Sunday, December 20, 2009

6 months in Brasil! Happy Holidays!


My parents have arrived in Brasil! We are having a great time. We met them in Rio de Janeiro. What an amazing city! We toured it for 2 days and the 3rd day we hung out on the beach. The weather has been absolutely gorgeous. It is really weird to think about Xmas being this week when you're sitting on the beach!
Our first 6 months has been really wonderful. We have made tons of new friends and attended more parties than we can count. The kids are learning Portuguese so quickly that they are translating for us! School is out for the summer break for 2 months. In February, Marilyn will start 3rd grade and Brady will start K4 which is basically 4 year old pre-school.
But first, we are off on our first South American adventure. On New Year's Eve, we fly to Buenos Aires for 3 days and then we are off on a 14-day cruise around the tip of South America. We even have the chance to visit Antarctica! We are so happy because our Brasilian friends, with kids the same age as Marilyn and Brady, are coming with us! Our ports of call are: Buenos Aires; Montevideo; Puerto Madryn; Stanley; Ushuaia; Punta Arenas; Puerto Chacabuco; Puerto Montt; Santiago (Valparaiso) We are very excited to visit the penguin sanctuaries that are all around that area.
In lieu of our normal holiday card, we have decided to save a tree and do it virtually this year. We wish all of you a wonderful holiday season and a happy new year! We are thinking about my grandma, Marion, who after 10 years in a nursing home, passed away last weekend. We are also sending lots of hugs to David's family. He also lost his grandmother just one month ago.
Our plan is to head back to AZ in April. If anyone wants to visit, let us know! We have a room for visitors.
Happy Holidays! The first day of summer for us tomorrow which is so bizarre!
Much love, The Salome

