Wooden Detour from Sin City

F* You WMDs

F* you mines!

Since I found out that I would be moving to Bahrain in the spring or summer of 2014 and that my high school reunion would be in June (when I wouldn’t be here) I wanted to make plans to see my best friends. I would give them plenty of notice and we would think of something awesome to do that reminded us of why we hung out from second grade to graduation. We decided on Las Vegas. I was excited because I’ve visited Texas, where we all grew up, plenty of times, but people are always busy with work, family, friends, and kids. I figured if I got them away from all that I would have them to myself.

Last weekend Deanna and I realized it would only be us going. Patricia had gone to Louisiana to gamble all her money; Barbara has a daughter in girl scouts and another breastfeeding; Bibiana has a bossy husband that won’t let her out of the house; Maria’s daughter had a concussion and she didn’t trust anyone else to watch her; Alejandra didn’t feel right spending that kind of money with two kids at home; and we couldn’t find the other Jessica. Was part of me sad? Of course. I even called them out on Facebook, but it wasn’t enough that we were supposed to be friends, that I offered to pay for the room and found free things and activities under $20 to do while we were there.

the supervisor's chair in the work center

the supervisor’s chair in the work center

Turns out though that Deanna paid for the room at Planet Hollywood – a hotel in the middle of the action. The plan: I pick her up from the airport tomorrow and we check out on Wednesday. I thought about driving in tonight and finding a place to camp. Caleb offered me a tour of his wooden boat to try to keep my mind from already being in Vegas. I love to travel and get anxious about these things, but I was glad to finally see where he’s been working off and on for the last two years.

It’s like the Navy took a LSD, 400-man boat, and mushed it into a 75-man version. They have rooms in closets and stations (for firefighting, cleaning, painting) in the hallway where it’s easy to bump into them – even when the boat is not rocking.  After that it was time to go home and stay up until one in the morning packing – boots, sunscreen, and dog food – or pretending to as I still debated driving out and watching the sunrise. I will be bringing the dogs with me since Caleb will be underway at work all week and the hotel’s website says it’s pet friendly.

tiny walkway in a loud work space

tiny walkway in a loud work space

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Annual Entertainment

cityhall

Anniversaries come but once a year, and they should be treated as such, just as every day is only given to us one at a time. Because of this Caleb, unknowingly to me, took the day off from work. I heard him in the shower at 6:00 am when my alarm went off and figured he was late, so I would let him finish. He was out the door and off to work… or so I thought. At 7:30 I get a phone call from him. He wants me to go outside and look for his military ID because he can’t find it and isn’t able to get on base.

photo by Caleb

photo by Caleb

It didn’t strike me too odd that it took him 75 minutes in a line of cars to get to the gate to realize his faux pas, so in my bathrobe I went looking along the grass and dirt of the driveway thinking it might’ve fallen out the side of his book bag that he takes to work every day. I turned around and saw all my neighbors looking at me, and as I waved, Caleb turned the corner with a handful of calla lilies, chocolates, a phone in hand, and a large smile on his face. He had done a great job of surprising me – yet again.

tentevent

This is year six that we have completed with him going on deployments, us owning dogs, dealing with the complexities of our relationships with our fathers, moving around the country – and traveling when we’re not, and dealing with the great days and the duty days. This will make nine years we’ve known each other. I’ve gone from cooking raw chicken (while under the influence of tequila), to the best brisket and turkey Caleb has ever tasted, to finally becoming a vegetarian.

thatface

I’ve gone from needing a drink at 4:00 am to cope with my boring Navy job, to looking forward to the crazies at the 7-11 convenience store, to dealing with the stress and excitement of getting an associate degree, to waking up and going to sleep sober while being happily unemployed. We went from having roommates in an apartment and wanting kids to having dogs and renting a house with a backyard for them. We know a lot about each other, even though we continue to grow and change. We both still want to do that together. Caleb also got us an ironwood tea box to represent the traditional gift as we look at the sweet life we’ve had so far and what that means to us going forward.

ferriss

While I sat in my bathrobe eating chocolate, Caleb polished my cowboy boots that hadn’t seen care in a while. Then we went to the library to print out Cirque de Soleil tickets for the Totem show in Santa Monica by the pier. I’ve wanted to go for years and now we were going – doors open at 7:30 pm. He paid for a parking spot in advance online to save us the trouble there. I was looking forward to going into the Los Angeles area without having to look for one. Then Caleb thought we should go on base to turn in our passport information that will allow us into the Middle East, but again, someone at his command left him with the wrong information and we will have to go back some other time.

