Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Holidays with the Holidays

Making Stockings
This family activity turned into alot of grumpy mama telling Ethan to stop messing with the sewing machine. Soon I will either learn to sew only at night or Ethan will gain a little more sewing machine safety awareness. Or maybe I'll just chill out. Ha, fat chance!
Also, note preggo belly.




Jeremy and Ethan Get a Tree




Night Train



Advent: 25 Days of Fun
Some highlights include cookie cutters, tickets to Nutcracker ballet, real nutcracker, candy cane, making a wreath, watching a Christmas movies, Hannukah candles, sledding, making clay ornaments, and much more. It was such a rare treat to have a few nights of good old fashioned craftiness making the envelopes and little hidden surprises.



Christmas Morning: Lots of Loot
Amazing gifts from Nana, Pappy and Santa include construction worker outfit, harmonica holder and drum (read: one man band), electric train and Leap Pad tag reader. Stuffed Woody toy (which Ethan refers to as "my Woody teddy!"), Chutes and Ladders, build-your-own wooden windmill and tractor, and tiny ornaments are also popular.







Festival of Lights: Fire, Friends and Hot Chocolate

Sunday, December 11, 2011

The Polar Express

Thanks to the DMS Partner's Group, we rode the Polar Express this Sunday. We are thankful that Ethan was not as terrified of Santa this time as the last time we tried to meet the jolly old fellow (that encounter ended in tears and screaming pleas to "leave now! leave now!). We are also glad that the trip was breif and we made it back home in time for nap. Once we got home, Ethan shoveled his lunch and then fell asleep immediately. Clearly wearing jammies outside, riding a real train, eating sugar cookies and meeting Mr. Claus is enough excitement for one morning.




Friday, December 2, 2011

Ok, I'll be Aragorn and you... what's that... Oh, you're making soup... cool.

I had intended to write about the following on the day that it happened, but time got away from me... Anyway, here is the scene:

So, we live by some pretty awesome woods... Jody walks to school/work through them most mornings when she is at DHMC... I have jogged in them many times... and Jody and I have taken several hikes through them. The several times I have tired to take Ethan into the forest, he is reluctant and gives up when we hit the first difficult walking. I had made a vow at the beginning of the summer to spend lots of time in the forest. It was not to be, however. I had grand plans, though... we were gonna fix up a little bridge, build a little house, and create a whole little world... The few times the weather and the fickle muses of timing and motivation saw fit to shine on us, Ethan would make it as far the medium brush and just cry "Daddy I need help," which would quite quickly turn into "I wanna go home" ... and shortly thereafter we would go home.

So, it's middle to late Fall and I just decide one afternoon that Ethan and I are going to have a forest adventure. The weather was good and Ethan was itching for a new adventure (other parents might call this being bored). We put on our jackets and headed out to the woods. It took us a little bit to find the right place to cross the stream and enter the edge of the forest, but we eventually did. We spent some time picking up various sticks and testing them for quality by smacking them against trees. Ethan was into this, which boded well for the rest of the trip.

Well-chosen sticks in hand, we headed into the medium brush and, as always, Ethan got stuck. He called out "Daddy, I need help." "Are you having a hard time getting through the brush?" I asked him. "Yes!" he whined. "Well, then just knock them down with your stick," I said, matter-of-factly. "That's the joy of coming out here to the woods, Ethan," I said, "hitting things with sticks." I then held my stout stick like I learned in Kendo class and went on a rampage slicing various dry weeds like a Samurai warrior fighting furiously through a host of enemies. "God I love this," I say to myself.

I look back at Ethan and is trying to fling weeds out of the way while holding his stick with one hand. I tell Ethan that he should use two hands and swing it as hard as he can. Then, I swear I saw a glint flash from the corner of his eye, and he raised his stick up in the air with two hands and started chopping innocent brush like the mad child that he is, like the human incarnation of entropy showing the world what's what.

