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You are here: Home / 2006 / Archives for August 2006

Archives for August 2006

Going to Ferryland

I want to go to FerryLand

It was a low key weekend. Katherine was in a funk yesterday, so Steve offered up an interesting adventure…going on a Washington State Ferry. Katherine was enamored with the concept, despite the fact that she didn’t know what a ferry was. We headed to Seattle, found a great parking spot and headed across the street to walk on the ferry.

Our round trip to Bainbridge Island and back was 2 hours. We boarded, made our way past the cafeteria, bought popcorn (Steve) and found seats up front. Katherine promptly began to inhale the popcorn. Allison settled for bunny crackers. We took turns taking the girls outside for five minute stints. Allison was outside with Steve when the horn blew – and jumped about a foot in his arms.

Given the time of day, we opted to disembark and promptly re-embark on the same ferry. On the way back we found a booth and looked at boats and cruise ships out the window. In all, Katherine loved the adventure telling us that she wanted to go back to “Ferryland” today!

Lots of Biking

We’ve been biking up a storm with the kids the past several days. One favorite trip is from Redmond Town Center to a park in Woodinville. Another is around Redmond Ridge and the “choo choo” train park. Besides the parks, Katherine loves the snacks and very diluted Gatorade. Allison is more ambivalent – she really enjoys getting out of the Chariot!

Today we had a particularly scary event in the RTC parking lot. Steve had propped his new bike on the minivan to avoid scratches and speedy Allison made a beeline to check it out. Next thing we knew she was wailing from underneath the bike! Holy Cow. We were very lucky that she emerged unscathed (but very, very mad) from this incident. Good thing she tried to play with the carbon fiber bike and not my tank.

The Marble

This is a very sensitive subject for Katherine, but one worth mentioning. Last Monday, Katherine and Allison went to Ferrell McWhitter Park with Patty, and Katherine found a small, round, glass marble. She was so proud of finding the marble and carried it for much of the afternoon. Patty was clear in telling her that she could hold it, but she couldn’t put it in her mouth. What happened? Patty turned around to find Katherine’s eyes big and watering. “Did you swallow that marble?” “Yes…” She didn’t mean to swallow it, but it just happened. Since talking to friends about this, we’ve learned that this is not all uncommon unfortunately.

We spent the next two days obsessing about the marble. Katherine was pretty upset, not sleeping well at night and talking to herself about it. “I wish that marble would come out soon,” I heard her mumble to herself as she pulled on her PJ pants. We figured that besides the enormity of having a marble in her intestines, Katherine was verklempt because of Curious George. If you haven’t read the story, Curious George goes to the Hospital describes how the monkey eats a puzzle piece and has to go to the hospital to have it removed. This was definitely top of mind for her, and she was very worried that she would have to go to the hospital despite our assurances that the marble would pass harmlessly.

Steve was a total trooper on the pooh patrol – and found the marble two mornings later.

I think this incident has pretty much cured her propensity to put small objects in her mouth. We asked her if she would ever put something like a marble in her mouth again – and got an emphatic no.

Going back to School

Katherine heads back to school on September 6th – this time to Eton School. We’re pretty excited for Katherine to meet new friends and learn in a Montessori environment. We find out this week which classroom she will be in for the next three years. Katherine is excited for a more tangible reason, which is that she will carpool to Eton with her friend Audrey.

More New Words and Developments

– “Siiih” – for Sit
– “Mooo” – for cow
– “Ri” for ride

Allison also tries to practice her spoon and fork skills whenever she can. She dips her spoon in applesauce, yogurt, anything – and gets a lot of it in her mouth. Today she tried to spear tofu on her fork.

Allison has also decided that she wants to go down stairs like her sister. Instead of on her belly, which Katherine did for months, Allison prefers the “sit, scooch and stand” approach.

Lots of Words, But Still a Skinny Bean

Lots of Words, But Still a Skinny Bean

We took Allison to her 15 month checkup today. As expected, she grew lengthwise – 2 whole inches over 3 months – to maintain her 25-50% in height. But, she’s now less than 3% in weight – not even on the weight chart for her height – at 18 lbs. 4 oz. Is her doctor concerned? No – because apparently Katherine had a similar “S” curve, although Katherine always was on the chart.

