Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Last couple Months in Europe






Here are some pictures from my last couple months in Europe. I got to travel a fair amount. Some highlights were summer skiing at the Matterhorn, Canyoning in Interlaken, renting moped in the alps, golfing in Ireland along the coast (and losing lots of balls), traveling to Norway and Priekstolen, hiking around Ireland, visiting Windsor castle and competing in another crossfit competition. Here are some pictures:









Sunday, April 11, 2010

Visitors, Visitors and more Visitors

Finally having some down time to catch up on all the excitement that has been going on. I have been really fortunate lately to have had people visiting for the past 6 weekends, getting to 3 different countries and managing to not work a full week of work in the month of March. It started with my parents visiting at the begining of March and just ended with Dani coming for 10 days. Finally getting a breather until I fly back to Chicago next Saturday. Sounds like I've been falling victim to the Schurter tendency to try and always do everything. The best part about having people come visit has been that every time a new group of people shows up, the weather turns absolutely beautiful. Crystal clear days really help capture the beauty of Ireland.

My parents came and we immediately headed west. They arrived on a Friday morning and after stopping by my work to show them around we headed to Westport. On the way we stopped in Longford for a traditional Irish lunch at a carvery. Lots of pubs here have places where for lunch it is served kind of cafeteria style only there are lots of really good roasted meats and a good variety of potatoes and other vegetables. best value meal in Ireland because the food is really good and the portions are very hearty. We then continued the Journey to Westport. My parents got their first taste if Irish roads which can best be described as 1.5 lanes wide instead of two and no shoulder. the most shoulder you get is either a 6 inch ditch dropoff or a 3ft tall rock wall. Not a lot of room to maneuver and things can get a little dicey with blind corners and hilly terrain. (Joey and Chris also enjoyed this, Dani however did not...) We found a B&B and then explored the new town. After Dinner, my dad and I went looking for the "Craic". We ended up sitting at a table next to a couple of musicians who were playing an accordian, a fiddel and a guitar, It was really entertaining. People randomly bringing instruments into pubs and having "trad" sessions is really popular around Ireland. The next day we went to Crough Patrick- a mountain just outside of Westport where Saint Patrick used to make pilgrimages. 2500 feet of elevation and a beautiful view of Clew bay was very picturesque. Due to time constraints and jet lag, we only made it about 3/4 of the way up but still had a really enjoyable hike. We then jumped in the car and took the scenic route to Galway. It turned out to be very scenic because we followed the coast line through Connemara National Park and we got lost several times stretching... But it was very pretty. After another B&B we continued the trip to Doolin and the Cliff's (http://www.cliffsofmoher.ie/) Beautiful, crisp day. Clear blue skies made the views spectacular. After an uneventful trip back to Dublin, my parents got a taste of city life- riding the light rail downtown to go grocery shopping. Monday we got up a 4:45am to get my parents off to the airport for their flight to Edinburgh. They spent Mon- Thurs traveling around the UK while I worked and then came back to Ireland Thursday night. We spent a couple days doing the usual Dublin highlights and then got them shipped off after a 6 hour delay b/c of the plane coming from ORD aka worst airport in the world.

Without any break from the action, the following Wednesday was St. Patty's day. Dublin was a madhouse. Tons and tons of people everywhere. It was really crazy here. Daliana and another IPDP came to Dublin and we went to the all-Ireland, club hurling championship game. It was a really fun event and a good dose of Irish culture. Thursday morning I got up and caught a plane to London for training on a work program. I worked it out so I took Friday vacation day and then took got my flight back on Sunday from Manchester so I could go to the Manchester vs. Liverpool soccer game at Old Trafford. A woman I work with ahs season ticket and offered them to me if I could get a plane ticket. I invited Christy's nephew Geoff who had told me over Christmas if I could get tickets. He bought a plane ticket a week and a half before the game and met up with me in London. I spent my free day in London waiting for him by hitting most of the major sites and at the Belarussian embassy trying to get a visa to visit Kiryl in his homeland. That turned out to fail but the rest of London was nice except for the weather. Geoff's flight was delayed by 8 hrs so he met up with me at the hostel later on in the afternoon. We met up with a friend from college who is studying in London right now. She took us to some of her favorite pubs and we had a really good time. Saturday we trained to Manchester to meet up with Daliana who was randomly on a shopping trip. Sunday Geoff and I went to the Man U game. It was the craziest sporting event I have ever been too. There were 75000 people all singing and cheering and yelling for 90 minutes straight. The only break was halftime. Very fun atmostphere and luckily the home team won. Geoff and I bought gold and green scarves to show our support and wore Man U jerseys my mom had gotten us. I flew back to Ireland and Geoff spent a few more days in London.

