Since Steven and I have been together he's had this terrible hand-me-down mattress that I absolutely hate. It was handed down to him by his brother and who knows who or where his brother got it from or how old it is. It's super firm which he loves and I hate and it has springs poking through which I can feel but Steven can't.
It was time for a new mattress so when a Groupon deal came around, we jumped on it. It was $50 for $200 worth of mattress at Sit N Sleep.We went in last night to check it out.They had a fancy machine that determines each person's perfect mattress type. Of course, Steven was far into the "medium firm" region and I was in the far "medium soft" region. So we tried just about every (reasonable priced) mattress in the store and we couldn't agree on any. The ones I loved, he hated and vice versa. Though they also had the super fancy section of mattresses that have half of the mattress firm and the other half soft. Perfection. Except it was also $3100.
The kind salesman at the store said they were selling out that item and that we could have the floor model for $1300. We somehow accidentally talked him down to giving it to us for $1150. We got $100 off because we mentioned a Sit N Sleep promotion which actually didn't apply to the mattress we were getting but he gave it to us anyway. Plus, we mentioned that we had a Groupon which also didn't apply to the mattress but he said he would give us the same $50 off that we paid for the Groupon AND we could still get our money back for the Groupon. He also threw in a free set of sheets!!! The delivery is also free as is the removal of our old mattress.
So yeah, on Sunday our fancy new dual sided mattress gets delivered. I can't wait!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Zip lining pictures!
Happy New Year everyone. Despite having all the time in the world to write updates during our near 2 week holiday time off, we just didn't. Ha!
At the very least we do have something to share with you all. We finally got the pictures from our zip lining tour.
This is our training session. It was just the 4 of us on our tour. As the day got later the groups got bigger so we were glad we did it early. They made the training fun by adding some silly jokes. Always appreciated and the outdoor classroom wasn't bad either.
Steven is first up. They trained us to lift our leg so that they can attach you. Steven didn't need to.
And away he goes! In perfect form too. Feet out arms straight. They wanted us to have feet out first so that we can get used it it. You assume cannon ball position when you want to go faster.
This is what everyone else had to do to have our harnesses reach the cable. One leg up, and for super shorties like me you need to hop a little.
Here I go!
Next line. The photographer gets me waiting my turn in the background.
This next picture is cool because you can see how long and how high these lines actually are. I don't remember seeing much jungle floor during our whole time there. There were a bunch of platforms built for the lines.
Half way through they had a rest stop with cold water. Not a moment too soon.
Now that he's refreshed, Steven goes super fast!
Another group picture.
The final line was the racing one. It wasn't so much a race as getting to go in pairs. But if you're keeping score, I won.
And the after picture.
At the very least we do have something to share with you all. We finally got the pictures from our zip lining tour.
This is our training session. It was just the 4 of us on our tour. As the day got later the groups got bigger so we were glad we did it early. They made the training fun by adding some silly jokes. Always appreciated and the outdoor classroom wasn't bad either.
Steven is first up. They trained us to lift our leg so that they can attach you. Steven didn't need to.
And away he goes! In perfect form too. Feet out arms straight. They wanted us to have feet out first so that we can get used it it. You assume cannon ball position when you want to go faster.
This is what everyone else had to do to have our harnesses reach the cable. One leg up, and for super shorties like me you need to hop a little.
Here I go!
Next line. The photographer gets me waiting my turn in the background.
One of the lines went through a tunnel. That was pretty cool and exciting. The camera man magically appeared in each location before we did even though he left his position after we had all passed. It was very confusing.
This next picture is cool because you can see how long and how high these lines actually are. I don't remember seeing much jungle floor during our whole time there. There were a bunch of platforms built for the lines.
Half way through they had a rest stop with cold water. Not a moment too soon.
Now that he's refreshed, Steven goes super fast!
Another group picture.
The final line was the racing one. It wasn't so much a race as getting to go in pairs. But if you're keeping score, I won.
And the after picture.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Mexico Day 8
Yesterday I wrote that this last hotel we’re staying in will do for the price. How wrong I was! I could barely sleep from all the noise! The hallways are noisy and it seemed that a group of people decided to have a party in the hallway until around 2am. We discovered that Steven can deal with noise but he can’t deal at all with light when he sleeps. I am the exact opposite. I will wake up from a pin drop but can sleep with the lights on with no problem. I don’t think either of us feel well rested though. My lack of sleep meant that Steven was kept up by me reading at 1am with a flashlight. I also accidentally scared the crap out of him when I was looking for the remote to the AC and accidentally woke him up as I was rummaging through things in the pitch dark for it. Quite a rude awakening for him.
On our last day we did a bunch more walking around town again. We started noticing that we were the only ones walking around with light sweaters. Even in the early morning, it was still only like 65 degrees out. Yet, for some reason everyone was walking around like it was snowing!
