Monday, January 25, 2010

Day 3

Not much to say today, we didn't have much to do. The treehouse is pretty much set up to our liking. There are still things we want or need to do (like heavy cleaning) but that can wait. The bedframe was delivered and set up this morning, it looks nice. They hated when they forgot something, having to climb the steps several times.



Dan took the mini van back to Avis (we needed it to transport things like the couch) and got a reasonable priced car until the jeep arrives which should be here in the next 2 weeks. We hung out, he took a nap while I watched tv and looked at the tourist magazines I picked up. I starred places I wanted to go or things I wanted to do, circled places I wanted to work (all outdoors; ranches, tour boats, botanical gardens, and the like), underlined food topics of interest (like the farmers markets and such). It's early evening the local news is on and I've got homemade spaghetti sauce on the stove (cheap and easy).
No plans for tomorrow, maybe laundry, maybe snorkle, maybe both. Here are some pics I just took.



South view from atop our landing.



East view, grapefruit tree on left clementine tree in front. They both need help! We can get tips at the big farmers market on Saturday, it's on the community college's campus and they answer questions like that.



North view/entrance

-- posted from my IPhone

Location:Kaapuni Rd,Kapaa,United States

Day 2



We rise with the sun. Laying in my husbands arms, listening to the roosters cock-a-doodle-doing, I feel at peace. The moist air caresses my skin, fragrance from the flowers outside waft in. We love our new mattress, made of environmentally friendly memory foam, and a great night’s sleep has invigorated me. Our new home is like a tree house. We are enclosed by a 20 foot tree fence. It’s private, and from our place, you can see treetops forever. We stand naked, on our little landing at the top of the stairs, and watch the sunrise.

Ilissa gave me a hairclip and dubbed it the friendship clip. Having given up on my wild hair she thought it would help tame it. It does, I comb my hair and put in my friendship clip. We throw on our flip flops, I'm wearing a flimsy skirt and a blousey top. Small Town Coffee has free Wi-Fi so we set our laptops up outside and eat a bagle, sip some coffee and get on the Internet. There is a retired couple sitting next to us only, they're not a couple. They're good, old friends comfortable with eachother. They roll their own cigarettes, she writes and draws, he reads the paper commenting aloud on it's articles. Their friends stop by, he has been here since '94 and seems to know everyone. Clearly posted on the window is a no smoking sign but everyone on the deck is smoking!


We walk, hand in hand through promanads, hallways and sidewalks finding things to make our house a home. Nightstands, towel racks, bathroom shelves, shower shelf, dustpan and broom. We look at high arched faucets for the kitchen, $250.00, should of brought ours. $500.00 for a full size stove, should we? The one in the treehouse is old and gross. I turn onto an asile that Dan is in, he looks up, smiles and says I look pretty, I love it because I'm not feeling too pretty now-a-days. We have desert before lunch and stop to get a shave ice (not shaved ice), it's like a snow cone only better, because it's in Hawaii!

Linghi Mui (red, Dan) coconut (me)

Our last stop is Costco, we're getting the couch we saw yesterday. We get there just in time, it's the last one left. On the way out, 10 people say they want that couch, including the cashieer. Two people tell us they have it (one lady works there) and that we're going to love it.The couch is difficult to get inside. Dan and I managed to get it to the top of the stairs before I became useless. I just didn't have the strength to heave it over my head to manuver it just so. Luckily, Phil and Simone came home then. Phil runs up the stairs, chiding us under his breath for not waiting for him (it looked like rain) and helps Dan. They heave and hoe, to no avail. Simone runs Phil up some tools and he has the screen door off in no time. Still unable to get the couch in he knocks off the eve with his hammer, and it goes in. (I had a picture of this but it went missing)


After a lunch of turkey sammies with avacado ($1.00 each, 2x as big as ones in Colorado) we get to work. Dan assembles the "dining table" and chairs (actually patio furniture), puts together the bathroom shelves and one of the nightstands. I clean the kitchen cabinets (they are filthy), line them with shelf liner and put away the things Brian shipped us. I also clean glasses, bowls and glass tupperware, dry them and put them away.


The "dining room"

Sitting on the couch, the window open, rain is pouring down outside. We are spent but clean having just taken showers.The TV is searching for all available channels, there are a lot and it's taking forever. I'm going to make dinner; fresh pineapple and macadamia nuts!