After a four day break, Joey and Chris flew in from Madison. We headed straight for the west side of the country stopping in a small town for a full Irish breakfast (egg, baked beans, bacon, sausage, pudding and potatoes) Joey especially liked the solid, filling breakfasts in Ireland. We then went to the Cliff's on the nicest day I've had in Ireland. We hopped the safety fence and went exploring the cliff's edge and did a bit of hiking around. Gorgeous day. We then found some other smaller cliff's on the way to Galway. We took the scenic route along the coast and found some awesome places to boulder. Chris climbed a 30 ft rockface in an attempt to start the trip with a sprained ankle but luckily he didn't fall. Really fun place to explore and climb around on the rocks. Galway was a completely different place than when Dani and I visited last January. It felt like an Irish version of Madison. Absolutely beautiful seaside town, with tons of people and the main roads were closed off to traffic. We got the travelers settled and then went out on the town to explore and find that first glass of the black gold. Very successful showing Joey and Chris the Irish social scene. Saturday we got up early and headed back to Madison. Another gorgeous day was spent touring Dublin and having a traditional Irish meal at O'Neill's Irish pub. We ended up spending a bit of time there watching a rugby game and experiencing a "Pour your own Pint" table. basically these are tables that have two taplines (Guinness and Carlsburg) running up through the middle of the table and a meter that counts how many beers you pour. All you do is give a cc to the bartender and then cash out when you're done. A very fun time. We got a professional lesson how to pour the perfect pints of each beer. Joey had a funny experience b/c none of us really knew what was going on and then she asked him if he had ever poured a pint before from a tap. his answer was yes but the technique she demonstrated was far from a solo cup and a rubber hose. We also found a pub with a live band that was really entertaining. Sunday was spent exploring all the sites of Dublin and getting ready for the work week. Chris and Joe flew out to Switzerland on Monday and continued their Journey.

After another four day work week I had yet another visitor. Dani came the following Friday. It was really good to see her. We planned it so that we had a few days in Dublin then flew to Prague, Trained to Berlin, and then flew back to Dublin. It was a very fun trip. We went running by the river Liffey downtown Dublin and discovered a really sweet lighthouse that extends about a mile into Dublin bay and provides really sweet views of the the city and surrounding areas. On easter we flew out to Prague. Originally I had a lot of trouble buying the tickets b/c the Ryanair website was being a real pain in the ass. unbeknown to me, I accidentally bought plane tickets for March 7 instead of April 7. So figuring that out the week before we left caused a slight amount of panic but fortunately turned out to only be a 170$ mistake. We got to Prague late at night and checked into the hotel. This trip was a big step for us b/c we upgraded from hostels to hotels. Very fun not having to worry about things like not having heat or hot water that we have experienced in the past. We spent the next couple days touring Prague and experiencing the Czech culture. Prague is probably the most touristy city I have ever been to but it was very beautiful. Lots of really different architecture than I'm used to and much cheaper than Dublin (as is everywhere). We found a couple Czech beer halls where noone really spoke any english with lots of locals. Really pretty but overall not my favorite place. I think I expect too much from it. One thing I did really like was that the city is very Hilly. Much more so than any other city except for San Francisco that I can really remember. Lots of restaurants and pubs are not in the main buildings, but in basements or set back off down sketchy hallways from the main thoroughfares. The train ride to Berlin was really awesome. Very beautiful countryside and lots of really neat villages along the way. Berlin is an amazing city I would really like to go back to. The S-bahn is really easy to get around and there is so much recent history that I can relate to and want to learn more about. We took a free tour and had an amazing tour guide. Really told the story of the city well and had tons of energy. Dani commented she wishes he would have been her high school history teacher because she would have learned a lot more. He was really captivating and informative. We also visited Sachenhausen concentration camp which was a very sobering experience. This camp effected more more than Dachau but both are really horrifying but necessary reminders of the past so we don't repeat our mistakes... Going off a recommendation from Joey and Chris we went to the Prater Garten which is one of the few beer gardens in Berlin. Very fun place. I also highly recommend the Reichstag. Dani really wanted to go there and I wasn't convinced but it was definitely worth going to. THe glass observation dome is awesome. Great views of Berlin, free audioguide and incredible architecture. Really amazing history behind the building as well. We traveled back to Dublin and then spent a few days on the Irish countryside and Dani got introduced to her first Crossfit gym.

