Lessons Learned: future posts
1) Be prepared for anything on the cuota
2) Try everything, try anything
3) Mexico loves speed bumps
4) Kids are kids are kids - no matter how much money their parents make or what country they're from
5) A team trip at the new school is NOT a team trip at any school I can think of
6) Move to an international school community: make awesome friends
7) Peacock dresses are the best kind of dresses
Rachel in Monterrey
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Monday, October 8, 2012
Food
In keeping with the fact that there are actually more Canadian teachers than Americans at my new school, I headed off to the Canadian Thanksgiving festivities with two Canadian friends who live in my colonia (neighborhood), one of whom is one of my housemates.
I had gone a little crazy in the planning process of what to bring, so I ended up making four different things. I cooked the classic green bean casserole, which - of course - went over awesomely. I also made three other dishes, all of which were roasted veggies a la Martha Stewart's website - carrots with thyme, baby mushrooms and pearl onions, and brussels sprouts with onions. I was pretty certain that people would be all over the green bean casserole, but I was worried about the rest. Turned out that was needless, as people went crazy over everything - there was about one bite of carrots and one bite of brussels sprouts left, a few spoonfuls of the mushrooms, and the same for the green bean casserole. I got nothing but compliments. In fact, the assistant principal of the high school - who hosted the dinner - asked me to send her the recipe.
Cooking has become something I am really enjoying since I've been here. It's great to put together something new and have it be tasty and have people enjoy it. It also helps that there is - on the whole - a great, inexpensive selection of produce here in Mexico. There are some things that will be pricier than in the states (or on par with prices), but usually you get quality stuff for much cheaper. I don't think I've made anything yet that hasn't been good...though there have been things I've liked more than others.
Cooking. Who knew?
I had gone a little crazy in the planning process of what to bring, so I ended up making four different things. I cooked the classic green bean casserole, which - of course - went over awesomely. I also made three other dishes, all of which were roasted veggies a la Martha Stewart's website - carrots with thyme, baby mushrooms and pearl onions, and brussels sprouts with onions. I was pretty certain that people would be all over the green bean casserole, but I was worried about the rest. Turned out that was needless, as people went crazy over everything - there was about one bite of carrots and one bite of brussels sprouts left, a few spoonfuls of the mushrooms, and the same for the green bean casserole. I got nothing but compliments. In fact, the assistant principal of the high school - who hosted the dinner - asked me to send her the recipe.
Cooking has become something I am really enjoying since I've been here. It's great to put together something new and have it be tasty and have people enjoy it. It also helps that there is - on the whole - a great, inexpensive selection of produce here in Mexico. There are some things that will be pricier than in the states (or on par with prices), but usually you get quality stuff for much cheaper. I don't think I've made anything yet that hasn't been good...though there have been things I've liked more than others.
Cooking. Who knew?
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Road Trip Day 18: Monterrey!!! (2600 miles later)
So I'm here! I'm really here! We left this morning at 8am, and I am SO glad we caravanned together. I would not have known which way to go, what line to go in, and I certainly could not have managed the registering my car and filling out papers part. We went from window A to window B and then back to window A and then to window C and then back to window B and then finally back to window C before we could leave. It was WICKED confusing. But I got that all done, and there is now officially no place for anything around my rear-view mirror: the EZ pass is on the right, the NH inspection sticker is underneath, and now the Mexican registration is on the left (sadly, it ended up being kind of crooked, and there will be no fixing that until January).
It was all (mostly) painless, just lots of red tape. There was a hiccup with one girl, but it all worked out in the end, and we were on our way. Shrimp sellers at the toll booth, a donkey on the side of the road, one homeless dude (how NYC), 300 pesos, and two cut-out metal police cars on the side of the toll road later, we arrived at the school. There was some quick paperwork to fill out, and we got our keys. A ton of people were there just to greet us. There were teachers there to lead each of us to our apartments (usually someone who lives in your neighborhood), and they actually helped us unpack our cars. After we stopped at the best taco stand in Santa Catarina for lunch and my money (from The Mom) got refused for being too old, that is. The vendedora was having NONE of that 10 peso bill. They have apparently been out of circulation since 1997(!).
I will post pictures of the apartment later, but it is INSANE. And there is food in our fridge and in the cabinets, all courtesy of the parents' association. As you can tell, the school even ensured that our internet would be hooked up when we arrived. And because I have the most awesome roommate ever, even though I lost the coin toss, she let me have the big bedroom with the walk-in closet. Pictures will be posted later.
