Tag Archive for moving

Six Months on the West Coast

Life Category

It’s been six months since we made the big move from Florida to California. What have I been spending my time doing?

August

Obviously, the big event in August was the actual move: the challenge of finding a place, of getting Elphie out here, the missing home.

We did some exploring: up into the mountains and down to the coast, a quick jaunt to Santa Cruz for dinner, our first trip into the city as California residents rather than tourists. We had a kind stranger take this lovely picture of us and used it on postcards to tell friends about our new address.

By the Golden Gate

September

In September, we started enjoying all the events that the Bay Area has to offer. We went to a Stanford game and I was shocked at their tiny stadium. We saw Fiona Apple in San Jose. We watched an Opera at AT&T Park. We caught Azure Ray in San Francisco (but arrived too late to see Soko). I checked out the Pier 39 seals with my mom and nephew.
With Nephew
We got a sneak preview of the Winchester House’s Fright Night (but saved the house for later). We went to a Salsa Festival in Redwood City one day and heard Alanis Morissette in Golden Gate Park while chilling in a playground with my sister-in-law and nephew the next. I discovered Meetups and rediscovered my love of the library.

October

In October, I ventured into the City on CalTrain to experience some art and attend a book reading by Gretchen Rubin. We went to beautiful Capitola to cheer on some friends doing the Mermaid Triathalon. I got my feet wet in the job marketing with a part time consulting gig. We saw Joshua Radin and A Fine Frenzy in San Francisco and due to a seat mix-up, got moved to the front row. We took a road trip to Huntington Beach to see some good friends and when we got home from that, my best friend was visiting the city so good times were had with her.

November

In November, I reconnected with old co-workers who were in town for the AAMC conference and it was great to see them. A morning doing the Mermaid Run 5K with friends turned into an all day SF outing as we headed to the Red Bull Flugtag afterwards to check out the festivities. My parents came out for Thanksgiving and I hosted dinner for my family. I took my first trip to Muir Woods with them and was awed at the massive trees. On Black Friday, we saw Andrea Bocelli in San Jose and were awed at his talent.

December

December brought the cold to the Bay Area and brought us back to the Winchester House to tour the place. It was actually really sad in a strange way. I also got to attend another NASASocial (previous NASASocial coverage) for the AGU 2012 Conference where I met some great people and attended great panels, including one with James Cameron. After an early morning meetup in the city, I spent the day sightseeing one day, finally finding the famous Painted Ladies.
Painted Ladies
We went to the Fantasy of Lights in Los Gatos, where, after a 45 minute wait to get in, we saw some delightful lights displays. I got to attend another cool event: LinkedIn ConnectYou session at the LinkedIn HQ where I listened to some recruiters talk about what they look for on LinkedIn profiles and got to work with other job seekers and LinkedIn employees sprucing up my profile. I also got a new profile picture taken which you can see on most of my social media sites (and on my About and Resume pages). After that, it was off to England for a lovely Christmas with the in-laws.

January

In January, we managed to snag some of the last tickets to one of Eddie Izzard’s Work In Progress, workshopping material for his upcoming tour. Another ticketing snafu led to us getting moved up to fifth row, center. Ticketing snafus have almost become my friend. We experienced a bit of how the other half lives thanks to my husband’s company’s Holiday Party, held at the swanky Terra Gallery in downtown San Francisco. The place looked wonderful, the food was delicious, and the cake pops for dessert were amazing. On a weekend, we took a trip out to the Blackhawk Automobile Museum in Danville and found one of the most legendary car collections imaginable. My husband was like a kid in a candy store. Who am I kidding? I kinda liked it, too… especially this lovely lavender car:
Perfect Car

Coming Up

The fun that we’ve been having doesn’t end there. On the concerts side, we’re seeing comedy music team Garfunkel and Oates this weekend and I’ve got tickets to The Package Tour to have a girls’ night out with my sister-in-law for July. Spurring on my job search even more are all the amazing concerts that are coming up in the area that I haven’t gotten tickets yet for: Lisa Loeb this month, Kate Nash and Marina and the Diamonds in May and BEYONCE in July. And those are only the ones that I need tickets for like I need air.