I think that covers most of it. It's been a very fun couple of weeks. The next couple are going to be just as busy. I am flying to the USA for PDP week next Saturday for 9 days, my friend chris is visiting Dublin the following weekend and we are taking a 4 day trip to Norway. More adventures to be had. It has been amazing having people visit. I am really excited to make it back to Chicago next weekend but I think I will be in for a bit of culture shock.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Manchester and the Theatre of Dreams...

Hey-o


So the adventure to Manchester started off a little rough. Daliana was suppose to meet me at work and we were going to catch a ride to the airport with a coworker to save money. Instead she got lost and ended up at the airport in short term parking. After working it out and meeting up our plane was delayed an hour so we had a pint at the airport (surprisingly cheaper for a pint at the airport than downtown Dublin) We arrived in Manchester around 9 and made our way to the hostel. We stayed at Hatter's Hostel in the Northern Quarter. We went to a restaurant that was recommended by my friends at Crossfit Center Manchester. We had a couple of Danish meat/fish platters at Kro Picadilly.

After an eventful night for the rest of the hostel i.e. getting woken up at 2 and 4 am by rowdy hooligans- we started exploring downtown Manchester. Ashley caught a train up for Dartford and we made our way out to Old Trafford, The home to Manchester United. We were suppose to go to a game but it had been rescheduled due tot he Carling Cup final the following day. The tour of the grounds was really interesting and we got to go into the players locker rooms. We also got to see where the managers sit and listen to the history of the stadium. It reminded a lot of touring Fenway Park in Boston. It was really neat to visit a place I have grown up wanting to visit and having seen on TV since I was little.

After the tour we went to the "Curry Mile" for a delicious lunch. The curry mile is a street in Manchester filled with Indian/Thai/SEA resteraunts. We luckily chose a great place. The waiter was really friendly and even gave us a free dish to try. We tried chicken tikka, korma and sambra- and Lamb khalida. We then moved to the main shopping district and one of the biggest malls in europe. England was playing Ireland in the 6 Nations rugby tournament so we watched it at an english pub. A real tense game that came down to the wire but Ireland pulled up the upset. Sam's Chophouse and Thomas Chophouse were two cool pubs that we hit. Saturday night was less eventful but the 7:30am wakeup call for the flight was still brutal. Arriving at the airport we couldn't find the passport check for ryanair and made it all the way through security to the gate. I was cleared to board but Daliana tried to play illegal alien and got us taken out of line and reprimanded. After giving us hand written boarding passes we were allowed to board. An uneventful flight finished the trip.

My mentor from Abbott was visiting for a global Conference. I met him and several other Abbott people in Temple bar for dinner. It was a nice close to the weekend.

Today I visited the Cootehill Abbott Nutrition Manufacturing plant. I got to meet all the other Irish PDPs at their version of PDP week. The infant formula plant processes 500,000L of skim milk per day and 98 million lbs of powder per year. It was a good trip and I'm looking forward to having my parents come up this weekend.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Catching up


The past couple weekends I have spent around Dublin. I am finally completely settled into my new apartment and am very happy with everything. It is really nice having the extra space and a big kitchen to cook in.

Work has been really busy because we have been having all of the brand review meetings so all of the people important to the business have been in town. We also announced the close of the Solvay aquisition which is exciting because 120 of their products fall into the MBO (division where I work) business model. Todd Chermak (the person sponsoring my position and the reason I am in Dublin) also visited recently. It was good to have him visit and our group went out to dinner in Malahide. I also was able to go out to dinner with a woman who is a commercial director in charge of $1.5 billion in product. She tried to convince me that Regulatory was busy and I really needed to get into marketing/commercial. I tried to convince her that she needed to give me job- so we'll see how that plays out. I have been able to have some really incredible experiences at this job so far interacting with people who make MBO a successful $4 billion a year business. I finished my first milestone last week and am getting involved with introducing a new drug product into 8 new markets in Southeast Asia and Africa.

Driving is getting a lot easier and I don't get lost nearly as much which is a definite plus.

