Also Italian:

And what I can only assume is a restaurant for down-on-their-luck cats:
Telling the story of the ups and downs, the adventurous and mundane days of one British family's self-imposed exile in the Capital Region of New York State.


See? so blue!
By the way it's irresistible pop pun #45 (not that you solved the last one) or shall I go and change my point of view for other ugly scenes?
Well, it's bedtime on Tuesday, so it's time to post again. It hasn't been night since sunrise found me at the airport early on Monday morning. At some point it was 3.30pm on Monday and them 2.30 pm on Tuesday. At that point we still had 4 hours to go to make our 3 pm landing, and we'd been flying for 9 hours since our 11 am take off - flying long-haul really messes with your head as well as your body.
Since my main task for today was to pack for my trip, Exile #3 of course suddenly wanted to play in the snow - one of my favourite things - so I find myself at 8 pm with an empty bag and a lot of pictures and videos of snow-fun to share.
Here is our answer to last winter's 'mountain'. It's unlike it in almost every respect except for being a pile of snow outside our house. This one was constructed to act as a booster for a surprisingly successful toboggan/sled run down the side of our backyard. As you can see, Exile #4 helped with the construction and tried it out.



You look me in the eye directly.
Firstly, back to Saturday for this picture of E5N1 looking down through a skylight on a boat. Exile #4 was inside as was the camera which I was holding in through a hole in the wall whilst standing behind E5N1 to make sure he didn't slide off. Quite safe. Honestly.
Here is another picture from yesterday. Yes they are under water and breathing easy - even if Sara Bareilles is reminding us daily that the breathing gets harder (even she knows that!)
And, besides - when someone in the family keeps insisting on timed group photos in cold windy harbours in February - a few hours peace in a car seems like luxury.
We undertook a 350 mile round-trip today to visit the Boston Children's Museum. Not surprisingly with it being a holiday weekend, it was busy but for the most part it coped well with the numbers - I imagine it would feel cavernous if too empty, but I daresay there is a happy medium somewhere.
Funny? The whole Valentine's Day experience - undiluted by a huge snow storm as it was last year - was quite something. How this became the second biggest card-sending day of the year is clear once you realise that five and six year-olds start by send cards to all their classmates.TRAVEL IS STRONGLY DISCOURAGED TODAY.



We are currently under a Winter Storm Warning issued by the National Weather Service. It ends with the words:A WINTER STORM WARNING MEANS SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF SNOW...
SLEET...AND ICE ARE EXPECTED OR OCCURRING. STRONG WINDS ARE ALSO
POSSIBLE. THIS WILL MAKE TRAVEL VERY HAZARDOUS OR IMPOSSIBLE.
While you may remember this battle cry from the baseball season, or imagine the girls shouting it as they ran down this snowy path on Saturday, actually I had a more negative connotation in mind.
We had a stay-at-home morning in which Exile #2 looked after three children and cooked a roast dinner single-handed while I slept - yes, another infection has caught up with me - the same one that has been ever-so-slightly slowing Exile #2 down for the last few days completely flattened me. Manfluenza strikes.