Category Archives: England

Memorial Day

While today is Bank Holiday in England it is Memorial Day back in the United States.  While either day may mean days off from work, picnics, and bbqs, I take this time to remember those closest in my life who have risked much for the the many they will never meet.  Especially for the fallen heroes, those who never got the opportunity to return home to their loved ones and to the ones still Missing in Action. 

The F-111 in Lakenheath, England is the plane my dad used to fly.  He was a navigator and bombardier in the USAF. He retired as a Lt. Col after 30+ years of service that included fighting in the Gulf War.  
source
My fondest memories of Memorial day with my daddy is visiting the American Military Cemetery in Nettuno near Anzio.  I remember once we went there and got there when Clinton was in office and I was so excited to get to see the President in person.  I believe it was a special place for my dad because his father had fought here in Italy during WWII.  Basically that is three genrations of my family who have spent significant parts of their life in Italy and four generations of my family whom have lived in Europe. 


Although no longer with us, I remember him especially today.  He is the reason I was born abroad and was able to grow up on military bases overseas until the age of seventeen.  He was an influential person in my husband’s life and a big factor for why he chose to follow in his footsteps and join the USAF too.    I wish he could visit us and enjoy our life here in Europe with us but I know he is smiling down from Heaven.

“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. 
Rather we should thank God that such men lived.”
– Gen. Patton

This is my time to remember my dad’s father, my dad, and my husband for their years of service and in the US Armed Forces.  I also say thank you to everyone else who has served their country and sacrificed  much.  It is a great honour, purpose, and duty and to you I write this post.  Thank you. 
Happy Memorial Day Everyone. 
Cheers,
B. 
*photographs found here are sourced and those not sourced belong to Bonnie Rose of Bonnie Rose Photography © 2013 All Rights Reserved | www.bonnie-rose.co.uk 

When My Daddy Returned from the Gulf War

Blog Every Day In May, Day 18.  Tell a story from your childhood. Dig deep and try to be descriptive about what you remember and how you felt.

I’m not sure if there are any photos of me in my school uniform from my days of primary school in Norfolk.
This photo however was taken near the same age with my father in one of those fun period dress up places. 
Most of my favourite memories are from years growing up in Europe and many of them include my dad now that he is really gone.  One of the best memories I have is when I was finishing up a day from school.  It was the afternoon and I had just completed a game of field hockey with the other girls and we were now changing to go home for the day.  A classmate ran into the room and exclaimed to me that my father was outside.  I remember shaking off the news with out a care because I knew my dad was not there.  He was a world away. He was in a desert.  He was not in England and certainly not at my school.  Grabbing my belongings I left the school building to be proven very wrong as my eyes met  my fathers.  I remember the way he looked. He looked so tall (from my short stature of being a young girl) and so tanned.  I do not remember my father every looking so dark. He was smiling and I dont remember if I dropped my bag or ran with it under my arm. But I ran all the way to be greeted by his arms in a hug.  To be honest my eyes are filled with tears as I write this because it was such a happy memory.  Times when I wish I had my father now I wish I could just close my eyes and open them again to see that same smiling face.  To be able to give him one more hug. To hear him say ‘I love you’. 
This is an excerpt from my post Living In England During the Gulf War

#BlogEveryDayInMay

*photographs found here either belong to Bonnie Rose of Bonnie Rose Photography © 2013 All Rights Reserved | www.bonnie-rose.co.uk 

Coffee @ Camden in Bath, England

I headed into town today despite the fact that I will have nineteen children at my house tomorrow for my son’s party, and there is still much to do in preparation.  I felt like being spontaneous and so I met up with my husband on his lunch break to try out Coffee @ Camden in Bath.  Technically it is in Camden which you can get to from the Bath city centre in a mere five minutes.  If you happen to come on a nice day I highly recommend sitting outside.  Their back patio area is very nice and has a picturesque view.  Which was lovely especially when the sun hid back behind the clouds and it got a bit colder.  
My husband ordered an Americano with the Camden Club, which is served with kettle chips, and I ordered a cafe latte and the Frittata from their lunch menu.  The Frittata was delicious and it came with a side salad, bread, and chutney. The best part was being pleasantly surprised by the fact that the bread was still warm.  I could easily order the same thing next time if I do not try one of their five variations of panini. 
Since this was a rare ‘day date’ with my husband, I decided to treat myself to the cupcakes I had seen photos of from their Coffee @ Camden facebook page. I paired my vanilla cupcake with a hot chocolate complete with cream, marshmallows, and sprinkles for a full sweet sugar fix.  It hit the spot.

