Vacaciones! The Ronald Reagan Experience (Days 7-8)

The conclusion to my vacation posts…

Awhile ago I had looked up to see where exactly the Reagan Library was located because I thought it might be something to do the next time I went down to visit Sarah, and it turns out it's pretty much in their hood, only 40 miles away from them in Simi Valley. As it turned out, they are also currently running an exhibit on Disney Archives – costumes, props, memorabilia from Disney's past. That sounded like the perfect excuse to head down to Simi Valley, so all of us headed down there on Saturday to check it out. 

We got there just a hair after 10 a.m. (when it opened) and the parking lot was already almost full. We had already purchased our tickets online and since the kids were with us, we headed to the Disney Archives exhibit first. One of the things that I thought was really well done was incorporating how Reagan actually had involvement to some degree with Disney – he was there as an announcer on the day the park opened, and continued on to have a friendship with Walt Disney himself, which was documented through letters and photos. 

The part of the exhibit I liked the most were the costumes!

Giselle's wedding dress from Enchanted. It really is that poofy!

Big Maleficent dragon head from the Disneyland Fantasmic show!

Model pirate ship from Pirates of the Caribbean movie.

I've been to only one other presidential library – George H. W. Bush at the Texas A&M campus back in 1999, and at that time, it was pretty boring and more like a library than a museum, though I looked at that link and it looks like it's now pretty impressive in its own right (a new building and exhibits were built a couple years ago). 

Anyway, I was really impressed with everything. The building was set up so each exhibit flowed into each other organically. I've been to plenty of museums and usually they're like, here's the Meso-American room, here's the Ming Dynasty room, right next to each other with no flow. The Reagan Library was set up really well in a timeline so as you toured the building, the narrative really flowed well. 

I was most impressed with the section that had the actual video of the 1981 assassination attempt – I'd never seen the video before and actually only knew the bare minimum about it – that it happened, that the shooter was nuts and trying to impress Jodie Foster, that Agent Brady was severely injured and went on to lobby for stricter gun control laws. The way the library had the section set up was really powerful – first you watch the video in surround sound, and then there were all the displays and artifacts, and more video about the recovery and what have you. I thought it was really well done. 

One of the really awesome parts of the Library is that they have, in its own glass pavilion, the verysame Air Force One that Reagan (and other presidents) flew around in. It was decommissioned in 2004 or thereabouts and transported to the Reagan Library for display. 

It's kind of amazing. 

The pavilion from outside

The view from the pavilion into the valley

You could go inside the plane, but you weren't allowed to take pictures, which was kind of a bummer but on the other hand, I understand that for security reasons it's probably not the BEST idea to take pictures of the airplane that squired around various presidents and their technology. There were also these pictures put up on how they got the plane from wherever it had been, all the way to California and up the hill and into the pavilion, which was essentially built up around it. Really an engineering feat that was just as interesting as the plane itself!

Anyway, it was a GREAT trip! I'm so glad I went, and I'd love to go back to the Library by myself someday – I would probably spend all day there, have a Guinness in the pub underneath the plane (yes, really!) and read every single display in the place. As it was, it took us three hours to get through everything, even with a passle of kids. 

After the library we had lunch at an incompetent Chili's, then headed back to Santa Clarita. 

That evening we headed out to New Moon, which is my favorite restaurant down there. I know what you're thinking: New Moon? Isn't that part of the Twilight franchise?

NOOOOOOOOO

It's a really delicious Chinese restaurant. We ordered Chloe Shrimp (my faaaavorite!), spicy green beans, chicken fried rice, honey walnut chicken, dragon beef (my NEW favorite! omg it was amazing)… and maybe something else but now I can't remember. I did manage to beat Bill to to the bill (hah) and treated them for the meal since they'd been so generous to me the rest of the trip. DRAGON BEEF 

*** 

In conclusion, while I bought a ton of noodles and a cutting board shaped like the United States on my vacation, I did not buy any nail polish. Don't worry, I made up for it during the rest of the month. (My nail polish guy even called today with the new OPI holiday collection. It's like he knew it was payday!)

