Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Expectant Twins!


The expectant twins! Karen and Katherine show off their babies to be... Karen is at ~15 weeks and Katherine is at ~34 weeks. Posted by Hello

Monday, June 20, 2005

Hans' Birthday & Father's Day

We took Hans out to Kalamata Greek Restaurant on Broadway and Cambie before returning back to their place for ice cream cake from DairyQueen.


Kat poses for the camera at Kalamata Greek Restaurant, where we had Hans' birthday and Father's day dinner. Posted by Hello


Hans blows out the candles on his ice cream cake as the twins look on. Mom looks intently at the camera. :-) Posted by Hello


Hans' birthday cake. Posted by Hello



Hans reads his birthday card. Posted by Hello


Hans reads his birthday card. Posted by Hello


Hans opens his birthday present. Posted by Hello


Mom looks on while Hans opens his present. Posted by Hello


Hans opens his birthday present. Posted by Hello


Tarzan II ... the new DVD is Hans' birthday present. Posted by Hello


Mom picks some flowers from her garden for Hans' birthday. Posted by Hello


Mom picks some flowers from her garden for Hans' birthday. Posted by Hello


Hans' Birthday and Father's Day Card Posted by Hello

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Alaska Trip May 2005

Karen and Jonathan took a well needed holiday to the Inside Passage of British Columbia and Alaska. It was a good time of solitude, where both of them enjoyed God's beautiful creation away from their normal everyday life of work, family and ministry. Seeing as kid #1 is on its way (Karen is 14 weeks and 1 day as we write this), this was the last major vacation trip as a couple, and so they particularly enjoyed the time they got to spend with each other.

Below are some select photos from their trip.

Day 1: Vancouver, BC


Workers at the Port of Vancouver (at Canada Place) prepare the Norwegian Sun for departure. Posted by Hello


The view of Canada Place as we depart from Vancouver, BC. Posted by Hello


View of the Lion's Gate Bridge from the Norwegian Sun. Posted by Hello


Karen on the promenade deck (6) in Vancouver, BC. Posted by Hello


A Harbour Seaplane flies over the Norwegian Sun as she heads out to sea. Posted by Hello


Is that Hans on the bridge? Karen's father decides to watch the ship sail off from the Lion's Gate Bridge - he is the person on the left. Posted by Hello


We are sailing on NCL's Norwegian Sun. Posted by Hello

Day 2: At Sea in the Inside Passage




Karen and Jonathan pose before dinner on Formal Attire night. (The ship is at sea on this first night.) Posted by Hello


Window seat dining in the Seven Seas Restaurant (Jonathan). The Seven Seas Restaurant (one of the ship's main restaurants) serves three meals a day. Karen and I particularly enjoyed our meals here because of the friendly service and the delicious food. Posted by Hello

Day 3: Ketchikan, Alaska




Our first port of call was Ketchikan, AK. Posted by Hello


The Norwegian Sun docked at Ketchikan, Alaska. Posted by Hello


A tranquil scene at a busy port in Ketchikan, AK. (Three cruise ships were parked right next to where this was taken.) Posted by Hello


A view of Creek Street from the bridge. During the prohibition, smugglers would smuggle booze from Canada by canoe and deliver them to underground "pubs" via trapdoors underneath these houses. Posted by Hello


The "Creek" at Ketchikan, AK. Creek Street was known as the red-light district during the gold rush. Posted by Hello


Creative use of early century contraceptives made of silk. Dolly (who ran the local brothel in Ketchikan, AK) decided they were too valuable to throw away, so she washed them out and made flowers out of them.... (We were glad there was a "do not touch" sign outside the display...) Posted by Hello


Some streets are actually staircases in Ketchikan! Posted by Hello


The Norwegian Sun at berth in Ketchikan, AK. Posted by Hello


Jonathan poses outside of Ketchikan as we sail away. Posted by Hello


Two U.S. coast guard ships escort us out of port near Ketchikan, AK. Posted by Hello


Alaskan Ferries are called the "highway" of Alaska. Most cities and towns (at least in the panhandle) are not reachable by road. Posted by Hello


Beautiful Sunsets greet us as we sail for Juneau, AK. Posted by Hello

Day 4: Juneau, AK




Mendenhall Glacier Park in Juneau, AK. Posted by Hello


Mendenhall Glacier Park in Juneau, AK. Posted by Hello


Ice floats in Tracy Arm. Posted by Hello


An ice float "threatens" the ship. The captain cancels our cruise into the glacier itself because of excessive amounts of ice floats. Notice how this is just the "tip of the iceberg" - you can see the outline of much bigger chunk of ice just below the surface of the water. Posted by Hello


