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Ko Olina- raining out over the water
The whole time I lived in Charleston I really wanted to LOVE the place. And I liked it a lot. There were even parts of it I loved. But it just wasn't the one. I've always loved California and it's warm but not too hot weather and laid back style and thought that's maybe where I belonged. God only knows I've never been happy living in Maryland and can't stand cold weather.

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Maggie's enjoying the sunny weather
Now when I walk out of the house to take the dog for a walk in the morning every day, the words, "God, I love this place" echo through my mind like waves lapping over each other.

It's just incredible. The weather is amazing to say the least. The beaches...well, I don't know that there's any going to back to Ocean City, Maryland and being close to satisfied at this point. Even the people are really great. Not all of them. But most.

I've met pretty much all of our close neighbors at this point. My next door neighbor to the left even said he would see if his company was hiring for me. As I was walking the dog last night I had a nice conversation with an older couple who have lived here for 30 years and promised to email me information on their veterinarian. 
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Yard planting day!
I just feel so...this sounds cheesy but blessed to be here. Nick isn't always around and that's the downside to his job but I've already met some amazing friends through him. And I'll continue to push myself to meet more people. The nice couple directly across from us are awesome. The guy is a West Point grad from the year before Nick graduated from the Naval Academy. They're engaged too and getting married next month. They already invited us to dinner at some point in the near future.

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Laying the compost
There are of course negative sides to living on the island but I feel like they're worth putting up with to be able to live in such paradise. Traffic is the biggest. It's hideous. I hear it's worse than LA and I believe it.  I've been trying to find a local job, which is actually harder than it seems. The area I live in is developing quite a bit but it's not really there in a business aspect yet. The major places to work are in downtown Honolulu or Waikiki. Which are over an hour commute each way...with a decent day of traffic. It's horrible. And I won't get started on parking.

I did interview at a restaurant at a golf course one street over from out house so I'm hoping to hear back soon.

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Grass trays before being broken into plugs
Also of course natural disasters are something to be aware of here. The tsunami scare was a big warning to us. Nick and I have since developed a list of disaster preparedness food and water and miscellaneous that we're working on assembling. It was good to have the scare and be warned because now I feel like we'll be a lot more prepared next time.

Being a homeowner has been interesting. About three weeks ago we decided to work on our yard and plant grass patches/plugs. That was tsunami day. We couldn't get out to rent a tiller to till the compost in with the dirt/clay base of our backyard. The following day, a Sunday Nick went out to rent the tiller...but when he got back and dropped it off with me he told me he'd been called into work. We only had the tiller for a day and I didn't want to spend our evenings that week working on the yard. I had no idea how long he'd be gone so I got to work. It was quite a job ahead of me. We had gotten the compost laid down the day prior but using the actual tiller was really hard. Once I got the entire yard tilled I broke apart trays of grass into approximately 5" by 5" "plugs" of grass to plant. The plugs are expected to grow together in 3-6 months. I got almost half the yard planted by the time Nick came home. I got him to cut the rest of the grass into plugs for me and I got the rest planted.
It's been about three weeks now and there are tiny sprouts of grass poking up next to the plugs so it must be working.

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Grass plugs: the semi finished product
I finally got the house pretty organized as of last week and even cleaned everything really well for the first time. Of course it's all just in time for our third and final shipment to come tomorrow. Then I'll have more cleaning to do and more things to put in their places. Then I have to get around to filing our insurance claims for all of our things that got broken in the move over- our dining room table, our dryer, a bedside table, shelves, and more than one lamp.

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Ko Olina lagoons on a bright sunny day
This weekend was really nice because, since I got pretty much everything done that I could get done on the house at the time, I was able to take it easy. I went to Ko Olina beach with my friend Megan. Ko Olina has man made lagoons which separate the waves from the beach. They provide a nice little outlet of calm where you don't have to be concerned about being dashed into rocks or taken out to sea. The sun was so hot we kept thinking we were burning but we were sunblock suited up. The sun is just really hot here. The water was perfect though- it seemed chilly at first but it was satiating in the heat. In Charleston what bugged me about the water is that at some point in late summer, the water became so warm that it wasn't satisfying to go in it to cool off. Here I think it's perfect.