I'm heading back to LA over New Year's to see the new bebe, so that's something to look forward to, and in the meantime I'm trying to sort the house out (more on that later) and finish my Christmas shopping before December. I ordered a ton of stuff from Lima Beads and there's at least two more bead shows I'm attending before the end of the year, PLUS I discovered there's a new Hobby Lobby in Stockton (45 miles from me – as opposed to only getting to visit Hobby Lobby when I'm in Texas every two years!).

I can't believe it's almost October!

Vacaciones! Days 1-7

Last week I took the week off from work and recharged from the day-to-day. Sort of. Could have used another week, methinks.

My parents recently celebrated their 40th anniversary, so my sister and I took them out for a meal at the Basque Cultural Center in South San Francisco. Basque cuisine has long been a part of our immediate family lives – at least, when we're on vacation; we have tried it out at several different places (mostly in Nevada) and have always enjoyed it. My sister discovered they had a restaurant in South SF so a couple years ago we tried it out, it was good, and so we took the parents there for a celebration meal. We got the family dinner which had several different courses including soup, salad, lamb cheek (not gonna lie, it was both delicious and gross at the same time), and prime rib. Aside from the lamb cheek (I love lamb, but the cheek was a gross cut, chewy and weird) it was all very nice! 

We also went to the Wreaths Across America fundraiser for the Sacramento Valley National Cemetery. This also included delicious meat and potatoes and a (very loud) live auction that blew my hearing out for the evening. We went to this fundraiser last year, and this year were able to bring my grandmother – my grandpa is buried at the cemetary, and the fundraiser is to place wreaths at each soldier's grave during the Christmas season. This year they will need 12,000.

Then I sort of ran around and was stuck in major traffic on Hwy 4 to Brentwood on Labor Day (a big fat accident in the construction zone just past the Loveridge exit – there had to have been three Highway Patrol cars, glass in the road, a fire truck, ambulance, tow trucks… and by the time I got there it was pretty much cleared so I didn't even get to see the carnage. BOO.) I was heading over the the Shops at Brentwood, where they have an Ulta and a DSW – I'm a little bummed I don't have a closer Ulta, but what are you gonna do? There's also a Sephora in the JC Penney's in Brentwood – but luckily there is a real one in Walnut Creek. I actually managed to not increase the nail polish/makeup/etc supply, instead stopping in at the Kohl's and Michael's – picked up some new dangles for earrings or something from Michael's, and I finally found a black tee/tunic at Kohl's! I've been looking for one for a long time, it's beaded down the front. The last picture in this post has me wearing it. 

Tuesday I stayed home and did laundry like a champ, packed up my stuff and on Wednesday headed down south to Santa Clarita to visit Sarah and her family. The trip down took 5.5 hours which is generally about right, with two stops – one for gas at Harris Ranch and another pit stop at Laval, just before the Grapevine. I got to Sarah's right around 3:30.

Didn't do too much that day: long drive = tired Melissa. I got myself a new air bed, a massive 19" full size Beautyrest from Walmart, and that along with a foam mattress cover equaled a really nice portable bed! I was pleased. I just can't sleep close to the ground anymore; my old air bed is the regular kind that's like six or eight inches off the floor – when you have to get up in the middle of the night in a strange place… let's just say I am too old for that, now. I've never been a champ at camping and sleeping on couches, and I'm not about to do an about-face and change my stance on that. 

Thursday we took the boys to soccer and then headed to SUPERWALMART, which is always a treat. We don't have SUPERWALMART by me at all (there's one in American Canyon which is 25 minutes and a $5 toll away… or an hour if you get stuck in Six Flags traffic, in which case you suck it up and keep going because you paid that damn $5 toll!) so I'm always up for a trip. I didn't need anything but I did find medium egg noodles which are increasingly difficult to find up yonder, and a butter pecan box cake mix. MEDIUM EGG NOODLES!!! I also checked out a new-to-me yarn store not far from Sarah's house and got two skeins of Madelinetosh Chunky to make into hats. 