P.S. I had a lot more pictures of the house I was going to post but I'll save the long, involved story, it didn't work. I may not be posting regularly until we get the Internet, my phone can't handle it and we can't afford to keep paying $25.00 for breakfast so I can use the Wi-Fi, plus, it's irritating the %$#! out of me to...well, I said I was going to skip that part!! Dan is on the phone right now trying to get it set up now, so hopefully soon!

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Day 1

Laying on the hard floor, exhausted, we couldn’t fall asleep. After 10 minutes my shoulder was hurting and I knew it was going to be a long night. All of the sudden, Dan jumps up and exclaims the neighbors are here! He rushes outside to catch them before they go in. I let the dogs out and join him. Pretty soon we are having beers, and Baxter and Lucy are chasing their cat around. Turns out, they love dogs. Phil and Simone are younger than us, maybe mid 30’s, he’s tall and wiry she’s cute with long brown hair. They tell us about the neighbor who used to live here; “the crazy chicken lady. She had around 100 chickens and would butcher them in the kitchen and sell the meat and eggs. Chickens running all over the yard, chicken poop everywhere. Strange because you’d never know it, the place looks clean and there are no smells. They have the boxes Brian shipped and they have a blow up mattress we can borrow, plus, Simone throws in a roll of toilet paper. Thankful for our great new neighbors, we go home, blow up the air mattress, and fall fast asleep.




Lucy relaxing on the blow up bed.

The sun has risen pretty high by the time we get up, it’s around 8:30. We’ve got a busy day ahead of us.



After breakfast at the local coffee joint, Java Kai, we get a mattress and bed frame. We will pick up the mattress later in the day, the frame will be delivered Monday. We make a quick stop, it’s Baxter and Lucy’s first time at the ocean. Baxter, quivering with excitement, jumps right in and takes a big drink. His face says it all, yuck! He can’t help himself and does it two more times, finally deciding to get out of the water figuring if you can’t drink it, what good is it? Lucy got her feet wet but basically stayed in the sand.



The day was productive, besides the mattress and frame we got a TV (yes, a TV, we wanted to be able to chill at night, there is no deck to sit on outside so, inside it is), trash cans, grocery’s and a really cute outdoor patio set for our dining room table. I’ll post pictures tomorrow, I’m not totally set up yet.

Exhausted and tired of ABC (the only channel we can get right now) we got to bed at 8!




-- posted from my IPhone

Location:Kuhio Hwy,Kapaa,United States

Friday, January 22, 2010

Goodbye Ilissa, I love you!

We are on the road at 8:30, making good time despite the rain and traffic, our flight leaves at 1:30. Dan is stressed, he has a lot on his mind and just wants to get to the airport and get this process started. We need to drop off the rental car, assemble the dog crates (Baxter's is ginormous and we had to take it apart so we could fit everything in this Ford Explorer that we rented), get the dogs and luggage checked in, pay for the extra weight and luggage, pay for the dogs and wait for the plane to leave.

Up at 6am, we said goodbye to Justin as he left for work. As we packed, Ilissa made sure we had everything we needed including love, good cheer, and hugs. I haven't seen her for 10 years and leaving her made me realize how much I missed her. I'm glad we made the time for a visit. She even sang a song to Lucy, her first favorite. "Lucy girl, in her Lucy world, doing her Lucy twirl. Ears like cottonballs (sung at a higher pitch) loves Baxter through it all" I'm gonna miss her!

Once we got to the airport things went reletively smooth. It was a total pain to assemble the crates in the car rental parking lot, in the rain, with 2 wet and stressed out dogs, 3 suitcases, 2 backpacks and 1 carry on bag.



Once that was done, and the dogs were in their crates, a kind, lady, bus driver for Avis told us she'd be happy to take us. She made it clear to the other passengers that there were dogs on the bus and they were welcome to take the next one if they had a problem with that. She's a dog lover and was very careful and protective of her cargo.



The guy checking us in at the airport felt sorry for us and all the fees we had to pay so he didn't charge us for our 3 suitcases, all of which were overweight! We grab some MacDonalds to eat on the plane and rush to our gate just in time for boarding. The man standing in front of us overhears Dan reviewing what we have to do when we land and learns that we are moving there. He just moved, with his dogs, 3 months ago. He is a director for commercials! He tells us they now have editors on set cutting dailies, hummm...possible job lead? He says we live by his holistic vet and has a 3 month jump on us so we say we'll trade numbers, but never get a chance. Lifting off, Dan and I look out the window. Excited, it's finally here, we'll be in Kauai tonight. As I look out the window, I see a double rainbow just behind the wing, I watch it, amazed, until we are swallowed by the clouds and it disappears. I settle in for the 6 hour flight.

