Day 4:June 14, 2012
Day four started nice and early with a 7am port. We wanted to get off the boat pretty early in attempt to buy tickets to ride the White Pass train. The tickets sold through Disney were sold out because we waited too long to buy them. We also had hopes that it would end up costing us less but it ended up being about the same price at about $120 per adult ticket through M&M Tours. The Disney Wonder docked at Skagway, Alaska The thing I love about this port was that it was within walking distance of the town. If you buy train tickets through Disney you can just walk straight off the boat and the train is waiting for you right there. Because we didn’t have tickets yet we walked right outside the docking area and there was a nice little tourist office. The guys inside were super nice and not pushy at all. We ended up getting tickets for the afternoon train, so we headed into town for some tourist shopping. I really hate tourist shopping so I ended up finding a bench outside and people watched most of the time.
Katie and I modeling hats we found. When I say this is a cute little town I really mean it is a little town. Lets just say that the population more then doubles when a cruise ship comes into port. We learned that is last year's high school senior class consisted of 4 kids (3 girls and 1 boy). They also don't have a doctor in town, if someone is in need of a doctor the closest one is in Juneau, Alaska. Women are taken to Juneau by boat or plane when they are going to give birth. View looking down Broadway At the end of the main tourist street (Broadway) is a microbrewery called Skagway Brewing Co. As soon as it turned 10am my dad and I poked our heads in for a quick beer and let my mom and sister finish up there shopping. It is a cute little bar and the staff was very friendly. They had a nice little game room on the upper level with shuffle puck (I love this bar game). This would be a great location to escape the cold rainy weather. We were lucky to not get any rain at the port.
Skagway Brewing Co. A great thing about having the port so close is that you have the option of walking back and grabbing lunch without wasting too much time. My mom and sister did this but I was nowhere close to hungry. I stopped over at the Alaska Fudge company instead for a sweet snack.
We picked up the train at the downtown station. It was a very pretty ride. There was commentary over the speakers telling about the town and the history with the goal rush. They also announced bear and goat sightings.
Katie and I on the train Katie and I loved being able to stand outside the car. It was a little scary, especially when going over a bridge. The only downside to standing outside was it was cold and we couldn’t hear the commentary.
Katie outside on the train. I always ducked back inside when we went through tunnels. It got really dark.
The train is a one-way trip and all the tourists get off at the first stop. The stop is in Fraser, Canada and they have a station that you can stamp your own passports. We had some time to walk around and take pictures of the wonderful scenery before our bus from M&M tours came.
Pictures taken in Fraser, Canada | | We really just paid for the train ride and bus ride back down but the bus driver got everyone’s approval to take a couple of photo stops and to be able to do commentary the way down. He was amazing and really cute too but married (sorry Katie).
The view behind the welcome to Alaska sign We stopped at the welcome to Alaska sign and again at a really cool bridge. This area has tons of tiny earthquakes because of being so close to a fault line. The bridge was designed so that only one side is attached to the ground, that way it doesn’t fall every time the earth moves below it.
Bridge connected only on one side. After getting back to town, we were really tired so we headed back to the boat for some down time before dinner.
One thing I wish I had planned on doing was taking a hike in Skagway. There are lots of trail heads very close to their downtown area. They have a park ranger station on the main street; they can help you plan hikes. Some of them are as short as a one hour roundtrip. I wish I had done a little planning beforehand!
Ran into Peter Pan on the way to dinner! The parents at Animator's Palate | We found Minnie too! | Dinner this night was in Animator’s Palate. My favorite dining experience! As you eat dinner color starts seeping into the wall of the black & white dining room. At the end the wait staff does a little show.
| | Animator's Palate Dinner Menu | Appetizer: Roma Tomato and Portobello Mushrooms on Polenta Cake Cherry Diet Coke loaded with cherries! Main Course: Animator's Grilled Veal Chop | Appetizer: Sesame-flavored Rock Shrimp and Caramelized Onion Cheesecake Main Course: Lemon-Thyme Marinated Chicken Breast Main Course: Asian Marinated Beef Tenderloin | Animator's Palate Dessert Menu Dessert: Buckled Warm Apple Crumble | Dessert: Animator's Sweet Temptations | After dinner they had the first showing on the Avengers 3D in the big theater. I started falling asleep before the opening credits so I headed back to the room to find my sister already asleep. I took a quick nap and then we both headed out to the adult show. The show was called "Match Your Mate". It was fun and we learned way too much about a few of the couples on the ship. It was like the old game shows were you got points for answering questions the same way. This is the night we learned they could ask any question as long as the Disneyfied it, “Where is the most exciting place the magic has happen?”
I know you are all waiting for it… here is our towel creature of the night. I think this one is a frog.
Day 3:June 13, 2012
If you look at the itinerary really fast you might miss that the day labeled Tracy Arm is not actually a port but another very scenic day at sea. This is one of the most amazing nature experiences that I have ever had.
We kick started this day with a character breakfast. Everyone gets one of these on one of the cruise days. They give you a ticket with your scheduled time on the first day.
Character breakfast menu | Character breakfast menu | At the breakfast four different characters (Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, & Pluto) stopped by our table to say hi and took pictures with us.
Character breakfast The waiters also entertain by folding dinner napkins into fun hats for everyone at the table. People all over the dining room were being transformed into characters like Dumbo, Rapunzel, Minnie mouse, and goofy.
April with Minnie Mouse Bow | Katie with Dumbo Ears | After the breakfast we headed back down to our rooms and bundled up in layers of clothing. A little tip: bring a scarf, hat and gloves… you will thank me later. We layered with a hoodie under a wind breaker jacket. It gets very windy if you stand at the front of the ship and very cold when you get close to the glacier. They do have free blankets to use on deck, these are located in bins on deck 9 and 10.
