Archive for the ‘MY LIFE’ Category

First of all…I’ve been trying to get my blog to show up on google reader and have the full entry posted with all the photos.  Up until now it would just show an excerpt of the entry.  I sent out a tweet and one of my previous clients put me in touch with his business partner who does this kind of stuff. With the help of a total stranger (seriously it made my day that there are such nice people out in the world) Johnny was able to fix it for me!!!  Thanks a million to Johnny for helping me fix this lil problem I had!

NOW…if you’ve subscribed to my feed through google reader, you’re going to need to delete/unsubscribe from me and add me on again if you want to see the full entry show up without the hassle of clicking over to my blog each time I post something!  Got that everyone?!  Unsubscribe from me and add me again!!!!

So with the technical part out of the way this is a totally random entry!  I saw this bird hanging out on a wire in front of my house the other day.  And I thought it was eating a worm, but I couldn’t tell so I went in the house and got my camera with my 70-200mm lens.  I know so dorky, but I was curious!  I zoomed in and I was right.  It was eating this juicy worm!  A few minutes later the bird’s friend comes along and it looks like they’re having some kind of intelligent conversation!

Here’s the bird zoomed in with it’s lunch.

The bird’s buddy joined him.  I’ve always loved the look of birds on wires!

Did anyone notice the color of the sky?!?!  This is NorCal for you in the summer!!!  It looks like winter and I don’t like it!

Well I have about 8 weddings and a family session to post on the blog and I’m slowly getting around to it so hope you guys keep checking in!

If you don’t know me, you will quickly find out how much I love dogs.  My good friend gave me Chicken Soup for the Dog Lover’s Soul and I haven’t been able to finish it because I cry at almost every story!  I think I got through 10 stories and decided I didn’t want to wake up with puffy eyes!

Growing up in an apartment my parents promised my sister and me when we move to a house we’ll get a dog.  I hung to that promise daily hoping for the day I too could have my very own dog!  Flash forward to 5th grade, we moved and soon after my parents found us Shawn a cute Lhasa Apso puppy.  He is now 16, blind, deaf, and walks with great effort, but I still see his puppy spirit hidden behind long naps and frequent trips to the backyard for a potty break.

Over the years we got other dogs.  With each new dog my mom said no more!!!!  But soon she too got attached to them and I frequently see her with one or two of the dogs by her side.  How can we not love a dog that unconditionally loves us.  Every time I step through the doors I’m greeted by a scene of chaos.  Even after I yell at one or all of them for doing something bad, they still quietly sneak up to me and win me over in a matter of seconds.  They follow us around the house and “protect” us from strangers and give us all these cute looks.

Toby is probably the biggest and fattest Yorkie I’ve ever met!

This is what I wake up too in the morning.  How can you NOT fall in love with this face?!

FREEDOM TRAIL

June 12, 2009

Boston’s Freedom Trail is basically the birthplace of American Independence!  You can easily follow it with the red line marked on the sidewalk.  A lot of it is made out of brick, but in a few places it’s painted on and kind of hard to find due to wear.  You can pass through everything fairly quickly especially the Boston part, but it can take the whole day if you’re going to stop by all the locations and really have a good look!

Here’s the brick red line you follow throughout the city!

1. Boston Common
The first stop was Boston Common.  Boston Common sits on 44 acres of land in the middle of the city (the Central Park of Boston) and is America’s oldest public park!  I was lucky enough to see the cherry blossoms because a few days later when we came back they had all fallen off!






2. Massachusetts State House

Was designed by Charles Bulfinch who also designed the state capitols for Connecticut, Maine, and worked on the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
3. Park Street Church

Built in 1809.  Nicknamed “Brimstone Corner” because gunpowder was stored in the crypt during the War of 1812.  America’s first Sunday School was founded here in 1817, the first prison aid society in 1824, and one of the earliest temperance societies in 1826.  America’s first missionaries were sent to Hawaii from this church in 1819.  Also the hymn “America” also known as “My Country ’tis of Thee” was sung for the first time on the steps of Park Street.

4. Granary Burying Ground
There are more famous people buried in this 2 acre plot than in any other small graveyard in America.  3 signers of the Declaration of Independence (Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Robert Treat Paine), 9 governors of MA, the victims of the Boston Massacre, Benjamin Franklin’s parents, and Paul Revere.

By the time we arrived they had already closed so these were the shots I was able to get from outside the gates.




5. King’s Chapel
“Symbol of what the Puritans fled”  In 1630 the Puritans who settled in Boston were religious rebels fleeing from the Anglican Church.  King James II ordered an establishment of the Anglican parish in Boston, but that was what the Puritans had fled from.  Since they could not buy land they just took a corner of the burying ground and constructed their church there.


Although these columns look like they were made of stone, they were actually made of wood with sand mixed into the paint.

The site of the first public school.  Boston Latin School.


6. Old Corner Book Store
Boston’s oldest surviving structures.  It was erected in 1712.  From 1833-1864 it was the office of Ticknor and Fields, the nation’s leading book publisher.  Great authors such as Longfellow, Hawthorne, Emerson, and Harriet Beecher Stowe gathered here.  Walden, The Scarlet Letter, and Hiawatha were published here.

Funny because this historic landmark was turned into an Ultra Diamonds so I was kind of confused where it was!



7. Old South Meeting-House
The largest building in colonial Boston.   The location where they protested their outrage over the Boston Massacre and Samuel Adams gave the secret signal to throw 342 crates of tea into the Boston Harbor.  Also served as a Puritan house of worship and Benjamin Franklin was baptized here.



