Saturday, June 22, 2019

Disney Staycation

Hey, Guys...

As promised there are some more Disney Staycation pics at the bottom of this post.

The post is the same, but the pics are NEW!


Good Saturday morning!

As promised, here is the post from my daughter-in-law, Melia, about her Disney Staycation.

Austin and I learned early in our marriage that typical vacations are not our “thing.” As we prepared for our first vacation as husband and wife, I spent the entire day and night before we left planning my outfits, getting our snacks, making sure laundry was done, cleaning our apartment, checking flights, etc. etc. etc. Around 10:00 that night, Austin walked into the bedroom and began packing.

“Do you think 4 pair of underwear will be plenty?”

“Well, we’re going to be gone for about 6 days, so I might get a few more.”

“Okay, well what should I put my toothbrush in?”

“The toothbrush cases are under the counter in the bathroom."

“Right. So, when I am done here, you’re going to check all my things that I leave out and put them in the bag for me, right?”

“Yeah… I won’t be doing that.”

I’ll spare you the details of how the conversation continued from there, but that was when I learned that I am not married to a world traveler. Since then, Austin and I have taken many great trips! Then we had a baby and the overwhelming, organized chaos ensued.

In our parenthood, we have determined that staycations are more our style. We began going on staycations last summer when a full vacation really wasn’t in our budget, and we loved it! This year, I decided to step it up a notch with a Disney-themed staycation. It makes sense really, when you consider how much planning, money, time, effort, and magic it takes to make a Disney vacation happen with a toddler. We opted to create a Disney-like experience for our 2-year-old from the comfort of our home.

Here’s how we did it:

1. The Schedule

I created a schedule based off the activities that were available to us that resembled the overall makeup of four Disney parks (Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom, Hollywood Studios, and Blizzard Beach).

We planned out what we were going to do based on our daily schedule and what worked for us.

In Magic Kingdom, we went to Let’s Play, an indoor gym/play area that has “rides” that our little guy can do. The best part is he can do literally everything in the gym. There are no age or height limits that apply to him!

In Animal Kingdom, we went to the zoo. Our zoo also has Dole Whips, a Carousel, a train, and of course animals/animal-related activities such as giraffe feedings!

In Hollywood Studios, we went to the McWane Center, our local Children’s Museum/Science Center. We played in the Itty Bitty Magic City (which is set up similar to a movie set) and participated in a demonstration about craters on the moon!

In Blizzard Beach, we went to the Cullman Wellness Aquatic Center. For $10 per person a family can spend the day lounging by the pools, going down slides, playing on the playground (which is ON the water), floating down the lazy river, or playing in the splash pad; and that’s JUST the kids’ pool, there is also another outdoor pool and an indoor pool.

2. The Daily Details

After we planned WHAT we were going to do, we planned HOW we were going to do it! Disney is all about the details, right? Each morning, we started our day with Mickey Mouse waffles (thanks, Eggo!), and a surprise letter from a character telling us where we were going with a gift to use during that day. For example, our guy got a stuffed Simba on the day we went to Animal Kingdom.

Each night, we had a movie night that fit the theme for the day. On Blizzard Beach Day, we watched Finding Nemo in Momma and Daddy’s bed.

We also made a point to work in a date night for Mom and Dad. This happened on our Magic Kingdom Day, and yes, it fit into the theme as well! We dropped RT off at his Fairy GRANDmother’s house (Nana B) then headed off to the movie theater to catch a matinee of Aladdin and an Italian dinner (like in Lady and the Tramp)

3. What We’ve Learned

Throughout our staycation experience, we’ve learned a thing or two about how to get away when we aren’t on a getaway.

Plan and prepare those around you - As mean as it sounds, we have to say no to things that aren’t truly family-related. Even though we’re in town, we are still on vacation, so non-family things must fall to the wayside as much as possible.