Bundeling up. If you head up early on this day it is a great time for whale watching before heading down Tracy Arm. My mom and I are really into photography so we staked out a spot at the front of the ship on deck 10 to get a prime view. This is really not necessary! We ended up leaving our awesome spot when we needed to eat lunch, the trip down Tracy Arm takes around 5 hours.
First views of Sawyer Glacier. What people don’t realize (or at least we didn’t think this through at first) is that the boat has to turn around after it reaches Sawyer glacier. This makes it so you will get an amazing view from the port side of the ship. I am not the tallest of people too, so I ran into the ship rail being too high in most places to be able to take pictures over it.
Sawyer glacier, if you look really close to the icebergs you can see hundreds of seals. The best places my family found to take pictures of the glacier when the boat turned (less crowded and low rails) was this little nook on deck 9. You access this spot form a staircase at front aft on deck 10 (I circled it in red on the map below). You get an obstructed view of the front of the ship but have a wonderful view when the ship turns.
Another spot that we found to be empty was deck 4, this is also a great spot when the boat turns.
If you are not looking to take amazing pictures, I would recommend just wandering. It is almost surreal seeing the Wonder float down this pass with huge cliffs on both sides.
I really wish I would have used the pool during this time. They heat it up to about 90 degrees! They have the view from the front of the ship projected on the movie screen over the Goofy pool, so you can see where the ship is headed. If I were to do it again, I would have gone and hung out in the hot tubs for a while!
The movie screen showing the video from the front the of the boat, with Katie as a model. | My dad hanging out on deck 10. | I have to say one of my sister and I’s favorite parts of this trip was watching the hundreds of seals down by the glacier. We were told they live there because whales don’t travel that far down for food (aka they don’t become fish food). Many of the seals had just given birth; we were concerned after seeing blood on a few of the icebergs, but then put it together. Katie even watched one of the seals give birth! It was the highlight of her whole trip. A gross little fact, the birds eat the afterbirth… we saw some of that happening too.
The seal pups were so cute and could swim seconds after being born. This is a good thing because our ship was sailing right in their path
Lunch on this day they do a special grill out, outside of Beach Blanket. According to my family, they had the best grilled salmon they had ever tasted (I am not a seafood person). They also had steak and chicken to choose from along with the full buffet line open.
Grilled food from lunch. They also have hot chocolate and cookies behind the wind breaking glass. Adding some Baily’s to the hot chocolate helps you warm up even more… its 5 o’clock somewhere, right?
The Disney Wonder added a glass window to the front of the boat to help block the wind. Katie in front with April behind the window. They do have commentary during this trip up Tracy Arm but is only playing inside dew to Alaska noise pollution laws. I caught parts of it during lunch and after going back down to my room to warm up.
The view of the glacier from our room porthole on deck 2. My mom loved going down to our room and seeing the size of the icebergs. You can see this even more with this tour boat in the background. My biggest tips for this day of the trip are: - Bring binoculars, this are great the whole tip! We used them all the time in our stateroom window looking for whales.
- Relax! It is a long day; there is no need to be in the optimal spot all the time. Nature is all around the boat, not just in the front.
- Dress warm and in layers! We found out a scarf in the gift shop will cost you $20.
- Make sure to stop and take a few minutes to soak in all the beauty that is around you!
After a nice nap we got ready and headed up for dinner. I didn’t mention this before but every night before dinner they have both professional backdrops and characters to take family picture with. Our personal favorite is to take pictures on the white backdrop, they always turn out so cool. You don’t have to pay anything to take the pictures, just if you want to buy them.
Dinner this night was in Tritons and we were eating off the Tritons’ menu.
Tritons' Dinner Menu | The pretty ceiling in Tritons Tritons' Dinner Menu | My parent's got a complementary drink to make up for some bad service the night before. Katie trying the Escargot Main Course: Aged Angus Grilled Beef Tenderloin Main Course: Slowly Braised Lamb Shank | Appetizer: Applewood Smoked Bacon and Wild Mushroom Tart Appetizer: "Prince Eric's" Escargot Gratinee Soup: "Chef Louis" French Onion Soup Main Course: Three-Cheese Lobster Macaroni | Tritons' Dessert Menu Dessert: Brioche and Panettone Pudding | Dessert: Grand Marnier Souffle | After dinner they had a family hypnotist show. They had the adult version the night before. Both were really funny! My cousin, April, actually got chosen to go up on stage! She fell out of the trance only after a couple of minutes in, because the show started the same as the night before so she figured out what was going on.
Ricky Kalm hypnotist show. My mom and I ended the night by going and seeing the movie “The Help” playing in the theater. The rest of our group when to Radio Wave to see the adult showing of Side Show Bert. They all said it was not very good. This was the only show we were disappointed by the whole cruise.
I feel like I have to continue the tradition of showing you our towel animal, so here it is. We all have mixed feels to what kind of animal it is… cat mixed with bear?
In my last post I had mentioned that we brought our own water bottles onto the Disney Cruise to use outside of dining hours.Well, I got really ambitious the week before the cruise and decided to surprise my family by making them water bottles with their name and favorite Disney character on it. I got this idea from House of Hepworths. I borrowed a silhouette machine from a friend to do this project and I never want to give it back. I love this machine!
DIY Custom Disney Water Bottle
| Materials: 1. Water Bottles 2. Silhouette adhesive vinyl 3. Silhouette transfer paper
Tools: 1. Silhouette Cameo 2. Computer 3. Xacto knife 4. Ruler
| Cost of Materials: 1. Dollar Tree, $1 each 2. Amazon, $10 (had lots of extra) 3. Amazon, $15 (tons of extras left) Total Cost: Around $3.00 each | I started this project by leaving a cryptic message on Facebook asking all my family that was going on the cruise to post what their top two favorite Disney characters were. This was fun because they knew I was doing something but had no idea what it was.
