Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Talk About Tuesday

 

In Which A Lot Has Happened!


This past week has been quite the marathon of action! My guy had his birthday, my family went on a trip, and we had a major household mechanical failure! All in the last seven days!

On Wednesday, my guy and I went out with some friends to celebrate his birthday and had a magnificent feast. It was a blast, and I loved every minute of it! 10/10 would do again lol.

On Friday, we had a wonderful time hanging out, watching YouTube together and planning out the next day's Family Trip to Boston. We parted ways and I stayed up all night anxious for our trip.

Why was I anxious? Because every single time I've been on a family trip, something always goes wrong. Usually someone throws up, has a meltdown, and/or gets lost, or something we were supposed to do fails or isn't actually as fun as we'd hoped.

So of course it starts with someone getting sick and not being able to come at all, leaving two party members without a ride. That was handled with my dad going to get them (yay!) and finding out on the road that his car desperately needs oil when we're running 10 minutes behind (not yay!).

We make it to the train station. Everything's cramped, I don't do well with crowds, and there's no one at the ticket counter. No worries, the tickets were purchased online! My dad printed them out and handed them out to... most of us.

One of our groups hadn't arrived yet - including the person who the trip was planned for, my eldest nibling. They were running late.

Thankfully, so was the train, so when they arrived 2 minutes before our train was originally supposed to depart, there was still a 20 minute delay. In the train's defense, it had dumped almost a foot of snow on the track in places. In my family's defense, it's hard to get young kids up and at em on a Saturday morning!

Boarding was just as stressful as I feared - since Amtrak doesn't do assigned seating in Coach, we kind of had to fend for ourselves, and the train was 100% sold out, so there was absolutely zero room for error. My boyfriend and I ended up staying in the first car we boarded while everyone else ended up in another car.

It turns out that their car had absolutely no intercom, so they didn't hear any of the stops and had no idea that we'd had to slow down at one point because the storm knocked out the signal from Amtrak to our train. They also didn't know that, due to our delay, we'd had to stop in the middle of nowhere for another train to pass us, since we were on a double track heading into a single track.

We were a full hour late to North Station in Boston, which was also stressful, but the worst stress for me was worrying if we were going to try to corral 3 kids and a herd of cat-independent adults onto the subway. Thankfully we decided to walk instead of trying to cram 7 people onto a subway at once. And I'm so glad we walked!

We trotted past the Charles River and said hello to some very unimpressed Canada Geese who were napping or strolling around in that area. The traffic was slow and sporadic at 11AM, and we were able to walk all the way to the Museum of Science easily! And once we were there, my younger sibling was able to handle our tickets and got us all in and stamped - mine was a lightning bolt. From there, we got a quick lunch in the cafe (I recommend the chicken tenders, but not the onion rings) and dispersed into the museum to roam in small groups until we'd meet back up at the planetarium for the show (which costs extra but is worth every penny).

My guy and I wandered around, taking in the Live Animal Care area (where we both cooed at the adorable lop-eared rabbit, Pancake, who was taking a nap in the corner of the exercise cage, and then I babbled endlessly about my love of Chuckwallas and Legless Lizards), the glory and majesty of the enormous fiberglass t-rex statue (clad in a comedically enormous custom scarf), and the awe-inspiring and fully articulated fossilized Cliff the Triceratops. Then I made a confession to him.

See... I have been to the Boston Museum of Science once before. And it traumatized me. Because I was very young and perhaps in the 1990s, the safety standards of the Lightning Show were a bit laxer and there were no warnings and also my parents loved to give me shit for being scared of things.

So watching someone intentionally electrify a cage they were sitting in while I sat in the dark (which I was already afraid of) and there was so much noise (which overwhelmed me) and the lightning was so bright...

It was maybe fully terrifying to Very Young Me.

And I figured, it's been more than 20 years. I should probably get over this.

And what better way to get over your phobia of lightning triggered by a lightning show than by watching that lightning show once more?

If you've never been to the Boston Museum of Science, they have a theater that was built around the largest Van de Graf Generator in the world. It was built in the 1930s to smash freaking atoms. It looks like something straight out of a sci-fi movie. It's HUGE. And it's gorgeous.

The theater has 3 levels accessible to all 3 floors of the Blue Wing, and it's packed by 15 minutes before the lightning shows. If you want to go there, go early, find a spot, and park yourself.

