Saturday, December 16, 2006

Mmmmmm, coneys......

We are in the D.

Kelli and I have been here now since Thursday night and been spending our time readjusting.

We can be reached on our same Detroit area phone number if you want to get a hold of us. Looking forward to seeing everyone the next couple weeks!

Monday, December 11, 2006

Xmas in Germany 2006

Marienplatz in Munich


Kelli Shopping away


View of Munich from nearby church


Kelli drinking Gluhwein in Wurzburg


Saturday, December 09, 2006

Translation

I slept in my lederhosen last Saturday night. I have never been more comfortable in my entire life.

We have a ton of pics from all of the xmas markets we've been to the last couple of weeks. I promise they'll be up this weekend. We are home on Thursday.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

The transformation

It is almost complete.

I have bought Lederhosen!

Monday, November 27, 2006

Aiden Hehl

The Marc Hehl family welcomes their second bundle of joy! Aiden Daniel Hehl arrived two days after Thanksgiving. Looks like the family is doing well and that Ethan is excited to be a big brother!!



 Posted by Picasa

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Happy Thanksgiving!

We hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving! Last year we spent the holiday in Barcelona - it was a nice get away. What a contrast to this year though - my friend Jenny & I hosted 17 people at her home! We had Americans from work, some American friends of Dan's and Tony's from the military, and an international mix of Italian, Swede, and German. We had a wonderful time and thanks to our friend, Mark, we were able to have turkey and all the trimmings from the Wiesbaden commissary (grocery story). We had a 20 lb. turkey, ham, green bean casserole, stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberries - just to name a few of the usual suspects. Plus. I made pumpkin pie for the first time and I was amazed at how good it turned it - it was almost as good as my grandma's (I later learned that she has a secret ingredient that I must try next time).

A good time was had by all and I learned a thing or two in the kitchen from Jenny. Good times, good friends, good food. It's funny how we have our own little family of friends over here, too. We are extremely luckily and fortunate to have each other and that it what thanksgiving is all about - to be thankful for the family and friends!!

We missed our families of course, but it sounds like they had an enjoyable holiday, too. My family was over at Aunt Nancy's and Jason's good friends Cory & Amanda joined this year. Dan's family was up at Frankenmuth enjoying a German Thanksgiving. Funny considering that we enjoyed a true American Thanksgiving.

This weekend the Christmas market opened and Dan and I have already gone to Cologne and Frankfurt's. This is probably one of our favorite times in Germany. It's hard to describe what it is like because the US cannot create this experience even though I wish it could. There is booth after booth of food, spiced wine, ornaments, wooden hand made gifts, candles. It is so beautiful - usually there is a huge tree decorated, sometimes carolers, and just people standing around having a good time. Wiesbaden's opens on Tuesday night and they light the tree and open the ice skating rink. We plan to go. Then next weekend we will head to Bavaria to see Augsburg, Munich, and Wurzburg's Christmas markets. We are lucky with the weather this year - it was in the mid 55s this weekend making shopping more enjoyable!

The following weekend we have Christmas parties to attend in town and then we will be home! We are amazed that we will be home in less than three weeks now! Looking forward to seeing you all...

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Cairo

Where to begin?

It was somewhere that I REALLY wanted to go to while we were here. I always dreamed of seeing the Pyramids, Sphinx etc. It was NOT somewhere that Kelli was too pumped about seeing. I will admit that I was a tad apprehensive simply because I had never been in a place THAT foreign. Going to different countries in Europe is about as easy as driving to Ohio (not that anyone would) or flying to Orlando. Sure, the language is an inconvenience but the cultures are generally the same. You can make out the letters and get a book and at least translate what you are eating. Not so easy with Arabic. I thought we were throwing all of that out the window. I was wrong.

Smiling faces on EXTREMELY kind people, more English spoken than France, American restaurants (Chili's. TGI Friday's, Quizno's to name a few), BEAUTIFUL Hotels, great food, surprisingly good beer! Not that any of these things would have made us want to go there in and of themselves, but it is always good to see and/or experience a little bit of home when you are a little nervous.

Obviously there are differences. Egypt is not doing to well financially right now and there is a great deal of poverty, trash and what I would initially have perceived as lawlessness. The lack of sidewalks (people are EVERYWHERE), apparent lack of building codes, non-existent traffic lights or cars manufactured since I got my driver's license makes you feel like you are in the tumble cycle of a clothes dryer as you barrel down the road. However, there seems to be a very eerie hum of control below it all. The lack of rearview mirrors and lane markers has forced every driver to use their horn as a sort of "HEY I'M OVER HERE" beacon to any car within earshot. It was not really lawless at all, it was just, different.

To walk around and past unbelievably beautiful Mosques and hearing the call to prayer, to see how men reacted to Kelli and women reacted to me, to feel totally and utterly foreign was a very new feeling. But it was not uncomfortable. As long as you were kind, smiled and respectful, people would smile back, knowing full well where it is that you come from and that you are different. In many ways, I couldn't help but think, we Americans should pick up a few things.

We spent the first night walking along the Nile and got to bed early ready for our only full day.