The Disney characters that I used came from a Google image search. I got the best results with the images that were coloring book pages or cutouts (basically the ones with no backgrounds). You need a medium – large image file for this to work. You can sort your results by image size (on left sidebar). I saved the image to my computer and opened it in Silhouette Studio.
I am not going to give you a step by step on how to do the rest. I am just going to direct you to this amazing YouTube video by Sarah’s World that I used. Here are a few tips that I have after making eight of these water bottles: - Find images with fatter lines. If the lines get too thin they don’t stick very well and are also a lot harder to weed the middles out. I ended up redoing Stitch and Peter Pan after the cruise because they were starting to peel away. The second time around I really increased the line size.
- The less detail in a character the better. A lot of the newer characters don’t work as well because of all the detail. For me Stitch and Wall-E were the hardest and Mickey and Donald were the easiest.
- Peeling away the vinyl is time consuming and requires patience. I love detailed work like this but some don’t.
Day 2:June 12, 2012
Our second day at sea consisted of naps (the boat just rocks you to sleep), bingo (we didn’t win {insert sad face here}), Disney movies on our stateroom TV, shuffle board, Disney trivia, and lots of food! I know what you are thinking, shuffle board, bingo, and naps? Yes, we were living the dreams of old people everywhere and loved every minute of it.
Shuffle board on deck 4. There are so many planned activates on the ship that you can’t do everything. I was concerned about having too much down time because of the cold weather and not being able to play in the sun but this was never a problem for us. I actually wish I gave myself more down time throughout the cruise.
Everyone receives a navigator in their stateroom at night with a time table of the next day activities. The activities director also lists some activities over the PA system in the common areas (hallways mostly) throughout the day. Every time he did this I was reminded of the movie Dirty Dancing when the actives were being announced through the mega phone.
Bethany and I having a drink with Belle. I love how the drink matches her dress. Dinner on the second night was the Golden Mickey’s (aka formal night). They hold the Captain’s gala before dinner this night. This is one of the few times they give out free alcohol drinks on the cruise; we definitely took advantage of this one. If you look at all under 21, I recommend bring a second form of ID other than your key-to-the-world card. Katie had a lot of problems getting drinks even though she is 21.
My parents all dressed up for the Golden Mickey's We were seated in Tritons this night. They were serving off the Golden Mickey’s menu.
The Golden Mickey's Dinner Menu Sangria Bisque: all the cold soups were amazing! | Oven-roasted Tom Turkey Breast | Oven-roasted Duckling Golden Mickey's Dessert Menu Baked Apple and Blueberry Pithiviers | Golden Mickey's Sweet Temptations | We ended up being late to the Golden Mickey’s show that night because we went for round two of free drinks for the second dinner seating. By the time we got to the show they were out of seats so we had to sit/stand on the side steps. Because we had no kids in the group, I feel like the free drinks were worth it. If you have kids or it is your first time on the cruise I would recommend getting to the Golden Mickey’s early. They have it all set up to make it feel like you are walking the red carpet to the theater.
Alcohol on the cruise…
I feel like there is no better time than now to talk about it (if you don’t plan on going on this cruise or don’t care about drinking you can skip the rest of this blog post). First of all you can carry on as much alcohol as you would like, as long as it fits in your carry-on bag. You must be 21 or older to carry alcohol on. Just keep in mind you have to carry this bag around with you when you board.
The alcohol you carry-on is for consumption in your stateroom, but they don’t send people around smelling your drinks. Just don’t be incoherently drunk when around the ship with your own drinks and you will be fine. We brought our own water bottles and mugs to keep our drinks in. This is essential if you want to make mixed drinks and is just a more efficient way of carrying pop / juice (alcohol or not) during non-dining times. I would also recommend bringing a shot glass to help gage how big your pours into the non-see through glasses are. Oh and for the occasional shot with Walt.
Cheers to Walt! The pop machine on deck nine has a limited selection of non-pop options for mixers (pink lemonade and fruit punch). We ended up getting more mixers by asking our wait staff after dinner for juices to go. They were happy to do this for us and filled up disposable cups with pineapple and cranberry juice. They also gave us a cup of cherries too, which we infused with alcohol (we had a fridge in our room for medical reasons, so we had a place to keep the cherries).
On the cold day sailing through Tracy Arm we went through a whole bottle of Baily’s adding it to our hot chocolates. We ended up picking up a new bottle at the first port.
This is not what you want to look like while drinking your spiked hot chocolate. I have to say this too. It you don’t want to go through the trouble of concealing your drinks like you are an underage college kid, the drink prices on the ship are not the extreme. They are very comparable to a bar in Seattle (where I live). I think the beers started at $3.50 and the fancy mixed drinks were around $8. They make the drinks really strong too, at least the one I bought.
Day 1: June 11, 2012
"A Disney Cruise without kids?", is the question I was getting asked from everyone I told about my upcoming vacation. After sailing on one Disney Cruise, my family and extended family has been hooked ever since. I hope you enjoy my day-to-day recap and pictures of our wonderful Alaska cruise on the Disney Wonder. I am also going to be adding some tips and tricks that my family has learned on the cruise or through our past cruises with Disney (these will be in blue text).