Allison was pretty tired to begin with, and she got even more crabby during the checkup. She wailed on the scale and kept indicating that she wanted to leave the checkup room. After the nurse measured her and her doctor poked, prodded and inspected her, the nurse came back to give two immunizations. Lots of crying and big tears until we reached the minivan. She cheered up at dinner (Mongolian Grill), toddled around the nearby mall, and demanded ice cream from Dad and Katherine after they left Coldstone.

On the other hand, Katherine was very cheerful during the checkup. She sat criss cross applesauce on the checkup table, saying “maybe Allison will get shots, maybe not…” She seemed pretty fired up when the nurse said that Allison would get two shots. During the checkup, I told the doctor that Allison really tried to keep up with Katherine who then exclaimed, “She’s not as fast as me because I’m older and bigger!”

Allison is a funny little girl. She loves to ride her red wagon, trying to climb into it and demanding “Ri…Ri.” She also likes to watch Katherine pedal around the driveway in her trike. If Katherine goes slowly enough, Allison grabs on to the push bar and walks after the trike as if pushing it along.

On the Silly Sally front, the book continues to wear and tear. Allison now says, “Sihlleee Saalll” telling us when she wants us to help her find her book. When we get to the middle of the book, she exclaims “Bbbuuu” for Neddy Buttercup. She often babbles while flipping pages, as if telling us the story. We’re going to have to buy at least another copy, so we have one upstairs and one downstairs copy.

Saaaahhhlleee

Saaaahhhlleee

What is Allison saying? Morning, noon and at bedtime we hear her talking about Silly Sally – the name of Allison’s favorite book. She carries the book around the house and often dumps it in our lap. Sometimes frustrated, she says, “reee,” telling us to start reading the book! Silly Sally is seeing some real wear and tear, but thankfully we know where to buy replacement copies. It’s probably the closest thing that Allison has to a Lambey.

Her other favorite book is Carl. Because she has a harder time saying Carl, she makes a smacking sound and points at the book to let me know that she wants to read Carl’s Masquerade before bed. I tell her in Spanish to give Carl and kiss, she presses the book to her face, and gives me a big smile as if to say, “I know he’s not real, but I’ll pretend to kiss him anyway.”

Other new Allison words:

– “Yea” for yes or yeah
– “Ceeral” for cereal (she’s very close to saying the full word!)

Garage Sale

For the last four days, we prepped and held a garage sale at our house with four other families. As I told Steve, I’ve never worked harder for $250. We figured between me and Steve, we probably made less than minimum wage every hour we worked. ๐Ÿ™‚

The first two days we spent deciding what to sell, cleaning up merchandise, aggregating it in the living room, making room for everything in the garage, moving it to the garage, labeling and pricing it. The last two days we actually held the garage sale, merchandising stuff on the driveway, talking with “customers” and closing “deals.” (e.g. getting rid of junk)

Aside from a really hot two days on the driveway selling previously expensive stuff for very low prices, we managed to free ourselves of some legacy items. The garage and other parts of the house look less cluttered. And, we’re both happy that the other person finally got rid of specific items, e.g. 10 year old red blanket, semi-working boom box, old speakers, toolbox, skis, mountain bike etc. Funny enough, one man asked whether Steve’s old kitchen table was for sale – since we were displaying kids clothes on it. But, it wasn’t for sale! I figure we’ll have this table in our garage for the next 20 years.

Katherine reveled in three days of playing with friends and hanging out with a nine year old friend down the street. Allison managed to only get knocked down twice on the driveway. Allison loved to poke into various items including popsicle holders, a glass vase, brownies and lots of kids toys and books.

We wrapped things up with a trip to Goodwill today.

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Farm Experience

Farm Experience

We’ve really enjoyed our first half of August. It’s gone by in the blink of an ….eye. Each day we’ve tried to keep the kids active whether at a local park or some sort of children’s attraction.

