Hello all!
We wanted to announce our happy news - the adventure in London will continue with 3 people instead of 2! Sarah is pregnant. She is 13 weeks and so far all of the ultrasounds and blood work have been excellent and the baby seems to be quite healthy and happy. She is due June 3, 2010 and will be delivering in London. Sadly, the child does not qualify for dual citizenship but they will have visa privileges so supposedly they can come work or live in the UK with less red tape to go through. At the very least being born in London should help them win a game or 2 or "2 truths and a lie." We truly want the best for our child :o)
So, we are very excited and so happy to share the news with all of you! Unfortunately we have no idea how to change the name on our blog so it will continue to be taleof2tintles.blogspot.com but please keep T3 in your prayers.
Love,
Sarah and Shane
Friday, November 27, 2009
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Life in London

Hi everyone,
Sorry we haven't written in awhile. Things have been busy but nothing too noteworthy to report. Of note, however, is that Sarah got a job! Yes, it only took 8 weeks for her license to be approved but the following day she had a job! She is working 3 days a week at a pediatric outpatient facility of a NHS hospital just outside of London. Her commute is 90 minutes each way (yikes!) which makes her very happy to be only working 3 days a week :o)
Shane has been working hard and traveling a little. His most recent business trips took him to Amsterdam and Norway. He, of course, forgot the camera on both trips but was able to take in the sights although he has nothing to prove it.
Last Saturday we hopped in the car (which Shane is now very adept at driving) and headed for Windsor castle. It is about 20 miles outside of London and a pretty easy drive. Windsor castle has been the home of the royal families of England for 900 years! It is quite impressive and looks much more "castle-like" than Buckingham. The current Queen of England has declared Windsor her official residence. Unfortunately she was not in last weekend, I guess she hadn't heard that we would be visiting :o)
Anyway, that is all for now. We are hoping to hit up a few more English cities in the upcoming weeks and we will definitely keep you all posted. Hope everyone is doing well!
Love, Sarah and Shane
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Belgium!
Hi everyone!
So, last weekend my sister came to London for her fall break. She arrived Friday morning and that afternoon we boarded the Eurorail and headed for Belgium; home of beer, chocolate and waffles.
On arriving in Brussels, Stefi and I explored the Grand P'lace area full of beautiful old buildings, surrounded by bars and featuring, only a few blocks away, Mannekin Pis. This is the symbol of Brussels (EU? what?) and is a very small statue of a little boy peeing into a fountain. There are 2 stories for how this came to be: 1 is that a nobleman lost his son during some festivities and when he found him 2 days later he was doing this act in a corner. The nobleman was so relieved to have found his son he made a replica statue exactly as he found him. The other story says that there was a fire and a boy put the fire out by peeing on it, thus saving the town. Pick your favorite :o)
Shane met us later that evening and after a delicious dinner of hearty Belgium food and beer we headed to bed.
Brussels is a fun town but can definitely be done in a day. We started off heading north of town to the Atonium - an enormous replica of an iron atom from the 1958 World's Fair. It is so completely random that it is now a tourist attraction. After the atonium we headed back to town for the Museum of Chocolate and Cacao. This small but delicious museum told the history of chocolate being brought into Belgium (which unfortunately began with King Leopold causing mass genocide in the Congo, which allowed the Belgiums access to the Gold coast and cacao) and how it is now made. Belgium chocolate is considered the best because they still use cacao butter and palm oil when they make it, instead of easier and cheaper substitutes that most other chocolate producers use. The museum gave several samples which were delicious!
After the museum we headed to lunch where we had "mussels in Brussels." Restaurants in the area cook muscles every which way but the Provencal style cooked in a vegetable broth at our lunch place were quite delicious.
After lunch we headed for the Museo Horta. This is Victor Horta's old house, now converted into a museum, and is the best demonstration of art nouveaux architecture, which Horta and Belgium is famous for. After getting our fill of the arts we headed to one of the only remaining fully functioning brewery's in Brussels; The Musee Bruxellois De la Gueuze - Cantillon Brewery. This brewery brews Lambics, which are a beer specific to Belgium. They are brewed using hops, wheat and malted barley, stored in old wine barrels and have a taste somewhat between beer and wine. There were 2 tastings at the end; 1 Gueueze which is a mix of a 1, 2, and 3 year old Lambic and 1 with either raspberries or cherries. All 3 were delicious.
