Author Archives: wandermom

About wandermom

". . .life is short and the world is wide" - Simon Raven I'm not sure I've ever consciously planned a trip based on this sentiment, but it definitely influences my subconscious! I've been traveling as frequently and widely as possible since I finished school. And I love it. I love the research, the planning, the fervent packing and the curiosity of exploring somewhere I've never been before. My husband & I are both Irish - as in born-in-Ireland. But we live in Seattle. We have two boys: wild, boisterous, regular boys. So, since becoming a Mom, I've been a WanderMom. Given our slightly-unusual family situation, routine "visits-to-Grandma" are international trips requiring passports, 10hr-flights and (oh joy!) airport transfers. I have rants, raves and opinions about how, where & why to travel with kids (start them as young as you can, I say!). I hope to learn even more by researching topics which other wandermoms may be interested in reading about on this blog. Passports, pacifiers, diapers and gameboys at the ready - off we go! Contact Info: Email Michelle: michelle (at) murphnduff (dot) org

antakya-turkey-street-view-3

Street Scenes from Antakya Turkey

antakya-turkey-street-view-2

It seems that every morning this week I’ve woken to NPR reporting on the current dreadful situation in Syria. Each report has ended with the reporter signing off, “from Antakya, Turkey” and each time I’ve heard that I’ve been able to picture this pretty Turkish city in my mind since we spent three wonderful days there just a year ago. I thought that if I shared my photos of Antakya then you too would be able to picture what Deborah Amos is seeing as she writes her reports about Syria.

antakya-turkey-street-view-1

This street is in the very center of Antakya. It is a pedestrian street lined with restaurants, coffee shops and stores. I wonder if the NPR reporter was sitting right here when she filed this sad story about the harsh human cost of the fighting in Syria.

antakya-turkey-street-view-3

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Turkey]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Eldoret Kenya Gynocare Center

At the Gynocare Center in Eldoret Kenya

Eldoret Kenya Gynocare Center

I wasn’t planning to put up a Photo Friday post today, but then I got this photo in my email from my friend Barb, who’s currently in Eldoret, Kenya with her 15-year-old son and fellow board members of Seattle-based One By One. In her mail, she says: “We spent the day at Gynocare meeting with the staff, touring the facilities, and talking with patients. It is overwhelming”. I understand that she found it overwhelming but I really want to know how her son found it? Spending a day at a women’s clinic would be challenging for most men I know. What does it feel like for a 15-year-old? In a rural Kenyan clinic no less?

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Kenya]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Eldoret Kenya Gracemont Guest House

First Impressions of Eldoret Kenya

Eldoret Kenya Gracemont Guest House
Today’s guest post is by my friend Barbara who is currently on her first trip to Africa. She is traveling with her teenage son and fellow board members of Seattle based NGO One By One, working to end fistula.

Our group is made up of three board members, three staff and four family members. We arrived this morning in Eldoret, Kenya via a 30 minute flight from Nairobi. It’s hard to believe we’re in Africa so effortlessly.

My first impression is that are so many Americans working here – since our arrival two hours ago, we’ve already met a woman visiting her grandparents who run a clinic started 20 years ago by Indiana University, and a nurse practitioner (with her husband and adorable 10 month old) who is working at a clinic in rural Western Kenya to bring better healthcare to women, including early detection for cervical cancer.

The local paper I read on the plane had an article on the early rate of sexual activity in girls in the region. It is heartening to see this openly discussed, as it is seeing people here to work on bringing better healthcare to women.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Zambia]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
chengdu-street-exercise-equipment.jpg

Top 5 Ways My Family Benefited from a Summer of Outdoor Play

Today’s guest post is from KaBOOM!, in support of their 2012 Summer Playground Challenge. As a mom of two very active boys I spent hours of my life in the many playgrounds in my neighborhood when those kids were younger. Given that there was no playground in the town that I grew up in, I often wondered how my Mom and other Moms who don’t have playgrounds nearby survive.

As the national nonprofit KaBOOM! kicks off its 2012 Summer Playground Challenge — which challenges
families to explore as many playgrounds as you can this summer and offers prizes for your playground
visits — past Challenge participant Sarah Brown shares what she and her family gained from a summer
full of outdoor play.

