Houston Day 2: Saturday, April 23
The day started like many others days. With Evan, inches from my peacefully sleeping face. "
Daddy, I want some breakfast."
I will rejoice the day he is old enough to pour his own cereal. But even if today was that day, we were in a strange house. And by "strange", I mean he didn't know where the cereal or bowls were.
After the 4 of us were up, fed, and dressed, we set off on the 4 block walk to a local neighborhood park while my aunt and uncle slept in a bit.
The little kids played on the swings...
...OK,
all of the kids played on the swings.
Slide Race!
Evan even met another kid there who was probably about 9 or 10 named, oddly enough, Evan. They were playing together, and all of a sudden the other Evan just runs off. I asked my Evan what happened, and he said that the other Evan was going to go home and get his
Lego guys. (Our Evan has just started getting into Legos and was
constantly playing with the few that he brought on the trip. It's not a surprise at all that Lego came up in their conversation.)
Evan lived across the street from the park, so was soon back with a pretty cool Knight - even though it was a fairly warm morning. (Wow, 3rd entry and I'm back to the puns. Honestly, I'm just as surprised as you are that I lasted this long, too)
We soon said goodbye to Evan and walked back to Aunt Jo's house where we all freshened up a bit then started the drive to Downtown Houston.
Along the way, we passed a steel yard that had done....interesting...things with their scrap.
The last time we were in Houston (1994ish) we went to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. At the time, it was held in the Astrodome and I remember being in awe of just how massive that building was. So it was even more of a shock to see the new(ish) Reliant Stadium right next to it - and dwarfing it! The sight is even more dramatic as you get closer and around that side of town, but we didn't have the camera out then.
Now, I don't have that much of a sample base to pull from (basically Milwaukee and Chicago), but Houston's buildings have some of the funkiest architecture. Many - like the one below - with random holes right in the middle of the building.
(That really, really large, windowless building on the right? Yeah, that's a light pole)
And I can't even describe what's going on with the building on the right here. But looks neat.
Our first destination was Discovery Green. From the reading we had done before we left home, it was sort of an artist's park right in the middle of downtown Houston. What we didn't know was that an Earth Day festival/event was going on. There was a band playing, dozens of booths set up selling everything from vegan organic baked goods to organic soap to Chevrolet Volt electric cars.
The little sailboats you see are remote controlled and you can rent them - similar to the boats near the Jungle Cruise in WDW. Unfortunately, due to all the people down there, the lines were just too long.
In the background of the photo is Houston's Convention Center, which Bambi pointed out looked exactly like a cruise ship with the big vents on top, the round "port hole" windows, and the defined decks. She pointed that out to my Aunt Jo (who plans conventions for a living) who stopped in her tracks, looked at it, and said "I must have been here a thousand times and never noticed that!"
We had lunch at their Lakehouse cafe. I had a Texas BBQ burger. Mmmm....
Discovery Green also has a pretty large fountain/splash pad that was quite popular on a hot Texas day. (The water, however, smelled a bit...ripe.)
After letting the kids cool off a bit, we went around to their playground. Evan was just a bit short to reach the zip line slider, but big sister was more than willing to lend a hand.
Like I said, Discovery Green has several artistic elements. And this basketball hoop.
It also has what appears to be the world's largest game of Tetris
Discovery Green was really cool, but it was also pretty packed with the Earth Day events that were going on. So we decided to head to park #3 for the day - Hermann park. Uncle Jack's knees were starting to bother him (which, during our 5 day visit, Aunt Jo mentioned that he refuses to get fixed at least 27 times) so he left Jo with us and headed home.
For those non-Houstonians, Hermann park reminds me a lot of New York's Central Park. And by "reminds" me, I mean "I've never been to New York, but I've seen it a lot on TV and in Movies." Hermann park is 445 acres, and is home to the Houston Zoo, the 18 hole Hermann park golf course, a very large outdoor theater, the Houston Museum of Natural Science and lots of other really neat park stuff.
In our research, we found the had a mini train ride around the park, so the kids were very excited to do it. The line to buy tickets was huge, but the kids wanted to ride, so I jumped in at the back. After about 5 minutes (and taking exactly 2 steps forward) Bambi walked out of the gift shop and said that you can buy tickets in there as well - and it's air conditioned and has no line. It didn't take much to convince me. I came out about 4 minutes later with train tickets, boat tickets for later, a Diet Coke and some Powerades for the kids. The family I was behind in line hadn't moved.
I paid it forward though. The man at the end of the line was looking really beat and his kids were getting antsy to ride. I quietly told him about buying tickets inside.
As long as the ticket line was - the actual line for the train was almost nonexistent. We waited for the train to come back from it's run, and we jumped right on.
And who do we see jump on the train just before it pulled out? The guy from the end of the line.
The ride was pretty long - probably 15 or 20 minutes around a good chunk of the park. When the ride was done, we made our way over to the lake to use the paddle boat rental tickets I bought with the train tickets.
Another funky Houston building:
The lake area for the pedal boats is pretty big, with a large fountain in the middle. Evan insisted on sitting up front with me. This is nice in a "hanging out with my little guy" type of way, but kind of unfortunate in the "his legs are too short to reach the pedals so dad will have to do all of the work" sort of way.
We were pedaling along, coming up behind and around the big fountain and everything was going fine. Until the wind shifted. And those pedal boats don't exactly turn or accelerate in any type of record setting fashion. Bambi and Madison, sitting in back, got ... well, drenched. Madison was pretty upset. She must have thought I did it on purpose. I can assure you, I did not shift the wind direction on purpose.
After a little more pedaling, I got to relax a bit.
Why? Because Evan insisted on pedaling.
We brought the boat back in and Madison was still a bit upset. And how do you calm down an upset child? Sit them down and have them talk to you in a calm and quiet manor, discussing their feelings about why they are upset and what we can do in the future to avoid getting upset? NO! You buy them Ice Cream!
We were hoping for a nice little ice cream parlor or something, but my aunt couldn't think of any nearby. We settled for the freezer in the gift shop with standard frozen confections - but on a hot day, they sure did hit the spot.
It was only mid-afternoon, but it was getting pretty warm, so we headed back to Aunt Jo's house. Not long after, my cousin and her husband made it down from Austin. We all went out to eat at Mimi's Cafe (evidently a chain, but this was the first time I'd heard of them.) The food was good.
We then headed back and had a relaxed evening at my Aunt's house catching up with family.
Up Next: Easter in Houston - Fishies, Bunnies and Horsies!