Josephine is still hooked onto this topic of marriage, despite us regularly trying to steer her in a different direction. She gets into her "wedding dress" (which was actually a "snow fairy" dress to start with) about 2 or 3 times per day. She's now marrying her toy cowboy. :-) Pretty cute though, I must say. She's a darling!
She's doing well at kindergarten. Still plays a lot on her own (perhaps language related) but seems ok nevertheless. Would of course rather stay at home - which she does too :-)
She enjoys Skyping with Gwan and Gwamps. Gets mega hyped there and tries to do all her tricks. Just got to practice avoiding permanent damage to the computer! But she loves to stand on her head for them (and then Gwamps mirrors her! Wow!), chats away, runs to fetch things from the other room. Begs me to buy her tickets to go to England! Wish I could do that right now!!
She took very well to Japan, Tokyo. When we were there, she said she just wanted to go back to Germany to fetch Pippi (her doll) and then we could come back to Tokyo.
She went on one of those pulley-slides for the first time in TOkyo and loved it. Up and down, up and down! She's far more agile now and brave too. Doing basically everything you can think of. Had some people telling me: "Wow, she's an active one!". I privately thought..."yes! But imagine boys!?!" :-) ...Amy!!xxxx
She's also picking up quite a bit of German now. Can understand virtually everything. Speaks more.
Actually a very affectionate friend. Often she goes up to Sophia and just gives her a hug in the middle of playing. And Evie and I too. And she tells me often how much she loves me.
We're the mixed (up) clan who reign from South Africa (but originally from Scotland and Holland) and Germany. My great grandfather and mother and are part of the "Logan" clan. Also got a lot of Afrikaans blood in my veins. My husband, Michael, on the other hand is German...with a strong liking for burgers - the Mac sort. This leaves us with our nickname "McSchmidt"somehow bringing us both under the same umbrella and uniting our heritage. Do our poor kids have any hope with us lot as parents!?!
Monday, 24 May 2010
4-wheel driving
Evie took the keys to her 4x4 car and began crawling on the 13th floor in Tokyo Central. Since then, she's discovered a whole new world! She's now also pulling herself up onto everything and anything.
She has 3 and a half teeth (bottom and top 2 central).
She likes walking with one of us.
She loves dancing and bops her head like a cork whenever a song comes on the radio or if we sing.
She does a lot more belly laughing now.
Still enjoys trying lots of food, but getting more selective
Slurps up spaghetti....till it disappears. Quite fast actually!
I'm pretty convinced she's saying a few words...not clearly pronounced, but "in that direction" and usually the same sound for the same thing.
She has 3 and a half teeth (bottom and top 2 central).
She likes walking with one of us.
She loves dancing and bops her head like a cork whenever a song comes on the radio or if we sing.
She does a lot more belly laughing now.
Still enjoys trying lots of food, but getting more selective
Slurps up spaghetti....till it disappears. Quite fast actually!
I'm pretty convinced she's saying a few words...not clearly pronounced, but "in that direction" and usually the same sound for the same thing.
Tokyo - here we come! (5-14 May 2010)
After weeks of waiting for this trip it finally came and on the last minute all the arrangements fell into place and we found ourselves sitting on a flight via Zurich to Tokyo. All 4 of us. I won't go into the fine details of the flight, as clearly it was sleepless and not as comfortable as one's own sofa...but we made it. Evie who blinks hard, fighting off any temptation of sleep, slept a cool 5 hours (broken up) in the first 36 hours from leaving home. Josephine was really good on the flight, but of course needed movement (much to the annoyance (?) of the stewards and other passengers, but was actually very good under the circumstances.
We got picked up from the airport by a VW employee who whisked us away in a Microbus. He spoke English very well and chatted freely and openly all the way to the hotel which was about an hour's drive. These were my first personal thoughts of Tokyo:
"Oh oh oh. A sea of buildings. Tall ones. On top of each other."
"Where are the trees? Those cherry blossom ones I read about!?!"
"Hot! Sticky!"