Be flexible - Staycations should be as relaxing, if not more relaxing, than a normal vacation. Don’t stress, don’t over plan, and, most importantly, listen to your family when they need a break! By Wednesday, our two-year-old told me that he wanted to take a nap. So, we all took a nap!

4. The Breakdown - This was such a fun vacation that really worked for us and was cost effective. Not including food, our week cost us less than $100.

We have McWane Center and Zoo memberships saving us money. Here’s the rest of our budget breakdown:

$8 for Let’s Play
$20 for Cullman Wellness Aquatic Center
$15 for Mickey Ears (found on Amazon)
$7 for Stuffed Simba
$6 for Mr. Potato Head
$20 for Toy Story Puddle Jumper

The important part of a staycation is making it work for you! We worked hard to make our vacation something special for our son and to give him new and different experiences that he doesn’t get during the school year. One day we’ll go to the real Disney World, but for now, we’ll just tell Mickey, “See ya real soon!”

NOTE FROM ENCHANTING BELINDA - We had some trouble getting ALL of the pics ready for the post, so here are the first five. It will be the first of next week before we have all the others ready for your perusal!











Y'all have a great weekend. I'll talk to you next week!

Sincerely,

The Enchanting Belinda

P. S. More Disney Staycation Pics...


Here are a couple from the day they went to "Blizzard Beach"!














Pizza Planet!


The breakfast food.


The snack food.


One night, the movie theater was a fort!

Let me know if any of you have a Disney Staycation. I would love to hear ALL about it!

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Blog Linkage, Coming Up, The Essence of Summer... SIMPLICITY and Mike's Birthday/Father's Day

Good Wednesday afternoon!

Blog Linkage - Take a second and scoot on over to www.thepioneerwoman/confessions.com and read her newest blog post entitled "Fueling Up at Home." I love how she SO intentionally scheduled her time off in the Summer knowing what was going to be really important to her... time with her college kids, time in her favorite place (her home), time to regroup, time to think, time to rest.

It doesn't have to be an entire month...

Or even an entire week...

But to know yourself well enough to plan ahead for that time you will need to just "be."

Ahhh.

Excellent idea.

RANDOMNESS #1 - Coming Up - My daughter-in-law, Melia, planned a Disney Staycation this month with Austin and RT. Being a lover of all things Disney, I asked her if I could share the info and pics with y'all, and she agreed. Check back on the blog this coming Saturday (June 22) for the Disney Staycation Post with guest blogger Melia Faulkner!

NOTE FROM ENCHANTING BELINDA - It is SO good.

RANDOMNESS #2 - The Essence of Summer... SIMPLICITY - When my kids were small, I liked to do things with them that Mike and I enjoyed from our childhood.

Sometimes these activities were met with eyerolls, but more often than not, they enjoyed them, too.

I can think of no better way "to do" Summer with kids than to stick with the simple things...


Making s'mores.










Catching lightning bugs.




Run around in the dark yard with flashlights...

Barefoot, if possible.




Make giant bear caves (forts) on the deck with your cousin.


Color/paint/hide/read in a giant refrigerator box.

Also on my ongoing Summer List...

Puddle Jumping
Drive-In Movies
Eat Outside (deck, picnic blanket, patio, etc.)
Blackberry/Strawberry Picking
Library Summer Reading Program (Also, absolutely anything else the Library offers during June and July.)
Make Foil Campfire Dinners (Let Dad cook them over the fire, please.)
Buy Ice Cream from THE ICE CREAM TRUCK
Hose Pipe Wars
Splash Pad (These appeared after I finished raising my kids, but oh, how fantastic are Splash Pads!)
Take Rainy Walks (with no umbrellas)
Fish (with real worms)

The list could go on and on, but I think re-living some of your Summer memories with your kids or grandkids is an awesome way to spend a season.

I really do!

RANDOMNESS #3 - Mike's Birthday/Father's Day - Mike's Birthday and Father's Day are always close together, so this year we had a combo dinner at Carlton's in Cullman to celebrate. Everyone was able to attend except Miss Roxie who is working in Asheville, North Carolina this Summer. (Another story for another time.)


