All posts by aliciajfrank

Hi! I'm the mother of the two kick-ass children featured in these pages. I traveled a lot when I was younger, but then real life kicked in with grad school and career, etc. I wanted my kids to experience more of the world than their little corner of New Hampshire, so - here we go!

Mom Won’t Let me Do This Again Until I’m 29

We are at a beach town in Thailand, with beaches and cliffs that are as beautiful as they are pristine. But instead of just enjoying the beach, I did something that I never did before; I went rock climbing. I liked it so much, I did it twice. I really liked it because it’s a good physical challenge. climbed on this cliff overlooking the ocean, and it could tower over the tallest tsunami, could dwarf the Burj Khalifa, nay EVEREST!!!The tallest climb that I did was about 90 feet, and another that was 80, but most of them at least 60 feet. The first couple ones were easy, lots of good handholds, but then my guide Sarut started giving me more difficult ones. There was one that I really liked, with a giant stalactite that I climbed around, and then I climbed up into an area with a couple bushes growing on the side of the cliff. There was another where I climbed over an overhang, and then one with handholds just big enough for my fingertips.

The one that was 80 feet tall was much harder than the 90-foot one. It was my fifth climb of the day and halfway up, exhaustion set in. I got so tired, I could barely hold on any longer, and told my belayer, Sarut, that I wanted to give up. He asked me if I was sure, and then I said no. He gave me a boost by pulling the rope, and it helped me get to a place with better handholds. About ten feet from the top, I felt like I was going to be , and again told him that I wanted to give up. He asked if I was sure, and again I told him no. He gave me another tug, and then I started climbing again until I reached the top. The view was breathtaking, although I couldn’t look down, out of fear of my glasses falling, or me seeing how high up I actually was!

Our Day to Day Life in Australia

For our second leg of the trip, we went to Australia for about two months. We lived in Waverton, in North Sydney, and I loved it there. It definitely wasn’t as adventurous Costa Rica, because we didn’t travel as much and didn’t do as many adventures. Also, we spoke the language and it was clean. In Australia, it was a lot about day-to-day life and schoolwork.

We lived with a woman named Beth, mum’s friend from college. Beth lived with us in Costa Rica for a month, so we knew her pretty well. She had a one-room apartment, so my brother and I slept on a spare mattress and on the couch. Beth’s apartment was so close to the train, all you had to do was cross street. We also lived very close to the Sydney Opera house, which was only four stops on the train away! There was no big supermarket near Beth’s apartment, so we ordered food off a website called Woolworths. Once or twice a week, a man would come by with the food we ordered and bring it right into our apartment. All the food was very fresh and tasty. The apartment building also had a pool and Xander and I used Beth’s spoons as dive toys.

On a typical day, I would wake up around 7:30, courtesy of mum, and make some breakfast. Because we had so much fresh fruit from Woolworths, we tried to eat healthy. We would eat, get dressed, and then I would brush my teeth and get ready to work for the day. We loved our neighborhood library, which was about a 20-minute walk away and had an outdoor café when we wanted a break. It had amazing free WiFi, and it was easy to talk to our teachers there because there were lots of private spaces. I would normally get a drink at the cafe in the library, and then work for two or three hours. We didn’t always go to the local library, though. Sometimes we would take the metro and be at the stop nearest the big State Library in about 10 minutes. On the way to the state library there was a cute little store called Daiso, which was a discount store filled with a ton of adorable items imported from Japan. The reason the State Library is so cool was because it has a room where you have to be quiet that had stained glass windows and two stories of books surrounding the tables that people were working at. We sometimes also worked at little local cafes a couple of times, there was one right next to our apartment building that was an outdoor café with multiple levels.

Out of all the places, our favorite was the local library. We walked there together every morning and then Xander and I would usually walk back to Beth’s apartment alone. It was really cool, because in Hookset we can’t walk places without an adult. When we would get home, we would relax for the rest of the day or go swimming in Beth’s pool. About once a week, we would do a little adventure and cut the library short. One time we went to a museum exhibit where you got to create your own Star Wars character, and it taught you about all the things that influence the shape of your life. We also went to a indoor water park a couple of times, where there was a lazy river that was titled “River Rapids” and was very fast, very rough, and very fun.

Maybe the biggest part of our Australian life was Anika. Anika is Beth’s three-year-old goddaughter. Every Friday, Beth would pick her up from her preschool at noon and bring her back to the house. Xander and I would spend the rest of the day playing with her and babysitting her. She is very adorable, and we got very close to her. Almost every week, Anika would do these three things: watch Madagascar 3, go swimming, and build a fort. She called it a “fork” and, really, Xander would build it. We didn’t just see her on Fridays, though. We celebrated Thanksgiving with Anika and her moms, watched Anika’s school performance, made chocolate chip pancakes, and went to Luna Park, an amusement park right by the Harbor Bridge. We can’t wait to see her again!

Monkeys Everywhere! The Video

The crazy monkeys at Manuel Antonio. At this point, one had already hissed at me when I tried to get my bag away from him and then reached into the bag and ran off with our underwear. So, if I seem a little panicked- I was! there were so many of them!! and they were fearless! And they wanted our beach bag! (the kids, however, did not share my fear, as you will see)

 

La Arribada of Turtles

Yesterday, our favorite taxi driver from Monteverde drove us four hours away to a coastal town called Ostional so we could witness the monthly arribada of Olive Ridley turtles. We had been following the Ostional Guides’ Facebook page to find out when exactly this would start and arranged with the taxi driver to take us the day after it began. (Let’s just spend a second to appreciate that fact – a normal, everyday taxi driver that drove us to our favorite taco joints and bakeries for the weeks we were in Monteverde also readily agreed to drive us to a town four hours away. This is a common thing here and it is so. great. Personalized shuttle service, basically.)

Continue reading La Arribada of Turtles

The $300 Death March to Touch Tapir Butt

Let me say, right off the bat, Drake Bay – home of the elusive tapir – and I do not get along. It is in the southernmost part of the Pacific side of Costa Rica. For miles and miles there is nothing but a gorgeous, lush, remote landscape directly ordered up for Jurassic Park and other prehistoric jungle movies; undeniably beautiful and unspoiled. We got there by boating through the world’s largest mangrove reserve into the sparkling waters and crashing waves of the ocean. The place we stayed had a bunch of bananas hanging in the open-air kitchen for the guests and one, closer to the river, for the monkeys, who came and tucked them under their arms like little thieves in the afternoons, scampering back up the vines into the canopy. While snorkeling, we saw rainbow fish, dolphins, and whales up close and personal. After less than four days there, I could not wait to leave. Continue reading The $300 Death March to Touch Tapir Butt

Drake Bay Photos

Click on a photo to see enlarge it, read the caption, and start a slideshow.

Day 2: Adjustment Period

Snippets from Daisy’s conversation with her father tonight:

“We went to a mall. We wanted to watch a movie but it didn’t even have subtitles, so I saw a little arcade in the mall and we played games.”

“Today was awesome– we saw pigeons picking bread at the place we were eating. It was gross.”

“So how was your day?”


Continue reading Day 2: Adjustment Period