Friday we hopped on the Metrolink train to downtown LA, where I experienced Union Station – what a trip! I've been in big airports and ridden BART all over the Bay Area but that was just weird/overwhelming to me, how all the trains, buses, Amtrak, etc., all converged in one place. Glad I don't have to do that every day! The inside of the station was very art deco and I got a shot of a section that isn't being used: 

Across the street from Union Station is Olvera Street, which is an old part of LA, and there is even an old adobe inside. Before we headed over there, we went to lunch at Phillipe's, the originator of the French Dip Sandwich! I… was actually not too enthused by this idea originally but I'm game for anything. Even giving wet bread sandwiches a chance again. Wet bread is up there in like the top three things I generally refuse eat (cooked fish, lima beans, wet bread [I say cooked fish because I recently developed a love of RAW SUSHI wtf]) so I was like, okay I will try this famous wet bread french sandwich but I don't promise to like it. 

I liked it.

They just barely dipped the bread in the au jus, like maybe a quarter inch? The meat was good – I had beef. They also had pork, chicken, lamb, etc. I meant to order the sandwich with bleu cheese which would have been even better! Next time, for sure, whenever that may be. I also want to try the lamb, because yum, lamb (just not lamb cheek!).

 After lunch, we headed over to Olvera Street, and it definitely reminded me of an outdoor version of my beloved Mercado in San Antonio

We visited the Avila Adobe – the oldest house in LA! Nicely set up and definitely cooler in the shade than the rest of LA, that's for sure. Sarah's little boy David actually sat with me for a picture…

And may I just say as someone who was suffering from a crazy stomachache AND the dredges of a migraine… I look pretty excellent in this picture. Especially since I wanted to lie down and WHINE. (Thanks Sarah for taking an excellent picture of me! lol)

Later that day, we went back to Sarah's house and rested up for our dinner out in Santa Monica – we were meeting our high school friend Rhoda for dinner at Il Fornaio, which is exactly where we had dinner with Rhoda last year! Last year I had a pasta dish with lobster, and it turns out I don't really like lobster (I'm not really kidding about the "If it comes from the sea it does not go in me" stance I generally take with sea food, but given that the sea food I do like is on the weird spectrum – calamari and shrimps, and I like crab cakes, I really thought I would go for lobster, but alas! I do not. I am sad about this) so this year I decided to stay away from anything too weird, especially since I'd had a pretty sassy stomacheache all day (YOU'RE WELCOME) and the food at Il Fornaio is quite rich. 

I decided to go for chicken tortellinis with a tomato cream sauce (See Abs, I totes will eat a cream sauce… as long as it's a tomato one!) and it was quite good, particularly after I followed Rhoda's lead and put a bunch of hot pepper flakes all over it for a little extra kick! I also had a very nice glass of sauvignon blanc and a caramel custard for dessert. The custard was very much like flan so of course I had to go for it. 

After dinner we took our now-yearly picture!

I look slightly ridiculous but I think I'd just kicked my leg up and made a face! Yay for me. I was having a pretty good hair day, though, and my glass of wine didn't reignite my migraine, so I call this whole evening a win! lol

The next day, my last in Southern California, was spent at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library… a post for another day because I have many feelings (almost all of them patriotic) about our trip there. It was really quite an experience, so stay tuned!

Self-Awareness Can Only Lead to Self-Improvement

I was looking on Modcloth last night, as my sister had sent her Christmas wish list to me and there was an item on there from that store, and I took to looking at the clothing. I don’t fit in the majority of their clothes (a lot only go up to a large [!]), which I find irritating, but since I don’t have any money anyway, it’s sort of a moot point. Anyway, so I did come across this dress that I really liked:

I think it’s really cute. I like the idea of a chevron stripe being the main visual feature around the neck, and since it’s a knit dress, well hell, I could make that!