When you come you must ask about their amazing chili jam.  We bought a very large jar of it a week back from their stall near Milsom Place on a weekend. It literally goes quite well with anything. Toast,  chicken, eggs, crackers, or even just off a spoon. We must have tried it on almost everything because our jar is now almost empty. Otherwise I would have shared a photo with you. Maybe with the next jar. 😉 

Coffee @ Camden is open Monday thru Friday from 9am – 5pm 
with breakfast being served until 11am.  You can view their full menu here.
Coffee @ Camden
2 Claremont Terrace, Camden, Bath, BA1 3EH 

A Day in the Life of Bonnie Rose

Day 15, Wednesday: A Day in the life (include photos from throughout your typical day – this could be “a photo an hour” if you’d like)
Do not let this photo fool you, I do not spend my day sitting on bed in front of my laptop. However my life in recent months is not really that more exciting. 😉  So here is the next installment of the #BlogEveryDayInMay challenge.

My Typical Morning
S N O O Z E
Lets be honest. I set a few alarms in the morning with the plan that I will hit snooze.  Then when that plan goes to fail my husband wakes me up.  I eventually stopped setting my snooze alarms and now jut wait for Ryan.  However he has snooze alarms on his mobile phone too. But who does not love the few extra minutes under the covers.

B R E A K F A S T
The morning begins with my husband waking up the household that consists of us and our two boys.  I make my way downstairs and start on making breakfast for Ronan and Maddox.  On school days I cook them porridge on the stove.  Not being quite awake enough for conversation, I cook while checking the tweets and Instagram feed that have happened while I was sleeping.  Being that I live in England and follow quite a number of people in the USA (not to mention that my friends in Hawaii are just now going to sleep) there is usually a good amount to look back through.

W A I T I N G  F O R  T H E  T A X I 
Though close in age my sons go to different schools in opposite parts of town due to the class sizes when we applied for schools.  There are not buses here like in the US and since we do not own a car, the school system has supplied taxis to take my boys to school.  Depending on when one boy leave and when the next taxi arrives it can be a good 30 to 45 minutes of waiting on the next taxi.  Add 15 if we are outside early before the first taxi arrives.  
L A S T   M I N U T E   K I S S E S 
If I am lucky that gives me a few minutes with my husband before he has to leave for work.  My husband orders coffee online from Has Bean Coffee (www.hasbean.co.uk) and if we have time he will make me a cup to enjoy with him.  I really like the Brazil Fazenda Passeio Natural Rubi.  The description on the package says, “In the cup you get sweet milk chocolate and biscuit.  Think a Kit Kat chocolate bar with a hint of dried apricots and sultanas.”  You had me at ‘chocolate’.  
B L O  G  G I N G
If I have been a good blogger than all this means is I look over my prewritten post that is already scheduled to ‘go live’ and then maybe start looking at what I will be writing tomorrow.  But lets be honest.  My finished blog posts are really notes in a notebook or on my phone that I still need to type up into a structured post online.  I like to do this first thing in the morning.
E M A I L S & C O R R E S P O N D A N C E
Though I may have checked the emails earlier, now I sit down and reply back to everyone. That trickles down to replying back to people on my numerous social networks.  