Here is a little background information about our cruise and group:
Ship: Disney Wonder Dates Sailed: June 11th-18th 2012 (7 days) Demographics of our group: 8 people, 3 adults and 5 kids (ages 20-24 (I know we are big kids)), 2 families Staterooms: 2 rooms (one for each family), 2nd deck, AFT, Ocean View, Big porthole Ports: | - Seattle, WA
- Tracy Arm, Alaska
- Skagway, Alaska
- Juneau, Alaska
- Ketchikan, Alaska
- Victoria, Canada
| The weekend leading up to our departure was a whirlwind of activity. My mom, dad, sister, aunt, 2 cousins, and my future cousin-in-law all flew into Seattle on Saturday to visit for a few days before the flight. Yes, that is seven extra people in my house! It was crazy but we made it work and I loved being able to have family over at my house!
Have I mentioned one great thing about our Disney Alaska cruise is that this one leaves out of Seattle, no long flights or time zone changes for me! My husband, Alex, decided that he was going to skip this vacation (he is more of a lay on a warm beach and drink sort of vacation guy, not a lets go to colder weather), so he became our wonderful chauffeur to the ship the morning of our departure. It took us three car loads to get everybody and all of the luggage over to the port.
The most exciting thing to me was turning a corner on a road I have traveled a lot in the past and see the Disney Wonder sitting on Pier 91. My vacation that I had been dreaming of was really here! After arriving and saying bye to Alex we walked into the terminal. The first stop is dropping off checked bags followed by a security check. It was really refreshing to go through a security check and not have to completely undress and be patted down. I was even about to leave my belt on through the metal detectors! So much better than the airports.
We then were able to go check–in and get our key to the world cards. This was our first time sailing on their new system so we had to get our picture taken for our cards (I made a great face for mine that made a lot of the staff giggle when they saw it all week). Next onto the waiting area, this area makes everyone so much more excited to take that first step onto the boat with Disney music playing and characters, like Mickey and Minnie walking around in sailing outfits.
Katie and I right after we got the okay to board. Tips & Tricks: Check-in
- You receive your boarding group number after dropping off your bags. They never check your given “check-in time” that you receive after your per-check-in online so it you want to get there earlier you can. We boarded with group 7 at about 12:10pm.
- Bring all family members up to the check-in desk. This is where they check passports and take your photo for your key-to-the-world card (this picture is not printed on the card, it just pops up when your card is scanned.
- If you are a return sailor you will receive a lanyard for your key-to-the-world card. First time sailors bring your own lanyard or you can buy an overpriced one in the gift shop. You use your card for everything on the ship and needs to be on you at all times. This is your room key, credit card (you set this one up per card), access on and off the boat, and a photo service link card (linking photos taken on the boat to you room) just to name a few. Having a lanyard makes it just a little harder to forget or loose.
The first thing we did after boarding the ship was head up to Beach Blanket (on deck 9) for some lunch. It was a beautiful day in Seattle so we filled up our plates at the buffet and headed outside to soak up some sun and enjoy the gorgeous views of the city and mountains (both Mt. Rainier and the Olympic Mountains) were out crystal clear.
My Parents. Picture taken from Beach Blanket. After eating we took some pictures of the skyline and mountains then headed down to the Goofy pool to find some chairs to take advantage of the sun while waiting for our rooms to be ready.
Pluto came up behind April while she was napping and scared her. He gave her a kiss to make up for it. I loved the random run-in with characters walking around the ship. My sister, Katie, and I took one look at the empty Goofy pool and garbed our swimsuits out of our carry-ons and jumped into the pool. I don’t think we have ever seen the Goofy pool empty. We were in there for about an hour before other people started to join us.
Hanging out in the empty Goofy pool. The water was really warm! We climbed out of the pool and headed down to our stateroom to find our bags already there (so much better then changing again in the tiny bathroom stalls! And the added bonus of being able to pull out the one pair of, just-in-case shorts I had packed). We took advantage of our bags early arrival and unpacked everything. I have never been the type of person that unpacks my bag during a vacation but this is highly recommended, almost required, to be able to live in a tiny space with three other people for a week. The nice thing about unpacking is you can slide all your empty bags under the big bed in the room, freeing up tons of space and making the tight quarters livable.
We then headed up to deck 9 for some much anticipated post unpacking pre safety drill ice-cream. Only to find out they close the ice-cream down 30 minutes before the safety drill.
After the quick and painless safety drill we headed to deck 10 to stake out a table for the parents to watch the sail away party from. They like deck 10 because the get a birds-eye view of the party to take pictures of us but I heard rumors that they are joining us down on the dance floor next time! Oh and we ran over and got ice-cream!
Tips & Tricks: Pre-sail away / unpacking - Rooms are not ready right away when you board the boat. Make sure your carry-ons only have what you really need during the first few hours on the boat or stuff you can’t check (like alcohol, I will talk more about this later) because you have to carry it around with you.
- When you enter the ship, they direct some people to Beach Blanket and others to Parrot Cay for lunch (same food at both places). If it is nice outside I recommend finding the first elevator and head up the sun. Beach blanket has both indoor and outdoor seating.
- Pack swimming suit in carry-on, you never know when it is going to be a nice day in Seattle
- If you plan on hanging a lot of clothes bring some of your own hangers. The have about 10-15 hangers in the room but that is not a lot for 4 adults.
- Ice-cream flavors of the trip: Vanilla + Chocolate and Banana + Raspberry (had the option of twisting these two pairs) Later in the trip they switched out to Pineapple (my favorite) , in place of Banana + Raspberry. They also ran out of cones and switched to cups.
The music of the Disney Wonder ship horns blew and we were off on our Alaskan adventure! I was torn but I left the party to walk around deck 10 with my dad taking pictures of my Seattle home drifting away. I loved being able to see views of the city that I was not used to and pointing out places I knew.
To my disbelief, after the sail-away party was done it was already time to head down to our room to get ready for our first dinner (we had first seating at 5:45pm).