"What were we thinking? We're making a mistake..."
We stayed in the "Westin" Hotel which was like an oasis. Spacious, cool, very fancy! We took our things upstairs and immediately went about putting the girls to bed, despite it being 8am or so Tokyo time (5am our time). An hour later I was standing at the door, showered and getting picked up by our relocation agent for the first day of school and house-hunting. Michael stayed with the girls this time.
For the next few days we just did school and house-hunting. Lots of it. We saw 37 apartments and had about 10 school tours. From day 2, we took the girls with us. Josephine ran circles in the houses/apartments we saw and found little nooks and crannys to hide in. She was very cute, but in the same breath it was also difficult to really focus on the place, what it had to offer and the whims of a 3 year old. And she quickly got used to taking off her shoes at the front door on the specially tiled area; slipped into some large slippers and skidded around on wooden floors. On day 4, we found the flat we liked and immediately asked for a reservation. We continued to look at all the remaining flats just to be sure. Regarding schooling, we saw lots of very good and interesting kindergartens/nurseries. Virtually all of them were something we'd have felt comfortable with. The only 3 things which were deciding factors between our top 3 schools were: proximity to house (and work), teaching philosophy, language medium. Of course, we were looking at other criteria too, but actually the schools ticked all of the other boxes, mostly.
Many of the schools were giving proper school lessons to 3 year olds and older. They were actually sitting at the table learning how to write and read! The 4 year olds were already keeping journals. It was "normal" there! I was shocked! On the one hand - impressive! On the other hand I thought "Oh, I just want her to have fun and play and be a little girl!". The language issue lingered in our minds too...she needs to speak German fluently to integrate back into German schools when we get back here.
So finally: We opted for a German International School. And our flat is nice and spacious and modern and in the Setagaya-ku (suburb on the rim of Tokyo central) ie about 20min by car to Michael's work and 20min by car to Josephine's Kindergarten.
So our "leaving impressions" were quite different after having spent some excellent time there with a very professional relocation agent who went the extra mile showing us around:
* despite the 14m inhabitants in Tokyo (42m in Metropol), there is such a calmness about the city. No hooting, no loud music or drilling. A great respect for each other's space, quiet. Even the ambulances have a gentle tone (clear, but not so deafening. Actually far more tolerable to the ear!)
* there are some nice parks! Beautiful botanical gardens - we had a nice picnic in one on the Saturday. Lush vegetation, ponds with koi fish
* Dogs are hot! Plenty of tiny fluffy teddy-bear looking dogs with all kinds of accessories. At some apartments they even have a "paw-washing station" before they may enter. But all are very dog-friendly. Stacks of pet shops too with turtles, lizards, some other odd balls.
* the Japanese are very organised, very structured. But at the same time very open, very friendly
* Evie for president!! She was a big hit there with her red hair. So many many people stopped to say hello, ask how old she was, tickle her toes, stroke her. Very sweet.
* Josephine discovered MacDonalds. Evenings we sometimes crashed after a day out and got ourselves some fruit / pizza / MacD. Oh dear!
* Yep, bowing is the thing to do! Sometimes they take a while to come up again. But one learns this very quickly and it's quite easy to do actually.
* Seaweed is a delicacy. A whole aisle at the grocery store just for that stuff. Otherwise, lots of really good quality fruit, veg. Stacks of fresh fish - yummy!! All very clean.
* Japanese seem very health/cleanliness conscious! Anyone with a cold wears a mask so as not to spread their germs to the others. How thoughtful! Others wear it to reduce hayfever symptoms. Interesting that people don't wear it to avoid breathing in polluted air! I always thought that was the reason.
* Coughing is not cool.
* The city is very clean.
* Those fans and lacey umbrellas are not just decoration. People of all ages use it! And it is necessary. It's hot! Even 17 degrees is hot because of the very high humidity. And apparently in summer it gets up to around 40! Yikes!
* Space is rare commodity and comes at a premium.
* Japanese are very polite. Actually makes one feel more polite too...to fit in!