We had a handprint/footprint/fishing theme going on for Mikie's birthday/Father's Day.


These two are Dads now.

I repeat...

These two are Dads.

NOTE FROM ENCHANTING BELINDA - I love watching kids being parents. Pretty cool.






Eden is just a little fluff of something sweet we like to pass around the dinner table when she wakes up...


And sometimes she gets her dander up a little bit.

We like her either way!


After dinner and gifts, we headed to a little Street Fair a couple of blocks away.



The Car Show was the selling point for RT.

Let's face it. A car is ALWAYS the selling point for RT!

I hope you all have a most wonderful week. Remember the special blog post coming out on Saturday!

Sincerely,

The Enchanting Belinda

"My house looks like I'm losing a game of Jumanji."

How to stay on top of the laundry when you have two or more kids:
(1) You can't.
(2) Get a new dream!

Sunday, June 2, 2019

My Favorite Things RIGHT THIS VERY MINUTE, Nana B Stuff (Toy Hunt), Euna Mae's Double Chocolate Blondies and NEW YORK CITY

Good Sunday evening!

May has come and gone so quickly this year. I didn't find the time to post more than twice during the entire 31 days, but I'm hoping I will be a much better blogger during the month of June.

We'll see!

My Favorite Things RIGHT THIS VERY MINUTE

1. I love a new cookbook called Love Welcome Serve - Recipes That Gather and Give. It is written by Amy Nelson Hannon, and it is all about hospitality...

Which is something I am striving to "do better" in my older age.

I highly recommend it, not only for the great Southern recipes, but also for the tips and secrets to becoming a more hospitable hostess.


2. Roxie told me about these. Aveeno Nourishing Hand Mask gloves are quick, easy and make your hands feel especially lovely.

I would use them every single day (multiple times), but there's that money "thang."


Nana B Stuff

Toy Hunt

RT loves matchbox cars.

Adores them.

One day when I knew he was coming over, I took his box of matchbox cars which I keep at my house, and I hid 30 of them in the hallway and three other rooms.

I didn't hide them in hard-to-find places.

I hid them for a two year-old fellow...

And he was thrilled.

Thrilled, I tell you!

What's that phrase they use when little kids are happy?

"Squeals of delight!"

Yeah.

Definitely had some squeals of delight that afternoon!











Euna Mae's Double Chocolate Blondies

You will need the following ingredients:

2 sticks of unsalted butter, softened at room temperature
1 cup light brown sugar, packed
1/2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 large eggs, room temperature
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup milk chocolate chips
1/2 cup chopped walnuts, optional

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 9" x 13" pan with baking spray.

2. In a medium mixing bowl (preferably with a pour spout), combine the flour, baking soda, sea salt and cinnamon. Whisk together to combine. Set aside.

3. If you're using salted butter, reduce the sea salt by a little to compensate.

4. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the softened butter, packed brown sugar and sugar on low speed at first to incorporate; then cream at high speed for a few minutes. It should be light and fluffy. Scrap down sides as needed.

5. Reduce the speed to low, and add the vanilla and one egg at a time, mixing until combined. With the mixer still on low, add the flour mixture a little at a time. Mix until incorporated. You'll have more of a dough than a batter.

6. Using a heavy wood spoon or utensil, stir in chips and nuts by hand.

7. Spread dough in the prepared baker, and bake in the center of the oven for 29 minutes. No more, no less. Remove from oven and allow to cool at least 10 minutes before cutting into squares.

RANDOMNESS - NEW YORK CITY - That's right. I got on another airplane with The Chick and my cousins, Amy and Monica, and we flew to New York City. (Once again, I was not the least bit nervous, so I'm hoping, hoping, hoping my prior nervousness 31 years ago will continue to be a thing of the past!)

I don't think I've ever been to a new city before that was so familiar...

And that was part of the fun of being there. Seeing all of the things I have been seeing all my life up close and personal.

Wait a minute!