As we were nearing our new home, I opened the window shade. We were about 15 minutes from landing and about a half mile in the air, when I looked down to the ocean. I was litterally, littered with dolphins. Thousands and thousands of them. The closer we got to shore, the less ferquent we saw them. An auspicious beginning!


The tiny white spots are dolphins.

It's warm and humid, my skin drinks it up and immidately relases the moisture, I'm over dressed, having left cold, rainy California. Baxter and Lucy arrive safely, in 5 minutes (and $800.00 later) they are released. I take them to a grassy area and Baxter yips and yaps as he pees a river. He's so excited, anxious and sick of being in a crate. Dan decides to get the rental car while I wait with the dogs and our stuff. Baxter is dancing around but calming down, Lucy clamouring up my leg when an airport attendant says the have to stay crated. I force Baxter in and he cries the whole time

While we were in the air Sky, from ReMax called on behalf of Jimmy, the guy we're renting from. The house hasn't been cleaned, would you mind? Of course we'll discount the rent. I call her, Jimmy is on the mainland, his mom just died, the keys are at his house. While she goes there to get the keys we have dinner at The House of Noodles, off the main highway in Kapa'a. It's open windows covered with bamboo, cross hatched, "bars", let a cool breeze in. I can't believe we did it! WE LIVE HERE!



While we wait for our food, Sky calls, none of the keys work, she called the locksmith, he'll be there in an hour. Perfect, we can take our time and eat then head up to meet the locksmith.

We wait for an hour, locks picked, we discover the power is out. After that gets turned on Dan chats with the locksmith while I unpack. Our boxes got here but they're at the neighbours and he's asleep or not home. We left 19 hours ago, I'm done, gonna curl up on the floor and pass out!
-- posted from my IPhone

Location:Kauwila St,Kapaa,United States

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Last Day in California



Our plans for visiting vineyards today have been dampened. As I lay in the warm queen size bed, Lucy and Baxter snuggled between Dan and I, my eyes closed, I have Ilissa's electric smile in my mind as the rain pours down outside - the wind slamming the rain into the house and making the windows creak. We decide we can go anyway, after all the tastings are done inside. Ilissa has made it so she only has about a half days work ahead of her. I'm grateful and proud because she works really hard, as always. We have known each other for about 24 years, meeting on set, we both ran camera. Since, she has gone back to DC and worked for CSPAN, CNN, Fox News, Omega Recording Studio, and Voice of America. We sit in the garage, on the smoking couch,  I blog and Dan does his computer things (FaceBook and gaming), the dogs snuggled between us.


The rain is coming down so hard that Dan calls to make sure the vineyards are open while I make lunch and Ilissa takes a shower. We are having sammies on the roasted garlic, rosemary bread, with the jalapeno gouda cheese and slivered basil. Gail gave Dan some dill pickle chips that she brought back home from North Dakota. We had been saving them for the trip, and now we finish them off. Ilissa is happy, she closed a big deal, liked her lunch, and is singing as she cleans up. I like the deal here, I cook, she cleans!

With the rain pouring down, a lot of the vineyards are closed. The Temecula Wine Valley Trail, is flooded out, but we ferry on.

A flooded soccer field.

One of the few open is Cougar Vineyard and Winery. Their tasting room is in the cellar, it's cold and there are no chairs, but the lady serving up the tasting is entertaining. We are not too impressed by their wines, all aged in stainless steel, but enjoy each other's company. Plus, you get to keep the glasses!

Ilissa smuggles in Molly, in the above picture she is in the bag over her shoulder. Nobody is the wiser.


The lady at Cougar sends us to Leonesse Cellars Winery.

Running through the rain we get into the warm, tasting room.

I'm not feeling it, I've had too much wine in too few days. It was pretty and the company was great and again, I just kept thinking how great it would be in the summertime. After a dinner at the local Chicago pizza joint, Ilissa, me, Dan and Justin watched My Life In Ruins. The guys loved it!