In activities, I’m already signed up for the Gladiator Rock N Run in June and want to commit to the Mermaid Triathlon (or at least the Duathlon) soon. There’s also a duathlon in Napa that my husband is thinking of doing with me, but we haven’t committed to that yet, either.

We still have so much to explore: husband hasn’t been to Muir Woods yet. We want to head out to Redwood park near Oakland. And we’ve got to find those trees you can drive through. Friends and family want to visit and I can’t wait to show them around places. I’m making really great progress on the job front, finally getting comfortable “selling” myself and being pushy enough to get my name to the top of the pile, so I know something great will happen there soon.

Slowly but surely we’re finding our places and making new friends. I’m hosting my first brunch soon, something I loved doing in Florida. Sometimes it still doesn’t quite feel like home, but that’s to be expected after living in Gainesville for most of my life. It’s getting there, though. Having family nearby helps, especially when your three year old nephew likes to tell you, out of the blue, that he loves you. The drive up to the city on 280, through gorgeous mountains and past the shock of blue Crystal Springs Reservoir, is always a moment of serenity to me; a feeling that this is right, I belong here, things are going the right direction.

I can’t wait to see what the next six months bring.

30 Things Update: Moving Edition

30 Category

Well! A move from coast to coast helped me cross some things off my 30 Before 31 list, but it’s made a few others a little harder to achieve. Let’s check on my progress.

  1. Swim with manatees
  2. See the Florida Keys

With only two and a half weeks between our England vacation and coastal move, the Florida items fell to the crunch time. My groupon for Manatee Snorkeling is valid until October, though, so I’m hoping I’ll be able to head home for a visit and make it happen before then.

8. Visit enough beaches to finish filling my sand jar

Our trip to Lake Conniston during our vacation gave me the perfect change to fill up my sand jar before packing it up. I may have to empty a little out and find another beach here to fill in, but it’s done and on display in our guest bathroom! Done!

28. Celebrate my 30th birthday in style
29. Say goodbye to Florida

Thanks to Chris’ first day of work being the Monday after my birthday, celebrations were downsized as packing and loading our POD took over. I still had a lovely day, though, with my best friend and her boyfriend coming all the way from North Carolina to spend the weekend in our furniture-less apartment and help us pack and load, and a nice dinner with friends and family. This just means I get to turn 30 again next year, right?

On the saying goodbye front, I did the best I could, though I didn’t get to see everyone I would have liked. I know I’ll never really say goodbye to Florida for good; my parents’ are still there and of course I want to be there when my niece goes to Disney World for the first time. But my days as a Florida resident as done and I think I’m okay with that.

Moving Challenge 2: Elphie, Elphie, Elphie

Elphie Category

As you may know, I have this dog. This really cute dog. Her name is Elphie.

Elphie

Hi, Elphie. Yes, it is adorable that you're eating your puppy's ear.

This adorable dog is also a somewhat anxious dog. Bichons are known for separation anxiety and when she was around two years old, it hit her pretty bad. Like, neighbor telling us that she was barking for an hour at a time, multiple times a day, and that he was concerned that she missed us. Yes, we felt like terrible puppy parents. She went to daycare one day a week, and that sometimes seemed to help. Once we found out about the daytime barking, we sought other solutions. The thundershirt seemed to help a little more. And so did dosing her with rescue remedy.

Also in ways we failed as dog parents, we never really finished her crate training. “Never going in the bedroom” quickly went to “Okay, she can go in the bedroom, but not on the bed” down the slippery slope to “Yeah, she sleeps on our bed almost every night.” It happens. We got her an adorable travel bag when she was little, but she avoided that thing like the plague. She likes her space, whatever. When the move became a Thing That Is Really Happening For Real, we realized that we might have a problem on our hands. How do we get this adorable anxious dog who doesn’t like confined spaces across the country?