8.  Old State House
The Old State House is the oldest public building still standing in the eastern United States.  It was built in 1713.  In 1761 James Otis said a speech against the writs of assistance which was considered the “first scene of the first act of opposition” 15 years before independence was declared.  1776 from its balcony the Declaration of Independence was read to the people of Boston.


Under the balcony is a circle of paving stones which marks the site of The Boston Massacre.

9.  Faneuil Hall
Gift to the town by Peter Faneuil.  Hosted America’s first Town Hall Meeting.  Used as a marketplace on the first level and a the town meeting hall on the second level.

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10. Paul Revere House
Paul Revere bought this house in 1770 when he was 35 years old.  He lived in this house with his family when he made his famous messenger ride.  Revere fathered 16 children over a 29 year period.  5 of the children died in infancy.

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11. Old North Church
“One, if by land, and two, if by sea” April 18, 1775 Robert Newman climbed the steeple and held two lanterns as a signal from Paul Revere that the British were marching to Lexington and Concord.  This event started the American Revolution.  This is Boston’s oldest church building.

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12.  Copp’s Hill Burying Ground
Copp’s Hill is the highest piece of land on the North End.  Most people who were buried here are ordinary people.  During the revolution the British soldiers camped among the gravestones.

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13. USS Constitution
Also known as “Old Ironsides” because cannonballs fired at her from the British H.M.S. Guerriere seemed to just bounce off.  The U.S.S. Constitution is made of a white oak/live sandwich which made it extra strong.

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14. Bunker Hill Monument
Marks the first time Colonial forces held their own against the British Army.  This famous battle was fought on June 17, 1775.  The monument is a 221-foot granite obelisk.

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The view from the top is amazing!
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Click on the photo to see the panoramic photos larger.


Exhibit at the Bunker Hill Museum down the street.



This concludes our little education journey about the Freedom Trail!

Let me end with this…what happens when you throw your leftover oyster crackers on the ground in Boston Common?  A ton of them flock over to you!

MORE FUN IN BOSTON!

June 5, 2009

Jamie came to visit that weekend!  Awww too cute!


We went to look at Harvard.  Their campus is so beautiful!!!!

I love all the brick buildings!  So different from California!




I gave Jamie a dollar to give to the street performer, but she was so scared!  It’s pretty hilarious.

The Prudential building is sooooo tall!  I wonder if birds frequently run into the building since it looks like part of the sky?

Inside the Boston Public Library.  This library was sooooo gorgeous!




Yum Yum Yum!

Boston Cream Pie!

Went to the Farmers Market after.  Love this pic I got of this lady resting.


Jamie and my first oyster!

Next will be all about the Freedom Trail!

BOSTON

June 4, 2009

A few weeks ago I went to Boston for almost 2 weeks to help my friends move!  It was my first time in Boston and I have to say it was a pretty awesome experience!  Although I was extremely sad to say goodbye to my friends, I’m very excited for their new life there.

I’ll have to do another “educational” post about the freedom trail because it was so awesome to see all those places we studied in school about American History!  I never thought I would be so into those educational things, but I am and I even bought the freedom trail book to refresh my memory!

I think a lot of funny things happened on this trip, partially because we were so deliriously tired and partially because we were trying to figure out what was where and had no internet.  If it wasn’t for all of our blackberries I have no idea what we would’ve done!

Let’s start at the beginning of my almost 2 weeks in Boston!

Est + Nev came from LA and I came from SF.  We met at our layover in Dallas at some super early hour like 4am!  We were TIRED!

When we arrived in Boston I thought it would be good for Nev to test “walking” around with all the luggage…just to make sure we can make it to the T =)

First time in the apartment calling family and trying to figure out where Target was

Waiting for the bus…we did a lot of waiting!


The ceiling was decorated with pizza pans!


We would’ve been so lost without our trusty crackberries



Went to a cute cafe/bookstore for some free internet to search for Ikea furniture…yes we were all very very tired!  This is also where we found out Ikea charges a ridiculous amount to ship furniture to your home.  It’s much cheaper to rent a truck/van and get it yourself!

Newbury St. – Did I mention in the time I was there we experienced rain, sun, wind, thunderstorms, everything except snow!


One of the funniest things we did was bring a chair from Urban and take it on the T to bring it back to the apartment.  Poor Neville…abuse!



The next day we woke up to beautiful weather!

Aren’t the cherry blossoms beautiful?!




Wow I look so much smaller O_o


A view of Boston from The Top Of The Hub

This post is becoming super lengthy  so I’ll pick up next time with Jamie’s visit!

WE LOVE BUBBLES!

May 29, 2009

If you know me.  You know how much I love all my dogs!  Shawn, Toby, and James.  They’re like my little babies.  I constantly find myself bothering anyone and everyone around me all day long to pay attention to them.  With lots of kids coming and going at the house lately we’ve been playing with a lot of bubbles and the dogs love the bubbles just as much as the kids!

Taking photos of bubbles is a lot harder than I thought!  They move so fast and they pop even faster!  I love this bubble I captured!  The colors and reflection is pretty amazing!

This is a before and after of a bubble that James got too!

More than my dog, Toby is completely obsessed with bubbles!  He will sit in front of the bubbles and scratch the container and even cry for us to play with him!  Once we start we have to make sure we give him breaks otherwise he’ll just keep going and going and going!  Look at him in action!

Here’s a video of them in action!