Parrot Cay entrance. Our first dinner was a Parrot Cay. All Disney Cruise lines have a rotational dining experience. You rotate through three different dining rooms and your wait staff rotates with you. They get to know you and you them. In the past our wait staff has been amazing! But this time around they seemed very busy. They had other tables then just ours but we were always being served last. Both servers were really nice guys, but very soft spoken. They were not the fun loving characters that we have had in the past. This is probably my only negative of the whole cruise but I feel like the dinning staff plays a huge part in the overall experience.
Appetizer, I don't remember the name of this one. The service improved by the end of the week after talking to the head server, he stepped in and helped speed up the service. The lesson of this is speak up if something is not at 100%. Disney will try to make it better!
My main course. | Katie's Main Course. | Parrot Cay Dessert Menu My dessert: Parrot Cay's Sweet Temptations. Katie got an ice cream Sunday almost every night! They change up to ice cream and the topping with every menu. | My dad's birthday celebration dessert. They come out and sing to you too! I got one of these on the last night.
My mom's Pina Colada Bread Pudding. | After dinner (or before if you have late dinner seating), Disney puts on full Broadway style productions that are unique to the cruise line. The first show was called All Aboard: Let the Magic Begin. They have a total of five of these shows throughout the cruise, the other nighst they have variety show type acts made for a PG audience. We had a juggler/comedian, hypnotist, and a ventriloquist. One of the nights they show the premiere (on the ship) of Avengers in 3D, they made this movie available to watch in the movie theater after that night.
Theater, there is no photography during the show. This is a new rule because we were able to take non-flash pictures in the past. Every night after the family show, the Route 66 area becomes an adult only (18+) area. Our favorite thing to do was go to Beat Street at 10:30pm for the adult only show. They had adult versions of the family variety acts and other comedians do Adult only shows. Our Scottish adult entertainment (Disney rated) host, Scotty, was great. He taught us that he could ask any question as long as you disneyfied it. The first night was a wacky scavenger hunt… all I am going to say is by the end of the night there were men strutting around in bras and women’s shoes, holding hand bags and wearing lipstick. This has to be one of funniest nights on the cruise. We laughed so hard]… I only wish I brought a camera.
Tips & Tricks: Night time Shows
- Send some people from your group down to the theater right after dinner to save seats. Take turns going to the room to change if you want to be more comfortable for the show.
- The Adult show normally fills up so if you have a large group, make sure to head down early. The first night was the only exception to this.
I am going to end this extremely long (sorry) first day post by sharing pictures of our first towel animal. Every night during dinner, your room stuart cleans and prepares your room for sleeping. The includes turning the once couch into bunk beds. They also leaves a towel creation and chocolates for you.
I personal think this towel creation is a seal because of the chocolate left on the nose but the whole rest of my family argues that it is a swan. What do you think?
The last piece to our farmhouse table is complete! After handing my wonderful husband a cut list, he built our bench all by himself. While he was doing this I was in the backyard pulling weeds. I really think he got the better end of this deal.
Screw together bottom skirt and then add supports.Use wood glue and square off everything. The only problem with the construction of the bench was the legs were not completely squared off. This made the bench a little wobbly until we put the non-scratch pads on the bottom and fixed the problem.
Attach top end boards by screwing through the top and into the skirt. Farmhouse Table Bench This bench has the exact same design as our farmhouse table with just two long boards in the middle instead of the three that are in the table. I also changed the overlay of the skirt by accident, but it just makes a difference for the cut list if you want to copy and keep the overlay of the joints the same (insert measurement difference). | | Attach center top boards through bottom supports. | I am not going to go through the step by step on this post, I recommend going to our farmhouse table post for the step by step but using this material and cut list.
Alex looking like a cave man before his hair cut screwing in the bench legs. | Materials: 1. Wood (We used pine, see cut list) 2. Wood glue 3. Wood filler 4. 1 1/4" wood screws 5. 2" wood screws 6. Sandpaper (110 grit)
Tools: 1. Sander 2. Square 3. Clamps 4. Electric Screwdriver 5. 1/8" counter bore drill bit 6. Measuring tape 7. pencil
| Cost of Materials*: * only new materials I had to buy was wood and sandpaper, all the rest I had leftovers from table.
1. Wood 6. $8 from Home Depot Total Cost: around $50.00
Cut List: 2 - 2X8 @ 4’ 5" (top boards) 2 - 2X10 @ 1’ 2-1/2” (top short boards) 2 – 1X4 @ 1’ (short skirt) 2 – 1X4 @ 5’ 6” (long skirt) 4 – 4X4 @ 1’ 4-1/2” (legs) 5 – 1X2 @ 10-1/2” (supports) 2 - 1X4 @ 10-1/2” (extra end supports) | I was so excited to send Alex off with the cut list that I forgot to check if on leftover wood from the table. This project would have been a lot cheaper if I had checked. Oh well. Now I have tons of spare wood laying around for future projects.
Sanding the finished bench before staining. As for the finish, this is also the same as the table. We actually didn’t pay any more money for the finishing supplies because we had enough left over from the table.
The cat being the center of attention
About two weeks ago, Alex competed in his first half Ironman. For those if you who don’t know what this entails let me give you the numbers. The race is 70.3 miles long, first off is a 1.2-mile swim, followed by a 56-mile bike ride. Then to top it all off you finish with a half marathon (13.1-miles). To make it even more insane he completed the Wildflower half Ironman, said to be the hardest one, which evolved crazy hills and camping before and after. Here is what he wrote on his experience:
| “Let's just get this out of the way: The entire Wildflower experience is unlike any other endurance race I've ever done or heard about. The weekend promises all sorts of crazy things: 10,000+ people all camping together, three very difficult triathlons, Cal-Poly kids streaking and weather that is typical Californian desert: hot and dry. Oh, and it happened to be the Supermoon weekend, so things were maybe a little crazier than average...