When I was a kid, they didn't have the lights on at all. You had one tiny spotlight on the museum employee who was controlling the Tesla Coils and the Van de Graf Generator. They didn't warn you when they were going to set off the sparks. It just... happened. Loudly and in the dark.

Now, your host (ours was Megan, who was wonderful) will introduce you, with all the lights on, to each part of the set and explain (along with lightning safety) what they're about to do. When they're about to do something, they'll tell you, they'll dim the lights only when they're about to bring on the lightning. And honestly? It was a restorative experience.

It was also FREAKING AWESOME!!!! I hope I can go again! 

Am I still scared of lightning? Oh, absolutely. To me lightning is no different than a bear or a volcano - I can't stop it, it'll kill me if it catches me, and it's really freaking cool.

After the Lightning Show, we explored a bit more, bought a bunch of water from the vending machines (which apparently belong to Wolfgang Puck?), and eventually met back up with everyone to go to the planetarium.

You go into a flying saucer-shaped room with a domed ceiling, settle into an unfairly comfortable chair, and a pair of sweet, funny museum employees will take you to the edge of the known universe while any small children in the room (and there will be a LOT, and they will be insanely adorable) lose their funny little minds.

I cannot explain the experience any better than this: It's a Ms Frizzle Field Trip without the peril.

It was worth every penny.

After the planetarium, we all took a final bathroom break, collected our things, and trotted back to the station.

The geese had all gone to bed, there was far more traffic, and I'm pretty sure we nearly lost half of our group because the front half was walking at 95 miles per hour, but there was a hawk in a tree on the way back, and there were pigeons in the station and it was just so much fun that it's impossible to complain.

Now the stress came back - we were going to have to get back on the train, and it wasn't late this time. We didn't have time to get dinner in the station, though we were considering it. Instead, we all bunched together at the doors to our Gate, and when we were given the Go Ahead, we surged towards the train. Some of us were better at surging than others, and I had to apologize to one of my niblings for nearly trampling her in my clumsy haste. We still ended up all together, and there were no delays on our return home aboard an also-sold-out train!

So obviously my panic was over nothing. We had a fantastic trip, we enjoyed ourselves, and aside from some minor logistical hiccups, it was awesome.

And then we got home.

I brushed my teeth, went to bed.

And woke up to a home with no hot water because apparently it broke at some point while I was trying to wash my face on Saturday night. Dandy.

Sunday was spent trying to get a water heater.

Yesterday, we picked up the heater and it took three people to get it inside and down into the basement. I am intensely grateful to whoever invented the Forearm Forklift because that damn thing weighed a lot. It was very unwieldy getting it through the shin-deep snow and into my cellar down a steep ramp we hastily added. I did lose my footing on the ramp as we were sliding the water heater down, so once it was out of the way, I let myself slide down behind it, which was actually pretty fun. Maneuvering it into place? Less fun.

I was basically useless once the heater was oriented correctly, and aside from pointing out where some pipes and wires terminated, I was pretty redundant, so I scampered upstairs to wait for hot water. Which took until this morning.

I had to wait from Friday morning to today in order to get properly bathed lol. As you might imagine, that first shower was heavenly.

Now, as for my other work - I haven't managed to draw since last Thursday, sadly. I plan to try to sketch something tonight, but we'll see if that's just idle want or if I can actually do it. I'm over 3k words into my manuscript right now, though, and I even managed to write on Saturday night!!!

Since last week alone I've written 810 words. Today's count was 113. I'm pretty dang pleased, to be honest. Heck, I've finished one chapter and part of the next!

As for the rest of this week, I hope to continue writing every night, and maybe I'll even draw! If you want a say in what I do end up drawing, feel free to hit up my Ko-Fi account in the sidebar and send me a coffee with a message telling me what category you'd like to see - Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, Dedbert, Location, Geometric, or Word.

For now, I am going to finish this last cup of coffee (decaf) and try to figure out how to draw something.

Go Enjoy Something!
FC

Friday, July 23, 2021

Friday Followup

 

Didja Miss Me?


Hey, so I know it's been a while, and I know I've been spectacularly bad at keeping up on my blog commitments, but... I have been a busy lil bee!