Sunday, August 23, 2009

3 months in Brasil

Hello all!
It has been a long time since I updated the blog so I thought I would take some time after a hectic week to let you know how we are doing!
The kids started school on June 1st and after a brief 17 days in school, they were out for 'winter' break. We love having uniforms for school. It makes it easy to get up, get dressed and then out the door by 7am. Marilyn starts school at 7:30 and ends at 3pm and Brady starts at 7:45 and ends at noon. They both enjoyed the first month meeting new people and going to a birthday party almost every weekend! The birthday parties here are full blown family events with tons of food, drink and activities. It is more like a wedding than a birthday party!
We got our first shipment of items in June so that made it a little easier than having 4 forks, spoons, knives, glasses, etc. Some kitchen items, clothes and electronics arrived in the air shipment. We only had one rental car at first but as luck would have it, another family was moving from here to South Korea and needed to sell their car. It is pretty nice but it is a 2 door so David uses that to drive to and from work. We received our company car at the beginning of July just in time for the break. It is a new Hyundai Tucson so it fits our family nicely. The best part is that it has an ipod attachment! The radio stations here seem to play the same 10 songs over and over and over!
The winter break was pretty fun. We tried to plan a lot of activities. Some of the kids from school rented a van and driver and we all went to the Sao Paulo Zoo. It was really fun and it was a gorgeous day. We also have our international group that meets every Tuesday so we tried going to those events every week since other people had their kids home too. We went to the equivalent of the state fair here in Brasil as well. A friend from school told us about it and took us there. They had a lot of animals and of course, the midway and junk food! David made a trip back to Phoenix in July also to stock up on Trader Joe's supplies and birthday presents for future parties. Toys here are VERY expensive and VERY cheaply made. There are some cool wooden toys that you can by at some of the fairs and outdoor markets but even stuff at Walmart is really low quality and expensive. Other things that are expensive include anything that plugs in, especially electronics, clothes, towels and linens.
We took a few day trips to the beach in July. We went to Ihla Bela a beautiful island where you can sit on the beach and sip umbrella drinks while the kids play in the sand. It has no waves and awesome scenery. You drive your car on the ferry to get there so that is extra fun for the kids. We also took a 5 day trip to an island called Ihla Grande. It is literally the middle of the jungle. There are no roads of cars so you can take the boat taxi around the island and go to the amazing beaches there. We saw tons of wildlife including little monkeys that were swinging through the trees right off our balcony eating fruit from the palm trees! The kids had fun and we even got to bring our big dog, Biggie with us. It was his first swim in the ocean at 10 years old!
When we returned we were supposed to start school right away but they cancelled it for the first 12 days because they are freaking out about the swine flu. There are only 3 people in the whole city that have it. When Marilyn had a fever one day in June they were telling me where the children's hospital was so I could take her. I'm like, she's only had a fever for one day! Needless to say they over react a little when it comes to illnesses/fevers, etc. We finally started school just last week. Marilyn had a rough time at first although she has many friends. The first half day is completely in Portuguese so she understands very little so far. Brady's class is more bilingual and he has told me everyday that he loves school!
The other thing that happened over break is that we found out that the school administrator not only lived in our neighborhood but that her golden retriever had puppies!! We found out from our friend that took us to the "state fair" so we immediately called her to see if we could come and see them. They were only 2 weeks old and couldn't even walk yet! I'm pretty sure those were the smallest puppies I had ever seen and for sure the smallest goldens I had seen. The rest of the break we were over there about every other day visiting the 6 puppies, one girl and 5 boys. Needless to say, we could not resist getting one so the Wed. before school started, we got the little girl at 6 weeks old and named her Rio! She was born on my great friend Tracey's birthday, June 23rd and we got her on Lester's birthday, Aug. 12!! Of course the first night I was up and down all night with her helping her adjust to her new home. The 2nd night I went to take her out about every 2-3 hours, the third night I think I was up twice and after that she has not made a peep at night! So much easier that a baby! LOL She is very smart and the cutest thing you've ever seen. She loves having Biggie as her adopted dad too! She waits to see where he will lie down and then she goes and snuggles up on his tail.
We celebrated Marilyn's 7th birthday last Friday with a few of her school friends because we ended up getting our giant boat shipment the same week! It had all our furniture in it including all of the toys and the rest of our clothes. Unfortunately I got my old maternity clothes instead of my sweaters and long sleeve shirts! We ended up with 18 missing boxes and just found out they are officially missing and did not accidentally go to storage. Time for the claim form. Our piano doesn't work either so they'll be owing us some dough!
The best parts about Brasil: a full time housekeeper that comes 5 days a week from 8-5pm for very little money. You can get your nails, toes and eyebrows waxed for about $10 total. Everyone is SO NICE here! I already have great friends that help me make appointments or anything else that I need or want help with. The food here is wonderful. It is so much better than when we lived in England and I constantly craved food from home. They have a fresh vegetable farmers market every day of the week in different parts of town so everything was picked that morning, organic and very cheap. I go to the one on Tues. near the school or the one in my neighborhood on Thursday. I also have my own vegetable/fruit garden. This morning we ate fresh strawberries and tomatoes that I picked and we have a ton of lettuce and spices like basil, cilantro, mint, etc. We even have things growing that I have no idea what they even are. We also have a papaya and lime tree in our yard that make huge juicy fruit!
Not so great parts about Brasil: I am not fluent in Portuguese so the language barrier is significant as times. Portuguese is a very difficult language especially at my ripe old age! We are taking lessons and I can now understand much more than I could before and much more than I can speak, but we continue to keep at it hoping it eventually sinks in. There are speed cameras everywhere here so I already got a speeding ticket! They get you for going just 1 mile an hour over! The crazy thing is that no one stops at stop signs, stays in their lane or signals to switch and lots of people run red lights if they feel it is taking too long. There are also a million motorcycles here weaving through traffic in between cars. I've already seen 2 of them get squished and I almost ran over one myself cuz they are crazy!!
Other than that, we absolutely love it here. It is the most beautiful place ever with the nicest people. Now that we have all our things we feel much more at home. If we can master Portuguese than we would maybe consider staying here forever, especially if we could live in this house. I'm not sure when we will plan a visit. We thought about Christmas but may consider traveling around South America instead since it is summer here and the kids are off school for 6 weeks.
I finally have 2 walking buddies and walked 4 days this week for a total of 22km! One is from Australia and the other one is from New Zealand! Love my new friends from down under! There is an awesome and gorgeous park here with a 1km loop and lots of wildlife. Their is an old hospital on the land that was once an insane asylum, then a tuberculosis clinic where people were quarantined and then a nursing home. Since Brazilians are very superstitious they decided to close it down because too many people had died there. I'll let you know if I see any ghosts!
Thanks to everyone who sent postcards over the break to the kids. They had fun sharing them with their friends at school. The kids all laughed at the one with the saguaro on the car ~ thanks aunt casey ~ since they have never seen or barely heard of a saguaro here!
We miss you all very much and hope you don't forget about us! E-mail us anytime or you can call our local Phoenix number with NO long distance charges at (480) 282-8713. We are 4 hours ahead of Phoenix right now at same time zone as Iceland. Also, if you haven't joined facebook, you should! I have hundreds of photos on there. It is easy and a fun way to stay connected to tons of people.
I'll try to update again soon! Much love!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Brasil Otimo!