Check out this kid...
We also finally got some decent shots of Steven standing on his birthday street. Steven's birthday is also Mexican Independence day.
Steven also got a better video of the street crossing signs. This video better illustrates how the walking man goes faster and faster as time counts down.
We thought we were used to the things the locals found entertaining. But then we came across this...
Hide your kids, people. That is a creepy, smoking, singing, robot clown who will probably kill you in your sleep.
We could have created a whole blog based on how often people ignore safety laws. But here are a few snap shots of one building under construction.
We saw people standing at the top of a ladder that was roped together to another ladder to get extra height and a guy running a power tool by touching two raw wires together. Crazy!
We made one final trip to the fabric store and Steven realized that he never got any pics of what fabric stores in Mexico are like. I'm not sure if we mentioned before but there is a large fabric store every few blocks in the city center area at least.
I'm like a kid at a candy store!
On our last day we did a bunch more walking around town again. We started noticing that we were the only ones walking around with light sweaters. Even in the early morning, it was still only like 65 degrees out. Yet, for some reason everyone was walking around like it was snowing!
Check out this kid...
His mom was actually dressed in a puffy down jacket with ear muffs. Really? It's 65* people! Maybe you need a light sweater but it was around 10am and quickly getting warmer but the ridiculous winter gear remained all day.
During our walk that day, we finally found the only mail box in all of Mexico. [12/20 edit: we're still not sure if our postcards ever made it to the recipients!]
We also finally got some decent shots of Steven standing on his birthday street. Steven's birthday is also Mexican Independence day.
Steven also got a better video of the street crossing signs. This video better illustrates how the walking man goes faster and faster as time counts down.
We thought we were used to the things the locals found entertaining. But then we came across this...
Hide your kids, people. That is a creepy, smoking, singing, robot clown who will probably kill you in your sleep.
We could have created a whole blog based on how often people ignore safety laws. But here are a few snap shots of one building under construction.
We saw people standing at the top of a ladder that was roped together to another ladder to get extra height and a guy running a power tool by touching two raw wires together. Crazy!
We made one final trip to the fabric store and Steven realized that he never got any pics of what fabric stores in Mexico are like. I'm not sure if we mentioned before but there is a large fabric store every few blocks in the city center area at least.
I'm like a kid at a candy store!
Well after all of that walking, we picked up our luggage from the hotel storage and headed to the airport. Our taxi driver was INSANE. He was very heavy on the horn and has absolutely no patience for traffic. To him, driving on sidewalks, or on the wrong side of the street, or driving over center dividers is totally a legit way to get around. We made it to the airport in one piece though. After paying him though, we still had a couple of bucks left which we decided to blow on some airport shopping. So Steven walked up to the register and the guy rang us up and the total came out to exact change of what we has left. It was the most amazing thing that's ever happened to me.
I am actually excited to get back home. It was a fun and mostly relaxing
trip but there is no place like home. I look forward to not having to try and
figure out the money exchange in my head for every purchase or make a fool of
myself speaking what must sound like cave man Spanish mixed with a little mime.
And as much as I hate our old mattress at home, I do still miss my own bed. And
Bowie, my little Bowie! He must miss us so much.
We are also coming home to some possible damage to our
house. Our neighbor said that all of our roofs suffered some damage in the
recent wind storm. We found out about the wind storm when Steven’s phone was
going crazy from Oxy alerts in the middle of the night. When we woke up we read
in the news about the fire at Oxy and the power outages everywhere. LAX
apparently lost power for over an hour and flights are still being delayed. My
work at Art Center College was actually closed for the whole day since the
roads left the campus inaccessible due to fallen debris and all of those old
trees around were still a threat while the winds persisted.
We'll see when we get back home!
[12/20 note: the above text was written at the airport so you obviously know how our house fared]
We'll see when we get back home!
[12/20 note: the above text was written at the airport so you obviously know how our house fared]
Mexico Day 7
Alas our final day in Puerto has arrived. We woke up and readied our bags to check out
and went to our last meal at the resort.
After checkout we got a taxi to our bus back to Guadalajara.
We took the Vallarta Plus line. There are half a dozen bus lines that take the
trip back and forth between Gudalajara and Puerto Vallarta just about every
hour each way. The ETN bus line is the fanciest. They take a regular charter bus
and fit it with plush chairs. Basically it’s all comfy and fancy and top of the
line…and also double the price that we paid for our bus trip. The Vallarta Plus
bus was only $20 per person each way if you buy the round trip and they give
you a little lunch/snack. It was actually very comfortable and they showed
movies. On our trip out to Puerto we saw part of Toy Story 3 (en Espanol) and
let me say, the emotional parts transcend the language barrier. Steven and I
got a little misty eyed.