Last weekend I had some fellow PDP visitors. Katie was visiting Ashely in the UK and they caught a cheap Ryanair flight over for the weekend. It was fun to have some visitors and entertain at my apartment. Daliana drove up from Clonmel and decided to play tour guide all weekend. We took them around to all of the Dublin highlights and had a Guinness or two.


I want to say congratulations to Stephanie and Craig for welcoming my first niece into the world today. I'm glad everything appears to be going well and that Sam and Eli will have someone new to terrorize. Hopefully she gets her looks from her mother...

Abbey Lorraine Schurter
born 2/21/10
5#, 6 1/2 ounces
17 inches

My Contact information in case anyone wants to send me any wonderful care packages is:
89 Hill of Down, Spencer Dock
North Wall, Dublin 1
Ireland

+353-086-877-0152

Most efficient means for staying in contact with me though is:
djschurter@gmail.com
skype: djschurter21

It is great to be able to chat with people from home to catch up so skype me if you get a chance.

This weekend we are heading to Manchester. I am excited to explore a new city/country. Will post again after the trip.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

CF Invite and Immigration


To follow my trip back to the US to become completely legal, I had to register with Garda and Immigration. I spent last Thursday waiting in lines with all of the other aliens hoping to get my Irish equivalent of the "green card." I also had to register to get my Irish PPS number (SSN equiv). I spent from 8 in the morning until 3:45 in the afternoon in transit and waiting in lines in order to get my documentation in order. After all of that I was still unable to open a bank account because I did not have a letter from the PPS office saying I did actually have an address in Dublin and that I am legal to be there. After running a few other errand I ducked in for some craic and a pint of Guinness at a bar that was established in 1108. It had a really interesting atmosphere and there was quite a bustle about it. After arriving to work the next morning, I was informed of a little bit of drama my absence had caused. Only my boss knew that I was going to be gone and he had given me the 'ok' to get sorted. Catching up on his work after having the flu run rampant through his 7 child household he had locked himself in his office all morning. The women who sit around me noticed my out of character absence and kept wondering where I was, asking each other and raising the general level of concern. One of them approached my boss asking him where David was and if he was ok several times and my boss seemingly blew it off. She then asked him to call David because wouldn't he want someone to care if his son was in a foreign country and didn't show up for work. So my boss called David reaching his voicemail and left a pretty sarcastic message asking him if he was ok and to check in with Dina when he got a chance. Turns out the David my boss had called and thought she was referring to is a fifty something Irish doctor who is the medical adviser for several of our products. He was equally confused my my boss was asking him if he was alright. It was very amusing situation and it also lets me know that skipping out on work will not go unnoticed...

Crossfit Ireland also held a competition on Saturday. Although it was small (~25 people) there were crossfits from Northern Ireland, Scotland and Manchester represented. It was a very fun and exciting day.

Workout One
Tabata Mash Up
Deadlift, 100Kg 220lbs
Pull Ups (chest to bar)
8 rounds of each, alternating. 20 seconds work, 10 seconds rest. total wod time 7 min 50 secondsq
I did 61 deadlifts and 44 pullups finishing second in this event.


Workout Two
As Many Rounds as Possible in 10 Minutes of:
3 Snatches, 40Kg (96 lbs)
6 Toes-to-Bar
9 Calories on the Rower
I completed just over seven rounds and finished second again.

Workout Three
3 Rounds of
1 Minute Max Thrusters, 45Kg 108lbs
1 Minute Max Box Jumps, 24″
1 Minute Max Kettlebell Swings, 24Kg 1.5 pood 53 lbs
1 Minute Rest
I think my third wod I scored like 161.

The third workout came down to me and another guy who is a powerlifter. We were tied for first place going into the final event. Two rounds done in the third event he and I were still tied and I managed to squeak out 4 more reps than him. It was really intense and fun. I ended up winning the competition. It was a good time. I was fortunate with the draw for what the workouts were. 16 of us went out for dinner and then to a couple pubs to celebrate.


Sunday was spent recovering and walking around Dublin. One of my favorite things to do here is to wander around and explore. The city has a lot of different pockets that each have their own unique flavor. There is a bubbly energy you feel walking around. One interesting thing to me about Dublin is that the tallest building is 16 stories I think. Most are less than 5 or 6 so it has a much different feel than most US cities.
-Starbucks everything is the same price number as the US only it is in Euro and not $ so that 5 dollar mocha frappa carmellata is much closer to 7.50$ most of the chains feel a little different but Starbucks looks/ smells/feels exactly the same
-A gallon of gas is ~7.50$
-A lb of lunch meat from the grocery store is ~15$/lb

Our soccer team also won its' first game tonight. Very exciting to get that goose-egg off the board.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Catching up...