Temecula (Teh-meck-q-la)

Who knew that the town of Temecula was so cool? I'd never heard of it and neither had Dan. Ilissa encouraged us to go to Old Town Temecula for the day. It is my turn to cook today since Justin has work and then school - he's getting a degree in Criminal Justice - so I want to do some food shopping as well. The day is clear with blue sky peaking out of the clouds here and there, but no rain.

I decide I want to make an omelette for dinner and I want farm fresh eggs, I know it sounds crazy, but it makes a difference. Justin, a foodie like me, had mentioned that there is a farm nearby. I did a search on my iPhone, but no luck. The only farm I found was a flower farm, and they recommended the farmers market.

The wind had picked up and the skies were getting grey so we wrapped our coats around us and looked around the farmers market. There were no eggs but we found some fantastic bread. A rosemary and roasted garlic sandwich bread, and a sourdough baguette. My omelette uses croutons (I know, weird, but it makes the omelette) so I figured the rosemary bread would be great with that, with the sourdough I would make bruschetta. I remembered that Ilissa has some oranges, that the neighbor grew on her tree, and I thought I'd use those in a salad.

Old Town Temecula is, as the name implies, the old part of the town. It reminds me of an upscale Georgetown. Old, renovated buildings mingle with new ones, created to match the look of the old west. There are restaurants, antique shops and artisan food and wine shops. After perusing an antiques store, we walked down the store lined sidewalk. I spy a sign that says olive oil tastings. Dan and I love, love, love, olive oil, the peppery the better, and I garnish almost everything with it. The Temecula Olive Oil Company, is a cute little store with creaky wooden floor boards, and it's clean and cheery. We meander to the back and find a lady behind a counter lined with olive oils. She asks us if we'd like to do a tasting are we are in! They use little plastic cups, pour a sip into it and give it to you. You smell it; clean and fresh smells of grass and green fruit, permeate your nose. The oils made with unripe olives are peppery, they have a bite to them, a little bitter, spicy. These are our favorites. Some olives are left on the tree to mature, these oils are smooth, buttery. On to the flavored oils. They are made buy adding the fresh ingredient to the olives when pressing, no additives, chemicals, or artificial flavors. Each oil individually blended with the chosen ingredient. The fragrances fill our noses; basil, blood orange, rosemary, and truffle. We are in heaven, the smells taking us to a warm, breezy, summer's day, erasing the cold, blustery day waiting for us. The hand crafted vinegars; champagne honey, balsamic fig, and pomegranate are sharp, acidic, sweet. The pungency of so many vinegars makes me cough. She says the balsamic fig served over a soft cheese, makes an extravagant desert. We had seen a cheese shop earlier, with cheese tastings, so I decide I want the balasmic and the buttery olive oil (because this is for our friends and most people don't like the sharp, peppery ones) Dan gets the citrus blend (made with blood oranges) and we go off to lunch.

We decide on The Bank. The building was built in 1913 as the First National Bank of Temecula and has even survived a robbery. Now, it serves fantastic Mexican food. As we are eating, I feel like Butch Cassidy will come barging in at any moment. The atmosphere is old west, and California, in a hippie kind of way. Leaving, I notice a wine tasting sign we can't refuse.

Temecula Hills Winery is somewhat off the beaten path, off Front street (which is the main street) on to main street, which is a side street. In front of the cute, little, 100 year old cottage is a courtyard with a huge tree stretching it's branches over the yard. The leaves are wet but I imagine them in the summertime, providing shade for the people who have come to taste wine. Inside, it's warm and jovial. The walls are covered with Mediterranean style murals, grapevines and grapes crawling up it's length. The long, granite topped bar has customers along it's 20 foot span. They are well into their wine tasting; laughing and joking with each other. Debbie, our wine expert and server happily explains that for $10.00 you can taste any of their 6 wines and we go for it. We happen to be sitting next to an older man, trim, maybe 60, hair full but grey. He is happy, having retired early and moving from Orange County,  he is now a vineyard appraiser and has a fantastic house with a view of the mountains that surround this valley. We make everyone jealous by telling them our story, he says in his little boy voice, "I wanna go to Hawaii". The warmth, talk and wine creating instant camaraderie. I am finished with my wine selection but Debbie gives me a "splash" of their 2008 Late Harvest Viognier and another of raspberry champagne. The Viognier is a white desert wine. It's not overly sweet, light, clean, it's fantastic, we buy it to have with desert.






Color




Bouquet


ahhh, taste



The back courtyard at Temecula Hills Winery.

