this was not a vacation

Posted under not a photog,whatever by Laura on Saturday 21 February 2009 at 5:55 pm

*** FYI: this post is long and picture-heavy ***

Part 1: driving through the mountains in the snow

roadtrip02
Dear Pennsylvania, your bridge is crooked.

roadtrip01
And then it started to snow! But it’s okay, we’re from Michigan and we can handle a little snow. We managed not to fall off of any mountains and Dylan was actually really good the whole way down. Can’t say so much for the way back up though, but you know, he’s two.

roadtrip04
Look at those snow clouds!

roadtrip05
And we made it into Virginia finally, greeted by a very pretty sunset :)

Part 2: sometimes when you order a hotel “suite,” you don’t really get a suite

roadtrip06
Slumming it in our hotel room, with a toddler. This is not recommended. Our hotel “suite” did not come with a separate bedroom (this is what you get for being cheap, I suppose). Blah! But it did offer free internet.

roadtrip07
The blue lollipop of doom!

Part 3: Fairfax is pretty, but hubby needs the blue Metro line

roadtrip08
So we spent our first day looking in Fairfax, because it’s pretty and family-friendly. But ultimately, hubby needs the blue metro line. Sorry Fairfax. Dylan liked your park.

roadtrip09
Dylan

roadtrip10
My boys :)

Part 4: little boxes on the hillside…

So the funny thing is, all the pictures I took, and I didn’t actually take any of the place we chose to live, lol. We were exhausted from looking at apartments, and it was raining. We chose Kingstowne, VA, which is on the south side of Alexandria, near Springfeild.

It looks pretty generic, really. But nice, suburban, generic. I saw on a message board that somebody called it a “strip mall on steroids”. And it kind of is. Think Weeds, only not in California. You get your movie theater, your Panera Bread, and your pretty little overpriced box to live in. Lots of trees and hiking paths. Our apartment has a “sunroom” = oversized livingroom with a lot of windows, that overlooks the woods, which I love! And it’s within walking distance to the Metro, which was top in hubby’s book.

I’m growing on the idea though. We get to belong to this community, and have automatic membership to gyms and playgroups and chess clubs (lol), and our little town center has shopping and banks and restaurants. But I think it will be a nice, quiet, safe, generic place to get our feet in the door out there. I was honestly giving myself a headache with all the different suburbs there are to choose from. The metro DC area is HUGE!!!

So we’ll live in our pretty little box for a year, and then we’ll reevaluate. Maybe we’ll even love it there, but I’ve always favored more unique towns, which personality and character, like Old Town Alexandria :)

Part 5: Alexandria rocks

roadtrip12
Downtown Alexandria is about a five-minute Metro ride from Kingstowne.

roadtrip15
Downtown, where hubby will work.

roadtrip13
Not sure if I’m allowed to say where hubby works and all… but dude, I was just taking a picture ;)

roadtrip16
Maybe nobody else finds this amusing?

roadtrip20
Old town is my favorite :)

roadtrip17

roadtrip19
Pretty row-house spam :)

roadtrip18

roadtrip22
Outside some restaurant.

roadtrip23
This theater totally serves beer and wine with the show! How soon can we get a new babysitter?

roadtrip21
It was really windy. They don’t look amused!

roadtrip24
The Potomac River from the bottom of King Street, and the bridge to Maryland in the background.

So I’m not sure if I would actually want to live in the city, but it sure is cool. And it’s nice to be able to hop on the Metro and get there in five minutes :)

Part 6: Pennsylvania mountain spam (because Michigan is flat as a board)

roadtrip26

roadtrip25

roadtrip28

but it IS that exciting

Posted under whatever by Laura on Wednesday 11 February 2009 at 10:47 am

Dylan was funny this morning. We looked out the window to find that the very persistent 18-inches of snow had finally melted away. Dylan’s reaction: “Oh, grass!” I wish I could even put as much enthusiasm into the word as he did. It was like he’d given up all hope he’d ever see it again :)

Yes, people GRASS! I don’t think we’ve seen it since November.

But grass isn’t the only thing exciting. We’re moving!!! (and OMG, OMG, OMG!) Hubby got a job in Alexandria, VA, and we have pretty much no clue what we’re doing, so any advice would be welcomed.

1.) How do you find an apartment when you live four states away? We’re taking a road-trip out there next week to do some apartment searching, to see what neighborhoods we might like (or afford) to live in. We’re thinking about the Chantilly, Centreville, Fairfax, Burke areas… maybe? Anyone care to share some thoughts on those areas?

And crap, it’s expensive there!!!

2.) How do you move your stuff? It sounds like a simple questions, but we’re quite stumped. I’m too scared to drive a U-Haul truck. We need more than a U-Haul van? I don’t think we could probably afford movers, nor do we really have enough stuff to warrant it. What about those Pods things? Anyone used those before?

And what the heck do we do once we get there, and have to unload the damn thing by ourselves with a toddler running around???

3.) Does anybody want to buy my barely functioning treadmill for $10?

Or my perfectly functioning washer and dryer for cheap?

Or does anybody want to come pick out some free baby toys?

4.) How do you keep a toddler occupied in a car for 9 hours?

5.) And where do you get cheap/free boxes without having to root through the trash?

And please tell me anything else I need to know. Thank you :)