My Typical Afternoon
I am currently not working outside of the home right now and so I do not have a typical schedule.  I could be out photographing or working inside on edits for Bonnie Rose Photography.  I am currently the one taking care of the majority of the work to make sure the household runs smoothly.  While my husband does 85% – 90% of the cooking I do 95% – 100% of the dishes. There is also the laundry that is more time consuming if its cold, wet, rainy, or any of the combination of those words outside. You can read more about this here in Laundry in the UK VS US
This week I am working to get ready for my son’s birthday party.  I have a thing about inviting every one in a class for birthday parties, because of someone feeling left out if you do not.  My son experienced this when we first moved here to Bath at his current school. So the party size is one of the biggest we have ever held and theres quite a bit more prep and stress to have the house ready to accomodate that many children at once. I do love to try to get outside be it to visit a friend for tea, go into the town of Bath, or a hike on my own up to Solsbury Hill
T W O  H O U R  W I N D O W 
Without fail from 2 – 4 every day I am the most exhausted. This is about the time I would like to sit and read but that only makes me more tired. I have started making sure I have a pot of tea ready for this time. Which is why I really enjoyed the warm sun we had a week ago.  I got to sit outside and just soak up the Vitamin D since in England we can have a deficiency of it with all the clouds and rainy skies. 
A F T E R S C H O O L 
My favourite time is when my boys get home from school.  Sometimes it is about the same time and other times I have a little one on one with one son before first.  I love hearing about their day especially from my youngest since he is just now volunteering information about what he does at school.  I have them change out of their school uniforms before after school snack and then we read together on the couch.  
A F T E R N O O N  T E A
When you live with boys you learn that the whole ‘eat you out of house and home’ does not start as teenagers but at birth and intensifies with each growth spurt.  I have recently started making these flat bread snacks with honey that the boys love because (well honey!) and they are cut with star wars cookie cutter shapes. 
D I N N E R T I M E 
My husband usually cooks dinner because he loves to cook.  I will help him and we have started getting the boys involved in the process as well. The photo below is actually the dinner that I made.  We now have one night a week where I get to cook since he plays football with the guys. 
B E D T I M E   S T O R I E S 
 If time allows we read through which ever book series we are currently reading at that time after the boys have gotten on their pyjamas and are ready for bed.  We love reading the Harry Potter series and books by J. R. R. Tolkien with my boys. 
B E D T I M E
After the boys go to bed we typically make an evening pot of tea or if its been a long day, we like to break out a glass of wine.   We like to work through a season of television that is already out watching an episode or two a night together.  The second thing I dislike more than adverts (commercials) is being ‘all caught up’ on a programme and having to wait until the next week to find out what happens.  So we are always looking for a good show to start next if you have suggestions. We are all caught up on Game of Thrones, so my solution has been to begin reading the books.  So far I am in book one. 
In Summary
So there you have it…not very exciting. But it is my typical day here in my expat life in England.  I was a lot more busy with a lot less free time last year when I was working in the salon.  So despite me feeling like I do not have a very fun to read post today, I am more than grateful to be able to be at home with my three guys on the weekend to enjoy our country walks and family time.  Last year I worked on Saturdays and my husband worked on Sundays and we basically had small increments of time together as a family.  After everything we have been through in the last several years, there is nothing more importnat to me than the time we have together as a family and as a couple. So I take the mundane daily grind with a stride and look forward to our next weekend plans.  

#BlogEveryDayInMay

*photographs found here either belong to Bonnie Rose of Bonnie Rose Photography © 2013 All Rights Reserved | www.bonnie-rose.co.uk 

A Moment in my Day

Today is the ninth day of May with the Blog Every Day in May challenge.  Feel free to join in and if you catch this anytime through out the month feel free to just jump right in.   

Day 9, Thursday: A moment in your day (this can be just a photo or both a photo and words.

Today I had a friend over to catch up over some tea.  I surprised her by making a banana coffee cake to share.  I was excited to get to use my new silver cake server.  I had been eyeing one like it by +aspiringkennedy with her Four Sales and found one online.  Due to having moved so much and having relcoated to Europe, we have parted with much of our original belongings from when we got married. I honestly think we may have just one or two ‘wedding presents’ still around.  So I have decided I am going to start collecting more ‘grown up’ additions to our housewares like Silver and china.  We honestly have just enough plates and bowls for the four of us that we purchased at teh grocery store when we got to England.  It will be nice to eventually have a whole set dishes and serving items for fancy dinners and the holidays.  While the lone silver cake server may have clashed with my glass measuring cup (posing as my creamer) the banana coffee cake was delicious.  

Note to Self: Must get grown up coasters for teas so I’m not using my Dexter ‘Blood Slide’ Coasters for tea. 😉

Homemade Banana Coffee cake for tea with my friend today.
Getting ready  to sit down for a cuppa and some treats as I catch up with  my friend this afternoon.


#BlogEveryDayInMay
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*photographs found here either belong to Bonnie Rose of Bonnie Rose Photography © 2013 All Rights Reserved | www.bonnie-rose.co.uk 

My Ex-pat Life

Cheers! If you have came here today from Casey’s blog,  We Took the Road Less Traveled I would like to say ‘Welcome’ and thank you for visiting! If you have not read my guest post today you can read it here at:Finding Happiness when Restlessness Strikes’, a look at how to find contentment when the need to travel or move arises.