Here's a picture of some fellow travelers. I wonder what they paid for their cross country ride with full lounge action?
The bus ride seemed to pass quite quickly. We left Puerto at
1:08 and we were checked into our hotel in Guadalajra at around 5:15. So our
entire trip took a little over 4 hours. We overheard that flights from Guad to
Puerto were only 45min, but factoring in airport security and travel time to
and from airports which are farther away from the cities and you probably only
save an hour or so.
So when planning this trip, we wanted to go all out and be
fancy, except we skimped on the last night. We got a cheap $40 hotel and I
guess we got a little bit too used to the pampering and “tranquility” of our
last two hotels. This new hotel has tile floors and gaps above and below the
door so we hear EVERYTHING going on outside. We ended up stuffing all of the cracks with socks and towels and clothes.
As with the air conditioner at the fancy resort, this light was also just as bright. Steven's socks provide a simple solution.
Also, the whole room has crown
molding. Very upscale and opulent looking…”looking” is the operative word. The
molding is actually made of painted Styrofoam. This place is by far the most
ghetto of our trip but despite me bashing it for this paragraph it is actually
decently cozy. Certainly worth the $40.
We rested for about 20 minutes and set off to explore the
town again. We walked and walked and walked and then found some tacos and
walked some more. The city is actually quite beautiful. There's lots of art all around in public areas and the buildings are very old and architecturally interesting.
We need to translate the description but this guy was notable because he's so intense.
This place comes alive between 6pm and 8pm. There are
neverending streets of shops that all have their own specialization. Looking
for Christmas lights? Well here’s a store that has nothing but!
We basically walked from 6pm – 9pm so once again we are very
tired. Tomorrow is our last day in Mexico. We get almost all day tomorrow to
continue to explore the town and then head to the airport tomorrow night.
Mexico Day 6
Day 6
Puerto Vallarta bus tour
So today we had the bus tour. We got picked up by the tour
bus at 9:40am for our full day affair. We quickly learned that this tour IS for
the faint of heart, unlike our thrilling trip the day before. Boarding the bus
we saw that our tour mates were much older than we are, some in bad health, and
in various stages of being able to walk for long distances.
The beginning part of our trip was basically the same route
we had taken the day before for the zip line tour except that we got to get off
in Puerto Vallarta. We walked the boardwalk and saw all of the statues.
I
finally had a chance to take my Lamby pictures.
Lamby travels everywhere with me. |
Then we walked to the Cathedral which we were told is not a
cathedral at all since it’s not the residence of the bishop. The church was
tiny and beautiful in its own way.
Steven had already thought that Mexicans
were very morbid what with the Dia de los Muertos and all but they had
life-sized statues of dead people in clear glass cases. Maybe taking morbidity
a bit too far.
Speaking of morbidity, our tour guide highly recommended the
beach on the other end of the river from the main area of Puerto Vallarta. He
said that very few people cross the river thinking that the boardwalk is all
there is to see, so the beach is relatively deserted and very romantic. The
name of the beach? Playa de Merto! Beach of the dead? Yes, very romantic.
The pace of the tour was only a little frustratingly slow
but then we got 40 minutes to spend walking around the flea market. It was
interesting; lots of little trinkets and stuff of course that reminded me a lot
of Olvera St. in Downtown LA but the vendors there are SO PUSHY to the point
where Steven and I left the flea market early and waited on the sidewalk so
that the vendors wouldn’t pressure us anymore.
In between the sections of the flea market was this crazy rope bridge which was so Indiana Jones-esque.
This is a real life pedestrian bridge but it was oh so dangerous. There were missing planks or holes in the planks and swung like crazy. There are other pictures where people are hanging on the the ropes on the sides for dear life but I am secure enough with myself to show you my own struggle.
When we got back on the tour bus the guide assured us that
that would be end of the walking part of our tour. Great, that’s not what we
wanted at all. Oh well. The bus took us back into the jungle and past where our
zip lining tour was…WAY past where our zip lining tour was. It seemed like we
drove through the jungle forever until we finally reached our destination. It
was another zip-lining tour/restaurant stop. The food was good and we finally
got some freshly made tortillas. You get used to seeing places like this after a while but it kinda seems crazy that are year-round business that don't have any walls.
We took plenty of pictures by the river. It looked a lot
like a river at home except for the dense jungle instead of more like a
woodland setting.
That's a river house tucked in all that brush. |
After the river we stopped by a Tequilery (? Tequila making place).
<QUEUE HOW IT'S MADE MUSIC HERE> It starts out as agave plants seen here. There are various types. Apparently it takes 10 years of growing for it to reach the right age for making tequila. That seems like a crazy long time for such a small plant.
Below are a picture of the heart of the agave plant. It looks like a pineapple but all those 10 years of growing turns into this.