The race itself started on a high note. The water was a perfect 68F, which meant that it was a little bit cool, but with a wetsuit it felt great. This was my first open water race and first mass start. Typically, you would want to hang around the back and let everyone clear out so that you don't have to climb over or be climbed over by other folks. However, since swimming is my strongest sport I positioned myself in the second line of my wave group start of ~150 guys with the goal of finding some open water early and hopefully a strong person to draft off of. The plan worked great, except for the foot that found my nose two strokes in. Ouch! Fortunately the swim opened up nicely and I was able to find a great draft that I hung with for the first half of the swim.
Wildflower Half Ironman swim start / finish Photo by: Matt Treinen After the turn around I gave up my draft buddy and bee-lined towards the exit ramp. I think the race is really setup to stay parallel to the shore for a while and then make a sharp turn towards the boat ramp, but there aren’t any buoys to keep you from shooting straight at the ramp and cutting off some distance, so that’s what I did. I only had two real problems on the swim: after the kick to the nose I had some water in my goggles and about ¾ in my swim cap was coming off. Easy fixes, but it definitely cost me some time. Once you touch down on the boat ramp there is a 100-150yd sprint to the top where the timing mat is and transition begins. I was super happy when I came out of the water and saw my time at just around 31:30! I had previously swam a 33:00 in the pool and had a stretch goal of 30:00, so I was very happy with that time. Megan from TNT didn’t think it was me coming out of the water because I looked “too springy,” which I think I’ll take as a compliment J
Alex finishing the swim Transition 1 (T1) was pretty quick for my first time (3min and change). Wetsuit off, more sunblock, glasses on, helmet on, socks and shoes on, and off we go! The Wildflower bike is known as being a very difficult because of the sun, heat, wind, bad roads, but mostly because of the amount of climbing you have to do. The long course doesn’t wait to start punching. It gives you a mile or two to find your legs and then you’re climbing a pretty tough hill that climbs something like 300-400ft in half a mile. After that, there are a series of what I think you can only call big rollers. The strategy is to hold back as much as possible because you know at mile 40ish you have to kill yourself going up “Nasty Grade,” which is a 3ish mile climb with ~900ft of elevation gain (and then after that you’ve got a half marathon!). The course makes it really hard to hold back with the elements: 77F, windy and hot. Fortunately they had great support on the ride; unfortunately there was really no way to drink enough to stay hydrated.
Bike transition area Photo by Matt Treinen Nasty Grade was indeed nasty. The biggest problem is that it comes so late in the bike so you’re already fatigued from the early climbs and rollers. The second biggest problem is that it’s a big ass hill. The third biggest problem is that after Nasty Grade, there are still three or four medium sized climbs left. The website says I maintained a 15.3mph average over the ride, which I’ll take for how challenging the bike was. However, coming in from the bike I knew that my run was going to be awfully hard…
T2 was a little less quick because I took a good amount of time to reapply sunblock. I had two real goals for this race: finish the damn thing and don’t turn the color of a lobster.
Coming out of T2 was difficult. The outsides of my feet were numb and in some pain already from the bike. I had gone and gotten my bike refit and they repositioned the cleats on my bike shoes and I hadn’t put enough miles to get comfortable with their new position yet. I might have been OK if the run had been on pavement, but the first ~8 miles are on a rocky trail. Oh, and there is a ton of elevation gain on the run. At mile 4 you start what can only be considered a difficult hike. Let’s be blunt: it was a death march. Even the top age groupers were forced to walk it. After that hill and the previous bike I was pretty much dead man walking and forced to play mind games to finish without completely walking (OK, I’ll start running at that tree and stop at that tree a tenth of a mile away). Ultimately I finished the half marathon in 2:48, which is by far the slowest half I’ve ever run. It was brutal, hot, dusty and hilly. They should really call it a Swim/Bike/Hike, because I sure didn’t do a lot of running J
The run finish area Photo by Matt Treinen After finishing I went down and sat in the water at the start to try and cool down. One of the other competitors remarked that it was ironic that this spot was the best place to be on the course, yet we were all so anxious to get away from it 7 hours ago… Results: Swim: 32:59 (including boat ramp run) T1: 3:21 Bike: 3:38:52 T2: 5:48 Run: 2:48:50 Total: 7:09:50 Special thanks to everyone associated with Team in Training, especcially our coaches: Fred, Karin and Cathy. Huge thanks to Sarah Hamilton for taking on the part of team mom this weekend: next time you don't do anything, we'll do it all! And of course, thank you to my wife Sarah for not killing me when I was spending ~10 hours a week training and then being dead tired when I was at home!” Special addendum for future Wildflowers:- The worst thing about the bike is that the road is super choppy. Ride on some rough stuff during training to get used to it.
- If you can, over-train for this one. It really is like a three quarters ironman.
- After nasty grade there are still plenty of hills to climb. The ride kind of lulls you to sleep during the middle, then punches you hard and then keeps punching when you think you're done.
- Unless you can run a sub 1:50 flat half, I would run with at least a water bottle unless its cooler or cloudier than normal. There are plenty of water stops, but its still a challenge to stay hydrated.