Everyone is just so amazing. There was dinner tonight at the high school assistant principal's house, and we met all the people who had flown in too, plus some of the admin. Everyone is SO amazing. We were riding with the high school technology coordinator and my 8th grade science teaching counterpart, and we ended up chilling on the tech coordinator's roof-top patio for a couple of hours.
Can I just reiterate again how amazing everything is?
It was all (mostly) painless, just lots of red tape. There was a hiccup with one girl, but it all worked out in the end, and we were on our way. Shrimp sellers at the toll booth, a donkey on the side of the road, one homeless dude (how NYC), 300 pesos, and two cut-out metal police cars on the side of the toll road later, we arrived at the school. There was some quick paperwork to fill out, and we got our keys. A ton of people were there just to greet us. There were teachers there to lead each of us to our apartments (usually someone who lives in your neighborhood), and they actually helped us unpack our cars. After we stopped at the best taco stand in Santa Catarina for lunch and my money (from The Mom) got refused for being too old, that is. The vendedora was having NONE of that 10 peso bill. They have apparently been out of circulation since 1997(!).
I will post pictures of the apartment later, but it is INSANE. And there is food in our fridge and in the cabinets, all courtesy of the parents' association. As you can tell, the school even ensured that our internet would be hooked up when we arrived. And because I have the most awesome roommate ever, even though I lost the coin toss, she let me have the big bedroom with the walk-in closet. Pictures will be posted later.
Everyone is just so amazing. There was dinner tonight at the high school assistant principal's house, and we met all the people who had flown in too, plus some of the admin. Everyone is SO amazing. We were riding with the high school technology coordinator and my 8th grade science teaching counterpart, and we ended up chilling on the tech coordinator's roof-top patio for a couple of hours.
Can I just reiterate again how amazing everything is?
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Road Trip Day 17: McAllen, Texas
So I was a total failboat when it came to posting every day, but I suppose that's okay. We leave in about eight hours to drive to Monterrey (omg!). I should probably already be asleep, but I wanted to get some postcards written and photos loaded to Facebook before we left...otherwise that was all never going to get done. I mean, seriously, have you met me? Procrastination is a way of life, y'all.
Some highlights from the trip:
1) That I am apparently not grown-up enough to remember to wear sunblock (major sunburn in DC)
2) Watched all four seasons of The IT Crowd while visiting my friend Caroline in Knoxville, Tennessee (show = amazing!)
3) Birmingham Civil Rights Institute: in which it becomes clear why Birmingham was the most segregated city in America (it was against the law to allow black and white people to even play dominoes/cards/dice/etc together)
4) That it took me two days to realize that I was in the Central Time Zone once I got to Birmingham (two days!)
5) Alabama really is as boring as my friend Caroline said (other than the Civil Rights Institute)
6) I drove over Lake Pontcharlain and thought "wow, the Mississippi River is SO big"
7) New Orleans is the most amazing city ever
8) Make sure you pee before getting on I-10 and heading out of New Orleans - it's mostly bridge over the bayous and swamps (very cool, but no way to get off)
9) The same goes for Texas: except it's just that there's NOTHING there for vast stretches of it (fields, but no towns as far as the eye can see)
10) Hung out with my new roommate and then met several new teachers/admin tonight, and everyone is awesome
And now I really need to get to bed, as we're leaving in less than eight hours!
1) That I am apparently not grown-up enough to remember to wear sunblock (major sunburn in DC)
2) Watched all four seasons of The IT Crowd while visiting my friend Caroline in Knoxville, Tennessee (show = amazing!)
3) Birmingham Civil Rights Institute: in which it becomes clear why Birmingham was the most segregated city in America (it was against the law to allow black and white people to even play dominoes/cards/dice/etc together)
4) That it took me two days to realize that I was in the Central Time Zone once I got to Birmingham (two days!)
5) Alabama really is as boring as my friend Caroline said (other than the Civil Rights Institute)
6) I drove over Lake Pontcharlain and thought "wow, the Mississippi River is SO big"
7) New Orleans is the most amazing city ever
8) Make sure you pee before getting on I-10 and heading out of New Orleans - it's mostly bridge over the bayous and swamps (very cool, but no way to get off)
9) The same goes for Texas: except it's just that there's NOTHING there for vast stretches of it (fields, but no towns as far as the eye can see)
10) Hung out with my new roommate and then met several new teachers/admin tonight, and everyone is awesome
And now I really need to get to bed, as we're leaving in less than eight hours!