Nikon vs. Canon

Nikon vs. Canon

I left with a smile on my face. We were spending time together, going to different buildings that all looked the same, asking people where to go, getting cut off by cars going the wrong way (according to the arrow on the one way), and walking completely around a building to get inside only to find out we had the wrong paperwork that was also outdated. We asked our neighbor Dan to feed our dogs dinner so that we could spend some more time in Santa Monica. Caleb loaded the bikes onto the back of the car and we were off to the parking garage near Tongva Park.

swings

Caleb aired up his tires and then we rode to the end of the wooden pier – enjoying every bump that those boards delivered. There is fishing, kissing, eating, surfing, Ferris wheeling, dancing, instrument playing, singing, and plenty of photo taking going on as people from around the world want to capture this moment – for whatever it means to them. There is sand, surf, sun, construction, restaurants, and gift carts that also catch my eye. We ride our bikes down the boardwalk to the beach, but no toes in the sand, before heading north to the end of Will Rogers Beach where the bikeway ends.

trombeach

 

On the return, we climbed 168 stairs (146 of those with my bike in hand) to get from the Ocean Front Walk to Ocean Ave. I wanted to go back to the 3rd Street Promenade – it’s been almost five years since we stayed at the Wilshire Motel and walked around all day and Caleb had to carry Sparky back later that night. We rode north through Palisades Park – beautiful, peaceful, spacious – before turning around and going left on Arizona Ave. We parked our bikes and walked one side and then the other of this three block eat – drink – shop plaza before deciding on Hummus Bar Express for lunch.

twowalk

We ordered from the rush hour menu while the place was not crowded because it was a better deal. We got laffa bread, fries, and falafel balls with mushroom hummus, two servings of house hummus, and ketchup to dip it all in and a glass of tea. Then we rode our bikes south to the Venice Fishing Pier going by all the arts and crafts for sale and being too full to get a frozen yogurt, but willing to try a piece of Butterfinger frozen popcorn. We passed Muscle Beach – outdoor gym equipment, and took the bike path back to the parking garage after many stops to take pictures of everything.

benchview

We should have stayed on the beach for five more minutes, but Caleb thought the sunset would look great from the little ramps in Tongva Park. Oh well if there were people, cables, buildings, and cars in the way – even after all these years (and I know we haven’t been married for 25 or more yet) but we are still happy, healthy, willing, and able to make the most of this day and our time together while it lasts. We set out on foot to drink a beer and a shot of honey badger (Tuaca, sweet and sour, and pineapple juice) each and shared a molten chocolate cake, too sweet for Caleb, at an Italian place on the corner of Ocean and Colorado Avenues.

photo by Caleb

photo by Caleb

We left there to get closer to the tent for show time and the line at Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. was too long so we went to Rusty’s Surf Ranch across the street where we sat at the bar and I drank a margarita and ate four limes – one off a drink that was returned with lime and salt intact. Caleb ordered a double Jameson to celebrate the occasion and then we were headed down to the sand to enter gate number 8. We were seated 3 rows back and there was one couple to my right, a guard and path, and the stage. The place obviously isn’t that big – it seems everyone gets a front row seat, but that’s also because they have us packed in there – elbows on thighs and knees in backs.

hummus

The show started with empty seats, but the staff was more than helpful in flash-lighting the late drunks to their chairs next to us. Pardon the interruption while I stand and block the show for others so you can sit down. I asked them to hurry up. Then we were settled again and dazzled by the amount of details in the make-up and outfits, the choreography, the lights on stage, the music being performed live, the muscle definition in the acrobats, and the stunts pulled off so smoothly. Then came a fifteen minute intermission – more booze, more popcorn, more people squeezing by and blocking the aisle.

relaxin

The show begins to start while people are finding their seats and soon cuss words are flying out of my mouth at an alarming rate and pitch. Caleb reaches behind me to stop whatever it is that has a hold of my hair that caused my head to jerk back. It happens to be the gut of the man who is sitting with his mother behind us – the same ones that were kicking me under my chair during the first half of the performance. Somehow, one of his buttons found its way into my brunette locks. Caleb was ready to rip the man’s shirt off, but the guy was able to untangle my hair and get possession of his clothes back.

wondersand

The nice lady beside me asked if I was ok. I massage the spot, but don’t concentrate on it long. I’m here to enjoy the show with my husband regardless of the surroundings. I ooh and awe and point at shadows, sequins, smoke, and a few outfits I wouldn’t mind owning. Caleb is impressed with the lady singing. Only the five girls on unicycles dropped two of the many bowls used during their time in the spot light on stage. It was a spectacular show and even though photography wasn’t allowed we saw at least four people take pictures. I would love to be their photographer, but I think more of the staff cameras were aimed at capturing the audience.

