Our first post since moving to Virginia! The past week has been pretty busy, with moving out of El Cerrito on Tuesday, spending a couple days with Dan’s family in San Jose, and then flying out and arriving late Thursday night to Dulles Airport. We’ve been spending the last few days recuperating and getting settled into my parents’ house, where we’ll be staying for a while as we get adjusted back to the area. Here are some snapshots from the whirlwind of the moving process over the past week!
Moving Day. The movers were scheduled to come at 8am, but didn’t come until around 2pm. 6 hours late! We started moving out some of the boxes we’d packed ourselves because we were tired of just sitting around waiting.
The ginormous moving truck.
The moving truck was huge and we still managed to fill a lot of it, despite getting rid of a lot of furniture. Kind of disgusted by how much junk we have… (What looks like the front wall of the truck in the photo is actually a mattress stacked on its side, with tons of boxes behind it.)
Goodbye El Cerrito! It was a small house, but is bursting with so many beautiful memories that were made there… It was Mio’s first home. It’s where I spent my entire pregnancy, where we brought Mio home from the hospital after she was born, where she took her first steps… so many milestones.
My sister got these sandals for Mio when she was born, so that she could wear gold shoes to match mine. They finally fit! Thank you Auntie Miwa â¤
Last morning in California. In San Jose, before we went to the airport.
The chinchillas were getting more attention than Mio at the airport! Everyone wanted to take a peek at them.
Right before boarding at San Jose Airport. We’ll miss you, California! ♥
First day in Virginia, soaking up the last of the summer sun…
A Walmart run to go get some diapers for Mio. She was KTFO during our whole shopping excursion…
With my loves.
We’re definitely already missing everyone back in California, but are excited about this new chapter. Dan went to his first day of work and really likes his new company, and I’m picking up more freelance work again now that the hardest part of the move is over. Just waiting for our car and moving truck to arrive in the next week or so, and we’ll feel more at home!
The movers are coming today and packing up all of our belongings to ship to the East Coast, and will be shipping our car, too. We’ll be spending a day in San Jose before we flight out with our one-way tickets to DC on Thursday. It’s been a whirlwind three weeks preparing for the cross-country move and saying goodbye to the Bay Area. Thank you to all of our friends who have made time to say goodbye to us, and for all your well wishes, thoughtful gifts, and most of all your continued friendship! We promise to keep in touch and visit often! 🙂
Dinner in Berkeley with our Nakayoshi friends. Thank you for everything; we’ll miss you!!!
Mio with Auntie Estella!
Good luck in SoCal pursuing your dreams, Estella (and Brent)! We will miss you so much!
Lunch with Nicole, Erik, and beautiful Arina!
Had to throw this in. Mio making sure everyone who walked by the restaurant knew that they were OPEN!
Thank you Tarrin & Jason for being such awesome friends to us! We’ll miss you very much, but will definitely see you again!
Picnic at Lake Chabot
To Mio, Sofia will always be her California BFF! Thanks for all the great memories!
Playground hugs! Mio was a little too forcible. (><) But that is how much she loves Sof!
Gorgeous handmade doll and card from Sonya for Mio… so much thought and detail put into it!
Mio with her handmade doll from Sonya
Girls’ night out with Korean food and soju-tails with El Cerrito mama friends!
It was Labor Day weekend exactly five years ago in 2007 that I moved out to the Bay Area, and it’s right after Labor Day weekend that we will be moving back East. It has been such a wonderful five years full of rich memories and unforgettable experiences, and I’m so grateful for everyone we’ve met along the way.
August 3 was our last full day in Maui, and because my sister Miwa and brother Kosei had to catch a flight in the late morning, we stayed in the central Maui area. We asked them what they wanted to do before they left, and they said they wanted shave ice one last time! Upon doing a quick search, we discovered that there’d been an Ululani’s in Kihei the whole time — it had just opened two months ago! There was no question; we had to go get a taste of Ululani’s one last time!
The Ululani’s Shave Ice that had just opened in Kihei!
Indulging in Ululani’s one last time!
Right before seeing Miwa and Kosei off to the airport.
After dropping them off at the airport, it was just Dan, Mio, and I, and we had the whole rest of the day to do anything we wanted. We hadn’t made any plans, so we just drove around central Maui and explored the area. We first stopped by the Alexander & Baldwin Sugar Museum, which showcases Maui’s once thriving sugar industry.
