Monday, January 14, 2008

We made it!



I'll blame the lack of posts on the extreme insanity Megan and I lived in the past month (like selling my car literally 5 hours before we left for the airport). But through it all we made it finally to Grenada.

(The picture to the left is our apartment, we are on the bottom furthest away.)

Today is the evening of day one. Technically we arrived last night but it wasn't till about 10:30pm that we got to our apartment, at which point we just crashed.
Don't you just hate it when your faced with talking to someone who has complete control over your situation and you can't do anything about it? This comes to mind after our experience with American Airlines at LAX... I called two months in advanced, asked how much extra to bring pets on board after giving my exact flight numbers destinations, etc... "$80 per dog", OK thanks, how much luggage is allowed... "two checked items per person, 50 lbs max each, one personal item and one carry on bag"... OK great, anything else? "nope have a great trip". .... OK so now fast forward to Saturday afternoon I spent about an hour balancing every suitcase out to exactly 50 or 51 lbs each. We had four suitcases between the two of us, two dog carriers (as carry-on), and two back-packs. We arrive at LAX and, now the situational control issue comes into play, at the check in desk the lady tells us "you can have two check in items per person but they can't be above 70 lbs combined" this means our 200lbs of luggage had to be reduced by 60 lbs. After arguing for a while and getting now where but just more frustrated we were given some trash bags, and opened up all our luggage in the middle of the terminal (for all to see) and started tossing things out. Thankfully my mom came with us when we checked in and was able to take this stuff home with her. Next she said "the dogs are $100 each", I said that AA told me $80, "That's domestic flights only". In situations like this there isn't a single thing you can do.

After that stressful, embarrassing and frustrating experience we said our good byes to my mom and headed for security where there was a bit of an interesting experience... anyone ever brought two dogs on board before?... We learned as we got there that first our check-in lady screwed up something about our receipt for the dogs, we found this out as the security lady read us the riot act about how our paperwork wasn't correct and that the check in lady screwed up... (um OK thanks but it wasn't our fault and what can we do about it now?), next we had to hand carry each dog (out of their crate) through the metal detectors, not a big deal unless you have two completely freaked out dogs who's natural impulse when scared is to bolt. We caught jasper before he got too far, and after seeing that I kept a tight grip on wiggly Felicity. After this point the rest of the journey was pretty smooth. The 7 hour lay over in Puerto Rico was pretty long, but we were so tired we really didn't care.

So today, we started off by sleeping through half of the day waking at 11am. This was largely due to jet lag as CA time this was only 7am. Either way we woke up to growling stomachs and TOTALLY empty cupboards and fridge. Nothing like hunger to spur our first outing, luckily for us it was less then a quarter mile down the road, not too bad. We filled two hand baskets to the top (not heaping, just full) of some basics, shampoo, PB & J, bread, mac & cheese (yay!), two bottles of water, ect... it all came to a nice sum of $254 EC which equates to $94 US dollars... OUCH! Yeah stuff is EXPENSIVE here. Later we did find a larger grocery store down the road a bit further that has a larger selection and slightly better prices but still expensive.

Anyhow we are happy, HOT, and getting a little more comfortable with our new place. Tomorrow we will be off to the SGU campus, for the first time, for a meet & greet event. I've taken a few shots of our place which I'll do my best to post. More later!

OK, So I can't stop quite yet, check out this shower head-ish thing. It points perfectly straight down with no option to bend it forward, annoying but we can deal. We have absolutely NO idea what the hose thingy is for. I've fiddled with the only "switch" if you will, on this thing and it doesn't seem to make a difference.
This looks like a boring door jam picture right? well take a look at the small box way up above the door with the red switch on it. Didn't notice that until i mentioned it did you? Neither did we. After waiting over 10 minutes for our shower to get warm to no avail we took ice cold showers, which wasn't that bad considering it was 83 inside but it was still chillier then we like. Later on, Megan spotted that little box which has very light print which says "water heater"... apparently we are supposed to turn on the water heater (which is IN the shower head) just before hoping into the shower and presto we should be getting warm water, I'll let you know how that turns out later. By the way that is the ONLY hot water in the entire place, all sink water is cold only, unusual but oh well.

(Above) This is from our front door looking south-ish. (Below) This is a small pictorial tour of our apartment.