Next they fire up those hearts to give it a smoky flavor. They pile on different levels of wood and lava rock. Each tequila maker does this part differently.
Next they move the roasted agave hearts into this crusher thing. A mule is attached to the long piece of wood and all of the juices that are squeezed out go into that hole and is collected.
The juices are then put into bins to age. This area was kinda gross and stinky but it's okay because next...
...they distill it. What comes out is clean, pure tequila. You better believe we participated in the tastings. They have 6 or 7 different types to try and they gave you a hefty shot of each. The chocolate one was delicious but we ended up buying a bottle of the mandarin one.
Then it was time for the long ride back to Nuevo Vallarta.
The best thing about this tour was that we got to see the different stages of
the city’s growth. We saw downtown which is where the oldest buildings are.
It used to be a mining town but soon those mining homes were changed to fancy beach side homes and shops once the movie stars (namely Elizabeth Taylor)
caught wind of this place. The place expanded rapidly north in the 70s and 80s
and then grew north farther to Nuevo Vallarta which is where we are
staying. All of the resorts in the Nuevo Vallarta area look brand new (because it is) and some of them are
still being built.
The Northernmost part of Puerto Vallarta (which is immediately south of Nuevo Vallarta) however looks like
it’s seen better days. I would say half of the buildings, hotels included, are
vacant and look abandoned. Either everything of value was stripped and sold or
they were in a middle of a renovation and ran out of money and there the hotel
sat for a decade. I feel like maybe 20 or even 10 years ago this place was
amazing, now it’s a little old and run down and there isn’t enough money to get
it going again. There were even some vacant Senor Frog stores with old sun bleached
posters proudly stating that Spring Breakers are welcomed and that Senor Frog
is home of girls gone wild. Not no mo.
We got back to our resort around 5:30pm. It was such a very
long day! We relaxed in our room while packing up our things. Our checkout
from our resort is tomorrow at noon. We’re both so sad to leave. This
place is really beautiful and serene and after spending 4 nights here, we feel
at home.
We went to dinner for the last time. True to form, Carlos
insisted our salad would have shredded duck on it but when it arrived it was a
regular mixed salad with cheese and sliced almonds, no meat of any kind. Oh
Carlos! Thanks for not letting us down on our last night!
For all of you thinking of maybe visiting Taheima in the
future, here’s a bit of pros and cons for you from our experience with pictures in between in case that's all you care about:
[EDIT: Please note that since we returned, we learned that Taheima actually just opened. No wonder it was so impeccable. That might also be the reason some kinks weren't quite worked out yet.]
Pro: The hotel is gorgeous, clean, safe, with a friendly and
memorable staff.
This is all one hose! We saw it one day laid out around the grounds and were astonished that we couldn't find an end. |
Con: It seemed like the maid service went a little too far in trying to make things look neat. They would open up our closed luggage and put stuff away in them and close them back up. Yes, it looked neat but I didn't like the daily search for things I didn't put away. Also, one day I had some clothes draped over a chair so that they didn’t get wrinkled but we came back to the resort to find that they bundled up all of those clothes and shoved them in one of our bags. It was weird and annoying.
Pro: The resort is basically empty. It’s the off season so
we would say there were only about 50 rooms occupied at the whole resort
leaving most spaces looking sparse of people.
Con: There’s nobody around! It happened many times that we
were the only ones at breakfast or at dinner or at the bar or at the pool and
it just felt awkward. Sometimes there were more than enough staff members, like at the restaurants, and sometimes it was hard to find someone, like when trying to order at the pool.
Breakfast and we're the only customers. A common site at meal times. |
Pro: Free yoga and other daily activities. Appointments were
very open at the spa
Con: Again, the spa was not fully staffed to their regular
working hours. They are supposed to be open from 9am-8pm but it seemed someone
was actually there between 10:30am and 5pm. That made it really difficult to do
ANYTHING outside of the resort and still get an appointment in at the spa. We
had $50 credit for 5 days and only used 3 day’s credit because we couldn’t get
an appointment that worked for us.
Gorgeous...and empty. |
Pro: seemingly a lot of activities advertised. Perhaps in
the “on season” there are more events at the resort.
Con: the staff basically seemed unaware of some of the perks
that were supposedly included in our package. Mayra (my nemesis at the front
desk) didn’t tell us about the book of excursions even though I asked several
times for it. She at first said it would delivered to our room, then said it didn’t exist and then later that very day, we found it in the lobby a
few feet from her desk!
Pro: Because we got it on a Groupon-type deal (actual website was Tippr), it was really cheap! We paid $250 each for a 5 night all-inclusive stay, plus they threw in that $50 per day credit.
Cool pool options. Just want to wade? That's fine, you can still hang out with peeps in the deep end. |
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