I exaggerate of course, but once he started whacking those weeds as hard as he could, he never looked back. We spent 3 hours galavanting around the forest. We kept upgrading our sticks. I would find a good one, and Ethan would want it, so we would trade. Then I would find another one and we would trade back, and so on... It was SO much fun. After I had gathered some small sticks to use as throwing knives and was attacking a giant dead tree from a distance (to get it's attention before closing in for the kill)... it was a forest giant, by the way... I found Ethan with his excited face asking me to come and see. "Come look, daddy," he said. I followed him up the knoll a little ways and he showed me an old fallen pine tree that had gotten soft. Using a stick, he had hollowed out a little section and made a little bowl out of one end of the tree. He had then gathered some moss, little sticks, and tree bark to make soup. To top it off, he had also gotten some medium sized sticks to "build a small fire" beneath his tree-bowl to cook the soup. I just smiled and gave him a big hug.

For the better part of an hour, I adventured around the rocks and trees of our little knoll like Aragorn battling Uruk-hai and Ethan worked on improving his tree-bowl and finding new ingredients for his soup. I couldn't have been happier. I played like I hadn't since my parents died and I was forced to leave the lush, adventurous forest I had grown up with. And Ethan started to learn to love the forest and learn what joys can be had there. It was one of the few times when parenting Ethan felt perfect.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Skiing

After three years, I finally figured out how you can get functional ski gear without having to spend a fortune (at stores I would be in otherwise). Step one was to ask a friend of mine who had been skiing for a while to find out what I actually needed (and what all to look for in general). Step two (oh you crucial step two) was to go to a ski swap. I knew I was where it was at when I showed up 30 minutes early to the swap and was already 100th in line... It was like the member picnic at the Willy Street COOP (Madison, Woot!). Anyway, I was "focused like a lazer beam" (thanks again Mark Minett for the phrase) when the doors opened and I dodged some elbows to snag boots, skis and poles for Ethan to the tune of $24. More over, after some lengthy perseverating (the black pair or the gray pair... enh... the gray pair or the black pair) I finally got a pair of cross-country ski boots that work the the skis I took from the trash 2 winters ago.

I went cross country skiing for the first time last Saturday and I just loved it. Below are some pictures of Ethan on is 2nd or 3rd time out on his skis. I thought he did a really good job. He had fun, but he also got cold and few down a few times. I took him out later that week and we skied a little bit together.



Friday, November 25, 2011

Thanksgiving, 2011, big day for a little guy...

I had hoped to make a bigger post out of this, but time has gotten away from me and it is already 2012.

This past Thanksgiving Ethan past a big mile stone and had his first sleep over without his mama and papa.  We drove to nana's house in Center Barnstead for some of her famously good turkey and then Jody and I left and Ethan spent the night with nana and pappy.  

Jody and considered it a date and we went to see the 4th Twilight movie and had a great time.  We also had a WONDERFUL breakfast the next day and Lou's and then I drove out to pick Ethan up in Concord nana (in her new blue Honda CRV).

Everyone had a great time and I was happy that Ethan got to a more intimate part of the canvas of his nana's daily life.  I grew up 100 ft from my grandmother's house and I saw her almost everyday.  Being far from family is something tugs deeply on my heart and to see nana be such a big part of Ethan's life brings me great joy.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

More Favorite Books


The Little Rabbit books by Harry Horse
Mayday Mayday, Firefighter A-Z, and Hot Shots by Chris Demarest
Wacky Wednesday by Dr. Seuss
DinoTrux by Chris Gall
Animals Home Alone by Loes Riphagen (this book is SO FUN)
The Little Mouse, the Red Ripe Strawberry and the Big Hungry Bear
Wendel's Workshop by Chris Riddell
House in the Night by Susan Marie Swanson
Three Pebbles and a Song by Eileen Spinelli
Tuesday and The Three Pigs by David Wiesner
Merry Christmas, Big Hungry Bear! by Don and Audrey Wood
Press Here by Herve Tullet

Friday, October 28, 2011

First Real Snow - Winter 2011

11/28/10 - Last night and this morning was the first snow fall of this winter (enh... there was the inch or two on Halloween, but that was fall). We could all feel it coming, but it was still a surprise to look out this morning and see what looked like an inch or so of wet snow. We have had freezes and frosts already (and it has been raining a lot lately) but up until last night, there hadn't been any snow.