(Above) Our bedroom



(Above) The dog's room... our YOURS FOR FREE!!! if you visit... hint hint nudge nudge...

(Above) Bars on the windows... the idea is a little scary but they do a good job of making them look nice. Every single building on this island seems to have these, we aren't too worried though.

Friday, December 21, 2007

24 Days and counting

The hurdles have been high and frequent but were almost there. We have one huge one ahead of us, negotiating with WaMu about the sale of our Condo, but we don't know exactly when we'll face that so in the mean time we are just waiting and enjoying the temporary relief from some stress. Megan and I are 100% over the food poisoning, and just about over a cold that we both got immediately after the food poisoning issue. So on to happier things, the condo appraiser came by, the home inspector came by, the buyers came by and so far everyone seems to be happy. We are now just playing the waiting game with WaMu.

Other good news, my boss has given me the go-ahead to pursue working contract for Zebra via the Internet! Income will be VERY helpful. I am currently working out the paperwork details but other then that it appears to be a done deal. With two three day work weeks ahead of me I am heading to an easy end at Zebra (as a full time employee anyways). Sitting in Grenada on my computer making good $ sounds like a great deal to me.

Also another major highlight, I got accepted to Texas A & M - Commerce Professional MBA program. I am extremely happy about that. I have yet to hear from Univ. of Mass. but that should be coming by the middle of next week.

It's kind of interesting decorating (lightly) for xmas while also pulling out all the empty boxes to start packing. As the date gets closer and closer I am getting more and more excited.

Oh yeah, to anyone actually reading this, we have a two bedroom Apartment with an empty (twin) bed. Anyone is welcome to come down and visit anytime and stay for free.

One more thought, for those curious I plan to have lots of photos posted of Grenada soon as we arrive.

Friday, December 7, 2007

slowly but surely...

As the clock continues to tick closer and closer to our January 12th departure date some things are finally starting to fall into place, but not without throwing other wrenches into the works. We got an offer on our condo, Whoo Hoo! We are in negotiations about the price and contract but are very close to signing. Megan also got approved on her student loans by aid of my co-signature, another major hurdle down. On the down side of things the two of us have a VERY nasty bug, we're not sure if it's food poisoning or viral but either way its awful. Neither one of us can ever remember feeling this miserable. Currently we are on day two and starting to feel slightly better but still a very long ways from us feeling "normal". Either way we wouldn't wish this bug on anyone, essentially it purges your entire body, while also getting sever stomach cramps, lots of lower back pain, and a general sense of throbbing throughout our entire bodies constantly. It sucks.

It's been a mixed bag, but over all the good news out weighs the bad.

Regardless on we go!

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Getting there may be the toughest part

Nowadays we hear "fraud this" and "protection that" without thinking much of it until of course you find out your denied student loans because of a delinquent account, which of course your completely unaware of. Now that we are in the middle of this situation we are scrambling trying to figure out how to get the fraud off Megan's account while also quickly realizing no one in our family can manage the co-signature we now need to establish a loan for the first year while the credit card company takes there time to clear the fraud from her credit report. As the date of our departing flight approaches closer and closer the stress level rises and rises.

As we make call after call to the various agencies I start to wonder if the stress of Vet school will really be all that bad after the stress of just getting there...

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Getting Started

This is the first official Glaser blog. I plan to update this as often as possible, keeping all you state side up-to-date with our fun and games in Grenada. As Megan and I are still in Santa Barbara our adventure starts with just getting us off the mainland and on our way to Grenada. We have a couple major hurtles left to get over...
1. get student loans... finding out you have fraud on my credit report by being denied student loans is a tough lesson. We are still working with the loan company and the credit card company to get this settled ASAP.
2. sell the condo - We love our condo but we don't love it's costs. We've met with multiple CPAs and they all say "get out from underneath it". As much as we'd love to keep it there just isn't any way. We plan to drop the price once again to try to get this to move ASAP.
3. Pack our stuff up and either sell or store everything big... It's a tough decision, at what point do you sell everything and start over vs paying to store it for four years? Based on the fact that we have pretty nice stuff in general it's probably worth storing it seeing as selling it will only get us pennies on the dollar.

Beyond those it's just packing our bags, mildly drugging our two adorable fuzzballs, and jumping on a plane for a grueling 16 hours total travel time. It's a long trip for two humans, and a very scary one for two miniature Schnauzers.