Showing posts with label Military Seperations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Military Seperations. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Making up for lost time!


Alex was deployed August 2009 just 4 weeks after Naomianna (aka Lexi) was born. He came home for 2 weeks R and R in Feb. 2010 when she was 7 mos old. He came home for good just before her 1st birthday July 2010. We got a whole 6 mos toghether July-Dec 2010 before he left for 4 more months for some school on the east coast. From January 2011-April we were apart while he was at that school. When he got home we had ONE month, the month of May, together and then Lexi and I left for NH and he left for Germany. It was four and a half MORE months until we got to see him again Sept 20, 2011!

THEN, when Lexi and I got to Germany we only had 10 days with Alex before he left for a month long rotation. So before he left we were rushed getting Lexi and I inprocessed and learnging where everything was and how to get to the base, getting new ID cards, getting my german drivers license and all that good stuff. But we still tried to max out our family time!

First we checked out our neighborhood.








(looking back at the town from a walk out in the fields. see the hot air balloon? Our house is off to the very far right and in the back you can barely see some of the solar panels on our roof)

And we met 'Oma' a sweet old woman who gets her milk at the farm across the street from us



(LEFT: this is Lexi running up to Oma -after she got done picking plums from her orchard across the street from our house- one day after meeting her! RIGHT: our landlord/neighbor reaching over the fence to say hello to Lexi who was yelling 'HI, HI!')

(Lexi eating a plum given to us by 'Oma' after she picked them from the orchard. We have a plum tree in our yard too!)

Lexi took the time to smell the neighbor's flowers


we went for a walk to the fields, met some goats, played in the flowers and let the dogs run around





And of course I found where ALL the horses in our town, err village, are =)
We had such an excess of pears and apples growing in our yard I started bagging them up EVERY day and bringing them to the horses in our village =)

This is Elsie. She's a haflinger (a seemlingly popular breed around here!). Her owner is the private bus driver that takes the local kids to a private school. One of the kids he drives is our neighbor's daughter, who rides Elsie. Elsie is stabled with two goats, Salt and .... I forget the other ones name, no, it's not pepper.







This is Elsie asking for more pears we bring her =)

At the edge of town there are 2 pastures right next to each other. One holds 2 ponies and the other, larger pasture holds 2 quarter horse mares, a yearling and another pony. The yearling is Cisco and he was born just 3 months before this picture. The owner was so happy to show me the papers on his quarter horses from america as he explained in VERY poor english (any my german was worse!) that one was from idaho and one was from alabama. how funny!


We did get to squeeze in touring some nearby towns and cities. Some of it was just to show me around so I knew where I was going and some was just for fun exploring.

I'll include those in my next posts! It's just about time I got this one out w/ pics of our neighborhood!



Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Our first O-conus PCS


Our first O-conus PCS (that is Outside the Continental US - Permanent Change of Duty Station) 

It seems fitting that I start this blog with one of the toughest times I've encountered as a military wife. Also fitting because I am so far from family, so they can kind of 'keep up' with me, if you will, and follow along my daily life as a military wife =)

Bear with me as I back up one month, to September 19th, 2011; our first Oconus PCS. I suppose that’s not very accurate though, since NO PCS is done in a day. So I guess I’ll just start at the beginning…..
August 2010. My family took a vacation to Germany. It was a big affair. My father (who is from Germany), my mother, my sister Gretchen, her husband Tom, my littlest brother Hans, (who’s not so little at 6’2), and my husband Alex, our daughter Lexi, (then 13mos) and I - all went! We stayed 2 weeks and toured where my dad was born and grew up. It was awesome! We got to meet a lot of family for the first time and we just really enjoyed ourselves!
 



All of us in Germany on the last day 17 Aug 2010. In the town of Neckarsteinach along the Rhine-Neckar.

No sooner did we get back to Ft Lewis (where we were stationed at the time) when we heard all kinds of things about people coming down on orders, some of them… to Germany. (It seems everything happens while you’re away!) I was all kinds of excited! I kept praying, ‘God if it is your will... please let us go to Germany’ (but don’t tell my husband this!! Ha!)

Well, no lie, October rolled around and my husband came home and said he had received an email that day from... don’t ask ME who… the PCS gods I presume… and we would be PCS’ing to Germany come May. It was kind of funny, really. He broke the news to me all gently, like, ‘I know, this is going to be tough.’ Meanwhile I’m doing cartwheels on the inside!!! (but don’t tell my husband this!!)

