Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Hiking, School and Olive Picking

 
Friday's hike took us to a little archaeological site just outside Kibbutz Shluchot

The weather was beautiful and the hiking was challenging

Many civilizations have been built and rebuilt over and over at this location....if you look carefully, you can find ancient artifacts
 
A large pile of broken pottery has been left behind by excavators....all the good stuff has been brought to museums!

Resting before a nice walk back home
 
Zach helping Max with his reading and math work
 
Bayla practicing vocabulary words on the I-pad
 
Dave writing in his journal about his accomplishments in Israel
 
Josh prepping for the English Regents
 
Gabby typing her English assignments
 
 
Tuesday we were hiking again, this time to pick olives in Shluchot's very own olive orchard.....about 6 miles from Kibbutz
 
The weather started getting rough...so we looked for any shelter from the rain we could find
 
Luckily we found an old storage shed that we could duck under....we laughed, sang songs and enjoyed the rain
 

We finally made it to the orchard and proceeded to fill many buckets with olvies

Zach pulling olives from the tree

Dave and Gabby scooping them from the ground

When the truck came by, we dumped our share into the mix


Off to olive oil factory in Beit Sh'ean to see how the oil is made
 
 


We're not tired yet, let's take a detour up this mountain.....



This factory in Beit Sh'ean collects olives from all the local Kibbutzim and turns them into oil

Watching the olives get unloaded....our olives that we picked are in this truckload

We got a chance to see the olives being turned into pulp with this gigantic set of machines

Finally we get to taste the fresh oil...yum!!


Thursday, November 29, 2012

Tel Aviv

While we all went to Tel Aviv this week, Gabby and her dad spent some quality father-daughter time together in Jerusalem

Outside the new and absolutely beautiful new wing of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art



Bayla in front of a piece in an amazing exhibit of contemporary art from India

Dave in front of another piece from a young Indian artist


Looking at an Israeli art collection

In front of a piece from a breathtaking collection called the "Wandering Veil" from native Israeli artist Izhar Patkin

Outside in the museum courtyard

Max with the skyline of Tel Aviv in the background

After the museum, we had a picnic lunch and relaxed by the beach near the Mediterranean Sea


In front of a famous wall mural along the boardwalk as we walked toward the old city of Yafo
 
 
Bayla and Dave enjoying the fresh air and beautiful views
 
 

Josh browsing in a thrift shop along the boardwalk
 
Like a magnet, Dave is drawn to a first aid station


Wandering the "shuks" of Yafo, as Kenny carries a chair Dvora has purchased
 
Max and a GIANT ice cream cone

Monday, November 26, 2012

Yerushalayim

Zach teaching the group about the significance of Yad Vashem moments before going inside.  Yad Vashem was established in 1953 and serves as the world center for documentation, research, education and commemoration of the Holocaust.
 
Beautiful and symbolic wall art in the corridors of Yad Vashem
Kenny explaining a particular work of art to the group inside Yad Vashem's Holocaust art gallery

Josh at the podium in the Shul

 
Group reflecting after exiting the main exhibit hall


The Valley of the Communities is a monument dug out of natural bedrock with the names of over 5,000 Jewish communities which existed for hundreds of years.....Today, in most cases, nothing remains but the name.


Dave lighting a candle in front of the monument from the cities of his Grandparents in Slovakia


Gabby standing in front of the monument from one of her Grandparent's cities

Josh reciting "Kel maleh rachamin", which is a prayer for the soul of the departed

One of the many memorable sculptures throughout the Yad Vashem grounds


Watching the trains pass by on our Friday morning walk to Machne Yehuda Market
 
 
Couldn't pass up getting a photo

Max in front of street grafitti

World famous Machne Yehuda Market is often referred to by Israeli's as "The Shuk". Over 250 vendors, inside and out, sell everything from fresh fruits and vegetables, baked goods, fish, meat, cheeses, nuts, seeds, spices, wine, clothing and housewares


The Shuk can get very crowded....especially before Shabbos

Halava anyone?!?


A great place to eat lunch and people watch
 
Lentil soup and tomato soup for lunch

"Soaking" in the local scene....literally
 
Bayla returning after spending Shabbos with her brother Yaakov and sister-in-law Leah