Whether you have been following along for the last few months or just here today, I would like to give you a glimpse of what it has been like to live an ex-pat life in England.  We have been living here since 2011 with no intention to leave.

You can also check out my other social media sites and follow along:

My Ex-Pat Life:
Although I was born in England and grew up moving around military bases in Europe, I spent the first decade of my adult life living in the USA, where my parents came from originally   I went to Uni, fell in love, got married, started our family, and become a USAF wife.  In the footsteps of my parens we lived as a military family for six years in Monterey, California and Oahu, Hawaii.  As my husband’s enlistment came to an end we decided it was finally time to move me back home to Europe.  He got accepted into Sussex University in Brighton, England for his masters degree programme and we began our life as an Ex-pat family living in England. 

 

I am a Third Culture Kid (TCK) and so I have always been caught between worlds.  Having been born in England while my parents were stationed in Oxford, I have dual citizenship.  Technically I am a citizen of England and technically I am an ex-pat from America. This has given us a unique perspective as an ex-pat family living abroad.  We have learned a lot from the experience and from our mistakes in the last two years.  Anyone thinking of moving to England as expats, feel free to send your questions my way and I will do my best to answer or direct you to informative sources.  
My husband and I moved here with no jobs or a place to live and tried to figure it all out during a summer living first at a hostel near the beach.  We got enjoy the cultural things of England like getting takeaway from the ‘chippy’, drinking copious amounts of tea, navigating our way on the public transportation system, and enjoying the sights of southern England.  Eventually we figured out jobs, found a place to live, found a school, and then our sons joined us to begin the Fall 2011 in England. 
We moved from an island life in Hawaii to the village life in England where we could walk to school, work, church, and the shops. 
We put our kids in the local school in the village and my boys got to experience a school system of uniforms and houses, much like their beloved Harry Potter series.

We decided to not get a car and instead walk and use the buses and trains.  Two years later we still do not have a car and have not seen it as a hindrance   The public transportation here is something I definitely missed during my time living in the USA.  It is really nice to just hop on the train and take a day trip with the family. 
We have enjoyed celebrating the holidays in England especially the ones specific to this country like Bonfire Night.  It is a great chance to get together with friends, watch the torch led processions  see the ‘Guy’ Fawkes burn on the bonfire, and enjoy a sky full of fireworks.  Even experiencing holidays such as Christmas in England has been a beautiful part of Expat life in England.
My family enjoys now living in the countryside of Bath, England where we spend our weekends donning wellies (rain boots) and walking for hours through the public footpaths.  We usually always see farm animals and sometimes wild deer.  There is nothing like being outside to make us remember just how happy and blessed that we are to be living here in England. 

We are both so content here in England and could not imagine not living the Expat life.  Has it been difficult? Sure.  Have we made mistakes along the way with not knowing the correct information. You betcha.  But would we trade our lives for something else? I do not believe so. Not unless it meant to live the expat life elsewhere.  However we are very happy here and look forward to more travels through out Europe during our time here.  Whether you are planning to relocate to England, are living here currently as expats, or want to come visit I recommend coming to the UK.  Feel free to ask me any questions and I hope to be able to answer you as best as I can.

Cheers!
Bonnie Rose
*Photography belongs to Bonnie Rose Photography © 2013 All Rights Reserved | www.bonnie-rose.co.uk

Expat: Choosing the Expat Life

The first Thursday of every month I will be linking up with Lost in Travels and Postcards from Rachel for the Expat Diaries instead of my usual ‘Throwback Thursday’  photography posts.  Today I commence the Expat Diaries series on my A Compass Rose with a beginning look at ‘Choosing the Expat Life’.  This is my personal look at how my husband and I got to where we are today living abroad in England. 
When I met my husband at Harding University we were in a traveling theatre group that ministered to youth groups in churches in and out of state.  He was a sophomore with an ever changing major and I was an incoming freshman with a plan to leave after two years.  My whole life up to that point had been centered around theatre and living overseas.  I was going to work on my theatre degree for two years and then hopefully transfer to a prestigious Theatre school in Australia.  I had already planned out my semester abroad the following year at the University’s campus in Sydney to help me in my endeavors.  Short story: The goal I had for myself was that I would be going places.