* Japanese are toilet fanatics. They have perfected the art of toilet-design. And *every* toilet is fitted with seat heating, a variety of spraying functions also with various temperatures (yikes!), gentle flushing immediately when you sit (!), seat coming up and going down automatically so you don't have to touch a thing. My first thought was "wierd! Even embarrassing!". But actually it's just another example of their level of cleanliness.
* taxi doors open automatically so the driver doesn't have to get out and open the door for you. And all their seats are covered in white lace.
* Relatively speaking fewer cars on the road than expected, even in Tokyo central! I was very surprised by this! I was imagining hugh queues, hooting, impatient drivers wanting to make their way through the chaos. But no, it was calm. Reason: little parking available. Excellent public transport.
* We felt an earthquake! Sitting in the botanical gardens, our bottoms took a wobble while sitting on the greeny lawns. Whoa!!! Not too hecitc, but enough to make my eyes huge! Michael thought it was a subway for a moment.
* Lots of children's parks and playgrounds
* Expensive
* Parking: at apartment blocks, the cars are in an automated park garage to save space (it's like those ramps you drive onto at a mechanic who wants to look under your car....)...so you drive on and it places your car on the right floor. Then for exiting the block they've got turn-tables. You drive your car off the ramp, onto the turntable and it turns so that your car is facing the right direction...there's no space to realign your car otherwise!!
*Bicycles on the pavements
* Lots of hills.
* very humid
All in all - we are now amped for our stay there!!
Gotta go! Jozie's horse-riding lesson now! Will update more.
Amidst all this, so thinking and praying for our friends who are going through a tough time with cancer (States and UK).
We got picked up from the airport by a VW employee who whisked us away in a Microbus. He spoke English very well and chatted freely and openly all the way to the hotel which was about an hour's drive. These were my first personal thoughts of Tokyo:
"Oh oh oh. A sea of buildings. Tall ones. On top of each other."
"Where are the trees? Those cherry blossom ones I read about!?!"
"Hot! Sticky!"
"What were we thinking? We're making a mistake..."
We stayed in the "Westin" Hotel which was like an oasis. Spacious, cool, very fancy! We took our things upstairs and immediately went about putting the girls to bed, despite it being 8am or so Tokyo time (5am our time). An hour later I was standing at the door, showered and getting picked up by our relocation agent for the first day of school and house-hunting. Michael stayed with the girls this time.
For the next few days we just did school and house-hunting. Lots of it. We saw 37 apartments and had about 10 school tours. From day 2, we took the girls with us. Josephine ran circles in the houses/apartments we saw and found little nooks and crannys to hide in. She was very cute, but in the same breath it was also difficult to really focus on the place, what it had to offer and the whims of a 3 year old. And she quickly got used to taking off her shoes at the front door on the specially tiled area; slipped into some large slippers and skidded around on wooden floors. On day 4, we found the flat we liked and immediately asked for a reservation. We continued to look at all the remaining flats just to be sure. Regarding schooling, we saw lots of very good and interesting kindergartens/nurseries. Virtually all of them were something we'd have felt comfortable with. The only 3 things which were deciding factors between our top 3 schools were: proximity to house (and work), teaching philosophy, language medium. Of course, we were looking at other criteria too, but actually the schools ticked all of the other boxes, mostly.
Many of the schools were giving proper school lessons to 3 year olds and older. They were actually sitting at the table learning how to write and read! The 4 year olds were already keeping journals. It was "normal" there! I was shocked! On the one hand - impressive! On the other hand I thought "Oh, I just want her to have fun and play and be a little girl!". The language issue lingered in our minds too...she needs to speak German fluently to integrate back into German schools when we get back here.
So finally: We opted for a German International School. And our flat is nice and spacious and modern and in the Setagaya-ku (suburb on the rim of Tokyo central) ie about 20min by car to Michael's work and 20min by car to Josephine's Kindergarten.