So it's been a while since I have updated this. In the past couple weeks I have been really busy including travelling to Chicago for the weekend, moving into a new apartment and our soccer league starting.

Due to immigration reasons, it was necessary for me to leave Ireland, set foot on US soil and then re-enter Ireland after my visa because effective. I was suppose to fly out of Dublin Friday Jan 22 at 10:30am but the flight was delayed for 4 hours due to mechanical problems with the airplane. After sorting everything out, we began the 8.5 hour journey to O'hare. The pilot missed the runway on the first approach and then overshot the gate. We spent 30 mins on the plane because they were unable to open the doors and connect to the terminal. The pilot came on the intercom and asked everyone to take their seats again because they had to get a bulldozer to come and lift the front end of the plane up and manuever it into place. Finally disembarked from the plane and arrived at Avis 5 hours late. I then met up with my friend Laura Pabst from college at her house in Arlington Heights until Dani arrived at ORD at 9:00pm. We stayed at the Marriott on Michigan Avenue on the 40th. It was pretty spectacular. Friday night was uneventful after spending 16 hours traveling and my body screaming at me it was 5am by the time we got checked in and up to the room. Saturday we spent walking around Michigan Ave and downtown and then met up with PDPs for sushi. Saturday night we went to the LaSalle Power company which was overly crowded but fun. Sunday we checked out of the hotel and then met up with my dad as arrived from helping Craig move in Spokane. It was good to see familiar faces and it was the first time in my life I ever felt like Chicago wasn't very expensive. High Irish prices and the exchange rate have changed my perspective on things.

Flying out Sunday night and arriving in Dublin at 8am really threw off my internal clock and most of the next week was spent recovering from the time change shock. Work was incredibly busy finalizing all of our goals for the year and getting the proper approval. I did meet my first milestone so this rotation has been a success so far. I also spent a day with Irish Relocation searching for a new apartment now that I had my visa. We saw 16 apartments in one day. It was very busy. Coincidently the best was saved for last. I am very happy with where I moved and am excited to have visitors. My apartment is in the new financial district of Dublin. It is 2 bedroom, 2 bath, on the 6th floor with an incredible balcony. Great location and incredibly furnished. I moved in last weekend.

I was able to move into my apartment 3 days after viewing it. Things move fast when you have Abbott backing you financially. 47 people had looked at the apartment but the landlord chose me so that was pretty sweet. I moved in last weekend. Daliana was in town because her friend Edu from Barcelona was job hunting. I found a micro brewery pub that I liked a lot. They had a good sampler deal so I was able to try a couple different types of beer. Nice to get some variety from Guinness and Smithwicks.

Our office also started a soccer team. We are of varying ages and skill levels. I am by far the youngest player on our team and also one of the most experienced. Games are played outdoors in hockey style rinks with astroturf and small goals. Games are 5 v 5 and have some slightly different rules than a full field. Loving the irish weather of 35 and misting to play our games in. I was able to pick up some turf shoes for 25€ so I don't break my ankles. So far we are 0-2 but showing signs of brilliance each week.

Some other interesting cultural notes:
-I just did my taxes for last year and was talking about it with my co-workers. Appearently the Irish do not have to file taxes unless they know they overpaid or are self employed. The company you work for takes care of paying your taxes for you. The rate the people I was talking with ended up paying last year was ~48% so that didn't sound too bad. Interest rates for car payments is also a lot higher here.

The next couple days should be interesting for me: I have to go to immigration to get my POS (Irish SSN) and register with the police and I have my first Irish Crossfit competition this week. Both should be exciting and physically/mentally draining. (converting kgs to lbs is confusing enough)

I will try and post some more pictures this weekend after I get internet for my new apartment.

Monday, January 18, 2010

A familiar face...


