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Winter Feet
Everyday Adventures

When Good Feet Go Bad

I‘ve been thinking about feet again.  I don’t know why I seem to have a feet thing lately, it’s just one of those things.  First, it was taking the sparkly shoes for a walk.  Now, I’m thinking about what happens to feet over time.  This all popped into my head last week when I took the photo above of the Little Monkey’s feet.  Something about the light and well, his feet.

I’ve had a thing about his feet from the very beginning.  What is it about little baby feet that makes them just so darn cute? I could kiss and squeeze his little feet all day long.  They’re just so perfect and soft.  The sweetest little things ever.

Baby Feet

But where do feet go so wrong?  Can you think of a single adult in your life whose feet make you say to yourself “wow, those are the cutest most amazing things ever?”  “I need to kiss these more often.”  I didn’t think so.  Feet have it tough don’t they?  We treat them horribly and shove them into unnatural positions.  And they end up rough and callused and usually pretty darn ugly.

Oh, but they start out with such promise.  Don’t we all?

I Like Snow
Everyday Adventures

Snowy Day

Saturday night brought our first snow of winter. The snowfall began early in the evening but most of its powdery goodness didn’t materialize until well after the Little Monkey had gone to bed. So I was actually giddy with excitement about showing him the snow in the morning and then taking him out to play in it.  He’s been in snow before but I thought this would be the first time he’d really get it.

Much to my dismay, he woke up so early this morning it was still dark when we got up and went downstairs.  This gave me plenty of time to fill my head with coffee before gearing up to go out in the cold.  And, it gave him time to just look out the window in amazement.

Once we got all bundled up, a process slightly less painful than that of Randy in “A Christmas Story“, we ventured out.  The snow was, well, a disappointment.  Not the nice fluffy stuff but the really wet slushy stuff and really not a ton of it, just an inch or two.  But, it was still enough for us to dig around in with a shovel making nothing in particular.

Because the snow was so slushy, we did manage to play around making lots of footprints and handprints.

And there’s nothing like cold wet fingers to make you want to come inside.  So we came back in leaving our snow-covered wellies by the door and then I made us some hot chocolate to warm up.

Bus Stop
Everyday Adventures

Riding the Bus Update

A couple of weeks ago, I challenged myself to learn to ride the bus.  It’s not like this was a Herculean task, but it was outside the norm and my comfort zone.  Driving the car into town, well that’s just how I rolled.  The American in me just doesn’t feel quite right without getting behind the wheel of a car to get where I need to go.  But it’s become such a pain in the neck to get into Oxford with the traffic and the parking fees that I thought I’d finally give the bus a chance.  I mean, there is a bus stop literally in front of my house which I have yet to use in the two and a half years I’ve lived there.  Plus, it’s the least I can do for the environment, right?

Well, I’m happy to report that I have so far ridden the bus not once but TWICE into Oxford City center.  And, no one died.  I figured out the schedule (well, I did go out front and take a photo of it a couple of days earlier), spoke to the bus driver and gave him money, and made it home.  I hung out in the comfort of my home until the last-minute and then headed out, waiting the least amount of time at the stop.  Hey, it’s winter and it’s cold.  And for a mere fraction of what it would have cost to park my car, I got a round trip bus fare.  The bus even drops me further into the city than the car park so I’m closer to where I want to go.

On my second bus trip, the Little Monkey joined me for what would be his first bus ride.  And, man he could not have been more excited.

At the Bus StopFirst Bus Ride

I took him to the Ashmolean, where we had lunch in the café and he ran around saying “oooo” a lot as we toured the ancient artifacts. He was slightly confused by the mummy collection.  How do you explain to a two-year old the difference between a mummy and a mummy?

Lunch for a King
The Ashmolean

And in the museum, what was he most interested in? When we were going to ride the bus again. “Ride bus again, ride bus again” was the refrain.  His face looked like this when we left to ride the bus again.