I take that back.

I had the same exact experience the first time I went to Disney, and although New York was fun and interesting and exhausting and so, so, so big...

Disney was, and will forever be, magical.

I guess New York City was, and will forever be, non-stop sensory explosion.

Yeah.

That sounds about right to me.

I'm going to share some pics and captions with you in no particular order of when they happened during our four-day stay.

Please know that is not how they will appear when documented in our 2019 Family Book. In fact, also please know that every minute detail will be listed and discussed ad nauseum for future generations of Faulkners to read... And they will no doubt wonder what on earth was wrong with their Great-Great-Nana-Enchanting-Belinda.

And that's okay, because I won't be around to have to deal with it!

But I digress. Here is our NYC trip in a very long nutshell.


We found these picture ops on our way to Times Square.


Little did I know...

EVERYTHING in NYC is a photo op.










It appears by the blowing hair, we are making significant progress on our double-decker bus tour...


But that would be a little misleading.

I don't know if you have heard or not, but there's a little traffic problem in NYC.


We stayed in a lovely hotel called The Riu in Time Square.


This will always be the perfect Girls' Weekend hotel in my mind.


Not only because the rooms were purple, but also because it was SO cute!


I loved Rockefeller Center.

LOVED IT!


The Summer Garden Cafe' is located where you usually see the ice skating rink in the winter. We ate there before we went to the Top of the Rock one night, and it was delicious and lovely.


Also, going to Top of the Rock at night did not disappoint.

Walking around in a little bit of rain did not disappoint.

And The Empire State Building lit up in the background did not disappoint.

One day we went to The Color Factory Museum in SoHo. It is a very hard place to describe, but I will try.


Simply put, they have free snacks as you go from room to colorful room, activities (art, ball pit, spinning, etc.), tons of photo ops and free Machi Mexican Ice Cream as you enter and wait your turn to go through. (Another hard thing to describe… Machi Mexican Ice Cream. Amy and I liked it… the girls did not care for it.)

The ice cream.

Not the museum. We all liked the museum!







It took a little over an hour to go through, but they do not rush you at all. Also, The Color Factory is a traveling museum and will be leaving NYC in August going who-knows-where. (Probably Birmingham. HA!)


We walked across Brooklyn Bridge, and it was absolutely beautiful.


In the middle of the bridge, we came upon three men and a small crowd of people. Each of the men had one, two or three boa constrictors wrapped around their necks, and people were paying them to have their picture made with them.

We had to pass by them to continue our walk, and with the crowd on the bridge it was a little too close for me. Also, I didn't just "snap" a quick pic, because I didn't want a man with three boa constrictors wrapped around his neck chasing me across the remainder of Brooklyn Bridge for $20.


The walking part of the bridge is divided in half… one-half for pedestrians and one-half for bicycles. They are serious about staying on your side of the line, too.

Amy was almost taken out by a bicycle.

And just so you know, that isn't the opinion of the "exaggerating" Enchanting Belinda.

EVERYONE noticed how close Amy came to becoming a handlebar ornament on a New York bike!

We are fortunate she is still with us.

NOTE FROM ENCHANTING BELINDA - That last sentence may be considered a bit of an exaggeration...

But only a bit.


We did see a Broadway play at The Music Box Theater.


Dear Evan Hansen was wonderful. The music was beautiful and the story was sweet and timely. It wasn't a typical Broadway musical, but we'll always remember it as our first.


After the play, we decided to try New York Pizza and stopped at Pizza Café less than a block away from our Hotel. We each got a huge slice, and since there was no room to sit, we walked to a pink-lit courtyard at our hotel and ate under the NYC stars. (The girls drank Fantas.) It was kinda perfect.

And, yes...

Our hotel had a pink courtyard to go with the purple bedrooms upstairs.

Perfect for girls, girls, girls.


On our last day in The Big Apple, we took the Harbor Cruise. Everyone knows a cruise or tour is only as interesting as the tour guide. We weren’t 100 percent sure of our guy until about five or six minutes in, and then he let his personality out and a good time was had by all.


