Last Ski Day at Willamette Pass

Posted by julie on Monday, 16 April 2012, 11:26

Much to my dismay, yesterday was the last day of lift-accessed skiing at Willamette Pass this season. The snow is still great; the weather was 55 and sunny yesterday; and Elena, Sylvan, and I shared the place with 50 other folks (okay, perhaps there were more, but we didn’t see more than about 50 – and that’s why they have to shut down while the snow’s still fantastic!). Elena was on her game:

Miss E and ski instructor Tom took a shine to each other. He balanced some snow on her head and taught her how to sidestep. She didn't have a lesson, but we have Tom's card for next December, when she'll be old enough for Ski Camp (lessons) and Mommy will be able to ski again. Yippee!

The walk from the car wore out Mr. S:

Know what's hard? Life. Oops, I meant throwing snowballs at your sister. It's exhausting.

Guess which one is more reliable in a photo booth:

Happy Birthday to a fun friend!

Posted by jonesey on Saturday, 24 March 2012, 6:50

Elena says happy birthday to someone who loves to play in the snow with us!

Two happy girls

The Active Kids, March 2012

Posted by julie on Monday, 19 March 2012, 16:55

Look who's downhill skiing! She occasionally snowplowed, and she figured out how to turn. Go, Miss E!

Mr. S at his belt test/recital. Two black belts later came up to this proud Mom and said, "You know, he did really well." He was superbly focused. He knows when to step it up.

4-, 5-, and 6-year-old karate line-up

Playing the snow bunny

 

Happy Birthday, Sylvan: You’re 6 1/2!

Posted by julie on Monday, 12 March 2012, 13:26

Dear Sylvan,

Six months ago, you wouldn’t read books; you couldn’t write thank you notes; you were a neophyte martial artist; and you’d played soccer a mere handful of times.

Now, I catch you reading books. Sometimes, you read to Elena. Those are gratifying for you, because you understand all the vocabulary and can sight-read all the words. On car trips, you sometimes read Harry Potter to yourself—just one or two pages, because you recognize how relatively slowly you move along and that you can’t understand the more complex vocabulary through context. It’s okay; I love the time I spend reading Harry Potter books to you. I’ll be sad when you’d rather read alone.

Know what's funny when your 3 1/2 and 6 1/2? Scatological jokes.

Do I have something on my head?

And speaking of car trips, your Dad and I recently talked about kids being plugged into movies and video games during car trips. You were playing Train Maze on my iPod, and Elena was watching a princess movie on Daddy’s phone at the time. It was marvelously quiet in the car, and we had the opportunity to have a grown-up conversation. It was nice.

Yet our conversation consisted of how happy we were that we’d waited until the last hour of our 6-hour trip (2 1/2 hours to the east side of the mountains, then 3 1/2 hours back two days later) to say yes to electronic media for entertainment. And don’t be mistaken: both of your parents really enjoy watching movies, and one of us likes to play video games and even sees educational value in them.

But, earlier that afternoon, to entertain yourself—and us—you’d developed a game to play with us. You had a brochure for a natural history-oriented destination. You selected words from the document, then asked us to guess the word, giving hints such as, “It has an A-R in it.” “Arkansas,” I’d guess. “Lard,” your Dad would say. You even kindly tried to handicap your father when he started advancing in the standings. We laughed a lot. That game wouldn’t have happened if you’d been playing Angry Birds all afternoon.

Long-suffering Sylvan

It's a sand clown, of course.

I can’t believe how much your handwriting has improved in the last few months. Your class wrote thank you letters to Dance Africa, because we performed at your school a few weeks ago. As I flipped through the letters, some decorated with colorful drawings, I stopped at yours because the handwriting was so neat and small. Only then did I realize that it was yours. Wow.

I rarely watch your karate classes, but I caught the end of one as I was picking you up last week. All of the students were running through katas, practicing for your belt ceremony later this week. You breezily announced, “Kiso Kata Number 1,” then performed the kata’s movements in order, unfalteringly.