Hi-ya

It's been a long eventful week. Last week started out with a wicked head-cold and ended with getting pulled over by the Garda(Police). The weather finally cleared up and we have had several sunny days (40deg) in a row. The week started off with snow and slush. Lots of cold and very wet weather since the temperature hovers around freezing. Because of the snow and cold, the schools were still out until Thursday. Lots of the country was without water. The city lowered the water pressure and even my office was without water for two days. They went to the store and had to buy bottled water for people.
Monday I had a great day at Crossfit and hit a new pr in the deadlift. I am still getting confused trying to convert from kilograms to pounds and vice versa depending on which gym I'm talking to. I woke up Tuesday morning with an awful headcold. I couldn't breathe/talk/function very well. I stopped at Eurospar- the Irish convenience store hoping to find some relief. Unfortunately I didn't recognize what any of the APIs were but I bought something called Panadol b/c it was the only thing available. I got to work obviously in rough shape and started asking my boss. Luckily I work with multiple pharmacists/ commercial people pedaling the exact drugs I need but due to compliance issues I had to go to the local pharmacy. The pharmacy structure is much different in Ireland. You can't just walk into a walgreens/cvs/ grocery store and get things like cold medicine. You have to go to a pharmacy and talk to a pharmacist, tell them your symptoms and they will bring you something from behind the counter. Ibprofen mixed with psuedephedrine is amazing stuff. Don't believe you can buy it stateside but really amazing. I inadvertently had an interesting cultural experience b/c of a cold.
Our office was incredibly busy last week because all of the commercial directors from the various regions around the world were in town for meetings so I met people from incredibly different backgrounds. Even the people I work with/eat lunch with represent Ireland/Greece/South Africa/France/USA/England. It is a really cool experience getting to work with such a diverse mix of people.

I also spent a lot of time talking with my boss about careers in Regulatory and possible career paths. Abbott is making an effort to develop more entry level RA positions in an attempt to develop better RA organically instead of bringing subject matter experts from other areas into RA. There is an incredible amount of opportunity for the right individual. We also developed my goals and set milestones. My first project is helping develop all of the goals for our group. Right now we are looking at upwards of 115 projects/milestones to keep track of and file this year. Should keep me busy. My next project is going to be to perform a gap assessment for a drug we are trying to file in multiple countries in the EU. I need to go through and see what we are missing and identify risk areas for filing. Both projects should be a good way to start off my Reg experience.

Daliana drove up from Clonmel Friday. It was really good to see a familiar face. We met up with people I had played basketball with at a bar near my apartment. They were really nice and welcoming. It was fun to get to know some other Irish people outside of work. Daliana and I spent Saturday exploring downtown Dublin. We went to the Guiness Brewery on Saturday because it was a really clear day. Guiness brewery sits on the crest of a hill and has a 9000 year lease on the land. The Gravity Bar, the place where you get your "free" beer at the end is 7 stories and has 360 glass windows. It is probably one of the best places to view the city of Dublin. We also hit some of the other touristy stuff since it was Daliana's first time in Dublin. I even got my first Irish haircut. 10 Euro was a much better deal than the 45$ cut i got in Lake Forrest even with the brutal exchange rate. Saturday night was spent listening to live music in the Temple Bar district. Sunday was spent walking around Dublin and a miserable trip to Ikea. It was unbelievably busy and overwhelming. It was really good to see a familiar face though and have someone to experience Dublin with.

Today was fairly uneventful except for driving home from work. I would say 75% of the time if i'm not driving to/from work I am lost within 5 mins of starting to drive. No street is straight or keeps the same name for longer than 300meters. All of the main roads crazily interchange from 2 lanes to 1 lane to 1 line and a bike lane or 1 lane and a bus/taxi lane. Usually it isn't horrible b/c all I have to do is follow signs to the city centre and I can usually make it home. Most of the time I couldn't trace my route on a map but thats all part of the adventure. Where I got in trouble was trying to discover a new way home that might be faster if I actually go where I wanted to. I ended up in a real busy part of downtown and make a wrong turn onto a street that only taxis and buses are allowed to go down. I got pulled over right away by a cop standing on the street corner. He took my id and asked me a bunch of questions and turned out to be a real nice understanding guy, gave me some directions and sent me on my way. Definitely a huge Tourist moment but it was still good. I got to where I was going without too much added stress.

I am flying into Chicago this weekend to deal with my Visa. I am flying in Friday afternoon and out on Sunday night. Should be a whirlwind but Abbott was gracious enough to find me accommodation at the Marriott on Michigan Avenue so I think I'll survive...

***Paula gets the GoldenEye Award last week for spotting the washer/dryer in the kitchen. Common in Ireland to be able to butter your toast and wash your dirties at the same time.***