Last week we joined the Root Connection – a local organic farmers coop. The concept is very straightforward. Pay upfront and then pickup your produce once a week. The farm volunteers dole out large portions of different vegetables, which you dutifully put in a bag or box to take home. Last week we picked up lettuce (2 kinds), lots of beets (yum!), carrots, small tomatoes, pole beans, bok choy, zucchini, squash, and more. We also wandered thru the u-pick area for basil, pole beans, rainbow chard and sunflowers.

The kids were on fire from the time they stepped into the parking lot. Literally. The lot has crushed, colored rocks which the girls picked up, fingered and played with. Allison kept returning to the pathway to exclaim, “ra!!” and play with rocks. Katherine talked about taking rocks home, but we put a kibosh on that.

Anyway, once we actually got to picking pole beans their focus changed. Katherine crawled thru the bean plants to pick and eat them. Allison managed to chew through four long beans – two handed! Katherine “helped” Dad cut the basil and chard.

As you can imagine, we’re slowly but surely mowing thru the veggies. Kids can’t wait for this Friday when we go again. We’ve learned our key lessons: bring kid-friendly scissors, plastic bags and socks/sneakers.

Bubbles and Sand

Last Thursday we had another first for us – taking the kids to a summer beach-type festival at the Pacific Science Center. I’ll have to post the pictures because they are just priceless. The key attraction: beautiful sculpting sand for the kids to play with and big vats of bubbles with wands. The other attraction which the girls did not appreciate was the rocket scientist who was finishing her show as we arrived. Essentially she used all sorts of interesting materials – say liquid nitrogen – and doing fun things with them. For instance, she put liquid nitrogen in a plastic soda bottle and dropped it in a barrel of water. What happened? A big boom and whoosh of water everyone. Katherine was not amused.

Katherine did end up waist deep in the sand, enthusiastically digging sand with her friend Sid. Allison first cried when plopped in the sand; this evolved into a quiet, sad looking face as she suffered in silence. That said, Allison loved the liquid Dawn and bubble wands. ๐Ÿ™‚

Is Madeleine going to be there?

For anyone who’s read to Katherine at bedtime, you’ve probably encountered her Carl books. We first learned about Carl from some friends who gave us Carl’s Masquerade Party. Now we have just about the full collection of books about a friendly and smart rottweiler who takes care of baby Madeleine when her mom leaves Carl to “take care of the baby.” While the concept of a canine babysitter can be a bit disconcerting to adults, the books have very few words and funny, well-illustrated stories. Katherine loves to tell the stories, flipping the pages and telling them her way.

So, she was really, really excited to find out that Carl was planning to visit a shop in Seattle last Saturday. Katherine asked, several days before the event, “Where’s Carl now?” “Can we see him today?” “Will Madeleine be there?”

Saturday finally arrived. We stopped by Trilogy for a pancake breakfast with both sides of the family. Afterwards, we headed into the city to a children’s shop in Madison Park. Having arrived early, we went to the next door bakery for donuts (a real parenting highlight!), bought the 3 last Carl book we didn’t have, read the books and met other avid fans.

The 30 minute wait was well worth it. Alexandra Day signed our books – one each for Allison, Katherine and Bisco. Carl walked around the shop, enjoying the attention and ear scratching. Katherine and Allison managed to get a few pets in and we headed home with both girls exhausted after all the excitement.

More Allison Developments

Allison is still a small, skinny kid. But, she’s getting increasingly verbal. New sounds are emerging from the back of the minivan during car rides, not just the “ba, ma” and other -a sounds. It’s almost like she’s talking to us, just with words and sounds we don’t understand.

One new word for her is gwanba or baba – for Grandpa or Grandma. She is also more clearly saying her other words.

We’ve also noticed Allison interacting more and more with us. For instance, the other day I told her that she needed shoes to go in the garage. She then walked straight to the family room shelf, pointed at her shoes and said “shoo.”

She also follows direction and does what we ask. For instance, I’ll ask her to stay at the bottom of the stairs. She’ll then close the gate and look back at me to see if I’ve noticed. Or, she’ll sit back down in the her big red wagon when we ask her.

What else have we done with kids? We’ve gone on a couple bike rides, taken them to playgrounds, visited with Steve’s family and played on the driveway. Their favorite activity is riding the tricycle (Katherine) and pretending to drive the Beetle (Allison). This gets hairy when they both decide to sit in the Beetle and when they both want to play with trike. So far, it’s all managing to work out; the kids are tired but happy at the end of the day; and we’re on track for school in 3 weeks.