So, it was a long ways off and there was MUCH to do! Back then my husband worked LONG hours! We awoke at and he didn’t come home until . It didn’t help that we lived almost an hour from the post. And I should mention that he had only just gotten home that June from a year long deployment to Iraq, his 4th Iraq/Afghanistan deployment. It was tough. But somehow, as usual, we made it work. We filled every spare moment with family time. People offered to watch our daughter so we could have a ‘date’ night but for us it was more fun to do things with our daughter and with our two dogs, the boys.


Favorite memory that summer after Alex came home? Driving to town to get ice cream and sharing it with Lexi and the dogs!


this pic was actually taken in Frbruary 2010 on Alex's R&R but I love it. And as you can see it's a long standing family tradition to go get ice cream togehter =)


Come January 2011 (just 6mos from returning from a year long deployment) he was off again to some school in Georgia. He was going to be gone for 2 school back to back and wasn't expected home until May. We actually got our PCS date moved back to June because of it.

For some reason, while he was gone, I had a very tough time. I ended up being so distraught and depressed that my sister, Gretchen, helped pay for our sister in law, Kelly, to come visit me. Kelly is married to our other little brother Ludwig (also not so little at 6’1, haha!) but he was deployed to Afghanistan at the time. (this is why he missed the big family trip to Germany the previous August). Kelly ended up spending 3 weeks with me helping me cope and helping me take care of Lexi. It is a time in my life I never want to remember and I blame it on having just rehomed my 3 horses (which was phase 1 of our oconus pcs) and just Alex being gone again and the stress of an upcoming PCS. Whatever it was, my sister and sister in law were my angels and really stepped up and came to my rescue.

After Kelly left I drove Lexi (then 18mos) and our 2 boys (the dogs) 17 hours down south to California to stay with Alex’s side of the family. Alex ended up coming home earlier than planned and I drove back up to be with him again in April. But remember, we had been apart since January.

A month and a half later, the end of May, as the movers finished up packing our house, Lexi and I kissed Alex goodbye and headed to NH. We had flown my father out to accompany me, Lexi and the two dogs on our cross country road trip from WA to NH. And it wasn’t a direct one, either!

We went from WA down south to CA, to stop one last time to see Alex’s side of the family. Then north east to CO to see my sister in law (who had JUST moved there from NH in anticipation of my brother Ludwig’s homecoming) from there we WOULD have gone to Ft. Riley KS to see my brother Hans but he had JUST deployed to Afghanistan as well. So... what did we do instead of heading straight to NH from there? Well we headed south again to Ft Sill Oklahoma to be with one of my bestest friends. (yes auto correct is trying to fix the word ‘bestest’ I don’t care! I love her). After a couple days with her family we finally headed to New England and good ol’ NH!

As we were approaching the finish line, (2 whole weeks later), Alex was getting on his direct flight from Seattle WA to Frankfurt Germany.

So, I relaxed. Phases two (the movers) and three (the cross country drive) of our Oconus PCS were over. We enjoyed the summer with my side of the family and all my close friends from grade school on up, but (a BIG but) we were missing Alex… a feeling that is all too familiar. And he was missing us. He had a lot to do to get settled in but he was definitely spending his free time checking out the area and enjoying himself. I had no clue JUST how much time he spent inprocessing until I arrived and and had to inprocess!!

Towards the end of summer it was, how do I say, GO time. There were a million things to do. I had to jump through a lot of hoops getting the dogs’ paperwork in order. This included faxing their records from the Fort Lewis vet, two trips to a military vet on an air base an hour away and then tracking down a USDA office 2.5 hrs away. (yes, I said USDA.. and no, we were not bringing cows with us, just our dogs!) Now mind you, all of this needs to be done last minute, and not by choice. But the paperwork has to all be dated within a certain amount of time before arrival in Germany. We had to show their vaccines, a bilingual health certificate and rabies vaccination sheet and a flight health certificate. On top of all that one of our dogs ended up needing to have a 2nd chip put in him because apparently the one he had wasn’t up to international standards! And all this information you need doesn’t come easy. It comes in pieces and you have to do your homework on it all. Otherwise, you have the fear of your dogs being quarantined up to 90 days on the other side. Something that would not only be heartbreaking for them and us (I mean they sleep on the bed with us) but would also cost us hundreds of dollars! Let me tell you, the Army does not make it easy for you to bring your pet!
Here I will let your eyes rest and finish up the story in my next posting.
                      ‘Til next time… I’ll be living my life as a soldier’s wife. Sooo dreamy =)
x

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