednesday afternoon trainand made our way back to Bangkok. 





Our Time in Phenom Pehn

We went to Phenom Pehn knowing once again that we would be doing some serious visitations. So, we tried to mix in some good things too. 

First, let me say that our hotel view was lovely. We again found ourselves directly across the street from the Mekong River. We had great views of the boats on the river and the very busy street just below. We were in a very busy area of town. We travelled everywhere via TukTuk. 


This is a closeup of one of the riverboats you can travel on to go up and down the Mekong. I think that might be the way to go.

Our first task was to visit the Cambodia Genocide Museum. This is one of the Khmer Rouge tourture sites that existed during the 1970's. Again, while I went in, knowing some history, I became ashamed by how much I didn't know about this aspect. Absolutely no pictures are allowed, so I have none to share. It was a very moving and emotional experience. Here is the website information.

S21 Victims - The Killing Fields Museum of Cambodia

www.killingfieldsmuseum.com/s21-victims.html.

While the grandsons were with us, on this somber visit, we spilt them up and managed to shield them from anything but just basic info about the structure. And then as a reward for being patient and quiet there, we found two different kid friendly activities in Phenom Pehn to do.

One was call The Kid Zone.  It is a place full of different physical activities. You pay for which ones you want to do and for how long. It was great. Very well supervised by young attendents. The boys chose race cars and rock wall climbing. 





The second kid activity was fun for us all. We went to the 4D presentation of The Finest Hours.
It was quite the full experience. The movie was in English with Cambodian sub titles. This was a movie about ships, New England storms, boat sinkings and rescue during a storm. A 4-D presentation means your seat rumbles, rocks, rolls and generally pitches you around. You get wind and mist blown in your face. The whole idea is to experience the movie as if you were on the ship or in the big storm. Very effective! Everyone had fun and no one got seasick.

We had some good dining experiences in this town. However, you know that annoying habit of waiters that we have all experienced where in their effort to impress us, they take our order by memory ... And then get it wrong, instead of just writing it down. WelÅ‚, add another complication to that trick - when the wait staff doesn't understand much English. We did have several wrong orders or actual "no shows" on orders. 

Once again we met ex-pat Americans who had great restaurants. 


We also actually found a Mexican food place. Food was ok. They were out of Margaritas. Obviously this one wasn't run by a Texas ex-pat! They did have decent taco ships, however. But nothing like Alamo Cafe or Mama Margies back home. Can you tell what I will be eating upon my return home?

Have I mentioned how many times we ate pizza on this trip? It is what you do when you travel with young kids. 

So.... This was it. Time to say goodbye to Jenny and the family. No matter how much time you have been together and how much fun you have had, this is always hard. When you give birth and raise those kids, it never occurs to you that someday they may be so far away. 
We all piled in a big Taxi and made our way to the airport and here we spilt. lots of hugging and a few tears and the noisy crew headed off back to Laos. We went to our Bangkok Airlines and headed back to Bangkok.