Road Tripping, STP and more

2.5 Weeks on the Road

We had so many memorable experiences and learned a lot of lessons the last 2.5 weeks. It all started with Steve riding STP in 1 day (wahoo!) and ended with a flight from Long Beach back to Seattle. Here was the itinerary:

  • I drove the girls down to Portland while Steve did his STP thing. My biggest point of pride was stopping only 3 times for snacks and bathroom breaks…and lugging all the kids luggage, etc. to our hotel room while carrying Allison too! (No, the Residence Inn Riverplace does not have a bellboy!)
  • The next morning we drove to Belknap Hot Springs to meet up with a bunch of friends and family. It was super warm with no A/C, but the girls really enjoyed hiking, watching the river swish past our suite window and exploring the gardens around the resort.
  • After two nights at Belknap we headed down I5 to Ashland on another 90+ degree scorcher day. We stayed right in the center of town, dragged the kids to a local park and to pizza for dinner. After three prior nights of poor sleep we finally got a refreshing night of sleep in Ashland before heading out the next morning.
  • Sacramento Arden West presented some pleasant surprises. We were delighted to find that the Hilton had a bellboy and a Nordstrom across the highway. Arden West Mall far exceeded our expectations. Not only did they have a nice mall, but it also had a carousel AND a Fresh Choice – soup and salad restaurant. One of our big disappointments happened when we drove past the first In and Out in California, but we recovered at Del Taco.
  • We then made a trip to the Jelly Belly Factory Tour after the Sacramento leg. We drove then to visit my Uncle Richard and Aunt Susan, so the girls could meet my Dad’s family. Following this visit was Carmel – and a very neat, historic place – the Carmel Mission Ranch. We stayed at a refurbished barn and checked out the Monterey Bay Aquarium the next day. We were blown away by the 1 million gallon tank – the hammerheads, sun fish, enormous tuna and turtles. Everything about the aquarium was on amazing scale – from the kelp tanks, jellyfish exhibit, children’s exhibit and much much more. Our dinner the preceding night was at a very touristy restaurant, bubba gumps; we had one of the best tables overlooking sea lions basking on rocks below.
  • Santa Barbara was our next spot for two nights. We arrived at dinner time, visited the beach briefly and had some really tasty Mexican food for dinner. The next day we walked up the street, window shopping, and split up while Allison napped. Steve took Katherine to another beach before we shopped on State Street that afternoon. That evening Steve and I were alarmed when Allison awoke just drenched and hot. Her temperature must have been 103-104. Thankfully we had Infant Motrin on hand, and we were able to get her temperature down in about 20 minutes.
  • Timing for Allison was fortuitous because we were scheduled to go to Steve’s parents house that morning. The next four days were very low key. We decided to cancel our San Diego hotel reservations and instead let Allison recover from what turned out to be Roseola. We had thought that Allison had Roseola several months ago, but it clearly hadn’t happened then. As the pediatrician we visited in Orange County said, she ran a super high fever for 3 days. After it broke, a rash appeared on her chest. It sort of looked like little red pinpricks – not totally obvious because of her skin coloring – but still very clear on closer inspection.
  • During that time, Steve took Katherine to Disneyland one hot scorching day and to a local beach. It was sooo hot in LA during these four days, with rolling blackouts and temperatures regularly above 90 degrees.
  • Allison’s rash disappeared on Saturday and we were able to finally hit Disneyland that weekend. Allison really was a bit young for the park, but she loved “it’s a small world,” the carousel, all the activity around the park and the parades. She a bit apprehensive to meet the bigger characters, e.g. Woody and stoic on some more active rides, e.g. Alice Wonderland, teacups, Dunbo etc.
  • On Monday we climbed on our plane at Long Beach airport and had a relatively uneventful ride home. My mom picked us up and, boy, were we GLAD to get home. ๐Ÿ™‚

Needless to say, we were so tired after this vacation. It’s been two days and we’re finally starting to recover. Katherine’s listening is much improved (whew) and Allison is back to her regular sleep schedule.

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