I don’t think a worsted weight dress would be a good idea, though, so I would shorten it to hip/tunic length. Also since there’s a ridiculous amount of stockinette, which I find tedious to knit (less so in the round than flat, but still) This would be an ideal candidate for the knitting machine. In theory, I could try my standard machine(s) out for this, but I actually have a random ton of dark dark heathered gray worsted weight yarn which I think would work out pretty well and plus I could use stash for it. As far as the chevron, I don’t know about the colors yet but I’ll check the stash. I’m also not totally clear on technique either: I’d like to try set-in sleeves in the round, but I think I’m leaning towards intarsia for the front chevron, which wouldn’t work very well in the round. At any rate, there would be folded over hems as opposed to ribbings. That part I’m pretty excited about it. I’ve done folded hems on socks but never on a garment before, so I think that will be pretty cool.

As far as what I’ve been up to lately (since I haven’t updated since Mid-October):

  1. HARDWARE: Did you notice that I mentioned standard knitting machine(S)? Yeah, that’s right, I managed to acquire a fully outfitted Toyota knitting machine complete with ribber and punch cards for the low low price of $40 (yes I still owe you Mom, just remind me…) at the Legacy Thrift Shop’s first annual rummage sale! From what I’ve been able to deduce from my interweb research, the Toyota is compatible with the standard Elna machine I already own. SUH-WEET! So if you’re paying attention, that means I now have three knitting machines and am basically turning into my mother with every passing day.
  2. THE CAR: Got the car fixed: my uncle came over and removed some sort of mystery squishy rubber piece from the clutch area that he was baffled by its very existence, let alone what it was doing in my car. No problems since, knock on wood. No really, knock on wood, wherever you are, I need all the cosmic points I can get.
  3. ZOMBIE INFATUATION: I made zombie cupcakes:

    They were fun to make, even if my kitchen is now under a sheen of red food coloring. These are actually red velvet cupcakes. I don’t think I really like red velvet cupcakes – I mean, they are pretty and all, but they don’t really taste like anything.
  4. LOS ANGELES: I went to see my friend Sarah two weeks ago. I took a day off work and drove down to Santa Clarita, listening to talk radio the whole time. It was really interesting to listen to, because that was the week Juan Williams got the heave-ho from NPR and he went on Hannity to talk about it. Once I got to Santa Clarita, Sarah and I went to dinner at New Moon and hung out the rest of the weekend. I even managed to squeeze in a trip to the Super Walmart! I love the Super Walmart! And Sarah. I love Sarah too. *ahem* 😉

One of the main things I’ve been working on in the past few weeks is getting my house back into order. This year has been kind of sucktacular, and I do have a tendency towards “clutter blindness” (and laziness) so I have been trying to get more organized in my day-to-day lifestyle. Last week I spent some quality time decluttering the kitchen, and I also did a small home improvement in my bedroom where I hung a row of hooks for my long necklaces:

…That’s not even all my jewelry, but I am trying to get organized and stay neater. It will be a challenge because I am kind of a slob, and like I said, I do suffer from clutter blindness to some degree, and if there is a flat surface soon enough I will put something on it. I was particularly struck yesterday when my parents stopped by after I’d cleaned up (and out) the den, they basically were all, “WOW.” so it must have been pretty bad, but really I just don’t see it, which I’m working on trying to recognize. Being self-aware is the first step to self-improvement, right?

Anyway, isn’t that rack nice? I got it at Target. It’s hanging where that picture used to. I also had a clock up there, but I moved the clock to another wall, along with a sculpture I made in my ceramics class in college, lo those years ago.

I like that corner a lot better now; it’s improved by the addition of the clock as it adds a little something to the composition of the area, and breaks up the solid blue of the wall.

I’m now working on getting some things framed and up on the walls in other parts of the house. I picked up some velcro sticky things by 3M to use to hang pictures – the wood paneling that makes up every wall in my house is often times hard to get a nail through, but the velcro stuff can hold things up to several pounds so I’m looking forward to finally getting my art collection up. What, I’ve only lived here for two years, isn’t that about the amount of time needed to get your crap together? I can’t believe I’ve already been here that long. And with the economy being the way it is, I bet that I will be here for awhile! AWESOME.

Hey at least I got another job, so I should just shut up.

And someday I really will take photos of the Wollmeise I got and post them. Someday, if the sun ever comes out while I’m at home!