Saturday, November 27, 2010

A lovely evening in Seattle

After the visit to the Space Needle Nicola took us to a restaurant that overlooked a lovely large bay. I think it was called Shilshole Bay, but I may have that wrong. The restaurant was called Rays and was famous for its seafood. We sat outside, despite the cool temperature, so we could watch the sun set. The waiter kindly bought us some blankets to keep us warm.





Nicola with her clam chowder (and blue blanket)
There was a wedding at the restaurant next door
After dinner Nicola took us to a suburb called Queen Anne Hill, where there was a lookout point at the top of the hill. We braved the cold and went and had a look at the great views of the Seattle city night lights. It was a very posh area and I am sure the locals didn't like all the people driving up and down the hill to look at the lights.
Nicola and I
The Space Needle at night
Hamish and Nicola

Seattle - The Space Needle

When we got back into down town Seattle, after picking Hamish up from the Museum of Flight, we all took the Seattle Center Monorail to the Space Needle. The monorail was okay, until it turned a sharp corner and felt like we were going to fall right off the track. There was entertainment on board in the form of a wedding party.



Unfortunately, I seem to have inherited my Mum's wobbly legs and concern about heights! So I left it to Nicola and Hamish to go up the Space Needle and take these photographs of Seattle.

The Space Needle






The Museum of Flight, Seattle, Washington, US

On the Saturday when we were in Seattle, Nicola had planned to drive Hamish to the Museum of Flight, which was south of downtown Seattle. We went on the I5 again, and Nicola was able to safely navigate us through crazy drivers in huge vehicles, traffic jams and queues, and past the massive Boeing testing airfield to the museum.

Hamish was very excited about being let loose on his own in a flight museum for a few hours. Mr Plane and Train we call him. Not so much of the Automobile (Ref: Steve Martin: Actor).

We arranged for Hamish to text me when he was done, while Nicola and I went back into down town Seattle for a girls catch up, lunch, and some shopping time. I thought Hamish would be at the flight museum for two-three hours max.

Here are some pics from Hamish's visit to the Museum of Flight. He said he took a lunch break between WWI and WWII. As you do.
Fighter planes at the front of the museum - Hawker Harrier on the left
A bomber!
The 'Blackbird' - the fastest plane ever!
The main exhibit hall
A mock version of the Wright brothers plane


A Corsair - the NZ Airforce had these in WWII
A Corsair - side on - Hamish liked its wings
A cool moon buggy
Freaky and frightening!
Each green light represents one aircraft flying over the US
Hamish was able to zoom in on an Air New Zealand aircraft flying into LA
A Concorde
Air Force One - the President's plane - from John Fitzgerald Kennedy (JFK) to Ronald Reagan
President Hamish J Pryce stepped aboard for 10 minutes, to make sure that all was well
Not two, or three, but some five hours later I got a text from Hamish to say he was done and could we go back and pick him up!  No problem, Nicola and I had enjoyed our lunch, we'd had mini facials in the mad Nordstrum department store product demo day and did some price checking in the Macy's sale. All good girly fun. :-)

Friday, November 26, 2010

Our new BBQ

I am conscious that I have not posted anything on my Blog for nearly two weeks now - work deadlines, catching up from a month away stuff, and home and garden stuff have all got in the way of fun Blog stuff, unfortunately. So instead of another 'diary of our holiday' type post, tonight I thought I'd post some pics of our new barbeque.

Our old BBQ is...goodness knows how old. Hamish bought it well before he met me, so that's at least nine years ago. It wasn't "performing", Hamish said, and I thought it was looking more and more like a rust bucket.

Hamish had a Mitre 10 voucher that Nick had kindly sent him for his birthday in August (thanks Nick!), so Hamish decided he wanted to use the voucher towards a new BBQ - probably swayed by Susannah's wonderful cooking on L and Sz's cool BBQ in Vancouver. 

Goodness me...what a range of BBQs there are now - I mean, really, over $3K for a BBQ?! Needless to say, we went for one at the lower end of the price range! Still very cool though and it has an extra rotisserie gadget.

Here is Hamish with our old trusty (rusty) BBQ.

Out with the old
And here is our shiny new BBQ.

In with the new
Of course I will benefit from this new BBQ as well, as all I will have to do for dinner over summer is make a suitable accompanying salad. Hamish is a very good cook and I am sure will relish trying out new BBQ recipes.

Doesn't Hamish look happy??!!

Saturday, November 13, 2010

A busy afternoon in Seattle

In the afternoon we went into downtown Seattle city central, with Nicola driving on the I-5 (the Interstate-5), which is the main interstate highway on the US west coast that runs from Canada to Mexico. What a huge, crazy, fast, busy highway - Nicola had obviously driven on the I-5 a lot and got us from A to B very easily. I was extremely pleased that Hamish or I were not driving!

Once in downtown Seattle, we went and booked ourselves on the Underground Tour, which was a walk (with humour) through subterranean storefronts and sidewalks that were entombed when Seattle rebuilt on top of itself after the Great Fire of 1889.








Pioneer Square
 


We then went and had a look around Pike Place Market, which was had lots of fish and huge crabs and other seafood on display. The market was about to close, so there were lots of special deals on the fresh cut flowers. Really beautiful displays of flowers...and chillis.






Across the road from Pike's Market was the first ever Starbucks, which had a barber shop quartet singing outside.



For dinner, Nicola took us to this really lovely Italian-American restaurant called 'The Pink Door', which we would never have found on our own, as it had no signage whatsoever outside, just a pink door in an alley! We were brave and despite the cool temperature, sat outside - The Pink Door had funky coloured tablecloths and excellent meals. I had a delicious cioppono - an Italian seafood soup. I would definitely go back to place Pink again, for a special meal in Seattle.

Nicola and I



Hamish and Nicola

Interesting statue on the  building next to the Pink Door