After the beer we meandered our way back to the EU district. All the buildings were closed but we did see the EU headquarters - an unfortunately ugly, star shaped building. Afterwards we headed back to Brussels, did a little souvenir shopping (chocolate!), grabbed dinner and headed for bed.
The next morning, since we had seen enough of Brussels, we hopped on a train and took the hour trip to Brugge. Brugge used to be the economic powerhouse of Belgium and was the base for all types of trading, and the making of lace. However, the canals that surround the city filled in and left the town mostly dependent on tourism. The town is beautiful, a Medieval town surrounded by canals and filled with horse and buggies and 8 million tourists.
We hit the highlights of Brugge. Climbed the Belfry's 366 steps to get a great view of the city, visited Heilig- bloedbasiliek cathedral (a church claiming to have a vial of Jesus's blood brought back from Jerusalem during the crusades), saw Michelangelo's Madonna and child at the Cathedral of Our Lady, and visited the last remaining functioning brewery in Brugge. This time we only sampled the product and skipped the tour :o)
It was nearing the end of our time in Belgium but we had one more task to conquer before we could leave content and that was to sample the best Belgium waffle in the world. The Etablissment Max, in Ghent (which happened to be a stop on our train from Brugge to Brussels) is owned by the family who claims to have invented the Brussel's waffle. The Van Maldeghem's family has been making waffles for 6 generations (120 years). The key, according to the family, is that they must be crisp on the outside with a dark color, almost like a tree, and soft on the inside. They must be made with gas, not electricity, and for a pure experience, you eat them only with powdered sugar on top. They were an absolute mess to eat, but they were delicious and I strongly recommend them to anyone passing through Ghent!
After Belgium we headed back to London where Stefi spent 1 day with us, touring the sights of London before heading back to the USA. We don't have any big trips planned for the next few weeks. We are planning to try and settle into London before continuing our European adventure, so there may not be an update for at least a week or so.
We miss you all and hope you are doing well!!
Love, Sarah and Shane
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
The following images may be disturbing...
If you are a neat freak, hate clutter, or prefer to live in homes where you can actually walk. I never knew I was any of these things but after living in chaos for a week, I discovered that minimalist decorators do have a point!
We moved into our house a week ago. The day the movers came we discovered that none of our bedroom furniture (read: dresser, wardrobe and box springs) could fit up our spiral staircase! So, all of our clothes were stuffed on the bed or on the floor of the guest bedroom - total chaos! Then, to make matters worse, our media center, table and chairs, bookshelves and leather chair, didn't fit downstairs. (see pictures).
However, after a few trips to IKEA, a man from craigslist who needed to furnish an entire apartment and took all of our stuff, Shane taking a part time job as a handyman and hanging all of our new shelves and pictures in the concrete walls, a good cleaning and a few coats of paint...our place is not only liveable but downright cute! (see pictures on facebook).
Miss you all!
Love, Sarah
Monday, October 5, 2009
Norway
Hi all! I apologize for the long absence but we finally have internet so I am back to blogging.
One of the perks of living overseas is that when your husband travels for work he travels in Europe! Which is why, 2 weeks ago, Shane and I set off for Oslo, Norway for the weekend. Shane only had to work on Monday which gave us all day Saturday and Sunday to explore!
