Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Monday, July 15, 2013
Traveling Home
One of the trips we
look forward to every year is our (way too short) week visit back home. It’s a chance to
catch up with family, reconnect with friends and of course gorge ourselves on
all of our favorite foods! This year however we had the added bonus of getting
to meet the newest addition to the Powell family. Quentin George Powell! We were
so thrilled that Greg, Alisa & Quentin were able to make their way back to
DFW while we were going to be in town and we loved every minute we got to spend
with them.
Of course it wouldn’t
be a trip home without spending time with relatives. Again special thanks to
Mom and Dad, Bootsie, Jonathan, Grandma and Grandpa Powell and Becky and Bob
for hosting family get togethers and/or providing much appreciated room and
board while we were in town. We certainly wouldn’t have been able to see as
many of our friends and family without you guys. And last but certainly not
least thanks to those of you who came from out of town to spend some time with
us, particularly Amanda’s parents and
Grandmothers. It’s always wonderful to spend as much time with family as we can
when were home and were incredibly grateful for the time we got to spend with
all of you.
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We already have taught him how cool the UK is. Just check out that onsie!! |
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Yeah, the poor kid may not have been allowed to touch the floor. |
We also got to spend
some time with a number of friends over the course of our visit thanks to some
fantastic parties hosted by several of our dear friends. They really were a
great way to spend some quality time with so many wonderful friends so to Bill
& Debra and Robyn & Scott a very special thank you.
Thanks also to Garrett
and Beth for being flexible on the one day we were all in town at the same time.
We really enjoyed getting to see you guys and are so excited about all the news
you shared with us. You’ve got some amazing adventures in store as well and we
can’t wait to share them with you!
All in all it was an
amazing trip home and we loved getting a chance to see and visit with so many
of you!
Friday, July 5, 2013
Quiet, please.
When I told
people in my office I was heading to Wimbledon for the day, they asked if I
really liked tennis. I don’t think ‘not
really’ was the answer they expected.
Well, it’s true. I don’t LOVE
tennis. I do really enjoy sports (you
know, watching them, not playing…because who really wants to get hot &
sweaty?) and given the chance to watch people at the pinnacle of their sport,
live – I wouldn’t pass that up. Plus,
we’d been having some amazing weather & I wasn’t going to miss the three
days of summer this year.
So you’re
saying that you decided to go to a major sporting event that people plan for
years to attend just two days before?
How in the world did you get tickets?
Did you have to pay a fortune to scalpers?
Haha. No.
Believe me – I want to see everything I possibly can, but I am my
father’s daughter & that makes me cheap frugal.
Here’s how
the crazy ticket system works over here.
You can
apply for tickets 6-10 months before the tournament through the public
ballot. There are just a couple of rules
on applying…from the website:
In order
to apply for tickets for The Championships, you need to fill in a Public Ballot
application form:
- To obtain an application
form, send in a stamped, self-addressed envelope from 1 August 2013
to: AELTC, P.O. BOX 98, London SW19 5AE by 15 December 2013. Ballot
forms for 2014 are not yet available.
- Only one application per
household. Don't ask for more than one form: we will void your
applications.
- If you do not send in a
stamped, self-addressed envelope, you will not receive a form. No
letter is required.
- There is a separate ballot
for wheelchair spaces so please make sure you write clearly 'WHEELCHAIR'
on both the outer and on your return envelope.
- Non-UK residents should send
in an International Reply Coupon instead of a stamp. If your post office
does not provide these, please simply send your self-addressed envelope.
- The stamped, self-addressed
envelope should have your return address and should be the type 'DL' which
is approximately 110mm x 220 mm (4 1/4" x 8 5/8")
- It will greatly assist us in
processing your request if you send the correct size of envelope
(and self-seal if possible, rather than gummed).
- Requests postmarked after 15
December 2013 will NOT be processed.
Once you
receive the application form, you have to fill it out by 31 December and send
it in. If you then are lucky enough to
get tickets you have 2 weeks from the time of notification (which could be
anytime from February to three weeks before the tournament starts) to purchase
your tickets. To say the least, it’s intense.
However,
they also reserve around 5,000 tickets that you can buy on the day of … if
you’re willing to stand in line.
As
Wimbledon had been going on for the better part of a week already and we didn’t
have tickets, we suddenly became willing to stand in the queue.
So at 6:40,
we headed to the train and made it to the back of the queue at 7:41. How do you know it’s the back of the
queue? They have a very large flag!
When you
join the queue, you are given a queue card with strict instructions to stay in
your spot. You have to stay in order to
be let through the gate.
If you’re
in the queue, there are rules. A book of
them.
Only the
British would publish a 20 page booklet on how to stand in a line.
You could
tell that there were some experienced professionals at this whole queuing
thing. A group of 4 women came in behind
us, immediately put down their picnic blanket, popped a bottle of champagne,
assembled their plastic champagne flutes, opened a package of strawberries and toasted
their girls’ day out. I bet they had a
pretty fun outing. The rest of us looked
something like this…
After about
2 ½ hours of standing in line, a little bit of rain, we made it to the ticket
booth. You can buy Centre Court, Court 1
and Court 2 tickets all of which also give you grounds admission to visit the
other 15 or so courts plus watch the prime courts on the jumbotrons. Obviously the prime court tickets go first,
so at nearly 3,000 back in the line, we didn’t think we had a chance at getting
any. However, the booth we walked up to
had two Court 2 tickets left. So in a
spur of the minute decision, we bought them.
So on we
went.
For a spur
of the minute decision, we had amazing seats.
We were behind the umpire, about 4 rows back and just three seats off
the net line.
I can’t
tell you the names of the people we watched.
Our court had all doubles matches.
Two mixed doubles and two women’s doubles. But I can tell you it was some of the best
tennis I’ve ever seen. (Yes, I realize that
you would hope it’s the best I’ve ever seen, when my comparison is the Marble
Falls High School Varsity squad. You
know what I meant.)
During a
break on our court, we stopped to eat our strawberries & cream. I’d prove it with a picture, but after taking
one of the booth, we ate them all before we remembered we didn’t take a picture
of us eating any. My attempts to purchase
another bowl (totally for the photo op & not at all because I wanted them)
fell on Adam’s deaf ears.
Our matches
ended about mid way through Andy Murray’s quarterfinal match against Fernando
Verdasco. We went and sat on Henman
Hill. ‘Sat’ is a term that I use loosely. As the hill looked something like this three
sets into the match.
Henman Hill
is the large open air area with the main jumbotron in the park. And as it’s on a hill, it has a sense of
built in stadium seating for your picnic blanket. It was named after Tim Henman, a British
tennis player popular in the early 2000’s.
People have been informally calling the space Murray Mound now that Andy
has become more popular. Guess time will
tell…
Andy
struggled through the first two sets and most of the third before finally turning
it around to win in five (4-6, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 7-5). I like to think he knew when I sat down to
focus on his match.
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