And, as luck would have it, we had just gotten our snow tires on the day before... through some impromptu craziness in Concord.

Looking out our front door in Sachem Village

...ditto...

Little Gardener...

If I had actually kept up on this blog this summer, there would have been many blog posts about the little garden that Ethan and I tended. It was all in a series of pots in our front yard, but it was our pride and joy and we spent many an hour tending to it. In addition to actually tending the garden, Ethan spent a lot of time pretending to plant, and grow various things. In this series below, he is inspired by some work we were doing with our tomato seedlings and decides to plant and water some of his own pretend plants.
It all began with transplanting some of our first seedlings....




(Bye bye) Red Room

For the last two and a half years or so, Ethan has been attending day care at the Child Care Center in Norwich at least one day a week. He started out in the nursery (which we all loved), moved up to the Red Room, and just a month ago, he moved into the Yellow Room. The Yellow room is more like a pre-school setting with formal circle time and the like. Regardless, we will all miss Carol and the Red Room immensely. Though I am sure Ethan will enjoy his time in the Yellow Room, I think it will be quite difficult to top the amazing times he had in the Red Room with Carol.


This is Carol, the mastermind of the Red Room and all of its wonderful, ever-changing wonderfulness

This is an attempt of a picture of Ethan and Carol together... as is often the case Ethan is a bit shy and hard to get to pose.  He is full of energy in this picture as he always is.


These are some pictures from on of the last big adventures that took place in the Red Room.. CAMPING. (Pictures courtesy of Carol)

Ethan is panning for gold (which we still play with often)...

... Fishing...

... Eating gold fish...

... playing with pine needles...

... Fishing again...

... Eating a snack...

... listening to a story...

... And finally roasting marshmallows.

I think that balloon is gonna land here... (runs and gets camera)

Jody had come home a bit early from her rotation at the hospital and met Ethan and I in the dining room.  She said "Did you guys see what is out side?"  We were both intrigued and said "no" with a smile of excitement.  We went outside to the field behind our house and saw a brightly-colored hot air balloon not that far in the distance.  I watched it grow bigger and bigger quite quickly.  Jody looked at me and asked if I thought it was going to land here.  I said "yep" and began running into our house to grab the camera.

The landing of the hot air balloon in Sachem field was a public event is the oldest sense of that word.  Many people just walked out of their yards and playgrounds and made an impromptu procession to the touchdown site.

As an added bit of fun, the balloon touched down RIGHT in the middle of the end of a middle school soccer practice, so one of the people who were helping tear down the balloon spent the entire time making sure middle school soccer cleats did not trample holes in the some-odd thousand dollar balloon fabric.

Also, if you will notice, Ethan was so excited about the event that he didn't even have time to get some underwear or pants on.  It was freezing, but hey, there was a BALLOON landing in our back yard.







Sunday, October 23, 2011

Our Little Garden

Ethan and I spent much of our summer tending to our little garden (read: a series of potted plants in our front yard). Below is a progression of photos from the beginning of summer to the end of fall.

Ethan and I potting the first set of seedling in flats.

Ethan helping me do some transplanting after we got the seedlings to take to the outdoor sun.

Once transplanted, the plants spent most of the summer out in our front lawn arranged like this.

After getting the plants in the right sized pots, they really grew quite well.

Our first tomato... we didn't have a great harvest (there were certainly more tomatoes than this one) but we enjoyed what we did grow very much.

Our bounty of green peppers (brought in right before the first frost, which was quite early this year)

Pots washed and stacked, as they dry to be put away for next year.