- If you can train in the heat, do it. It will help you a bunch!
| | Now for the cookies... Here is the recipe for the second batch of cookies I made to send down to the race for the team (the first being the margarita cookies). I found this Resse’s Nutella cookie recipe on My Kitchen Addiction. They turned out to be a crunchy cookie (I made them a little smaller and added Reese’s Pieces which could have been the cause), I am not a huge fan of crunchy cookies but these were not bad. If you like peanut butter cups and crunchy chocolate cookies I would recommend these. Reese’s Nutella cookies
Ingredients:- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup lightly packed dark brown sugar
- 2/3 cup Nutella
- 2 eggs
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 2 1/2 cups all purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
- 2 cups mini peanut butter cups (or peanut butter cup baking pieces)
- 2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
- 1 cup (about) Reese’s Pieces (4oz box)
Instructions:- Preheat oven to 350°F. Line cookie sheet with parchment paper.
- Using mixer with paddle attachment, cream together butter, sugar, and brown sugar.
- Add Nutella, mix until combined
- Add vanilla and mix for an additional 30 seconds, until incorporated.
- In separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and sea salt. Gradually add mixture to mixer while on a low speed.
- By hand mix in mini peanut butter cups, chocolate chips and Reese’s Pieces until combined.
- Using a cookie scoop (heaping tablespoon) drop cookies onto cookies sheet. Leave a few inches between, cookies spread a lot.
- Bake for 12-15 minutes, or until cookies are slightly cracked on top. Let them cool for 5 minutes on cookie sheet before transferring to wire rack to cool completely.
I wrote this a week ago but it took me awhile to get the photos together, so some of the info is out of date. Introducing our new little ball of fluff: Zoey! She is ¾ Australian Shepard and ¼ lab. As of Saturday she was 8 weeks old (birthday is March 10, 2012). Here is a picture of her mom (30 pound, Australian Shepard) and dad (40 pound, ½ Australian Shepard & ½ Lab).
Mom (left) & Dad( (right) Because Alex was gone for his half Ironman this past weekend, our friend Heather had the task of holding our little girl on the way home from Tacoma. Zoey was really good all the way, she was crying a little bit but was a lot better than I expected.
After we got her home, we had a great weekend of playing outside in the wonderful weather we had this weekend.
Even at 8 weeks old the herding instinct is coming out. She loves to herd the cat around the house. She just has the problem of getting mouthfuls of cat hair. Keagen (the cat), I think is having fun with the puppy. He always has the option of jumping up to higher ground but seem to always want to lie on the ground or try pouncing out at Zoey.
I love the puppy energy crash. Going at 100 miles per hour to 0 instantly, needless to say we had some great family puppy naps.
Night time is still a little rough. We are crate training her and she doesn’t like being away from me. We bought her a cuddle pal and heartbeat pillow but she was not interested in either of these things. All she really wanted was my hand in the cage. I broke down and slept all night next to her cage…. Really, how can you say no to this face?
After I am with her she falls asleep within minutes… I attempted to move back to my bed but she woke up. After we both fell asleep she woke up again at between 4-5am both nights needing to pee. She cried a little bit when I put her back in the cage but after I laid back down she went right back to sleep. On the third night she fell asleep within minutes and stayed asleep all night!
The best thing we did for the sleeping situation was having something with the smell of her littermates on it. I had brought with a stuffed toy to rub all over the other puppies but was generously given one of the blankets they had been using. She loves it!
After reading tons of information on the internet we decided to start clicker training Zoey. She is picking up on commands really quick! As of today she can sit on command and is about at 50% on shake and touch. Not bad for two days of training and only being 8 weeks old. I think we have a smart one!
For anyone getting a puppy soon and are looking for a starting list of what to buy here is what we got (from online research and past experience) and how Zoey likes it so far. I highly recommend buying the bulk of the items from Amazon or discount stores. Prices are so much higher at pet stores.
New Puppy Checklist
1. Dog Crate : We got the life stages one , it had a partition that you can move as the puppy grows. 2. Collar and leash: Currently Zoey hates both of these, it will take time to get used to. 3. Chew toys: We got a lot of chew toys because there are so many different types. 4. Comfort toys: These really depends on the puppy. I was prepared for all the senses. 5. Squeak toys: Zoey is not a huge fan of the squeak toys yet. I got her a JW Pet Company Bowling Pin Squeak toy. 6. Dog Waste Bag Dispenser: I got the really cute one from Petego with Polka Dots. The is the best idea ever if you take your dog on lots of walks and field trips. We have used these while doggy sitting for people. Don’t forget the refill bags (when you buy in bulk they are $0.02 per bag). 7. Food and water dish: We have heard stainless steel is the way to go to prevent germs. 8. Housebreaking pads: Have not used them yet but plan to when we leave her along while at work. After reading reviews Wee-Wee brand seems to be the best for the cost. Some of the cheaper ones have horrible reviews. 9. Doggy Gate: We will be blocking Zoey into the kitchen when we are gone. We have the gate installed and seems to work great so far. I know she is going to out grew the gate at some point because her breed can jump really high. It will work for now. 10. Clicker: For clicker training. She loves the clicker… she knows after the click comes a treat. The clicker works great so far. 11. Stuffed toys: The pick pony toy is one of her favorites. She loves pouncing at it. 12. Ball: This JW Pet Hol-ee Roller ball is great for puppies. Having a tiny mouth Zoey is still able to carry this ball around. For added fun I put treats inside the ball for her to get out. 13. Food: Try to stick with the food it was no before coming home. It will make there little tummy happier. We bought the wrong food but her tummy seems to be doing okay so far. 14. Treats: Make sure they are in the same family as the food. We are using IAM’s all-natural food so we are sticking with an all-natural treat. We all have little raw hides for her to chew on (sent home with us). 15. Blankets: Cheap blanks of the cage and holding the puppy. Get lots so you can wash them if they get peed on. 16. Doggy Bed: I just made a fleece tie blanket for the bed. We will get her a real bed after she is through the chewing stage. 17. Potty training door bell: Starting to train with this bell so she has a way to let us know she needs out.
