Monday, June 28, 2010

English week...

This past week has seen the arrival of 160 British Majors from Shrivenham to Fort Leavenworth (something that happens twice yearly). A few old faces from the past have appeared and new friendships have been forged. It is a little weird to have this English invasion, so soon after leaving Blighties dusty (?wet) soils, but nice all the same. We were invited to a traditional Kansas 'smoke-out'/BBQ on the Brit's first night in town, 2 Americans and about 15 of 'us'! Jeannie, the quilting queen, hosted us beautifully and even the burnt baked beans tasted good. Thursday night saw us lording it up at some cocktail party hosted by the Brits, and then down to the High Noon Saloon, our local drinking establishment, for some local beer and Kareoke! Our bank manager is also the barmaid there! It is a great place from where to people watch, but I was suffering from very sunburnt legs, and when we tumbled out into the street at half ten I was expecting to see some tumbleweed come whisping down the dark alley and some drunk rednecks to pounce on us! We eventually found a taxi and made it home.
Since then the course, for J, has really started. We had an International students Ice Breaker BBQ on Friday night and wandered round with name tags on trying to make friends! From a quick glance the Aussies seem great fun, the Spaniards, the French canadians and the Danes. The Bangladeshis also seemed lovely and I can't remember many of the others, we met most of the African students in one go, all the men, didn't seem to have any wives present. I think it's going to be a fun year getting to know them all better. This seems to be just the beginning of the gettin' to know ya functions!
Sunday was spent with our sponsors at the Kansas Royals v St Louis Cardinals baseball match - the local derby, so to speak, and we won! It was a great experience, our sponsors could not be nicer and we were with her Rotary Club, so were well looked after!
J has gone on a tour of Kansas City with his class mates today and I am home alone... prepping for a barbie for some Brit mates and doing some work!
p.s. Tomato plants coming along nicely, no real tomatoes as yet!

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Yikes! Have been very poor at updating the blog! last time I started to write was a slightly shameful day on the sporting front for England! Though we didn't leave the England/USA match with our heads totally down, a draw is better than a loss... i think, it was pretty embarassing to be a minority group amongst a lot of locals! And there has been little good sporting news since then. I don't really care about football though, am currently listening to a live feed from Wimbledon which is much more exciting! Makes me feel very far from home though.
We have been in Kansas for almost 3 weeks now and last week we had a little escape to Chicago. What an amazing city. An architectural and cultural feast! We dined on Monet and Matisse at the Art Institute and drank in the art deco and post modernist buildings. We managed to fit in a lot of good meals and a baseball match too, at the iconic Wrigley field, home to the Chicago Cubs. I had to get myself a cap (i'm a true fan after all), which no doubt will go down well when i wear it to the Kansas Royals game on Sunday. The drive took nine hours each way which seemed like nothing. We broke it up with a few obligatory stops at road side diners and we even saw some Amish folk.
Back in the epicentre of America now, and happily J still hasn't started work. We joined a whole gang of Brits at a true American 'Smoke out' on Saturday night which was a delicious treat and Jeannie (our hostess) is my key to a future of quilting and teaching!
The tomoatoes are doing well on the deck. The hibiscus, however, has been completely demolished by some nasty racoon and is just a cluster of twigs now. Very sad. On a good note though we have discovered a supermarket selling more than muffin mixes... aspargus and artichokes! Hurray! xx

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Leaving TJMax the other day we were engulfed by extreme, humid, heavy heat and the sky was black. As we headed home the radio was alive with tornado warnings and things were getting a little fruity. Having supper with friends later that night we couldn't decide whether it was the margaritas taking effect or if the sky really had gone green. This is what happens when there is a tornado coming! The air was completely still, no birdsong, nothing... we waited... and waited... and thankfully no tornado came (by this time we had of course forgotten what we were waiting for!).

We have just driven off the forecourt and onto our drive way in our new SUV! Sadly not as big as the rental truck, but I think it will do! We also have a house full of stuff! Our container arrived yesterday and we spent a long time unpacking and trying to find homes for things. Pictures still to be hung and shoes to be stowed into my walk-in-closet, all in good time!

The tomatoes are all nicely potted in and the hibiscus is flowering!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Electric carving knives...?? totally useless or not? I think they must be an American thing. I've never seen one in my life before, but while we are living in an almost empty house, still waiting for our stuff to arrive, it seems that there is an electric carving knife here! We tried carving an upside down roast chicken last night (maybe that was the problem?!) and James almost took his hand off. Today I used the knife without the electric add-on to cut a loaf of bread and it was rather effective. This makes the electric part a little surplus to requirement i think!

Enough rambling. This mornings torrential rain and thunder has passed, still waiting for that tornado..., and it's time to go SUV/truck shoppping and to invest in some tomato plants for the deck!

Monday, June 7, 2010

We've been here almost a week now and I know a little bit more about America and its people than I did a week ago! I know now that it is a country of convenience and plenty; drive-thru ATM's, drive-thru pharmacies, not to mention the many drive-thru eateries! It's great, one rarely has to get out of the car! Water gushes from the taps, shelves are packed full of goodies, it seems they could want for little. The roads are big, cars are even bigger, and as for the people..... Everything seems well looked after; lawns are neatly trimmed, driveways swept, houses tidy and cars/trucks tucked away into the many garages. You seldom see people 'out and about' on the streets, only in convenience stores!

The people we've met so far, from the bank manager to our sponsors, could not have been more friendly. There's always a 'have a nice day', a nod and a smile and when they discover we're English (or think we're Australian!) there's even more excitement!
Today, at Home Depot, I asked a nice man where I could find 'curtain rods' and he didn't have a clue! Not as to where there were, but, what was I asking for??? He could not understand me, i might as well have been speaking Dutch!
Oh, and I've just roasted a chicken upside down! I didn't know it was possible, but it was so big and meaty that it's breats were on both sides!
Welcome to my blog! I am the 'English Girl in Kansas'!



I intend this little blog to be a journal of our time in the US. Though I certainly don't claim to be any kind of comedian/joker/writer or philosopher (of note), I will try to entertain you with a few a stories of our time here! Let's see how it goes...