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Road Trip Day 5: Washington, DC
So I've hit several states since I last posted. Well, some before I did, actually (MA, CT, NY, and then NJ). I drove south through New Jersey down into Delaware and Maryland two days ago, and I arrived at my hotel in Greenbelt, Maryland, the site of the very last stop on the Green line of the DC Metro. I haven't actually ever stopped in Delaware, so I hesitate to count it as a state I've "set foot in," but I figure when you pay EIGHT DOLLARS to drive through a TINY section of a very small state, then that totally counts enough for me.
I originally planned on visiting the Goddard Space Center after arriving on Tuesday, but I got a late start and then had to wait around to replace a belt at Pep Boys in New Jersey. It was squealing, so my friend Ruth's dad dropped me off there as I left their house. It honestly would have been a super quick job...if they'd had both of the belts I needed. They originally thought they could get one from their store in the next town over, and the manager drove all the way over to get it...but they didn't have it after all. They managed to track one down at another store, but then that necessitated waiting an additional 45 minutes to get that belt. Once they got it, I swear it was on the car in about 10 minutes. To which I say: really? Really, car, REALLY???
I visited the National Museum of American History yesterday, which was interesting, but surprised me. I was expecting a lot more Revolutionary War stuff, I guess, and instead there were things like Daniel Radcliffe's Harry Potter costume. I did really like the "America on the Water" exhibit, and "America on the Move" was pretty cool. The "America at War" exhibit was also really interesting, but I cry foul on there being NOTHING about submarines at all in the World War II section. Especially seeing as THEIR OWN WEBSITE says:
"submarines comprised less than 2 percent of the U.S. Navy, but sank over 30 percent of Japan's navy, including eight aircraft carriers. More important, American submarines contributed to the virtual strangling of the Japanese economy by sinking almost five million tons of shipping—over 60 percent of the Japanese merchant marine."
My grandfather served on submarines before we even joined the war (he told a story about how they were patrolling the Panama Canal when they heard about Pearl Harbor and immediately zipped through the canal to head towards Hawaii...it was a long trip, and by the time they got there, all they had left for provisions was some water and lima beans...and that was where my grandfather's hatred of lima beans started), and he worked on them for years afterward, even after leaving the service. I mean, seriously, he worked on building the USS Albacore, and the speed it reached is STILL classified.
And, wow, what a tangent. Today I walked the monuments. That was really interesting, but perhaps the coolest thing happened as I walked down the street from the White House. All the sudden the cops were blocking off traffic and waving people through. I was waiting at a cross-walk to be able to cross. Eventually another cop waved those of us waiting away from the the crosswalk, even. At that point, we were all intrigued, and so we waited. Then we heard the sirens coming, and a motorcade started coming down the street. It was Michelle Obama being escorted back to the White House. Seriously cool.
What was not seriously cool was me neglecting to put on sunblock. My shoulders are beet red. Or is that beat red? Red as a beet or red as if I've been beaten? I'm hoping it's the former.
I originally planned on visiting the Goddard Space Center after arriving on Tuesday, but I got a late start and then had to wait around to replace a belt at Pep Boys in New Jersey. It was squealing, so my friend Ruth's dad dropped me off there as I left their house. It honestly would have been a super quick job...if they'd had both of the belts I needed. They originally thought they could get one from their store in the next town over, and the manager drove all the way over to get it...but they didn't have it after all. They managed to track one down at another store, but then that necessitated waiting an additional 45 minutes to get that belt. Once they got it, I swear it was on the car in about 10 minutes. To which I say: really? Really, car, REALLY???
I visited the National Museum of American History yesterday, which was interesting, but surprised me. I was expecting a lot more Revolutionary War stuff, I guess, and instead there were things like Daniel Radcliffe's Harry Potter costume. I did really like the "America on the Water" exhibit, and "America on the Move" was pretty cool. The "America at War" exhibit was also really interesting, but I cry foul on there being NOTHING about submarines at all in the World War II section. Especially seeing as THEIR OWN WEBSITE says:
"submarines comprised less than 2 percent of the U.S. Navy, but sank over 30 percent of Japan's navy, including eight aircraft carriers. More important, American submarines contributed to the virtual strangling of the Japanese economy by sinking almost five million tons of shipping—over 60 percent of the Japanese merchant marine."