1. I think the biggest joy of last summer came from watching my children’s relationships with each
other grow. I watched age differences slip away as they played chase, made up games, and
lent a helping hand to a younger sibling.
Suddenly, the barrier of age or ability had no bearings
among the tree limbs and monkey bars. This character development carried over into their daily
life at home and they were always eager to retell stories of their adventures over dinner each
night. Families that play together have more fun!

2. Because we feel outdoor play and time spent in nature is so important, it was a lot of fun to find
various new places to go. Everyone enjoyed locating new parks, playspaces, nature preserves
and even State Parks to visit.
We learned being in a city can be quite different from rural areas,
but there are still plenty of play places to visit.

3. It was so nice watching their reactions to parks in different areas of our town and how they
noticed the conditions of or amount of equipment (and lack thereof) at others.
Their eyes were
opened to our community needs and the children who should be provided with a safe place to
play.

4. Their natural curiosity about the world around them was heightened. Instead of passing along
an area unfamiliar and hitting the swings, I watched all of the kids gravitate to a new apparatus
or area of the park.
They wanted a space for free thinking adventure and fortunately, some of
our visits provided just that.

5. I found the more opportunities provided to my children to be outdoors, with place and space
to roam and PLAY the more they CRAVED it!! It became a nightly ritual to talk about what
new adventures lay ahead and if something like a rainy day prevented playground play, they
would be so disappointed and frustrated.
You see they were not satisfied with video games or
indoor activities, after a short time of making the effort to provide them with what I feel is a
child’s natural outlet of PLAY, they wanted it and more of it, and I think that is how children are
designed and loved every second of the transformation!

We look forward to expanding our horizons this summer in other parks, playgrounds and play spaces.
We also look forward to serving our community through park cleanup efforts and of course enjoy adding
to the KaBOOM! Map of Play so others can easily find places to get outdoors and PLAY!

Get motivated to visit more playgrounds with your kids this summer by joining the 2012 Playground
Challenge!
The three top Challengers will win a trip for two to DC and all participants can win great
prizes throughout the summer.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
iraq-travel-sulaymaniah-city-view

City View Sulaymaniah Iraq

iraq-travel-sulaymaniah-city-view

A photo of the city view of Sulaymaniah, Iraq – the location of yesterday’s musings on being inappropriately dressed in Iraq.

Head on over to DeliciousBaby for more travel-themed Friday photo fun.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Iraq numberposts=-1]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email

Inappropriately Dressed in Iraq

We arrived in Al Sulaymaniah in the mid-afternoon. Guess what? It was hot. Dry desert hot with the sun burning down in a way that makes a body want to find even a tiny piece of shade and hide until after sunset.

I was still dressed for Iran (i.e. covered from wrists to ankles). I Could Not Wait to get myself into a shower and change into proper, lighter, shorter, summer clothes – the things that had been stuffed in the bottom of my backpack during the whole time we’d been in Iran.

We’d met a local family at the Iran-Iraq border crossing. The Dad had recommended a hotel in Sulaymaniah – he knew the owners. With no guidebook, no internet and an eye on safety we just went with that recommendation even though when we checked in we learned that the price was more than a couple of notches above our usual basic backpacker level. But, the premium bought us a standard Western business hotel with (oh joy!) hot American-style power-showers.

I came back downstairs to wait for my husband and boys in the lobby – this woman is usually first ready in our family. The lobby was empty except for the desk staff, me and the furniture: two long leather sofas and a bunch of easy chairs around a glass coffee table. I settled on one end of a sofa, my flip-flop dangling on the end of a short-skirted bare leg and my arms, neck and shoulders ready for sun in a simple black tank (looking just like this, but without the boat or the ocean).

I turned my head at the whoosh of the hotel’s automatic door. What happened next was a study in cross-cultural impressions and similarities.

A group of about eight men, all tall, had just got out of a pair of imposing black SUVs and were filing into the hotel lobby.
“Gulf Arabs”, I thought, based on their dress. It was an easy guess since the dress style is fairly unique: a long-sleeved, full-length white dress (called a Thoub) and a checked headscarf (called a Shumag). When I was in college we referred to those as “Yassir Arafat scarves”. Gosh, that was so long ago now. I slipped into a little reverie about my college days, smiling to myself about being young, foolish and too broke to eat regularly but always able to find money for a pint of Guinness if the crew was heading to a bar.