On our first date during Spring semester I told him how I was going going to be leaving to go to Australia to pursue my dreams in Theatre.  My husband told me later he knew on that date that he was going to marry me.  Long story short I fell head over heels for the American boy and my first real love.  We dated for one semester before getting engaged for just a year.  We got married the summer before his Senior year, nine months later we  were pregnant with our first son, and had a newborn nine months after that.  Any plans to go to Australia or be a starving actress in Los Angeles shifted as my life took a new focus and direction. 

During our engagement we came up with new plans that would involved the two of us together.  My only need was to be living overseas.  Since we were going to a private Christian university this developed into embarking on a life of mission work.  There was a current team at my small church in Naples, Italy where I had lived before we moved to the US.  I figured we could put together a team from students on campus and return to help with the on going work.  It seemed perfect because my husband could see the place where I had lived twice in my life, being the closest thing to a home that I had.  After we were married a situation arose back in Italy closing down that path to us.  As one door closes another one opens.  We were invited to join a team going to southern Thailand with a summer camp friend of my husband.  I had not yet been to Asia and my husband had not yet left North America, so the excitement of a new world captivated us.  We formed a small team to live in Thailand that Summer working with a church to teach English.  I was pregnant with Ronan when we lived in Bangkok and so our family was top priority on our minds.  We learned from the locals how dangerous it had become recently where we wanted to move with the other missionary team.  Between the issue of safety and other circumstances the group never went forth to that area of the Thailand.  My husband and I felt lost at that point because we knew we wanted to go abroad but we did not know what to do with our lives.  We needed to decide fast because Ryan was finishing his degree and I was getting closer to having our baby.  

I was a freshman during 9/11 and Ryan and I had been together that first weekend on a trip with our ministry theatre group.  Since then talks about the military (due to my father being an officer in the USAF) came up frequently.  Ryan had even talked to a recruiter about a master degree to be a chaplain in the military.  So we decided after the baby was born we would move to Arizona where my parents live and he would enlist.  My father, dressed in his officer’s uniform, escorted his son-in-law to make sure the recruiters did not try to pull the wool over his eyes (as they can do).  He put in that we really wanted an overseas assignment and we began the process of being a military family.  My parents did six overseas tours in Europe. I figured, having known enough families that would rather stay stateside, it would be easy to do.  My husband got a linguistics job that ironically would never send him to Europe, nor Asia, despite the fact that he was learning Chinese.  After training in Monterey, California it would be one tour in Hawaii, followed by DC, and repeat the process through out the time spent in the military.  We were so blessed to be stationed in such beautiful places but my heart was calling me elsewhere.  
The Military Life on Oahu, Hawaii 

The actual story of how we got from that point in our life to where we are today is not really a pretty one. Nor is it flattering. Since it does not pertain to life of an Expat, I’ll leave that story for another day.  I had my English passport and I was more than ready to leave. I came to the US in 2000 with my parents and in 2011 my husband took me back to Europe.  Though he was enrolled in school for his masters degree, we came with no jobs and no place to live.  We essentially lived in a hostel until we were able to figure things out.  It included an expensive trip back for Ryan when we were told incorrect information about his application for a marriage visa.  We have also learned a lot of other mistakes along the way as rookie expats.  To be fair I knew what an expat was in definition but did not fully know what it meant to be an expat until we became expats.  I also did not know how vast and huge the expat world is today.  Honestly had I known and had I been able to connect years back maybe I would have saved myself from some of the heartache of being a Third Culture Kid living in a foreign land of America.  

Living in England with our family
The current life for expats is much different than how it would have been twenty or thirty years past due to online social networks.  An expat life can be open to loneliness especially when you live very far away from family.  However I do not have a ‘home’ and I dont have those friends I have grown up with my whole childhood from moving so often.  But I connect with people living nomadic lives as adults that now it seems you dont ever have to feel alone.  I had not realized even until the start of this year how much resources there are for expats and how many expats share their personal stories online through blogging.  I find much happiness and fulfillment from just conversing with other expats all over the world on a day to day basis.  I never found twitter as useful as I do today because I can easily talk with people who understand the ups and downs of expat life in seconds.  If you have a heart for travel, for the world, for letting new cultures and ways of living into your life then I recommend choosing the expat life.  Although the community of expats is spread worldwide, it is a close knit community.  We chose the Expat life to come back to the only life I had known.  We choose to stay with the Expat life because we have made a home for ourselves and essentially found our home in the world.  
Q: Why have you chosen or do you want to choose the Expat life?

If you liked this you can also check out: Expat: Finding Love Abroad and Travel: Moving Abroad

xx
Bonnie Rose