I've been working on a lot of stuff lately- little projects other than just job hunting. It's definitely been keeping me busy. But it was nice to finally let myself relax at the beach. This is a really exciting month now that we've both gotten to know the area a bit more. I'm sure this is just the beginning. Some more exciting things to come very soon...

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Out to dinner last month at Roy's for Valentine's Day
 
 
Well, as most of you have watched the reports, you know that the tsunami barely reared its ugly head here in Hawaii. We had some cloudy water, some unusual activity in the water near all the islands, etc.

I don't think Hawaii overreacted. I think today really illustrated how prepared the islands are for something that could become a severe disaster in the future. Today my thoughts kept going back to this horrific what-if youtube video I saw a while ago before even moving here.

This is the clip I saw a while back that freaked me out today:
It's scary to imagine something like that can occur. It's unlikely of course, but as we were shown today, a tsunami is NOT out of the realm of possibilities. Definitely shows you how lucky we are to have every moment in a clean, dry house. It also really makes your heart go out to the people in Chile, and of course Haiti who didn't have any warning for their natural disasters.

I typed on Twitter all day. It was really interesting to follow the events on Twitter while watching the news and it makes you be thankful for technology. I got a lot of support from people I have never even met. All of Hawaii had prayers and good vibes coming its way from Twitter users all over the world. It was really interesting to watch and it kept me calm talking about everything going on.
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Naptime on the couch after a day of too much adrenaline!
In the end the whole event showed us how to prepare for such an event. I was especially fortunate to have Nick here with me. As he pointed out, if he had been close to a deployment they probably would have just taken off early. That would have been scary.

As it was, after things had officially started to die down, I practicaly passed out on the couch in front of the news. All that adrenaline rushing through me so early in the morning when I thought our area had to evacuate (and we were fortunate- quite a few of our friends here actually did have to evacuate!) just really hit me hard. I ended up napping for three hours.

Now we're up, and oddly enough this is the worst and most ominous I've seen the weather since I've been here....It's been overcast all day long. I know that doesn't sound like bad weather, but the most bad it's been since I've moved here has been a 2-3 hr period of overcast-ness at the most. This has been all day.

It's not going to stop us for making the most of what's left of the day. Nick is about to use his new barbeque with some shark meat he got the other day (we'll see how this goes- never had it before) and we'll probably just stay in and relax. We have a lot of work to do on the yard tomorrow that hopefully we'll still be able to do. We have to rent a tiller in the AM and get gas for it (assuming not ALL the gas stations are out of gas) so we can mix up the compost we laid today in with the pre-existing red clay/dirt stuff. Then we actually have to plant small patches of grass all over so they'll grown in and fill out the yard. Ahh, it'll be a long day.

Once again, thanks everyone for the well wishes through phonecalls, facebook wallposts, twitter, etc. We're glad it wasn't anything serious & hopefully now we know we need to have more stuff on hand in case this pans out in the future with another crazy event.

 
 
Today was supposed to be a pretty normal day. We were planning on having a a grass-planting day followed by a housewarming party later tonight. Last night we decided to cancel the housewarming to give ourselves more time to get the grass done.
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Crazy. But still a little humorous.
We had the alarms set to go off this morning around 7/7:30am so we could pick up the tiller from a local rental shop. I got a text at 5:30am from my stepdad. I sleepily scanned the message...something about "this is serious" and the word "tsunami" caught my eye. I had two other missed texts from friends who said the same thing and one mentioned evacuations at 6am. I layed in bed for a minute deciding on if I should go back to sleep....it just didn't seem real.

I guess the adrenaline started and my heart was going too fast to just go back to sleep. I got up and went into the computer room to google the info and went into a panic attack when I read about the possible upcoming tsunami and the evacuations planned for Ewa Beach..where I live.

I glanced at the clock- 5:45am. Fifteen minutes before alarms started sounding to evacuate. I couldn't get on the website to see if ours was definitely an area to evacuate. The site was down.

I ran in and got Nick up in a panic. Brushed my teeth and started grabbing things I needed, all the time worrying about driving to a shelter with the dog. I had the crazy moment that I've thought about before where you decide what is the most important to you that you can grab. The dog was a given. I got her food, cleaned out our canned food and boxes of food, dog food, and started grabbing clean clothes, underwear, toiletries.