White dresses lined up on the sofa opposite me. Politely, I pulled in my legs and made myself smaller on my sofa, assuming that the group would spill around the coffee table by the time they’d all checked in. They seemed to be moving as a group.
Another one successfully checked in and he perched himself on the side of the already-full sofa.
The lucky (or unlucky) next guy took one of the end armchairs.
Now this was interesting. Not one of them wanted to be the first to share my sofa. There was a pair of particularly bushy eyebrows sending disapproving looks my way. I wondered which was more offensive: bare head, bare legs or bare shoulders?
“Oh well. Your baggage, not mine.” I thought and relaxed back still waiting for my boys to show.

The elevator pinged and BigB came running over: “You look like yourself again”.
This kid had really had a hard time with me in Islamic dress. I am stern to start with. With a headscarf, all the soft edges were gone and being all wrapped up in such hot weather made me grumpy to boot. His three-week living nightmare of traveling with my cruel stepmother alter ego was visibly over.
“Yes, and now we can do this again too.” CAM reached over and mussed up my hair.
I batted him away like my favorite pesky fly. You’d have to have been blind to miss the affection in all of this.
“Let’s go.”

I stood up, almost expecting to hear gasps of derision from the audience on the other sofa. I just had to take a surreptitious peak to see how they were reacting.

I might have been imagining it but I swear that the bushy eyebrows seemed less forbidding. It appeared that my boys had taken center stage and their universal boy-energy and tomfoolery was appreciated. There were smiles beneath some of the Shumags.

Well now. Maybe being a Mom made me less of a jezebel.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
ireland-with-children-connemara-clifden-main-street

A Windy Stop in Clifden Connemara Ireland

ireland-with-children-connemara-clifden-main-street

On a wet and windy April afternoon we stopped in Clifden, Co. Galway for lunch. It was so wet it was foggy. CAM joked that “the fog wasn’t really fog, it was because in Ireland the rain clouds are so heavy they’re almost on the ground”.
But getting a little wet in the rain has never deterred us from taking a walk especially when a good leg-stretch will blow out mental cobwebs gathered from sitting in the car all the way from Dublin. We took a walk down towards the harbor, on a path that was signposted “Sli na Slainte” – that’s Gaelic for “healthy walk”.

ireland-with-children-connemara-clifden-bay-view

At the bottom of the hill, I got this great shot looking back across the bay at the town.

ireland-with-children-connemara-clifden-windy-walk

The wind had picked up even more as we made our way back to our car. My kids stood, feet planted wide apart, trying to see if the wind could blow them down or at least blow off a jacket.

Head on over to DeliciousBaby for more travel-themed Friday photo fun.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Information on traveling to Ireland with kids.

Related Posts

[catlist tags=Ireland]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
ireland-with-children-avoca-mills-wicklow

Ireland with Children: Reasons to Visit Ireland in 2012

ireland-with-children-scenery-wicklow

I’m Irish so naturally Ireland is always going to be near the top of my list of places to recommend for family travel but right now is a particularly good time to visit and here’s why…

Legacies of the Celtic Tiger Boom
Dublin Airport’s new Terminal 2 opened in November 2010. It is, as BigB said “Very fancy, futuristic even.” And it is. All shining glass and steel with wide open spaces and lots of great light its a tremendous improvement to the airport. For me, having a smooth and fairly pleasant experience just getting in and out of the country help set a good tone for our visit.

Infrastructure in Ireland has improved vastly over the past fifteen years. It’s easier to get from the airport out into the country and now there are motorways linking Dublin with other major cities (Belfast, Cork and Galway).

Motorway tolls are automatic. You may think this is trivial bu if you’ve ever had to sit in the waiting line for the toll plaza on the M50 (Dublin’s ring road) with an infant screaming in the back of your car you’d understand why, to me, this is a huge improvement.

There are new family-friendly tourist attractions such as the Sea Life Aquarium in Bray and Dublin’s Children’s Museum. Around the country historic sites such as the passage graves at Newgrange have improved visitor facilities with cafes and informative displays so that you can get more out of your visit.

ireland-with-children-avoca-mills-wicklow

Indirect Legacies
The wealth years have left Ireland with a many great new hotels and resorts and the whole country looks as if it’s been spruced up. Freshly painted and newly whitewashed main streets in pretty villages up and down the country look even more charming.

