Sunday, February 24, 2013

Natural Sciences Museum in Brussels



Brussels is the capital city of Belgium and only 30 minutes from Antwerp.  We been exploring outside of Belgium these past few months and finally decided to explore our own backyard.  The Natural Sciences Museum was curated beautifully, with many hands on activities for children to explore and learn.  Ethan and Ava really loved it and took an interest in everything.  Especially for Ethan, since he is learning to read and was able to put his skills to the test!






This was one of their favorites.  There were two glass boxes on the ground and they had to figure out which ones had fossils.
























Ethan was surprisingly good at mimicking the animals' expressions....


Just like the tiger....


...and the turtle
Gorilla family of three


Gangsta fox with his cane. Just needs his pimp cup!

Purple and butterflies, Ming's faves!




There was a entire whale exhibit, it was amazing to see the actual sizes of them.  We had no idea they were that big!






It must be the Asian genes I passed onto Ethan and Ava. They each took over 500 photos in the museum!  Check out their poses to get the right angle...





















Amazing collection of butterflies
My Fave


Monday, February 18, 2013

American-like Refrigerator

 (Yes, this is worth a dedicated post)

Like many Americans, we used to have two refrigerators.  One in the kitchen and another in the garage to store our stockpile.  I still remember the days of loading up on groceries from Wegmans or Shoprite in my giant SUV and having plenty of fridge space to store it all.  Our flat in Antwerp had a typical European  refrigerator - tiny, no ice maker, no filtered water.  Ours was a Smeg, a 50s style refrigerator that's become the next hottest thing (and way to expensive in my opinion).  We learned to change our shopping pattern by making more frequent trips and buying less.  I would even deter myself from trying new sauces and dressings which came in jars or bottles that would eat up precious real estate in that tiny fridge.

Besides the lack of storage space, it would also build up a sheet of frost in the back and every couple of months, it would decide to purge itself and unfreeze completely.  






We finally decided it was time to purchase a new one but wanted one that we could bring back to the US to replace our old one.  Shopping for a new one was an experience.  There are basically two kinds: (1) Side-by-Side which they label as "American" Refrigerators and (2) Tiny European Refrigerators.  I was drooling over the side-by-sides, which were too big to fit in our flat.  We were on a mission to find one that was in between 1 & 2.  We went to 3 or 4 "Best Buy"-like stores in Belgium and even made a trip to the Netherlands.  We finally located one and had it delivered on the first available date.

I was so happy when it arrived, I almost shed a tear of joy.  While this one does not have an ice maker or a water dispenser, the extra space makes such a difference.   I had to stare at the inside for a few minutes when they put it in place.  I can not believe a refrigerator can make me so happy!  Just so you don't think I went off the deep end, this fridge had a wait list for 3 other orders.





Goodbye Tiny European Refrigerator!