Saturday morning we got to the Pyramids early enough to get a ticket to go inside the largest of the Pyramids. They only give out 300 or so passes a day to keep the wear and tear down and they are first come, first served. What a workout, and it is NOT for the claustrophobic. There is one stretch that you are hunched over at a 90 degree angle and climbing a steep incline while trying not to pound your head on the millions of pounds of Limestone between you and the sky. After moving in and out of a few chambers, you end up in the central room where the Pharaoh was buried. Absolutely nothing in the room but about 15 tourists panting. And then back out the way you came in.

That is when we met Moses and Ahmed. After a little bit of bartering, and Ahmed grabbing Moses' buddy Charlie Brown, off we went on camelback walking around the pyramids and out into the desert. (We discovered that camels get their name from the first person (tourist) to ride them. Moses was named by an American, Charlie Brown was named by a British woman, and they had a third camel that was named by a German, he called him Lufthansa.....poor camel)

We toured around a bit, saw the Sphinx (smaller than you think) and were back to the hotel in about 5 hours. We hung out by the pool and rested up for the night.

We headed to the Khan el-Khalili market at dusk for a couple hours of shopping. What an experience. There are NO price tags. Everything is bartered. We picked up a few things and did alright bargaining with some guys that would put some Western businessmen to shame. We were offered Egyptian tea while we bartered in one shop as is custom. It was great. Kelli and I realized that this one man was uncomfortable dealing with women so we teamed up very well and used this to our favor. Kelli was the hard ass (not a stretch!), and when the man would get flustered, he would drop his price and come back to me. I would continually defer to her. Very entertaining.

We then had a Nile River Dinner Cruise to hit after the market. It was phenomenal. The food was all Egyptian. Egyptian food is very similar to Lebanese or any other that you would find in any Middle Eastern restaurant. Hummous, Tabbouli, Kebab, Kafka etc. We had a belly dancer to live music and a traditional male dancer that seemed to spin forever in this colorful robe. Then we had a Egyptian Lounge Act that wasn't so bad. We spent this time on the outside of the boat watching Cairo go by.

On Sunday morning we headed to the Egyptian Museum. Our primary goal was to see the Tutankhamun rooms but we were able to pretty much see EVERYTHING we wanted to see in a couple of hours. Absolutely amazing place. Strange to have these priceless pieces of history displayed in only a VERY basic manner. There did not seem to be any security systems at all in the Museum. The large items were laid out for you to touch (although that was discouraged) and the mummies and most of the VERY priceless items were in a basic wood case and behind a thin sheet of glass that you could walk right up to.

We only had 48 hours in Cairo and I would say that is not enough. There were some neighborhoods that we missed and I am sure some other sights to be seen, but for a weekend trip, not so bad.

Enjoy the pics and leave some comments!


You used to be able to climb them - apparently dead tourists are not a good thing


The Egyptian Tourism Police - VERY kind and VERY well armed


The pool at our hotel in Giza


The Great Hall inside the largest of the Pyramids - these women scolded me after saying no photos were allowed


They really are pretty massive


Sun coming up over one of the Pyramids


After our venture into the Pyramid


She looks like a natural


Kelli riding out to the Sahara


Kelli saddling up on Moses


Standing out in the desert looking back


The Sphinx looking out to the city over a Bedouin neighborhood


The Sphinx and I


Sphinx


The Great Pyramids of Giza


Cairo and I


Lone Camel on the plateau


Cairo Freeway - I love the guy sitting in the back of the pick-up - there are no seatbelts, no lanes, no speed limits and hardly ever a car from the last 10 years


Giza sunset and typical street scene. Most buildings were 4 to 5 stories tall and nearly every one looked like it was still under construction (or destruction)


Giza Sunset


Inside of a typical Cairo Cab - notice the lack of lanes and the OLD school fare meter (not used anymore)


Busy Cairo Street and Mosque in Islamic Cairo


Khan el-Khalili in Islamic Cairo


Khan el-Khalili Market


Kelli on the Nile River Cruise


Belly Dancer


Spinning Egyptian Dancer - The guy spun for about 15 minutes!


More Spinning Egyptian Dancer


Belly Dancer


The Nile looking towards Giza - a little fuzzy


The Nile looking at downtown Cairo


Kelli on the Cruise


Egyptian Wedding Procession in our hotel lobby Saturday night


The view from the front of our hotel


The Egyptian Museum

Monday, November 13, 2006


Y.I.T.B.O.S.


Plenty more to come!

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Last Minute Trip


We are going HERE this weekend, just because we can

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Old Man Bites Tenderly

This is hilarious. Apparently the big dude is some kickboxing champion in Japan. This is a game show called "Silent Library" where the contestants need to stay quiet since the show takes place in a library. You must watch until the end and see "Old Man Bites Tenderly"

A couple more pics from the D

Mmmmm, Lafayette at 3 AM, does it get any better! When Karl and I walked in, there was a SERIOUS food fight going on. I think someone was punched towards the end even. Good times.


Monday, November 06, 2006

Marc and Ethan


This is a picture of my buddy Marc and his son Ethan. You can never start too young...

World Series

Here are some of the best pics that I have from the World Series and my trip home.

Can you believe Billy Sims? Shared a few shots with him and listened to him complain about the Lions for a while.

No more Tigers, no more Spartan football (dead to me right now) so on to Spartan Basketball!

Leave some comments!


Former Lion Billy Sims and I at Cheli's Chili before Game 2


Drew and Mike at Cheli's Chili before Game 2