So our "leaving impressions" were quite different after having spent some excellent time there with a very professional relocation agent who went the extra mile showing us around:
* despite the 14m inhabitants in Tokyo (42m in Metropol), there is such a calmness about the city. No hooting, no loud music or drilling. A great respect for each other's space, quiet. Even the ambulances have a gentle tone (clear, but not so deafening. Actually far more tolerable to the ear!)
* there are some nice parks! Beautiful botanical gardens - we had a nice picnic in one on the Saturday. Lush vegetation, ponds with koi fish
* Dogs are hot! Plenty of tiny fluffy teddy-bear looking dogs with all kinds of accessories. At some apartments they even have a "paw-washing station" before they may enter. But all are very dog-friendly. Stacks of pet shops too with turtles, lizards, some other odd balls.
* the Japanese are very organised, very structured. But at the same time very open, very friendly
* Evie for president!! She was a big hit there with her red hair. So many many people stopped to say hello, ask how old she was, tickle her toes, stroke her. Very sweet.
* Josephine discovered MacDonalds. Evenings we sometimes crashed after a day out and got ourselves some fruit / pizza / MacD. Oh dear!
* Yep, bowing is the thing to do! Sometimes they take a while to come up again. But one learns this very quickly and it's quite easy to do actually.
* Seaweed is a delicacy. A whole aisle at the grocery store just for that stuff. Otherwise, lots of really good quality fruit, veg. Stacks of fresh fish - yummy!! All very clean.
* Japanese seem very health/cleanliness conscious! Anyone with a cold wears a mask so as not to spread their germs to the others. How thoughtful! Others wear it to reduce hayfever symptoms. Interesting that people don't wear it to avoid breathing in polluted air! I always thought that was the reason.
* Coughing is not cool.
* The city is very clean.
* Those fans and lacey umbrellas are not just decoration. People of all ages use it! And it is necessary. It's hot! Even 17 degrees is hot because of the very high humidity. And apparently in summer it gets up to around 40! Yikes!
* Space is rare commodity and comes at a premium.
* Japanese are very polite. Actually makes one feel more polite too...to fit in!
* Japanese are toilet fanatics. They have perfected the art of toilet-design. And *every* toilet is fitted with seat heating, a variety of spraying functions also with various temperatures (yikes!), gentle flushing immediately when you sit (!), seat coming up and going down automatically so you don't have to touch a thing. My first thought was "wierd! Even embarrassing!". But actually it's just another example of their level of cleanliness.
* taxi doors open automatically so the driver doesn't have to get out and open the door for you. And all their seats are covered in white lace.
* Relatively speaking fewer cars on the road than expected, even in Tokyo central! I was very surprised by this! I was imagining hugh queues, hooting, impatient drivers wanting to make their way through the chaos. But no, it was calm. Reason: little parking available. Excellent public transport.
* We felt an earthquake! Sitting in the botanical gardens, our bottoms took a wobble while sitting on the greeny lawns. Whoa!!! Not too hecitc, but enough to make my eyes huge! Michael thought it was a subway for a moment.
* Lots of children's parks and playgrounds
* Expensive
* Parking: at apartment blocks, the cars are in an automated park garage to save space (it's like those ramps you drive onto at a mechanic who wants to look under your car....)...so you drive on and it places your car on the right floor. Then for exiting the block they've got turn-tables. You drive your car off the ramp, onto the turntable and it turns so that your car is facing the right direction...there's no space to realign your car otherwise!!
*Bicycles on the pavements
* Lots of hills.
* very humid
All in all - we are now amped for our stay there!!
Gotta go! Jozie's horse-riding lesson now! Will update more.
Amidst all this, so thinking and praying for our friends who are going through a tough time with cancer (States and UK).
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Cute saying for the day
Jozie's eyes were watering a bit for whatever reason, and while wiping them dry she looked at me with eyes wide open and said with her little girl voice in all seriousness:
"Mamma that's why my eyes are just sweating. I not cwying. I just sweating in my eyes."
"Mamma that's why my eyes are just sweating. I not cwying. I just sweating in my eyes."
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