My grandfather served on submarines before we even joined the war (he told a story about how they were patrolling the Panama Canal when they heard about Pearl Harbor and immediately zipped through the canal to head towards Hawaii...it was a long trip, and by the time they got there, all they had left for provisions was some water and lima beans...and that was where my grandfather's hatred of lima beans started), and he worked on them for years afterward, even after leaving the service. I mean, seriously, he worked on building the USS Albacore, and the speed it reached is STILL classified.
And, wow, what a tangent. Today I walked the monuments. That was really interesting, but perhaps the coolest thing happened as I walked down the street from the White House. All the sudden the cops were blocking off traffic and waving people through. I was waiting at a cross-walk to be able to cross. Eventually another cop waved those of us waiting away from the the crosswalk, even. At that point, we were all intrigued, and so we waited. Then we heard the sirens coming, and a motorcade started coming down the street. It was Michelle Obama being escorted back to the White House. Seriously cool.
What was not seriously cool was me neglecting to put on sunblock. My shoulders are beet red. Or is that beat red? Red as a beet or red as if I've been beaten? I'm hoping it's the former.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Road Trip: Day 1
The Mom, The Step-Dad, and I finished packing the car at midnight last night...this morning? Which does that count as? Anyway, we loaded up the entire back of the car and then the roof-top cargo carrier (wicked awesome). I am so glad I didn't have to do the two bags thing like the teachers I know who are teaching in Asia this year - I could have done it, but I am really happy that I didn't have to.
I took The Mom and The Step-Dad out to breakfast as thanks, and we stopped by my grandmother's on the way home. (This is my dad's mom, mind you.) My grandmother is 94 and such a character (just the way she insists on calling Big Papi "Big Pappy" cracks me up - it isn't spelled right, apparently), but she's also a worrier. That means that The Dad and Auntie decided she doesn't need to know I'm going to be in Mexico, so I am already accruing the benefits of the school's Texas postal box.
Anyway, the drive down was crazy. I should have expected that for a Sunday afternoon in July. Everyone and their brother was headed south, back to the city for the work week. I was originally GPS-scheduled to get in at 5:40, and I didn't get here until almost 7:30. The torrential rain in Connecticut didn't help (except perhaps as a test of the water-resistance of the cargo carrier...my comforter hopes that it held watertight) - there was too much rain for the storm drains, so there were sections that had water that was probably 6-inches deep, meaning that anyone with sense (i.e. not near as many people as one would hope) was driving slowly so as not to splash water in the wrong spot on their car undercarriage. And, you know, driving slowly in torrential rain is also a safe thing, with or without deep water.
But I am safe and sound at my friend's house now, and it is going to be great to spend a few days with her, as I haven't seen her in ages.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Oh, my god, I have so much to do. So much to do! Did I mention how I have so much to do? (Also, why do you keep switching my font to Comic Sans MS, blogger? Super annoying, that.)
I am leaving on Sunday (the 15th). I will be hitting, in order:
- Driving through: NH, MA, CT, NY
- Carteret, New Jersey
- Greenbelt, Maryland
- Washington, DC
- Virginia (lunch, somewhere)
- Knoxville, TN
- Possibly North Carolina (a day out while in TN)
- Birmingham, AL
- Hattiesburg, Mississippi (lunch)
- New Orleans, LA
- Texas (southeastern)
We are crossing over through McAllen/Reynosa (US/MX) on the morning of the 1st. I am going to try to post every day (hopefully with pictures) as I drive down, so we'll see how that goes.
I am still having moments where it doesn't quite seem real. Maybe it'll hit me once we start packing the car.
My Route:
View Larger Map
I am leaving on Sunday (the 15th). I will be hitting, in order:
- Driving through: NH, MA, CT, NY
- Carteret, New Jersey
- Greenbelt, Maryland
- Washington, DC
- Virginia (lunch, somewhere)
- Knoxville, TN
- Possibly North Carolina (a day out while in TN)
- Birmingham, AL
- Hattiesburg, Mississippi (lunch)
- New Orleans, LA
- Texas (southeastern)
We are crossing over through McAllen/Reynosa (US/MX) on the morning of the 1st. I am going to try to post every day (hopefully with pictures) as I drive down, so we'll see how that goes.
I am still having moments where it doesn't quite seem real. Maybe it'll hit me once we start packing the car.
My Route:
View Larger Map
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)