After arriving a bit later than anticipated (turns out Ryan Air lands in a city an hour outside of Oslo!) we began our touring. Oslo is a beautiful city, situated right on the water and surrounded by contryside. It is mainly divided into 3 main areas, Central Oslo West, Central Oslo East and Bygdoy. Our hotel was in Holmenkollen, where the ski jump competitions take place, so we took a train to get to central Oslo. Once there we were able to see Aker Brygge - the main shopping district/eating area by the harbor. On Saturday morning, when we were there, there was a huge street fair and we helped ourselves to some delicous Hungarian inspired goulash made by a local chef. Near Aker Brygge is the Nobel Peace Center, where the Nobel Peace prize winner is decided on and the award given, as well as Radhuset - home of the Norwegian parliment. The building was opened in 1950 to commemorate the city's 900th anniversary! We also saw Akershus Slott - a 700 year old fortress built in 1299 by King Hakon V. It became the administrative center for the Norwegian government in the 19th century and was taken over by Germany during WWII. The fortress was beautiful and there was a wonderful restaurant nearby that served smorgsbords - traditional open faced Norwegian sandwiches (we had these Sunday - don't worry, we didn't have 2 lunches!). We walked down Karl Johans Gate, the main thoroughfare of the city that leads from the Oslo train station to the Royal Palace (Slottet). We also checked out the Opera House - a huge complex, completed in 2008, that houses the Den Norske Opera. You can actually climb on top of it and hundreds of people were sunbathing, eating and hanging out on the roof when we were there! We were not able to hear the famous Opera group, but there was a Norwegian band performing on the roof. They were, I believe, Norwegian punk rock, and the crowd LOVED them! For dinner we ate at a wonderful seafood restaurant on the water.
The next day we explored Vigelandsparken, Oslo's largest park which houses a collection of 212 sculputures made by Gustav Vigeland. All of the sculputures are of humans with the largest being a huge monolith in the center of the part composed of 121 human forms spiraling their way towards the sky. After the park, we headed for najonalgalleriet, the national gallery that houses hundreds of works by Norwegian artists, as well as a small but excellent impressionist section. The most famous work displayed is, of course, Edvard Munch's "The Scream." The painting was actually stollen in 2004 but found again in 2006. Shane's favorite Norwegian artist was Christian Krohg who also had several paintings on display.
After the museum we headed for Bygdoy. This used to be an island in the Oslofjorden until the sound was filled in during the 19th century. It is now a residential area but is still primarily covered with farmland and forest. We took a bus through the beautiful scenery until we reached Vikingskipshuset, the Viking ship museum. It holds the remains of 3 Viking funeral ships, as well as a lot of artifacts from the age of the Vikings. The ships were in incredibly good shape and were very cool. After Bygdoy we headed to the highest point in Oslo, Frognerseteren. There is a great restaurant up there that serves traditional Norwegian food including elk and reindeer - which we tried. They were delicious!
The following day Shane went to work and I wandered around Oslo doing some shopping and taking a few more pictures before we headed back to London. Please check out our pictures on facebook! The pictures above from left to right are Aker Brygge, Akershus Slott and the Royal Palace with statue of Karl Johan.
Love, Sarah and Shane
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Welcome Home ctd
6. Our bedroom - definitely no as big as our old one - we'll see about the furniture!
7. The tiny second bedroom that we invite you all to come stay in (we'll still have the pull out couch if you need extra room)
8. The bathroom - yes, the floor is bright blue tiles - way better than carpet!
We also have a "roof top terrace." We've never seen it because the hatch is broken but the landlord is suppossed to bring a new handle over soon :o)
I was thinking today that someday I would like to move and actually know where I am moving before I move in. In moving to NYC, our stuff was shipped before we found a place and the same thing happened this time. It would be nice to actually know if your stuff was going to fit - prior to moving! A novel idea, I know.
But that said - we like our new place and think that it will be a lot of fun. We sincerly hope that lots of you come and visit us! Also, our internet will not be set up for another 2 weeks so we'll be available by email on our blackberrys, but not by skype and we won't be able to update the blog.
So, tune in again in 2 weeks for exciting new updates!
Love and miss you all,
Sarah and Shane
Welcome Home!
We have a home! It is currently empty and our sea shipment isn't set to arrive for another 2-4 weeks (which England time could mean 3-5 weeks) but it is still exciting. I'm attaching our pictures in 2 postings since they wouldn't all fit into one. The captions are:
1. Our spiral staircase :o)
2. The Living room - not as big as our old one but we are hoping the furniture will fit!
3. The kitchen - it is actually bigger than it looks and a lot of storage
4.Another view of the kitchen
5. The combi washer/dryer (just for you Sunim)
OK - now check out the next blog to finish...
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