When I pick you up from Edison on Wednesdays and Thursdays, we skirt a game of soccer on the asphalt just outside the cafeteria. Every day, a 1st- or 2nd-grade boy says, “Bye, Sylvan!” I asked you the other day how they all know you. (Kindergarteners, because of their shortened days, have relatively few opportunities for interaction with older kids.) “I play soccer with them every morning at recess,” you responded. It was definitely one of those moments for me of recognizing the breadth of your life outside of our family.

I love you, Luke Skywalker.

Love,
Yoda

My tooth is falling out at breakfast! I'm so scary!

How to know if you did too many puzzle books as a kid

Posted by jonesey on Friday, 2 March 2012, 6:42

I walk by this apartment house on my way to and from work. I suspect that most people, when they see it, think “Go Ducks” or “hey, only six more months until football season.”

Not me. Because I am, and always have been, a giant nerd. A giant nerd who spent way too much time with puzzle books and secret codes and Frank and Joe Hardy (and their portly chum, Chet Morton, who was a big quipper, if I recall correctly).

Every time I see this display, I can’t help but think “F, of course.”

U-O=F

I fly my nerdy kid flag proudly….

Freaky? Me?

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 29 February 2012, 2:17

Valentine Love

Posted by julie on Friday, 17 February 2012, 21:42

A couple of our Valentine’s Day creations:

Heart-shaped pancakes on Gramma Jo's plates.

Elena's and Sylvan's valentines for friends

In retrospect, I would have let Elena do her art thing and then cut it up into little squares or hearts for her classmates. She has art project staying power, unlike my last 3-year-old. The “love bugs” are cute, and she loved them, but they were parental-involvement heavy (I downloaded the printable jars here.).

Sylvan’s valentines were GREAT, though. Sylvan and I were inspired by this post, so we developed some Mad Libs for his friends. They were entitled Super Pig’s Rules for School, for some reason, so he also signed his valentines ‘Super Pig.’ Each was wrapped in origami paper, as we’d seen in that blog post, so I decided that I’d print up some little twirling airplane origami instructions on the back of the Mad Libs. Sylvan was involved, but he didn’t feel overwhelmed by his jobs of developing Mad Libs and writing tags. He still doesn’t enjoy long-lived craft projects, and I never want to lose him and feel like I have to do his valentines without him. Success! We’ll do it again next year.

You know how sometimes you do something and then completely forget you did it…?

Posted by jonesey on Wednesday, 15 February 2012, 22:06

So I was googling myself for a legitimate, non-narcissistic reason*, and I came upon this.

I always wanted to be a published author....

* Trying to find references on the web to my previous job title.

Some of My Favorite Things—14 February 2012

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 14 February 2012, 21:47

A photographic list:

Two of my favorite vehicles, one ridden my three of my favorite people. Xtracycles rock! And they're even better when you get them from a nice guy on craigslist.

The photo is a few months old, but the sentiment is quite current. Elena is an expert hugger, and I love it!

Bracelet made by Claudine, beader extraordinaire. A lovely necklace completes the set, but the bracelet secured my decision. I loved the memory wire, smoky beads, and thumbprint stone.

My husband is silly.

Time-saver or time-sucker?

This is my favorite Harry Potter book. We're reading it with Sylvan right now. I don't want to miss any on Chris's nights to put Sylvan to bed!

What a great organization and a great group of people.

And one of the reasons I love the Patrol so much: I get to see this, my favorite mountain, Diamond Peak, every time I patrol (unless it's overcast, which it hasn't been this winter—which means there's less than 3 feet of snow on the ground, but that might change this weekend!).

 

“You may ask yourself, ‘Well, how did I get here?'”*

Posted by julie on Sunday, 12 February 2012, 22:36

Are there ever times in your life when you wonder, “Now how did that get here?”

*With thanks to the Talking Heads for the use of the lyric from “Once in a Lifetime.”