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boats * bikes * bargains

Friday, June 12th, 2009

by Rachael
Burgum, Holland

It sure is a pleasant place to be staying.

Now that the harbourmaster is satisfied the children will not rip up his lawn, kick their ball onto expensive boats or be a general nuisance, he’s become quite friendly. In fact, yesterday he sold us two bikes! 
Grandpa had seen two boats signposted “Te koop” and surmised that it was highly unlikely two boats would go under the same name in one marina, and so it probably meant “For sale” or “Do you want to take me out for a sail?” or something similar.
The same sign was on two folding bikes over by the shower/toilet block (sidetrack: it’s been so nice staying here and having real flush toilets and showers that spurt water – it’s not that we don’t like our onboard facilities, quite the contrary, we are most thankful to take our kitchen and bathroom along with us wherever we go – but we are just super appreciating not having to put the sink up to use the toilet, not having to wait for the water to drain away, not having to empty the loo, being able to stand up under a shower instead of crouch in a cupboard).
Back to those bikes. Having established they were indeed for sale, our interest in them was piqued….when you start thinking about buying something, you take notice when it falls across your path! While they weren’t the best bikes we’ve seen, there was nothing wrong with them when we compared them to many we had seen being used in Asia! And they were cheap – even by our tight-fisted standards, and by the time half-Chinese-blooded Rob had sent quarter-Chinese-blooded-Jgirl14 to bargain for them, they were even cheaper still, the cheapest we have seen yet.
Mr HarbourMaster can’t have felt ripped off though – he accepted our offer and this morning had procured another old dunger of a bike and offered us that as well. A real old dunger this one! But such a bargain, we had to counteroffer and take it.
So, with a little person on the back of each bike, we can now move ten of us at once by pedal-power if we need to.

But they weren’t the only bargain…..
On a rack outside a shop was a sign offering jeans for 2.95 – that is cheap in any language. In fact, in a country where you can’t get a loaf of bread for under a euro, 2.95 sounded way too cheap……so I checked.
”Ja ja zwei something that sounded German-like for 95”
Worth trying on….given the state of my new-but-already-baggy jeans after the little Incident In A Tunnel. I had fully intended mending *those ones*, but at 2.95 and a shopping expedition that lasted only four minutes flat for jeans that fit, it was another bargain worth snaffling up. The ripped jeans are too good to throw away – maybe we’ll refashion them into something else.
(Just quietly…..I was heading in to town to find the cheap underwear shop Rob had seen yesterday…..and you know what? I found three of them, but in none were you able to try on before buying. I don’t know about you, but I think buying a bra without trying it on first is potentially not going to be such a bargain after all. Even a pack of undies that you have not been able to look at could be a disaster. At least my tight new jeans will hold everything in place <wink>)

you can’t stop the learning

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

by a learner
Bingen am Rhein, Germany

Every day I happen across older kids with their maths textbook open or copying out Latin vocabulary, smaller ones are continually badgering for “how to spell” something, especially the ones who were writing *nothing* six months ago, and pictures are constantly being churned out.

You really can’t stop the learning.

I had wondered if, with fewer craft supplies on hand, the amount of *creativity* exhibited at home might diminish while we were on the road. My fears are proving to be unfounded. These kids just make do with what they’ve got. If they have a space of four square metres to play in, they make up games that fit that space. If we get a couple of hot nights and they realise that it’s going to be roasting by the time summer hits, they start ruminating about how to make a fan……check out Jgirl14’s journal entries about the process:

Tuesday 2nd June
Success!
If we forget the fact that Kboy10 and made the previously mentioned fan and it didn’t work on account of the brackets not being stable enough, the shaft not being straight and the fan heads not being efficient, because they were a) too fat, b) the wrong shape and c) couldn’t spin fast enough due to the first two problems…..if we forget about that, which I highly doubt, given that it took two and a half hours to fashion the pieces needed and fully assemble….if we can forget about all that….we had two successes one was the shopping and the other was the fan.
The shopping hilarities can wait until the matter of the fans is closed!
While Kboy10 and I were despairing over our un-co-operative fan that, instead of spinning, went up and down like a seesaw, I had a brainwave. One minute Kboy10 was saying, “I knew it wouldn’t work, even in our test run it didn’t” (which was entirely true), and the next minute he was asking, “Are you sure it will work?”
An hour later we had transformed it into a paddle fan. The brackets stayed the same, but everything else was moved around, and the rotational fan heads….they’re history.
Now the brackets have three strings holding them at 45 degree angles to the roof. In the middle of these strings is a strip of cardboard (5cm x 8cm) secured lengthways for stability.
We kept the shaft and it now has a paddle on each end.
As the trial run was successful we even decorated the paddles.
Finally the shaft was taped on to the cardboard strip. There’s a string on each end of the shaft so at the pull of a string you have a fan that works!
As Grandpa says, we are now Punkah Wallahs 😉