Last week I was waiting impatiently for my Arteza Watercolor Pencils to arrive from Amazon and while Amazon could shoot their founder into the upper atmosphere in an embarrassingly phallic rocket with no issues, they could not send my pencils in a timely fashion. It felt like it took forever. It didn't, and I've already whined about this ad nauseum, but there you go. While I waited, I plopped my paints into new containers from a discount store and stressed.

After they showed up, I started getting ready for a really cool trip to Boston with some friends, and that was a total blast! We ate a lot of food.

I took the pencils with me and... never really used them because we were busy as heck lol.

And yesterday, I couldn't post my art because I was dogsitting.

But here we are! And here are all of the pics & stories I wanted to tell you since last freaking week :P


THE REPOTTING SAGA


While testing my paints a while back I noticed that a lot of the paints were gummy or solid in the tube. They're watercolors, though, so I figured I could still use them if I found some way to reconstitute them inside the tube (I couldn't) or took them out of the tube and put them somewhere I could find them!

Enter: Cheap Dollar Store Containers

I bought three packs of cheap little containers for about a buck a pack, and each pack had 8 containers, so I had plenty to repot my tubes into tubs! Some were very liquid (one of the greens actually filled the bottom!) but especially the brown tones like Burnt Sienna and Raw Umber were totally solidified and unsqueezable.

My dad's utility knife with epoxy-gummed blade plus the gutted tubes of paint

Fortunately, once I had everything all untubed there wasn't too much of a mess - just a bunch of sharp metal tubes, some wrappers off of the sleeves of containers, the box the paints came in, and a few napkins!
And some paint splotches on my fingertips

Mostly of the runnier blues

Two days after the repotting experience, though, part 2 of the saga commenced:

THE WATERCOLOR PENCILS

Yay Pencils! In a box that made sense and was the right size!

My poor mail carrier must've thought I was going (more) crazy when he pulled up with the box - I actually did the "fist-pump for joy" thing you see in 80s movies. I was so excited I'd have hugged the poor guy if he hadn't high-tailed it back to his truck and rumbled down the street at top speed lol.

What a weird day that was! One mail truck pulled up across the street and delivered to my neighbor before leaving and then 40 minutes later, our mail showed up!

The Pretty Pretty Tin

I don't know why I was under the impression that the pencils would be coming in a cardboard sleeve when it says "comes in a tin" in like four places on the order, but I was very pleasantly surprised! The tin is heavy and sturdy and has a pleasant matte finish everywhere except the outline of the red box, the words "WATERCOLOR PENCILS" and the box around the word "EXPERT", which are shiny metal.

The tin itself is very difficult to open one-handed, which is very good, since it means it won't just randomly open if you're bringing it with you to sketch on the go, and the inside of the lid has swatches, numbers, names, and lightfastness rating of all 72 colors!

I'm planning to swatch each color by lightfastness rating, which ranges from + (Extremely Lightfast) to +++++ (Less Lightfast), though it does not say anywhere what those distinctions mean. By the Wikipedia page on Lightfastness, I'd guess they're using an ASTM rating system so + level pencils will hold color for over 100 years and +++++ pencils will hold theirs for only up to 2 years. Wild!

So. Many. Colors!!!

I haven't finished with my swatches yet, so my apologies for not including the whole gamut.

I packed the pencils for my trip to Boston, and here are some of the things I ate and where to find them (when I can remember where lol).


Go Go Curry! Medium Pork Katsu curry with a boiled egg and sausages
H-Mart food court

An amazing roast pork bun from a food court in an arts college
which was... an adventure!

12 Dollar Bento lunch at Karma in Westford, Mass
My lunch was:
A9 (Sweet & Sour Chicken), Miso Soup (not pictured), Chicken Fingers, Spicy Tuna Maki, White Rice
10/10 would recommend!

I was in the Boston Area from Sunday til Tuesday and I only drew a couple times while I was there because the adventure was non-stop! But now that I'm home here is:


THE ART:


"A Cool Pylon Seen on the Way to Boston, July 2021";
Watercolor Pencil & ink on watercolor paper; 2021

"Highest Colorfast Pencils 1"; watercolor pencil on watercolor paper; 2021

"Highest Colorfast Pencils 2"; Watercolor pencil on watercolor paper; 2021


"Undersea 1"; watercolor pencil on watercolor paper; 2021


And there you have it - a lot of the things I have been up to since I went radio silent!