Side-Effects of the Crash
On our recents visits to Ireland my husband has commented on how surprising it is that the country doesn’t appear more dreary – given the extreme economic deceleration that’s happened. That said, on our last visit (April 2012) we did notice that restaurant food prices appear to be falling which is a nice bonus for visitors: a hearty and filling cooked breakfast for 5 euros anyone?

While driving in Ireland we heard a radio interview with the head of IDA Ireland. This development authority is busy at work trying to bring international investors back to the Emerald Isle. Indeed, during the interview, he says that they have had some “encouraging discussions” driven by falling local labor costs and an educated, English-speaking workforce.

This is another reason why now is an excellent time to visit Ireland. If the IDA is successful, increased employment will create upward pressure on prices. If they are not successful, sadly, there won’t be enough money available for maintenance of those new roads, buildings and tourist facilities.

Right now is a sweet spot for any tourist who’s ever had a hankering to see if that fabled Irish Cead Mile Failte (a hundred thousand welcomes) is real or not.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Information on traveling to Ireland with kids.

Related Posts

[catlist tags=Ireland]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Zambia-Child-Reading

More Than A Library

“A library is an optional extra.”
So said my husband last year during the Passports with Purpose fundraiser. I didn’t have a meaningful come-back.
When I was growing up there were some books in my house but not many and certainly not a lot of extra money to feed my bookworm habits. Our Saturday morning visits to the local library were the high point of my week. I know he used his local library too. There was a library at my elementary school and a pretty big one at my high school – I bet his was the same.

Even with that, I had to concede that he had a point. Maybe the Passports crew had deviated from our goal to fund basic needs projects by partnering with Room to Read.

Of course this conversation was in my head when I met with the Room to Read team in Lusaka, Zambia.
Of course I thought of it when we visited one of the libraries funded by Passports with Purpose at Chilileka Basic School out side Lusaka (read my co-travelers stories about this visit on DeliciousBaby or WanderlustAndLipstick).

But really, I couldn’t wait to get home to talk to Murph about the experience. Sure, there was an aspect of pointing out how right we were to support this project (“Ahem, I was right honey”) but also I wanted to share with him – and you – what I learned during my visit.

The library we funded is so much more than “just” a library it is also a literacy and literacy education program for the teachers, children and parents associated with this school. Room to Read trains the teachers and a parent representative on how to manage the library and how to catalog books and operate a check-out system. The program funds a literacy teacher who integrates library time into the school day for all children. The kids can come to school early or stay late just to read.

The odds are completely stacked against children in rural Zambia getting even a basic education. Many (20%) do not have access to a school. The only words available to them to read are the ones the teacher writes on the board during the short school day. Only 7% of children attend high school and even if there is a high school spot available and if their parents can afford the fees the children need to test in. As one of the Room to Read staff told us “How can they pass the test when they can’t read?”

I realize now that I have been completely surrounded by books and reading material for my whole life. Sure, maybe I didn’t get the latest Harry Potter equivalent when I wanted it when I was a kid but there were ALWAYS books, magazines and newspapers for me to read. I did not understand what it means to grow up with zero reading material until I went to Zambia. I did not understand how literacy functions as a foundational element of learning. If a child can’t read, he can’t learn, it’s that simple.

My trip to Zambia to visit the libraries built by Passports with Purpose in 2011 is sponsored by Expedia.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Zambia numberposts=-1]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Zambia-Mazabuka-HIV-Sign

A School Playground Sign in Zambia

zambia-mazabuka-high-school

Zambia-Mazabuka-HIV-Sign

I have two sons: one 12, one 16. If I had the time I’m sure I could write for a day on the differences between life for a tween/teen in Zambia versus the life my children are lucky to live in Seattle. Instead of all those words, the top picture, of a playground sign in an all-boys secondary (middle + high) school in Mazabuka, Zambia is a powerful reminder that teenage risks in Zambia can carry a significantly higher cost.

Head on over to DeliciousBaby for more travel-themed Friday photo fun.

My trip to Zambia to visit the libraries built by Passports with Purpose in 2011 is sponsored by Expedia.

Like what you’ve read and interested in reading more? Subscribe to the WanderMom rss feed, follow me on Twitter or become a fan on Facebook.

Related Posts
[catlist tags=Zambia numberposts=-1]

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Google Plus
  • StumbleUpon
  • LinkedIn
  • Email