This past weekend, Alex went to California to compete in his first Half Ironman! I made some margarita cookies to send down to with him for his team to help them celebrate Cinco de Mayo which happened to fall on race day.
Sad to say but I didn’t get a single margarita or Mexican food on Cinco de Mayo this year because I was picking up this little girl:
I will have more on this little fuzz ball and Alex’s race in the next couple of posts!
Back to the cookies: I was planning on making these margarita cookies from Smitten Kitchen but I have this horrible problem about not reading the recipe before starting. I had all the all the fruit zest prepared when I read the rest of the recipe, it required the dough to be chilled for 2.5 hours! It was already 9 pm and I was leaving at 5 am the next morning to get Alex to the airport before heading to work, there was no way I was staying up that late to make these cookies. After a two second freak-out and almost deciding not to make anything I went to the internet in search of cookies with similar ingredients without a long prep time. I found these at Just a Pinch. I just had to run to the store for a lime to add to the zest but I had everything else. I ended up using an extra lemon in this recipe that I already had prepared. I don’t know what I did wrong on making these cookies but they didn’t flatten out. My only thought is that I used parchment paper. I am not complaining because of this they made a nice bite sized treats.
I skipped the glaze they had in this recipe; instead I dipped the cookies into a sugar and salt mixture before baking them (similar to the Smitten Kitchen recipe). The salt really put the finishing touch on the overall taste of the cookies to give it a nice sweet and salty contrast. I think next year I want to figure out Strawberry Margarita Cookies or maybe a cupcake? Oh the possibilities!
Ingredients:- 2 1/4 cup all purpose flour
- 3/4 cup sugar
- zest of 2 lemons
- zest of 1 lime
- zest of 1 orange
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 cup unsalted butter, room temp
- 2 teaspoons tequila
- 2 teaspoons triple sec or orange liquer
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 cup raw sugar
- 1 teaspoon Maldon sea salt
Instructions: - In mixer, using paddle attachment, cream together butter and sugar.
- Mix in egg yolk and all the zest. Mix until well combined.
- Add tequila, triple sec and salt.
- Gradually add flour to mix mix until well combined.
- Cover dough in plastic wrap and chill in fridge for 30 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line cookie sheet with parchment paper.
- In a small bowl mix together raw sugar and sea salt.
- Scoop out cookie dough into rounds. Dip dough ball into sugar/salt mixture. Place on pan.
- Cook in oven for 15 minutes or until edges start to turn golden brown.
- Take cookies out and let then cool on wire rack.
Nothing looks homier than mismatched chairs around a farmhouse table. As soon as we started building our farmhouse table we started making trips to thrift stores to find the perfect chairs. We had a goal to find five random style chairs to go around three sides of our table; the forth side will have a bench when it is complete. Here is the line up of the chairs we collected: A. Value Village, $24.99 (the king's chair as Alex likes to call it) B. Goodwill Outlet, $1.99 C. Value Village, $9.99 (the boring common chair) D. Value Village, $14.99 E. Goodwill, $24.99 (My favorite! Has a placard on the back for Cook County Court house) I had planned on painting all the chairs with the gallon of Teal Zeal Behr paint I had bought, but after hand painting on the 2–3 coats of primer I got very impatient. I decided to go to the store and buy spray paint. The problem I have with spray paint was there a limited selection of colors. I ended up painting the chairs Rust-OLEUM’s Satin lagoon. This ended up being very bright. I think the color is growing on me, but it is very overwhelming at first sight. Painting Mismatched Thrift Store Chairs Disclaimer: I am not an expert in any means on painting. This is my first paint project. I referenced a couple of great blogs for information to get me started: Someday Crafts & i create.... with love. Materials- Zinsser Bulls Eye 1 2 3 primer
- 5 cans of Rust-OLEUM’s Satin lagoon spray paint
- 1 can clear coat
- 3 - 1" foam brushes
- 3" Paint rollers
- Thrift store chairs
| Cost of Materials- Lowe's $8.98
- Home Depot $3.87 each
- Lowe's $4.98
- Lowe's .69 each
- Lowe's $3.57
- Total for all 5 = $77
Total Cost = $115 | I started by wiping all the chairs clean with a damp rag. I also removed anything that was stuck on the chairs. In particular, I worked on chair C forever because I think the chair got in a fight with a bottle of glue at some point in its life. Side note: One cool tip I got from good old Martha, was to put nails into the end of each chair leg. This raises the chairs off the ground and makes it easier to get the paint all the way down to the bottom After the chairs were clean and dry my sister (who was visiting for spring break) and I, using a paint roller, applied a layer of Zinsser Bulls Eye 1 2 3 primer. We used a sponge brush to work primer into the nooks and crannies of the chairs. The great thing about this primer is you don’t have to sand the chairs before! This saved me so much time. Be careful to catch and smooth out drips when painting on the primer. I applied 2-3 coats of primer to the chairs depending on the original color (the black on took 3 coats, the white took 2).
Next came the waiting game for a nice clear day in Seattle to spray paint. Yes, those do happen! I spray painted 2 coats of paint onto each chair waiting an hour between each coat. There was also another trip to home depot between coats because I seriously misjudged how much paint it would take. I would recommend at least one can per chair. After the paint was dry I topped the chairs off with 3 coats of a clear coat protector. I am playing around with the idea of adding a white glaze to the chairs. I am hoping this will help tone the color down a little bit. I am just concerned with how well it will work because I already put a clear coat over the paint. I really need help deciding. Please add comments and let me know what you think! Should I change the color, try out a dark or light glaze or keep it as is? Keep in mind the real to the eye color is a little darker then the pictures. I think the chairs have a touch more green in the actual to the eye color. I couldn't capture this color on camera.
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