The owner/winemaker notices our olive oil and says he has oils as well, come, have a tasting. Game, as always, we almost skip over to his back bar to have a taste. Instead of cups he has a plate meant for deviled eggs, you know, those little clear plastic jobbies? He starts by telling us he uses bread and dumps a bunch into the center of the plate. A little drizzle of olive oil goes into the first divot. We are instructed to soak the bread in it until it absorbs all of the oil, then suck the oil out of the bread. Doing it this way incorporates air, lending a truer taste. His oils are excellent as well and we get the jalapeno one. The clean, fresh, taste of the jalapenos give the oil a nice kick. He suggests cooking your breakfast eggs in it, I'm thinking of drizzling it over grilled, fresh, Mahi Mahi and sprinkling a little sea salt over it.

As the rain pours down, we run/walk the two blocks up Front Street and are at the Temecula Valley Cheese Company. Cold, wet, and tired, we tell the shop purveyor my plans with the fig balsamic vinegar and she suggests a soft cheese from France. We also get a gruyere for the omelette and a local jalapeno gouda just because.

On our way home we stop at Trader Joe's to get some fresh basil and heirloom tomatoes for the bruschetta. At home, Ilissa is done working and Dan fixes her computer while I make dinner. We have the bruschetta and omelette (stuffed with croutons and gruyere), and a salad with toasted almonds, thinly sliced red onions, avocado and the neighbors oranges in a vinaigrette I made from the citrus olive oil and fig and balsamic vinegar. Justin came home early (everyone in class got dumped on, on the way in, and were sitting soaking wet in class with the air conditioner cranking, they couldn't turn it off so the instructor let them go early) and joined us for desert; the Viognier and soft cheese drizzled with the fig-basalmac reduction. 


We bought Ilissa a flower bouquet, something she loves to arrange, taking great pride and satisfaction in the process.


Cool note:
Dan has been following Laird Hamilton's blog almost religiously. He is famous for pioneering big wave surfing. Yesterday, Dan sent him an email telling of our move and asking if he know someone that could teach him how to surf. He just got an email back with a guys name and phone number! I am relieved that Dan will be learning by (probably) one of the best surfers on the island.


Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Ilissa's

Finally, the jeep is at the port. We got up late this morning and took our time getting ready. Ilissa and Justin made us comfortable in a hundred thoughtful ways. We have a beautiful room to stay in, and our own bathroom. They also went out and got groceries for us. Things like my cereal and deli meats so we can make sandwiches. We were told to make ourselves comfortable, like it was our own home. She introduced herself as Auntie Lil to Baxter and Lucy and by the end of the night they were snuggled up next to her on the couch along with her cute pie Shitzu Molly.




Last night, our first night, Justin made a fantastic dinner; steak that had been marinated for 2 days in Stubb's Marinade, sauteed zucchini and yellow squash, scalloped potatoes and sauteed mushrooms and onions. Fantastic! I usually don't eat a whole steak, but I ate all of it! They bought a local red wine, we are in the Temeluca region, and Dan and I drank the entire bottle. After dinner we hung out, on the couch, in the garage, smoking and Dan and I drank another bottle of red - funny how much you can drink at sea level - and we talked the evening away, going to bed at 11.



Tuesday morning, Justin got up at 6, to start his day. Dan, Ilissa and I converging around 8:30. She works at home so we left her to her work and made the long drive back to Long Beach. The rain had stopped last night, so the drive was a lot quicker and a lot less tense. Dan dug out the car stereo and made my drive much easier. My buddy Tiffany gave me a Lady Gaga CD and she got us to Long Beach in style! We were there in 90 minutes and had to wait 45 minutes for the ship yard guy to call and give Dan the shipment number. Starving, we ate Pho for the first time. The spicy beef soup was delicious and warmed me up.

The rain started back up again and it was slow going on the way back. It is so saturated here that the roadways and highways are flooded in some areas. 


For dinner, Justin made spaghetti and meatballs. But these weren't just any spaghetti and meatballs! The sauce and meatballs were home made! I am in heaven, the meal, with salad and garlic bread is delicious. I prod about his sauce but he won't give me too many details!

We spent the evening playing the game Apples to Apples and went to bed at 11. I am so grateful to have such a fun, loving, thoughtful, beautiful, sweet friend like Ilissa, I'm glad we made time to visit before going to Kauai and I'm comforted that she has such a kind and loving husband.