A drive cross-country was in the plans for a while, but now I realize that, seriously, five days in a car would stressed her out like no one’s business. I started researching the options for flying. At sixteen pounds, she technically fit within most airline’s in-cabin animal weight limits. But she would be super-cramped in the proper size carrier. I had to choose between two non-ideal options: Put her in a larger, hardsided carrier (that she had taken to hanging out in at home while packing was happening) and check her in temperature-controlled pressurized cargo or cram her into a carrier and take her on board with me. With option one, she’d have more space, but she’d be without me to comfort her and I was afraid she’d whine the whole flight (let alone me being a wreck worrying about her). With option two, she’d be crammed, but with me. But what if she whined and freaked out? What would I do?

I got a couple of kinds of bags from a local store: The Sherpa Delta Branded Medium carrier and the Bergen Large carrier. The Bergen was closer to the airline’s dimensions (still a tad over, but squishable), but was the same design that made Elphie claustrophobic before. The Sherpa was bigger, and not squishable, but Elphie took to it very easily. Unfortunately, after reading some information on DogJaunt I realized that the Sherpa may not fly. And since I was traveling Virgin America to have a non-stop flight, I didn’t want to take the chance she’d be kicked off (they don’t take pets in cargo at all). So I had to make the Bergen work. I put treats in it, put toys in it, left it out and open around the place… everything to make her comfortable with it. I don’t think she ever liked it, but she definitely tolerated it for small periods of time.

When the day came to fly, I hadn’t had her in it as much as I’d wanted to, so I was a little worried. My parents took me to the airport and I had her in the back with me. About an hour away from the airport, I got her into the carrier in the car, with surprising ease, and she just chilled in there for the rest of the ride. I was so relieved. My parents helped me with my bags as I brought Elphie to the counter. One of the counter agents joked that her co-worker was having a bad day and needed a hug and I said “Well, I’ve got a puppy; will petting a dog do?” I opened up the little head part of the carrier and three counter-agents ooh’d and aah’d as I was checked in. I couldn’t get her head back in, so I held onto her, head poking out, as my parents gave me goodbye hugs and I got myself somewhere quieter. I got some food and then took her outside to the Pet Relief Area to try to get her to pee before we passed the point of no return (security). We stopped a couple of times on the way down, but all the newness was too distracting and the same proved true in the animal relief area. And I’d forgotten to bring any pee pads. Oops. After twenty minutes in the heat and no progress, I gave up and fought her back in her case to get to security.

At security, I had to take her out again. All passengers traveling with pets have to have their hands swabbed, but this was all the extra screening I had to have, which was nice. As I gathered up my stuff, one of the TSA officers said that since I had a leash for her, I didn’t have to put her back in until the plane; I could let her walk to the gate. This was the best thing that had happened all day. Elphie was so much more at ease getting to walk around and look at everything happening around her. And she definitely attracted attention, which she was surprisingly chill about. She even let one woman pet her.

Elphie, people watching in the airport

I tried to get her to pee one last time (in the bathroom, using paper towels in lieu of pee pads), but it was a lost cause. I just hoped she could hold it until San Francisco. I struggled to get her back in the carrier, but eventually won the fight and we boarded.

She was amazingly good as I placed her under the seat, and after some adjustment, she settled and didn’t make a peep through the flight. The middle seat was free and the man on the aisle seat was a dog owner himself, so he didn’t mind me putting her up on the seat during flight. I took the opportunity to open up the head part and she just laid down and dozed for most of the flight while I occasionally gave her treats or some ice. I placed her head back in and put her back under during some choppy bits, but let her head out when she got a little fussy later. She wouldn’t let me get it back in for landing, but she was fine otherwise. I waited to deplane last and once I was in the terminal asked if I could let her out, which the gate agent said was fine. We walked along the terminal in San Francisco airport to meet my husband, who was a little shocked to see her out and walking. After a pit stop at the Pet Relief Area (and another ten minutes before she FINALLY went), we were on our way to a comfy bed for the night.

