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Heading home….

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Monday May 31st

Today we flew back to the US. But before we headed to the airport we FINALLY got to see the ocean! We saw lots of sea urchin so I couldn’t walk around in the water, but at least I got to dangle my feet in it.

My aunt showed me sea snails that stick on the coral. Sometimes she comes to the shore and gathers up the larger ones to cook. I helped her gather some up, but these weren’t for her dinner, they were to feed the cats that randomly wander onto her balcony. It’s common for people to keep all the doors and windows open in hopes to get a breeze so occasionally something might wander in. People can barely afford to feed themselves much less their pets or stray animals.

We headed to the airport. Let me just say that as much as I despise long lines, it’s ten times worse when there are no lines, or organization at all. Just people pushing to the front and you have to stand your ground. Passport control was a breeze once we finally got through the pile of people. I guess since we have a US passport and we are so white they figure we’re not trying to escape illegally.
Security on the other hand questioned my handmade bamboo gift that my aunt made for us. Never mind the glass bottles in my carry on bag, I was going to hijack the plane with a piece of bamboo!! As security started calling more and more people to analyze the threat level of my “weapon” I started crying. I couldn’t bear the thought of them taking away a priceless gift that my aunt made me, who I just met for the first time and that could have used that bamboo to make something to sell and maybe have money for food. Oh I was heartbroken at the thought of them confiscating it.. But I guess all my crying made them finally realize I wasn’t a tough terrorist that was going to bash someone’s head in with bamboo. If they had taken it away from me I might still be in Cuba. Detained for causing a ruckus at the airport.
My little brother and his mom picked us up at the Miami airport and we went out for sushi. A real salad, a cup of soup and fish! ahhhh! Anything besides farm animals and Cuban food sounded yummy to us!
After having the best shower ever, we snuggled in an over fluffy bed with extra pillows and fell fast asleep.
As I write this we are on the plane heading home. The trip and experience was more than we ever hoped for. I’m sad that it will be at least a year before we see my Cuban family again. But the thought of pajamas, the sofa, kitties and our memory foam mattress topper makes me a little happy. Te amo Cuba! Te amo mi familia! I love you.

LUXOR!!

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Well, after spending all day Sunday in the Cairo hotel I was really worried we weren’t going to make our trip to Luxor. Mark had caught the travelers bug and was in bed ALL day Sunday. Miraculously (and several drugs later) he woke up Monday morning perfectly ready to catch our 6am flight to Luxor. WHEW!

Apparently I had accidentally purchased us business class tickets so it was a nice surprise to have big comfy seats, fresh juice and breakfast on our flight. I don’t think Mark would have done so well that morning in coach. I love how these little mistakes work out like they were meant to be!

We arrive in Luxor and once again, our hotel room isn’t ready so we catch a cab and head to the Luxor Museum. This museum is probably the size of one room in the Cairo museum, but it was so nice, well organized and well labeled that we really enjoyed the artifacts even more. We saw two mummies! One looked all peaceful and one had his mouth open and it was kinda creepy. You could even see the linen in his skull through his eye sockets….ewwww…..and cool!! These mummies are like 3 or 4 thousand years old! And you could see their teeth!

Back to the hotel for lunch and to make our 1pm tour. Our room was ready and since we are Gold members (eh-hem) we were upgraded to a suite! SWEET! Our room had a dining room complete with complimentary cheese tray, fruit tray and bottle of Egyptian wine. Two bathrooms, a jacuzzi tub, a toilet that warmed your butt when you sat on it (seriously and really quite nice). But the best part was our wrap around balcony overlooking the Nile river. Ahhhh,,,, This ended up being a sanctuary for us the last two days as the afternoon sun is just too much after a while.

OK, first stop on our tour…..Karnak Temple! This is the reason I wanted to come to Luxor so bad, Karnak temple is the largest temple complex in all of Egypt. I remember seeing photos of Egyptologists in a room full of columns that were the size of sequoia trees. I’ve always wanted to stand in that hall. As we walked through with our very own egyptologist, Dina, she explained who all the kings and pharohs were, what stories were on their statues and temple walls, what each tomb was used for and how the offering room would have been filled with the scents of perfumes and incense. And then we saw it…the very room I had always dreamed of standing in! We walked in and it was so overwhelming. There is still original paint on the uppermost parts of these columns. Just think….134 columns that would take 6 people stretched arm to arm just to go around one of them. Each column is 50 meters high and they are all covered in heiroglyphs!!! I could go on and on about this temple but would never be able to explain how you feel walking into that room.

Luxor temple was next on the list. This temple used to be completely covered in sand and the town of Luxor was on built on top of it and no one ever even knew until it was discovered. Then they moved the town and excavated. You can see parts of this temple had to be restored, but it was still totally amazing.
As we walked into the temple the call to prayer began over the speakers at the mosques throughout town. It was totally a surreal moment. It’s these little moments that I love so much about our travels. Luxor is about 1.5 miles from Karnak temple and there used to be an avenue of sphinxs connecting the two temples! So throughout the city you can see remains of these sphinx. Very very cool!