A bit after we started loading the car up, Nick was able to get through the the evacuation site and looked up our area. Fortunately we're about 1-2 miles away from the evacuation zone. I've never been so thankful to not live close to the beach.

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Hey if the eggs might go bad anyway...
We watched the news for a bit as we absorbed all the info. I tweeted a bunch (and still am), and fixed breakfast-made blueberry pancakes (hey, we might not be able to use the eggs soon). We started working on what we could on the yard- laid out the compost and started spreading it. We couldn't go anywhere to rent the tiller and a lot of the gas stations are actually out of gas at this point.

We both got showers while we still could- a few minutes ago they announced we're now conserving water because the sewage plants may not be able to be emptied for a while.

Nick went to the liquor store yesterday so we have beer and champagne. We loaded up empty containers with water (and our bathtubs too), put aside food, and have batteries and my laptop charging. We'll have to unplug stuff soon due to possible electric surges.

It's crazy that all this just happened with no warning. It's weird to think that we're not in a place where we can drive away from all disaster. Like Florida when there's a hurricane.

We're sitting tight at the moment, drinking mimosas (why not?) and switching back and forth between the news and Independence Day..ironically.

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Alcohol & Natural Disasters. Just like bread & butter.
I'm really happy Nick is here with me now through this. He said if he was close to deployment they would call him in and they would just take off early. So I'm very happy that's not the case. And I'm so happy and consider us so lucky that we're a bit farther away from the beach than I'd originally hoped...

About a half hour to go until something happens on the big Island of Hawaii. Anything else that will happen here will happen about a half hour after that.

Thanks all for your texts and Twitter messages. We're staying safe and dry.

Our thoughts are with all the people in Chile, the big island, and all the evac areas. Hopefully this won't be as bad as they think.

 
 
I am stressed to no end.

We finally got an answer from the moving company- they're coming next Monday, which was our first choice in dates. So that's good at least. The bad news is that a surveyor is coming out first to look through our stuff and take inventory.

My friend Ali said when she and her boyfriend Matt moved from WV a surveyor came out and took inventory, and since they weren't married, they carefully avoided her things and only took things that were obviously a guy's or gender neutral. When she packed her stuff into storage last week she told me no surveyor came so they took everything. Now that I know a surveyor is coming, and Nick and I aren't married so the Navy is not really responsible for my stuff, my life is getting sucked into vacuum packed bags.

First it was more of a nice compact organization method. Now that it makes a difference from what I'm going to be struggling to fit into my car for my trip back to MD next week and then have to ship with my own money to Hawaii in February...well, I bought 8 more jumbo and x-large vacuum pack bags today. I'm avoiding putting pink things in eye view (why don't they make NON see through vacuum pack bags???) and deliberately putting Navy shirts and guy colored things on the tops and sides of the bags as much as possible.

I'm also majorly stressing about job hunting when I get back. The unfortunate thing about job hunting for restaurants is that you really can't apply ahead of time. Most require you to apply in person. So there isn't a lot of prep work involved other than making lists. Ahh, I wish I could be more prepared. I just have to believe it won't be a problem when I get back. Hopefully. Like I said, worse comes to worse I guess I can always go back to Hooters.

The one good thing about today is that I did some househunting online and actually saved about 13 properties. Five of them Nick and I really liked- I had two favorites. I'm looking at an area called Ewa Beach which is pretty close to Pearl Harbor. Turns out the area Kailua I was looking into before is pretty ridiculously expensive. I actually think it's where a lot of the stars and stuff live- many of the homes are listed in the multiple million dollar range.

We actually found some great 3 BR detatched houses in Ewa Beach for decent (for Hawaii) prices. Nick is emailing our agent tonight to find out more info about them. Some of them say they have central air and some don't, for example-which doesn't mean they don't have central air but it might not be listed. Not really feeling the loud window units. Although I don't know how much it costs to install central air so I suppose if we found something we really loved that's always an option.

Those are my major things I'm stressing about at the moment: moving, jobs, and houses. Those are prety big things. God, I wish I could just fast-forward to halfway through February when I'm already in Hawaii and in a house. Although jobhunting would still be an issue.

I just can't wait to get settled in there. Don't even get me started on booking the flight. I'm going to have to call the airlines since the dog will be flying with me. Oh Lord. One day at a time.