All watercolor pencil pages were then gone-over with the water brushes, and I'm really looking forward to playing around even more with them! I still really want to go back over my old Pokemon teams and try to draw the trainers, so maybe that's what I'll do next?

I also really loved drawing that underwater scene! I used some references from WikiSpecies by hitting "Random Page" over and over until images of sea life appeared lol.

But that'll about do it for me tonight. If I find out were I got those awesome roast pork buns from I'll add it to a future post.

I hope you're all doing alright out there, and...

Go Enjoy Something!
FC

Sunday, October 20, 2019

Survival Sunday 242: More Reviews!

In Which I Nom The Things

Boston was, as I've mentioned, a great trip. It was a much-needed break from the Blanket Fort, and it's always nice to be surrounded by friends. Bringing back a bunch of snax was just icing on the already decadent good-times cake!

Sadly, I don't have images of these last three snacks outside their packaging because my phone ate the pictures (I had slippery fingers while doing a mass-delete and was too dumb to have backed up those images... oops), so you'll just have to deal with my descriptions. Thankfully, with the exception of the mochi, you guys can probably guess what these treats look like - they're very much like the average US equivalents.


First we have tasty Korean Cheetos!

I'm not 100% sure what the flavor on these Cheetos was supposed to be besides awesome and delicious. I saw peppers, a tomato, and some garlic on the bag, which makes sense, because these crunchy little snacks were sweet, garlicky, and had just enough spice to be addictive as heck. As for what they look like... have you ever had a white cheddar version of Cheetos? Or just... cheddar cheese crunch snacks in general? Because they looked like pale Cheetos with maybe a few specks of non-cheese powder.

I could probably eat a pallet of these. They're my favorite Cheetos ever.


A potentially deadly chip...

I've slowly become a spice hound over the years. Yes, my acid reflux has gotten worse. Yes, I'm still a big weenie. But... spicy food is delicious, guys. It's amazing.

These Lay's chips are amazing. They're quite spicy, though it's the kind of spice that creeps up on you. You'll regret shoving a fistful of these tightly-rippled chips into your face within three breaths after swallowing. And it just gets more intense after the first minute. Within ten minutes, however, you're back down to gentle levels of "oh yeah, I ate a spicy thing, didn't I?" so this won't kill you if you're mildly sensitive to spiciness. I think. I mean, sometimes I'll eat a Pad Thai and think it was a little mild, then I'll look over at my mother eating the same thing with tears streaming down her face, so maybe I'm a bad judge of spice levels now?

Regardless, I could eat a lot of these, too.

Of the Lay's we tried, I think my favorite was probably the grilled meat chips we tried in the car on the way home. Sadly, I can still find no evidence of their existence, but if I ever get back to the H-Mart, I'll definitely buy more.

Also, I'll probably get a GoGo Curry Tonkatsu...

Finally, dessert!

I love mochi! Basically, mochi is what happens when you get angry at your rice and beat it mercilessly while kneading it. It's a soft, sweet dough made from glutinous rice rolled in some kind of starch (often potato starch) to keep it from sticking to you. It's about the consistency of a good marshmallow, and I'd say it's got a superior texture, in my opinion. These little mochis are filled with a peanut butter filling, so of course we fell on these like starving monkeys.

Individually wrapped like those big peppermints you can usually find at Staples, these tiny confections maybe didn't look quite like the packaging. Most of the starch had either been knocked off or had absorbed the oils of the peanut butter filling through the mochi making them resemble... uh... uh....

How can I actually visually describe this treat in a way that's appealing?

Ah! There we go!

They kinda looked like a slightly oily cookie dough wrapped around a firm blob of peanut butter! That's how I can describe it!

It's kinda how it tasted, too, which was nice :)

It was lightly sweet, very sticky, with a firm and pasty peanut filling that really satisfied the salty/sweet cravings I'd been having that day. The filling was a little dry, so that was a bit annoying, but I could easily eat a crate of them.

They were also only about the size of a half-dollar, so that's a lot of mochi....


That will do it for the treats I tried!

I hope you guys can get out there and taste-test some tasty treats of your own this week!

Go Enjoy Something,
FC