Are We Getting Back on the Bus?

My biggest challenge on the way home was to keep him from pressing the stop button before we got to our stop.  I’m sure there are some bus etiquette rules somewhere that say thou shalt not confuse the driver and annoy the other passengers by pressing the button for every stop.

Are We Getting Back on the Bus?

And as we watched the bus pull away, I knew it was a good journey, one that the Little Monkey thoroughly enjoyed.  One that we would do again.

Hip Shot of the Bus

London Double Decker Bus
Everyday Adventures

My January Challenge: Start Riding the Bus

Chalk it up to the fact that I’m American, but I don’t get the bus.

Now, I don’t have anything against public transport.  In fact, I’ll ride the subway / tube / metro anywhere.  London, Paris, New York, Chicago, I’ve explored them all using the underground trains.  The tube makes sense to me as a way to get around, especially in a big city.  You avoid the snarling traffic in the streets above.  I understand the maps and codes of the underground, when to get on and off.  If you dropped me off in a subway station in most cities, I’d feel confident enough to find my way from point A to point B.  And, before I became a stay a home mum, I spent a year commuting by train and tube into London.  The train is comfortable and familiar.  But the bus?  Not so much.  The complexity of its timetables and stops, it’s like hieroglyphics.

Maybe it’s a function of my childhood.  Where I grew up, the bus wasn’t simply a way to get around, it was a measure of socio-economic status.  You didn’t ride the bus as an efficient means of getting around town.  You rode it because you were too poor to own a car.  And the bus line typically doesn’t extend out of the inner cities and into the suburbs where most of middle class America lives and works.  The vast expanse of America necessitates the car as a primary means of transport.

Europeans, however, are happy to accept public transport, bus and train, as their primary means of getting around.  Riding the bus is normal, it’s efficient, it’s accessible.  I now know people who don’t own cars and who use the bus exclusively to get where the need to go.  The only people I’ve ever known in America to use the bus are friends I’ve had in the big cities, places like New York and Chicago.  They live in the middle of the city and they don’t own a car because it’s too expensive to park.  But outside of those dense urban landscapes, I don’t think I know a soul who uses the bus.

So maybe it’s a culture thing or maybe it’s just my control issues but for whatever reason, taking the bus has been outside of my comfort zone.  If I’m going to brave the traffic on the surface streets, I might as well drive myself.  It will take less time than figuring out the timetable for the bus.

But, I’ve decided it’s time to break out of my comfort zone.  I’m not saying I’m going to start taking the bus everywhere because, well, that’s just not going to happen.  I didn’t go through the pain of getting a UK driving license for nothing.  But, very specifically, I’ll start taking it into Oxford.

Oxford, the charming city steeped in history, has one big flaw.  It really, really hates cars.  Oxford seems on a mission to make it as difficult as possible to navigate its historic streets by car.  With a maze of one way and restricted streets, extortionate parking fees, and traffic jams no city of this diminutive size should ever have, Oxford sends a clear message to anyone behind the wheel of a car, Keep Out.  We live just a couple of miles outside the city center, a drive that at 7 AM in the morning, when there is no traffic, takes me about 5 minutes.  More often, the road into the city center is choked with traffic.  This two-mile journey has, on occasion, taken me 45 minutes to complete.  Now, I know you’re thinking the bus won’t help me with this.  But, there is in fact a bus lane which allows buses to navigate the queue of traffic with ease.

There are great things to do in Oxford, places like the Oxford University Museum of Natural History and the Ashmolean, good outings for me and the Little Monkey.  But I tend to do other things instead just to avoid going into the city.  I would do these more often if it weren’t such a hassle.

So, as there is bus stop more or less in front of my house(!), I’m going to give the bus a chance.  Plus, the last time we were in Oxford, the Little Monkey expressed an interest in riding the bus.  Given his obsession with modes of transport it’s only fair of me to give him that experience.

Stay tuned for more on our adventures riding bus.