Everyone learnt today what happens when you go over a bump on a bicycle too fast. Unfortunately for her, Tgirl5 will probably remember the lesson the longest, with scraped hip, grazed elbow and donked cheek and forehead. She will be back on the carrier tomorrow, urging the driver to “don’t go too fast”.

We have had all sorts of encounters with *nature*.
From the crow snatching a sparrow for lunch…
to watching little flitty birds build a nest on the side of a house in Reichenau (where, as it happens, Mboy6 observed that the ones clinging to the house must be men…..when asked for a reason he replied, “Well the ladies are the servants doing all the work”….and I realised he needed to help out more round the van – not that there is a lot to do each day!)…
to listening to birds sing all night long in Rothenburg – literally All Night Long; they simply didn’t stop…
to dipping in a mountain stream…
to catching a glimpse of a woodpecker and a deer…
to listening to the song of a cuckoo day after day in the woods behind us (and y’know, we haven’t *seen* the cuckoo, but we know that’s what it is, because it sounds JUST like a cuckoo clock – very realistic – so it must be!)
From wheat fields to waterfalls, from pollen to poppies, from mountains to watching the Rhein grow wider and wider.

And travelling through Europe you can’t help but have an historical experience. We have observed, compared and contrasted churches, chapels and cathedrals. We have delighted in quaint little villages, tudor houses and all manner of solid old buildings.

Actually, we are having a Wikipedia Holiday…..it may not be the most educationally advanced way of seeing the world, but I saved offline a Wikipedia page for every place we are planning to stop, and that gives us a snippet of background information. Not good for Lonely Planet, but informative enough for us! Besides, we find a lot of the reading we have previously done coming to mind and to life.

the learning goes on and on and on….

connecting historical faith

Friday, May 29th, 2009
by Rach Kehl, Germany – visit to Strasbourg, France The Tower of Babel, the Parting of the Red Sea, The Last Supper, Pentecost – these are a few important markers in the history of Christianity and today we were reminded of ... [Continue reading this entry]

Is Graffiti Art?

Monday, May 11th, 2009
by a non-draw-er Berlin, Germany In this arty bohemian city, where there are more galleries and design shops mingling with cafes concentrated in one spot than we’ve seen in any single place before, creating a relaxed beautiful atmosphere, walls are plastered ... [Continue reading this entry]

market rates

Saturday, May 9th, 2009
by the main shopper Berlin, Germany A far cry from the watch-where-you-step wet markets and touristy colourful night markets of Asia, are the markets of Berlin. We sampled our second today, will be returning to the first again tomorrow, yet another on ... [Continue reading this entry]

crafted

Thursday, April 30th, 2009
by a crafter Tallinn, Estonia What a wonderful array of handcrafted items – and what’s more, you can even watch the masters at work. For you wool-workers out there, you would have loved this shop. Just look at all those hand-knit socks ... [Continue reading this entry]

hardly famous

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
by Rach Tallinn, Estonia How do you explain reasons for a world trip, your goals for sustainable living, home education (“No, actually, we don’t use a programme”), and what we think of religion (well, the interviewer did ask) all in half ... [Continue reading this entry]

simply welcoming

Monday, April 27th, 2009
by Rach Tallinn, Estonia

We’re in a community house. Breakfast is shared with a red-hat-wearing dreadlock-bearded Santa Claus’s helper. This Finnish man actually went to school with Santa Claus. We certainly didn’t have any inkling we’d ... [Continue reading this entry]

We found her!

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

by the Mama, who loves watching the children connect their learning St Petersburg, Russia Last year we read Gloria Whelan’s book, “The Angel on the Square”. So captivated by the descriptions, we added St Petersburg to our wish-list-itinerary, ... [Continue reading this entry]

The Sixteen Second Snowman

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009
by Rachael Day 4 on Train 5, ending up in Moscow Our compartment is still pitch black when Mboy6 stirs for the toilet. As he cracks the door open light streams in and I catch a snatch out the corridor window ... [Continue reading this entry]