We saw the Statute of Liberty up close and personal. We saw the NYC Skyline. We saw Governor’s Island AND all three of the main bridges in NYC (Brooklyn, Manhattan and George Washington – BMW). It took about two hours, and by the time we were finished, we were relaxed and we knew where we wanted to have dinner on our last night in the City.

We made 8:15 reservations at a restaurant called Havana Central which we had walked past earlier in the week. There had been live Cuban music and a lot of laughter, and it just looked fun.

Both girls ate mango-glazed salmon (?). I had a vegetarian casserole with sugar cane-coated chicken mixed in (which makes me think it wasn’t really vegetarian). Amy ordered paella. Everything was so good.

There were all kinds of people in the restaurant (young and old), and when the live music started, an older man (perhaps 90-ish) came to the front with an older-not-as-old-as-him woman and they danced (salsa) together. Amy and I weren’t sitting where we could see very well, but the girls had a front-row view. When people in the restaurant gasped, Monica told us the man had dropped, but had come right back up.

This led us to believe he had dropped on purpose.

Then he danced with another lovely older-not-as-old-as-him woman.

Then all three of them were dancing at once.

We did notice his yellow shirt (which had been buttoned almost to the top when everything started), became more and more unbuttoned as the evening progressed.

I will say it was very entertaining and not at all risque'. (Mainly because of him being 90-ish, I think.) We were basically just filled with admiration and a little in awe of his "talent."

We will remember him always, too, I think.

I am going to leave you with our "in order" itinerary of NYC just so you know we did it justice during our four-day stay.

WEDNESDAY

Margarita Grill (Lunch in Time Square after we dropped our bags off at the Hotel until check-in time.)
Times Square
FAO Schwartz Toys
Bryant Park
6th Court Shopping
Dinner at Ellen’s Stardust Café

THURSDAY

Lunch at Authentic NYC Hot Dog Cart
911 Memorial
Dear Evan Hansen
Dinner at Pizza Café
Dessert at Amorino’s (Gelato)

FRIDAY

The Color Factory
Lunch in SoHo at Savore'
Brooklyn Bridge
Dinner at Summer Garden Cafe'
Top of the Rock
Dessert at Magnolia Bakery

SATURDAY

Central Park (Amy and Monica)
The Met (Amy and Monica)
Lunch at Food Kitchen (Roxie)
Harbor Cruise
Statue of Liberty
NYC Gift Shop
Dinner at Havana Central
Times Square for one more visit
Disney Store on Times Square

You will notice on Saturday morning, Amy and Monica and Roxie went a couple of places without me, and I can explain that. I truly can.

You see, when not on the hop-on/hop-off bus, we did an inordinate amount of walking in NYC. So much so, by Saturday morning, I was more than a little weary. (Also, keep in mind I am ten years older than Amy and 35 years older than Monica and Roxie, so Nana needed a little down time on Saturday morning to be able to finish off NYC with a bang on Saturday night.)

It pains me to say it, but once again, it appears that I am old.

However, I will ask you to check with anyone on the trip and ask them if I was whiny or needy during Wednesday, Thursday and/or Friday of the trip.

As per our agreement, and a signed Disclaimer by all three, they should corroborate my story.

If you hear otherwise, I would appreciate you letting me know.

I think it was a great trip. We made once in a lifetime memories, and as far as I can recall, there was nary a disagreement or difference as far as traveling styles.

And we all know that is a rare and wondrous occurrence.

Not unlike seeing a unicorn!

I hope you and yours have a lovely first week of June. I'll be back in a few days with some other pics, stories, recipes, etc. to share.

Take care, and I will talk to you soon.

Sincerely,

The Enchanting Belinda

"Sometimes you might feel like there's no one there for you, but you know who's always there for you? LAUNDRY. Laundry will always be there for you."

"Common sense is like deodorant. The people who need it most never use it."
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