Speaking of cool….we were so ready for the hotel by then so off we went to have dinner and relax on our balcony while we watched the sun set over the Nile river. This was a totally unexpected treat, but after the flight, the touring, the heat, the fighting off beggars and being tricked to follow someone to a “market” that ended up being his friend’s shop and the ATM eating Mark’s debit card, we were SO ready for this wonderfully relaxing evening and were so very grateful for our sweet suite! There were two mosques across the Nile and one behind our hotel so as the sun set and the fallucas filled the Nile we could hear the Call to Prayer all around us. No matter what your religion or beliefs, this was a magical, once in a lifetime moment.

Day two in Luxor and Dina and our driver met us at 7am. Off to the Valley of the Kings we went! There are over 60 tombs in this one area. You can’t possibly go in all of them (not on a 4 hour tour anyways) so we hit the three most decorated ones. I’ve heard so many kings and pharoahs names in the past four days I can’t even remember the ones we went in. No photos were allowed so I’m likely to never remember again, but it was still totally amazing. Hieroglyphs and original paintings filled the tombs with stories of the King, offerings made to the Gods and symbols to guide him in the afterlife and help him find his body again. I wonder if the egyptologists left a note when they decided to move it several hundred miles away to a museum? Someone’s going to be pissed! Hehe

We also saw the Colossi of Memnon and the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut. I think this was the first official transvestite! She claimed herself to be a King (and later a God) and dressed in men’s clothing, even wore a fake beard so people would take her seriously as a King.

Can I just say I don’t know what we would have done without our tour guide?! These temples are not marked or explained so we would have just been wandering around looking at all the “pretty pictures” and never really know what the heck we were looking at. Now we can look at a heiroglyph of an offering and tell you how many of each offering the God was receiving. Oh, and that a frog represents 100,000 years (just don’t ask us why a frog)

Time to head back to Cairo, but first I just had to finally tip these Nubian musicians outside our hotel. There were these four men (two playing spike fiddles, a doumbek player and a riqq player). Every time someone entered or left the hotel they would start up their song and they had big smiles. As soon as the person got in their cab or entered the hotel the music just died and their smiles disappeared. But like a wa-wa-waaaaa kind of way. It was SOOO funny to us. Whenever we were in the lobby you could hear them start and then stop, start and then stop. They never even finished the song. We began to wonder if they even knew the end of the song because nobody every tipped them or stayed long enough to watch so they ended up playing the same first four measures and then died out. HAHAHA (ok, you just had to be there). But, as we got in the cab headed to the airport I reached in my pocket and had 10 pounds. I looked over at them and they had already stood up, big smiles on their faces and by this time had already gotten further in the song than we had heard in two days. I handed one of them the 10 pounds. Their smiles got bigger, their instruments played louder and they began to sing, “Bye, bye, bye…lalala….bye bye bye!”

We ended the evening eating mezzas with beladi bread being made by two women in front of a fire, a veggie fatir and a dessert fatir covered in almonds, raisins, honey and powdered sugar. YUM!!

So it’s 1:30am (still not on Egypt time yet) and I’m ready for a day of shopping in Cario! We’ve gotta get our sleep and be ready for some haggling tomorrow!

Day six – Hello San Francisco

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I love San Francisco. The smell of sourdough bread, the historic buildings, the architecture, the food. We started our day on a 2.5 hour trolley tour. It was raining so there was only six of us on the whole tour. We got some great rainy, foggy Golden Gate Bridge pictures.

By the time the tour was over the rain had stopped. We headed over to fisherman’s grotto and had seafood and beer/wine for lunch. Mark got his crab and beer he’s been talking about since we booked this trip and I could see his face glowing with every bite!

After lunch the ten hours of walking began. Oh yeah. When we are on vacation there really is no relaxing (except for the cruise last summer). Of course, we make our pit stops along the way like the Buena Vista for Irish coffee, Ghiardelli square for fudge and chocolate sampling. I think we did everything today! We took the cable car to China town, had canolis in North Beach, shopped Union square and Pier 39. We even found a Scottish store that had an entire back room of scotch and whiskey. Mark was looking at a few and then the salesmen walks out with two glasses for him to taste. Our kind of store!

Needless to say we are exhausted and can’t wait until tomorrow!! We’re headed to Haight Ashbury to discover our inner flower child (well, mine is more of an every day flower child) and then having giant burritos in the Mission district.