A tranquil scene in Tracy Arm near the Sawyer Glacier. Posted by Hello

Day 5: Skagway, AK



Skagway "Kate" and "Al" perform for us...to get us into the gold-digging mood. Posted by Hello


Buckets on the gold dredge would dig up en masse the earth underneath lakes. Gold would be sifted out and the tailings of the dredge would spit out the other end. Posted by Hello


Buckets of the gold dredge. Posted by Hello


The output end of the Gold Dredge. Posted by Hello


Karen pans for gold at the Klondike Gold Dredge in Skagway, AK. Posted by Hello


A (rather scary looking!) wooden tressel along the White Pass & Yukon Route. Posted by Hello


The White Pass and Yukon Route took us up to the international border between Alaska, British Columbia, and the Yukon. Flags from left to right: USA, Alaska, British Columbia, Yukon, Canada. Posted by Hello


Karen poses in front of the White Pass and Yukon Route train in Skagway, AK. Posted by Hello


A 1920s street car (now used as a tour bus) stops in front of a modern day Starbucks coffee. Posted by Hello


The White Pass and Yukon Route in Skagway, AK. Posted by Hello


We took the White Pass and Yukon Route railway when we got to Skagway. This railway is quite a feat. It served as the backbone transportation route for Alaskan gold-diggers destined for the Yukon. It is one of the largest and steepest narrow-guage railroads ever built, and stretches from Skagway all the way into British Columbia and the Yukon. Today, it again serves as one of the main attractions of Skagway, thus making it the biggest revenue generator in Skagway. Karen poses here on the snow-clearing train. Posted by Hello


Karen poses in front of a building in Skagway, AK. Driftwood adorns the entire front face of this building. Posted by Hello


Brothels were popular in the late 1800s and early 1900s due to the disproportionate numbers of men present in Alaska. They were there looking for gold. Hrmm.

Nowadays, many of these brothels are now museums. $5 for 15 minutes ...just like in 1898. Posted by Hello


Alaska Cruiseship Services: a wonderfully odd place in Skagway amidst all the tourist shops. I was in need of offloading some of the pictures on my CF cards (they were getting full) onto CD. The photo shop on the ship wanted to charge me $14.95 per CD. I promptly decided to wait until we got to shore. But the photo place in Skagway wanted to charge $15.95! Alaska Cruiseship services offered cheap Voice over IP service and Internet/computer services to ships crew at dirt cheap prices. I managed to burn two CDs and use their computers for 45 minutes for the cheap price of $5.00. It pays to shop! :) Posted by Hello


Karen enjoying her time at Skagway, AK. Posted by Hello


A "postcard" picture of the Norwegian Sun taken at Skagway, AK. Posted by Hello


Our steward (Victor) and stewardess (Larissa) left us a beautiful swan on our bed made of towels! Posted by Hello

Day 6: Wrangell, AK




Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


A fishing vessel off the waters in Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


Petroglyphs in Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


At the Petroglyph beach in Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


The incredible view from Petroglyph beach in Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


Petroglyphs in Wrangell, AK. Posted by Hello


An abandoned fishing vessel in Wrangell, AK near the Petroglyph beach. Posted by Hello

Day 7: At Sea - heading back to Vancouver




A beautiful sunset in the inside passage as we sailed back from Alaska. Posted by Hello


A beautiful sunset in the inside passage as we sailed back from Alaska. Posted by Hello


Karen was waiting anxiously for the chocolic buffet... but of course was careful to not eat too much! We met a nice German tourist at this buffet where we got to practice our german. Posted by Hello


A bald eagle in ice! Posted by Hello


A bald eagle in chocolate Posted by Hello


The Norwegian Sun in the Carribean (chocolate style) Posted by Hello


Chocolate Norwegian Sun Posted by Hello


Early on in the trip, we had to do a lifeboat drill. The captain assures us that there are more than enough life boats for all the passengers on board. Crew members are subject to floating rubber zodiac boats though... Posted by Hello


Walking on the promenade deck was a favorite pass time. One mile is 3.5 rounds. Posted by Hello


Self portrait (Look in the left corner of the mirror) and fisheye view of the promenade deck Posted by Hello


The promenade deck of the Norwegian Sun. Posted by Hello


The Internet Café: Karen won a 100-minute plan here...although we really didn't have much use for it since we wanted to stay as far away from computers as we could on our vacation! Posted by Hello


A 360-panoramic view of our stateroom Posted by Hello


The bathroom in our stateroom Posted by Hello


The showers in our stateroom Posted by Hello


Self portrait in our stateroom Posted by Hello




Karen relaxes and reads on our stateroom couch Posted by Hello