The Salome family has arrived in Brasil!
Biggie was the frst one to leave; It was a long process to get him there including rabies shot more than 30 days in advance and less than one year, a International health certificate within 10 days of leaving that had to be stamped by the USDA (all 6 copies) and then by the Brazilian consulate. We ended up finding one in Phoenix even though we had been told we had to overnight paperwork to LA!
May 26th: After weeks of anticipation, watching movers pack up everything you own out of our house we've owned for 10+ years on Desert Flower Lane, Biggie, Our dog, left at 4:15am Arizona time when I turned him over to the pet handler in Chandler. He had a giant crate/kennel although he has never been in one. He knew something was going on when we moved to the Residence Inn near Chandler Mall for 5 nights. Little did he know someone was going to show up and take him away. He flew to Denver first and stayed there 8 hours before getting loaded on the evening flight to Brasil about an hour after we left. Our flight was delayed so we arrived around the same time as Biggie and gave Jerry from Brasil Pet our boarding passes, a copy of the passport and some other paperwork to retrieve Biggie. He said if he couldn't get hime before noon it would be much later in the day and I begged him to try to get him out ASAP. Jerry called at 11am to say he was leaving the airport with Biggie. We had arrived at Casa Azul around 9:30am. At noon Jerry pulled up with Biggie in the truck and his crate in the back. Biggie was very shaken up and tired and thirsty but totally fine. Jerry said he drank a bunch of water but no food but I noticed no one had opened his food or given him his thyroid medicine the entire time he had been gone. When he got in the house he drank about a gallon of water while his whole back half trembled uncontrollably. He drank sooo much water, he coughed some of it up. Then he was in his new back yard going to the bathroom for quite a while after not going for at least a day. The crate was perfectly clean after more than 24 hours. I gave him his thyroid medicine and then I took Brady and Biggie into the darkest room of the house and we all 3 took a huge nap. Biggie and I slept for about 2 hours and Brady slept for at least 3. When Biggie got up he finally ate some food and drank tons more water but was feeling much better. Within hours you could not even tell that he was any different.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Bye Phoenix, AZ and family and friends!

Hi all, Our house at Desert Flower Lane is all packed up and drove away in a giant truck today. We are leaving Tues. morning for Brazil. Our pet handler is picking up Chianti, our golden, at 4:15am to make sure he is not in the heat for his flight. He is taking Continental through Denver and we are taking American through Dallas. We will see him hopefully about 3 or 4 hours after we arrive at Casa Azul in Sao Jose dos Campos.
Our new address is:
Condominio Quinta das Flores
Av. Cidade Jardim nº3141, Casa 36, Bairro: Quinta das Flores
Sao Jose dos Campos - SP - Brazil
CEP: 12233-002
We will have a local Phoenix phone # thanks to modern technology! (480) 282-8713 so please feel free to call and of course, come visit!

Monday, April 13, 2009

We haven't moved to Brazil....yet!

Hi all,
It has been 4ever since I updated this so I'll try to give details!

• We are not leaving to move to Brasil until after Memorial weekend approx. May 26, 2009. We decided that it would be easier to leave after school is out and give us more time to work out the millions of details and concerns.
• Currently all our paperwork is complete and all our passports are awaiting David's one year technical work visa (renewable each year) and our dependent visas to be stamped at the Brazilian Consulate. Apparently Brazil has a lot of bureaucratic red tape and it takes a long time for everything to be approved. We should have them back around April 20th.
• Great news, my BFF, Paula, found a friend of hers to rent our house as soon as we leave. They are a wonderful family with 4 kids and the best part is that I didn't have to show my house to a bunch of random strangers at a moment's notice! SO NICE!
• I'm still working out the tremendous details and stress concerning my Biggie (100lb. golden retriever) getting to Brazil. I have found some people to help but he has never been in a crate or in a kennel before.
• David goes back to Brazil for another 3 weeks at the end of April and he gets to live in Casa (Caza) Azul, the blue house we rented there. He will officially become an ex-patriot meaning we will be on the international health plan and he will begin the intl' compensation package.
• David comes back the last week of school to help us separate our stuff into air shipment - arrives 3 weeks after we leave - boat shipment - arrives 2 months and hopefully does NOT get highjacked by pirates and storage - see ya in 2+years! Should we bring none/some/all Xmas stuff when it is fairly logical that we'll be coming back to Phoenix? What to do? Any opinions are more than welcome! Also, if anyone wants a Lexus SUV or baby items, please let me know!
• We continue to take Portuguese lessons although it is extremely difficult if you don't practice and don't need it...yet. I hope my children can learn it quick and help teach me!