runner

Since I’m leaving the tent with no bald spot the incidence gives us something to laugh about – and for others to overhear and make faces about. We settle in at Bubba Gump’s for a night-cap and some artichoke dip. I had a dirty martini and Caleb got a margarita with a Coronita upside-down – a first for him, but he preferred to Facebook about his wife’s hair. We didn’t get the garlic bread that we asked for and then the menu’s and waitresses disappeared as the place started to close. We still had two hours to drive home, so we weren’t complaining – not until we tried to leave the parking garage and had to pay again because the machine wouldn’t read our prepaid ticket.

photo by Caleb

photo by Caleb

There were detours, and we got lost, and then we purposefully detoured. This is our anniversary and we weren’t going to let strange men, Los Angeles traffic, or waitresses mess up any part of it. They only add to the story and the memories and we managed to be up at midnight two nights in a row making sure that we are still happy, healthy, willing, and able as young adults to park behind a dark building and bring the best ending to an anniversary that we could. I would drive us home while Caleb attempted to nap in the passenger seat, but he wanted to be sleepy with me and then cuddle when we got home at 1:30 am – too tired to take the bikes off the car.

moniset

Then almost in a case of déjà vu, Caleb calls and tells me he actually lost his ID. He pulls into the driveway, enters the bedroom, checks his pants from last night, and then finds it hidden in his wallet. And as much as I love this man, no matter who we ask – best friend, sibling, or stranger – I’m the one who is lucky beyond the stars to be with someone who constantly puts up with my shit – my childhood aggressions, my conflicts in the Navy, and my emotions as I try to find myself somewhere between forever teenager and burgeoning adult that wants to be less selfish and more loving.

Posted in Art, Cycling, Entertainment, Family, Food, Friends, Marriage, Music, People, Photography, Places, Travel, Water | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Escaping the San Diego Storm

Fat Albert surrounded by F/A-18s in demonstration flight

Fat Albert surrounded by F/A-18s in demonstration flight

San Diego is known for its beach weather year round, so when a forecast tells of heavy rains with chance of lightning and flooding some people run to the beach to see what storm clouds look like – beautiful, but I wouldn’t see them myself. I would be on the way to El Centro with Caleb to visit his uncle Ed working in warmer weather and staying at a hotel with a hot tub – the same one I was in last week with all of Ed’s co-workers keeping an eye on me. I’m sure that had nothing to do with the bikini I was wearing.

a strike at the bowling alley on base

a strike at the bowling alley on base

I picked Caleb up from work Friday, filled the tank with gas and the tires with air, and made the two-hour drive. The first hour was slow and full of hard rain. The second hour was cut short with high speeds on dry roads. Dinner would be burritos from Roberto’s Taco Shop. As I looked at the sauces on offer I wondered what had made me choose the orange sauce over the hot and chunky sauces I picked this time – sober. Caleb had refried beans wrapped in a tortilla and then we went back to the room where we talked until Ed went to bed after sending the two of us downstairs to get in the hot tub.

Ed and Caleb waiting on laundry

Ed and Caleb waiting on laundry

The next morning, Saturday, Ed was up before 5:00 am getting ready for work. Us talking woke Caleb. Then we grabbed muffins and bananas and headed to the flea market in Calexico that the guys had told us about. We found some books, like poetry from Robert Frost, and some clothes that I could get without having to try them on. Then we let the dogs run around at Heber Dunes SVRA before going back to the room. Caleb read poetry until we both fell asleep. I was tired from trying to sleep in a room with two snoring men.

tools for sale at Calexico Flea Market

tools for sale at Calexico Flea Market

We would get a surprise wake up when there was a knock at the door. Ed had come back for lunch at 11:30 am. He tried calling to let us know that the Blue Angels would be doing a public relations performance at 1:00 pm. I finished the other half of my burrito from last night and Caleb had some fruit for lunch. Then we drove to Ed’s hangar where he works – or sits around and gets paid to watches movies, read books, and play games. We got to watch the mechanical dance of men working after a plane taxis in.