I didn’t know that many Japanese had come to Maui in the mid-1800s to work as laborers in the sugar plantations.
This is how Japanese women dressed while working in the sugarcane fields.
Mio and I inside the Sugar Museum
Daddy and Mio by the huge tractor (?) outside the museum.
It’s no secret that Dan is a fan of anything related to machinery!
Mio is hanging onto Daddy for dear life…
Back in Mama’s arms…
We then visited the Kanaha Pond National Wildlife Refuge, which served as a sanctuary for endangered Hawaiian waterbirds including the tall and pink-legged Hawaiian black-necked stilt, the brown koloa duck, and the white-billed Hawaiian coot.
Everything inside the visitors center was really modern, clean, educational, and child-friendly. We got to learn a lot about the sanctuary and the waterbirds that were protected there.
Kanaha Pond National Wildlife Refuge
We went back to the cottage to eat lunch and relax for a while, and pondered how to spend the rest of our last day in Maui. One regret that we had had (besides not being able to see the Haleakala sunrise) was that we didn’t get to drive the back road when we traveled the Road to Hana. As we mentioned, we found out afterwards that the back roads had been fixed in recent years, and that it does offer its own beautiful, unique views along the Piilani Highway, as you drive around the southeast part of the island. Who knew when we’d be in Maui again, so we decided to just screw the car rental company’s rule forbidding us to drive those roads, and drive the opposite way towards Hana so that we could see a little of what we missed. (I know, we are such fearless rebels.) We agreed, though, that we would not go all the way to Hana, and that we would just try to see as much as we could until we hit roads that seemed a little too dangerous, and that we’d try to get back before we lost daylight. (So I guess we’re not that fearless.)
We headed out in the late afternoon, around 4:00pm and drove along the Piilani Highway.
We could see great coastal views of Maui — even a clear view of the Molokini crater in the ocean.
The coast of Maui.
There was a random Chinese memorial dedicated to Sun Yat Sen along the Piilani Highway. It was nice, but it seemed like a very remote place to put a memorial…
Statue of Sun Yat Sen
Mountains of Maui rising up from the ocean
Dan with the Maui coast behind him.
We also spotted what looked like giant marshmallows in the fields alongside the road. I then couldn’t stop thinking about how much I wanted marshmallows during the rest of the drive.
A house among the clouds, above the ocean.
Majestic cliffs by the ocean.
A canyon along Piilani Highway.
Dan on the cliffs. I was terrified that he was going to lose footing and tumble down.
Wrecked cars at the foot of the cliff… scary!
Walls of volcanic rock towering by the narrow roads.
The back side of the Road to Hana definitely has a very different landscape than the lush, green views we’d seen going around the northeastern side. It’s much more rugged and can be more treacherous, but it’s not without its own beauty. We were in awe of the huge cliffs, canyons, and rock formations along the way, with incredible views of the coast and mountains across the water. We were really glad that we took the risk and the initiative to take the back roads, because we felt like we were able to really see all the variety of landscapes and scenic views that Maui has to offer.
Approaching the unpaved area of the road. We decided then to turn back, especially since it was getting late.
Mountains shrouded by the fog in the distance.
Before heading back, though, we stopped by the Nuu Bay area to check out the pebble beach and the natural bridge there.
Pebble beach by Nuu Bay
The natural bridge at Nuu Bay
Mio and Dan at Nuu Bay
Love you, Mio!
On the drive back, we saw these beautiful rays shining through the clouds — you can see why they call them God rays, or Fingers of God. A truly beautiful sight!
The sun rays shining down on the Molokini Crater. Stunning!
Driving the back road of Hana was a spontaneous but really great way to end our vacation in Maui. We got back in the evening, and got a good night’s sleep before we had to catch our flight back to California the following morning. It was a truly memorable vacation spent with the family, and we hope that we have a chance to visit the beautiful island of Maui again someday! 😀
Mio is so much fun these days! She is more expressive than ever, and we’ve noticed that she’s been picking up things really fast. She’ll see us doing something once, and then we’ll find her imitating the action later. Her personality is really starting to emerge, and it’s a wonder to witness — while she is half me and half Dan, she’s a whole separate, individual human being with her own personality and quirks that are all her own and no one else’s. It may sound like I’m stating the obvious, but sometimes I can’t help but watch Mio and just be enchanted and amazed at how she is so much more than just a combination of her parents.
Mio trying to wear a bra. Err, let’s not get ahead of ourselves here…