E-mail anytime az2brazil@gmail.com and call at our NEW PHONE #!! YOU CAN CALL US IN BRAZIL LIKE WE ARE IN PHOENIX!!!!

(480) 282-8713 is active now!

ALSO HERE IS OUR NEW ADDRESS:

Condominio Quinta das Flores
Av. Cidade Jardim nº3141, Casa 36, Bairro: Quinta das Flores
Sao Jose dos Campos - SP - Brazil
CEP: 12233-002

You can send David something as of April 27th!
FYI - Amazon delivers there! Ironic eh? lol

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Brazil Bound

Last week, the whole family went down to visit Brazil. It was David's 9th week in Brazil and our first!
Luckily I had seen enough photos and videos so that it felt familiar, in a way. We arrived first thing in the morning in Sao Paulo, Brazil along with a few other Honeywell employees that were coming down to meet with Embraer. We met with the Honeywell driver from Sao Jose dos Campos and he drove us an hour and a half to town.
My first impression when I walked out of the airport was Hawaii. It felt very tropical and there were amazing flowers everywhere. Although we just drove out of Sao Paulo, you can tell it is a gigantic city. The most interesting thing along the way is that there were people walking, biking all along the freeway, not to mention the people darting across it from one side to the other. There is even a little 'people holder' in the median so people don't get squished.
Sao Jose is a much smaller town with a maze of one way roads that you have to navigate to get around. David did pretty well after spending a lot of time there so it shouldn't be too hard to figure out. It was interesting that we had to drive around one whole square block to get to the hotel.
The hotel was a 2 bedroom flat that had an air conditioner in both bedrooms upstairs but not downstairs. It was really hot on Sunday and we went to the 19th floor to swim. Even with 45 sunblock the sun was so strong that in 20 min. I had visible tan lines. It is slightly like AZ in the fact that the sun is super strong and hot when you're in it but in the shade it is much cooler, although still humid.
On Monday we started the house hunting tour. First we went to the neighborhood that has 3 houses that we liked. It also has great security and beautiful houses. There is a full-on castle in there and a house that looks like a big top that we started balling the Mickey Mouse house. People have told David it is one of the nicest neighborhoods. The first house we looked at was one that was our very top choice from the beginning although it would have been nice if they cleaned it up a little before we came over. It is a great house and perfect for our family but a few days before our trip we found another house that was for rent and fell in love with it from the photos alone. That was the 2nd house we looked at that we now call Casa Azul. It is big, blue and amazing. It has a ton of room for guests (hint, hint). We went to a few other houses but we narrowed it down to these 2 very quickly and we now are starting the contract/lease for the blue house.
The next day we visited the 2 international schools in town. The school year is based on the Australian model. School just started on Feb. 4th so it had only been in session one week when we visited. They take almost all of July off for winter break and then December and January for summer break. The first school was much bigger and more spread out. Most of the classrooms were virtually outside. They have turtles and chickens and a huge garden. There are so many fruit trees that I had never heard of 1/2 of them. This school is a little further away from our neighborhood so we ventured to the 2nd one. Marilyn and Brady both loved this school and it was the one we had pretty much picked since they do a 1/2 day in English and a 1/2 day in Portuguese where the other school was mostly Portuguese. All kids in both schools take taekwondo and flute! Of course there are some other things but I thought both of those were neato!
We went to lots of good restaurants. Most restaurant workers do not speak any English so communication was interesting while we were there. Occasionally we came across a menu that had English under the Portuguese. We ate pizza and lots of beasts on skewers. They love to bbq meat and seafood on giant spears and everything comes with pinto beans and rice. We also ate Italian and a couple of places that had huge yummy salad bars. They have great food and the biggest part of the menu is the fresh squeezed juices that they literally walk outside, pluck off a tree and squeeze for you!!
I could actually feel my Portuguese lessons starting to work.....then of course I came back here and don't have anyone speaking the language constantly. The great thing is that even Brady at 3 years old keeps asking me how to say different things in Portuguese! They will both fluent in no time.
The best scenery we had was driving from Sao Jose to the beach at Ubatuba. It was literally like the rainforest even though the official rainforest is much farther north and west! Please check out my facebook page for photos and I'll send you some from shutterfly if you don't have an account. I will update more soon on our new plan for moving! Don't forget to become a "follower" so it lets you know when I post new info. Thanks for reading!

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Happy New Year 2009!