Overall, flying with Elphie was a great experience and much better than I thought it would be. The ticket and gate agents with Virgin America were great, as was the flight crew. One attendant did notice Elphie on the seat and reminded me that, technically, she was supposed to be under the seat, but if the other passenger didn’t mind, it was okay. I don’t think any other passengers even realized that I had a pet with me, as I got a few surprised looks when they were deplaning.

Next time, I would definitely remember pee pads, although fortunately, I didn’t need them. Everything else went pretty smoothly. Flying with a pet caused extra stress, but after seeing how well she took to it, I definitely wouldn’t count her out of future trips.

The Little Things

Etc Category

There are a lot of big things I’ll miss about Florida: the beaches, St. Augustine, the theme parks (as much as I mock tourists), my family, friends, etc. But there are a lot of little things I’ll miss about our strange little corner of the country, as well.

Football Season – I guess this isn’t really a little thing, but the energy in a town like Gainesville (or any other big football town) when the season starts is a thing of wonder.

The Goats - On the road we used to live on, there was a pasture, right between two neighborhoods, where someone had a bunch of goats (and a donkey). It was always a delight to pass by on the way home and see the goats up near the fence.

The Pizza - Somehow, Gainesville became a hub for amazing pizza. From Big Lou’s to Leo’s (University and Millhopper) to Satchel’s to Piesano’s and Blue Highway, every local pizza place was amazingly delicious and unique from the others. Sadly, I only managed to hit up Satchel’s and Leo’s University before I left town.

Downtown – The two years that I worked at The Hipp were my own little mock-big city experience and since then, I’ve never stopped loving the crazy little downtown area. From Harvest Thyme to the cast of downtown locals, to the Gainesville Hippies, and the Wednesday Farmer’s Market, it was the perfect mix of city and country. As hotels move in and the downtown area grows bigger and better, it’ll never lose its place in my heart.

My Places – The places I went to school, the places I worked, lived, the places I got engaged and married at, the places I went to to think or stare at the stars… I’m sure I’ll find new places in California, but they’ll never be my places the way my Gainesville places were.

Moving Challenge 1: Perspectives and Expectations

Etc Category

We knew that we’d have to adjust our perspective a little.

My current twenty minute commute to work (including the 7 minute walk from the garage) would be nothing compared to an hour+ on the CalTrain if I found a job in the city. We knew this. We knew that we were going to have to pay at least double for rent (and we weren’t in a cheap place to start). We knew that we couldn’t do it without relocation. We knew all this.

We knew nothing.

We had no idea how hard it would be to find a place that was pet friendly. I mean, have you seen my dog? Places should pay us to have the privilege of having that much cuteness in residence. We had no idea what the “twice our current rent” estimate would get us… places two steps down from the nice, slightly older, but still nice and somewhat current place we live now. We had no idea that Chris would probably be looking at half an hour in traffic, too… even if we just lived ten miles away from his work. We had no idea that relocation would drop almost in half once taxes were taken out of the bonus. We had no idea how demoralizing something so exciting could be.

The worst part was having to be moral support over the phone as Chris searched, frustrated, three thousand miles away.

But then, there it was… a place that was nice… only one bedroom, but workable. And another place, just as nice, only a little more expensive. And another. Perfect. More space than we needed. For less than other places that were less nice. Pet-friendly, nice area, good feel to the place. It was like finding a unicorn.

We have two bedrooms and a loft. A LOFT. A huge loft for an office/sewing area and a second bedroom to actually have a guest bedroom. To repay all the people who’s couches and guest rooms we’ve crashed on through the years. To give our families a place to stay.

A loft, guys… a LOFT. I am in LOVE with the idea of a loft, I don’t even know why.

I can’t wait to live there.