Salvation Mountain - and lots of paint

Salvation Mountain – and lots of paint

The Blue Angels were in the air for thirty minutes and something was wrong with Magic Lantern (program on my camera) that kept me from being able to record their amazing maneuvers. Then I gave Caleb a tour of the base – gas station, liquor mart, and bowling alley. Caleb didn’t know my shoe size, but I still let him win. Then we picked up Ed from work and went to do laundry before dinner at Grasso’s Italian Restaurant. We ordered two servings of garlic bread. My stir fry veggies were large-cut covered in cream of mushroom. Caleb’s eggplant parmesan came with a plate of spaghetti with meat sauce – too much for a flexitarian that abstains, but enough food for two meals.

poetry in Slab City

poetry in Slab City

Then it was back to the room and hot tub so that I could drink beer while the guys filled up on Sailor Jerry. I had no troubles sleeping and Caleb was the first one up Sunday morning. He grabbed me some muffins and a banana and a bagel for himself. He thought we would let Ed sleep in, but all our gabbing woke him at 7:00 am – the latest I’ve ever known him to sleep. He went downstairs for food and then we took him to Calexico – the place he’d heard about and driven by, but never stopped because he doesn’t have room in his checked bag for a spare washer or couch and has no need for the spandex pants on sale.

view of the backseat

view of the backseat – by Caleb

From there, we drove out to Slab City and Salvation Mountain – a free camping place in the desert about nine miles east of the Salton Sea. We drove around taking in the sights and then found Area One – an amazing outdoor museum where we were given a tour by a man in a beret with a rainbow-colored beard. Lunch was at Lucky Chinese Restaurant. We all got heaping plates of food and we all took some home – me more than half because I was full, Ed half because he was anxious to get back to the barbecue at the hotel, and Caleb less than half after building up an appetite playing in the desert.

view from the hotel hot tub - by Caleb

view from the hotel hot tub – by Caleb

Ed grabbed some meat and joined the two of us in and near (alternating to control heat) the hot tub for the next two hours. I tried their rum – one with sprite and the other tea, but didn’t down any myself since I would be driving later. The booze opened the men up and they were able to talk about their feelings. Instead of leaving at 6:00 pm we didn’t end up leaving until after 7:30. I was happy they got to spend some time together and that I was there with them to enjoy it.

More photos here.

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Yellow Rhymes with Hello

meloyelo

yeloroofyelobikeyelolarvayelopointyelometal

yelopigs

yelorant

yelotat

yelolag

yeloff

yelostripe

Posted in Animals, Art, Cycling, Education, Entertainment, Family, Food, History, Photography, Places, Plants, Things, Travel | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Did Someone Say Eritrean Food?

blacktea

The State of Eritrea is a country in the Horn of Africa, and just so happens to be across the Red Sea from Saudi Arabia and Yemen – Middle East countries I hope to visit while Caleb is stationed on the island of Bahrain. Anyways… San Diego has plenty of food options and the more we are introduced to the more variety we fall in love with. As much as we would like to return to our favorite places I make it a priority to try new things.

This visit to Asmara Eritrean Restaurant on University Ave. would be Caleb’s first attempt at using injera to pick up lentils and lettuce – my second. I love eating with my fingers and am getting better at not constantly licking the different flavors that find themselves on my palms, chin, and cheeks. I instead try to wait to savor the taste at the end like Caleb, but he has a weird neatness about him – even the two times he’s had enough time off work to grow a beard. And yes, that goes on the list of what makes him sexy.

beforedin

We arrive after 7:00 pm and with usual restaurant etiquette I want to take my jacket off, but I notice everyone else is wearing their coats and sweaters – cheaper to keep the inside as cold as the outside, and probably easier on the chefs too. We already knew we were getting the veggie platter, but somehow the waiter talked us into two orders – still on one plate, but that guy might be a competitive eater. We could’ve easily shared one.

I don’t know what I was expecting when I ordered the tea – a pinch of cardamom, a tiger in the bottom of my cup, or some fancy serving ware. What we got was black Lipton tea – the same thing I can make at home in a pitcher on my porch in the sun, but we can all make water come from the tap and that doesn’t stop me from ordering it everywhere I go, so I took a picture of the drink provided and it complimented my meal greatly. I was debating getting any dessert option they may have to-go and looked up at Caleb.

15min

He was sitting contently when the waiter showed up, shoved the plate of injera on top of our lentils, and then quickly placed them back down putting curry sauce on the table when he realized that we would take this meal to go. I should’ve remembered my reusable to-go dishes, but luckily the restaurant had some. Maybe he thought that we didn’t enjoy the food because we were unable to finish it, but it was enough to feed me twice more and treat the dogs to some rolls of injera.

To the untrained eye it might look like a simple plate of carrots, cabbage, collard greens, spinach, brown and yellow lentils, and lettuce on a crêpe or tortilla, but it’s the style, flavoring, and history that bring more meaning to this feast. I enjoy how other cultures share living spaces, eat off a communal plate, and hold hands no matter the age or sex of the persons involved. This brought Caleb and I closer to each other by sharing a new experience and taught us about another culture – even if they are over 8,700 miles away.

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