I thought for the new year I would update the blog! We have been really busy since David got back on the 18th of Dec. after 3 weeks in Brazil. The first order of business was to watch the one hour of footage on the different houses he looked at for us to live in. David met several times with our "destination service provider" in Sao Jose dos Campos. All the houses he looked at are all extremely nice and big. David originally liked one but it is not in a gated and guarded community and for safety reasons we're now focusing on a couple of other houses with more security. The house David liked the best is in the process of being rented to someone else. It is a gorgeous house with an orchard and an amazing view. There is another house in the same neighborhood that is ranch style with tile and granite throughout that has basically become the #1 choice but it has no furniture at all or appliances in it right now which means bringing practically everything we own. There is another house that is a little further away that looks like a celebrity's house and has a huge park next door. All the houses we have looked at have a pool and a private sauna. They also have maids quarters in case you wanted a live in helper! The kids and I were supposed to be leaving for Brazil in 2 days but we got delayed because we need a tourist visa. We finally got our plane reservations for Feb. 7-14th. Our Valentine date will be on a 12 hour red eye plane flight with our 2 kids! Yee ha! I am so looking forward to it. It is called our familiarization trip. Honeywell flies the family down there and puts us up so we can look at houses, schools etc. I can't wait to see the town and look at the houses David picked out along with others. David has been to the 2 international schools there and we're leaning toward the smaller one that would be 1/2 day in English and 1/2 day in Portuguese with the cutest uniforms. I'm looking forward to that!
Speaking of Portuguese (no pun intended:) we started our lessons right before Xmas and we've had 4 lessons so far. Crista is our teacher and she has been coming over every other day to get us jump started. It is really cool. David has a small background in Spanish and I do in French and I find that I'm pulling out French words that have long been dormant my brain! If only I had an ibrain or was 3 or 6 like my kids who remember more than us already. We each get 20 hours of lessons while we're here and then we get an additional 80 hours in Brazil. We should be "fluent" in no time!
The property manager came over yesterday to look at our house and tell us how much we should rent it for. Honeywell provides this service as well. When we moved to England we had to set is up ourselves so this is a huge load off my mind now that I have 2 kids! They recommend that you don't sell your house but rent it for tax reasons so we'll be working on that soon too.
There is a company helping us get our travel visas and permanent visas for Brazil. We are also working with the Honeywell tax people which is so nice because I can't even imagine figuring out international taxes let alone the ones here! We will also be meeting with movers once we know which house we want and how much stuff we will be bringing. We have an air shipment that gets there in about 3 weeks and a boat shipment that will arrive in 1 1/2 months or so for heavier, bigger items. A storage unit will also be available for what we leave behind.
We are currently negotiating with Honeywell to get them to pay for a 2nd car and for Brady to go to school. He is not normal school age which would be age 4 and since he is just turning 3 in 3 weeks they said they wouldn't pay for him. Currently Brady attends Foothills Montessori pre school at no cost to me because I have the nicest boss in the world. She puts an ad in the newspaper every month for the school and they let Brady attend for free! In the Honeywell contract it says if a child attends free school in the home country that if something free is not available in the host country they will pay for it. We feel it is vital for him to attend school for socialization and so he can learn Portuguese which he clearly won't learn staying home with me all day. Plus I need to meet some families with kids the same age as mine for MY socialization! 
Apparently Brazilians LOVE to socialize and have BBQ parties all the time. I believe it since their outdoor BBQ areas are nicer than most people's indoor kitchens! We went to the Brazilian Steakhouse call Fogo E Brasa last night for dinner so I could taste the food and drink! Food was really good and drink was really bad! It gave David a chance to tell me what is the same and what is different. They serve pinto beans and rice at every meal and are huge carnivores! I hope I can get a filet there!
We have one major concern and that is our beloved golden, Chianti (aka Biggie). He is my first baby and at 9 1/2 years old he seems about 5. Unfortunately Honeywell will not help with the transport of pets and it is extremely expensive. According to airline rules, any pet that weighs more than 100 pounds including him and his crate (he's 100 on his own) must be shipped freight. I got a couple of names for places that do it and the service starts at $5000 one way for a dog his size. My sister looked into it when she moved to Turkey and for her 2 cats they wanted $2500 each so it is just really expensive. We do not want to leave him behind like we did for England but they had a 6 month quarantine and we were only there 14 months. This time it may be up to 3 years with no quarantine but I'm not sure if I want to pay that much either!
We get a puny allowance for the loss we will have when we sell one or both cars so we're still talking about what is going on with that. I have no idea what will happen with our boat since no one I know has a place to store it at the moment.
We are continuing with our vaccinations for the kids and Portuguese lessons. If you know anyone who wants to rent a house in Ahwatukee or buy a Lexus SUV let us know! We still don't know exactly when we are leaving but it won't be until at least March.
Happy New Year!
Jen, David, Marilyn, Brady & Biggie