Day five – Springtime in Napa

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Day five – Any day that starts with 12 glasses of wine can’t be bad. After a very yummy breakfast in Calistoga,CA we drove the Silverado Trail through Napa Valley. We stopped at a few vineyards, but had tastings at Joseph Phelps and Clos Du Val. Joseph Phelps had wine tastings by appointment only, but we walked right in and they offered us a tasting. This vineyard is pristine. You sit on top of the hill overlooking the vineyard as you try their reserve wines. Never will I taste a $200 bottle of wine with such a beautiful view (or really ever again at all, but let’s not spoil the dream).

Clos du Val was more our style. We love their reds and ended up leaving with a merlot and cabernet. I don’t think I could drink another glass of wine and Mark still had to drive us to San Francisco so we finished the trail and off to San Francisco we went.

We stopped off in Murin County to visit some very sweet people I met last summer. Mark Bell and Ling Shin are some of the nicest people I know. Not to mention they are kick ass musicians that I listen to every day for the last 6 years. We had some great conversation and are looking forward to seeing them again the next time we are out here.

As we came down 101 off the mountain we turned a curve and there was the Golden Gate Bridge! It was beautiful and so huge. Mark’s never seen it and said it was quite impressive. I had never seen it at night so was giddy when we got to drive across it with the city all lit up over the bay! I love San Francisco and am so excited to be here. I can’t wait to wake up and show Mark the city and all the reasons I love it so much. If it wasn’t for the outrageous cost of living we would totally be moving here!

Tomorrow….sourdough bread, Anchor steam beer, Irish coffee, cable car rides and every tourist photo op we can find!

Day four – our Oregon Trail

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Day four – VOO DOO DOUGHUTS!!!!! Drool! We saw this show on Travel channel called Man vs Food. This guy was at Voodoo doughnuts in Portland and was attempting to eat a ginormous doughnut. These are no ordinary doughnuts. We bought a dozen and they consisted of: two voodoo man doughnuts (shaped like a man, filled with rasberry jam and it comes with a pretzel stick so you can poke him and make him ‘bleed’) FREAKIN YUM! We also had one covered in fruitloops, a chocolate one covered in cocopuffs, a snowcone shaped cinnamon one topped with maple icing and dipped in sprinkles, one covered in m&ms…..you get my point. The doughnuts must be made with crack because the line was a block long to get in!

Next stop….Powell’s City of Books. This is why we stopped in Portland. A three story, square block bookstore filled with every book you can imagine. All organized in color coded categories so you can easily follow the map you are given when you walk in the door. Um…heaven? Used books, new books, anything you want. They even had a book full of useless Japanese inventions. We bought a few books and back on the road we went.

The drive through Northern Oregon is BEAUTIFUL. We had no idea what to expect, but the lush forests and gorgeous mountains kept us “ahhing” for about 400 miles. We also had no idea they have more sheep than we have ever seen. We saw farmland, snow topped mountains, rivers, rolling hills and tons of forest. It totally made the long drive more than bearable!

600 miles later we ended our day in Corning, CA. Turns out it’s the Olive Capitol. We didn’t have the heart to tell them that they had nothing over France and Spain!

Next stop…..Napa Valley!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Day three in the Seattle Underground

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Day three – We took the coolest tour today! It was an underground tour of Pioneer Square in Seattle. We learned a lot about the pioneer settlers and how they built Seattle, problems they came across (like sewage going downhill at high tide is a very bad thing) and how they eventually made it all work to be a great city. We walked throughout the underground sidewalks that use to be the original ones. We saw old storefronts bricked up, saw the beams that are literally holding up the new sidewalks and even saw some old memorabilia down there like a crapper (which is what they used to be called). What a great tour!

Then we headed back over to Pikes Place. Marci’s flight was late coming in so we had all just gotten back from Pikes Place yesterday and she didn’t get to go. So Mark and I suffered (hehe) through another walk through all the yummy foods and crafts.

We walked our way to the downtown shopping district and ended up taking the monorail right to Seattle Center by our hotel. The monorail went right through the Experience Music Project museum which was an unexpected bonus and well worth the $2 it took to get us back.

Tonight was the Cues and Tattoos show. This was the whole reason we are in Seattle. Two troupes from opposite sides of the country came together and performed without rehearsal. Did I mention I love love love ATS belly dance? I danced to Ishwini Fik with Michelle and Kristine and then ended Caravan with Megha, Sandi and Carolena. Our monitors went out about half way through the set so we could barely hear the music. The zills got off for about 30 seconds, but hell, with 13 zilling dancers that can’t hear the music, I think we pulled if off quite well. Some video will be up on ATSDancer as soon as we have a reliable internet connection.

Another great day, another late night. Tomorrow morning we head for Portland and on to California!

First day in Seattle

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We have our first day blog ready and a few photos. We’re staying at a tiny hotel downtown and their wifi is down so we’ll find a Starbucks later and post. I hate to retype the whole thing from my iPhone :)
But we are having a blast!!
In the meantime…here’s a photo of Pikes Place market!