Friday, July 29, 2011
Looking Back
Have I mentioned that I'm hating myself for not archiving all along? :/
The process of copying, pasting, formatting and PDFing (is that a word?) the blog is tedious, but I must say I am thoroughly enjoying revisiting all the photos and doing quick reviews of all the things we've covered in these almost-two years. We've traveled so many miles, and the kids have come such a long way in other ways as well. So in that sense, this project is very rewarding.
RADIO SILENCE: No report from the campers today. I'll just go with the "no news is good news" theory.
GET OUT THOSE GLASSES: Not that you took them from the theater on purpose, but if you do happen to have some of those 3D glasses round your home or office, get 'em on and check this out!
On his Flickr page, Nathanial Burton-Bradford of England offers views of the final space shuttle launch as well as a panorama of the shuttle docked to the International Space Station, and a view of Atlantis' descent to Earth.
PICTURE THIS: Found this drawing of Bee's while picking up around here today. I didn't see her draw it so I don't have a story to go with it. You'll have to make up your own. :)
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Blogged Down
We spent hours getting them ready earlier this week, last night and this morning. We gathered groceries, clothes, gear and a tent, of course. CJ and Annabelle helped Christian check out their temporary shelter here in our yard to make sure it was all in order.So far, I can only think of a couple of things they forgot, but nothing they can't live without, so that's good.
They are camping at Baker Bay Campground on Dorena Lake, which is just east of Cottage Grove, Oregon.
It took them around seven hours (ugh) to drive there. Christian called tonight to report their safe arrival and to tell me "CJ is having 10 times more fun than he had last year." That's good to hear.
MEANWHILE, BACK AT MPA: Last year when they left, I spent three days and nights down in the basement, cleaning it out. This year's special project is less physically taxing, but it is tedious. I'm archiving this blog into a PDF format. It's a rather painstakingly slow process in order to make it look acceptable (to me).
And so, I am reliving our past couple of years one day at a time. I have finally gotten the first year done. I have a whole additional year to go. As you might imagine, all the while I am cursing myself for not archiving it as I went along instead of trying to play catch up. :/
Ironically, I almost forgot to post a blog tonight because I'm so swamped in the archiving project. ...
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Play Time
It was pretty funny, when we walked in the room she immediately ordered us to stop - telling us we were too close. I guess she needed a big performance area. And then she immediately recruited CJ, telling him, "You know this!" :)
And so we were treated to a 3-minute live action version of "I Can't Defeat Airman."
SUNK: A couple of nights ago I bought the kids a Battleship game on clearance at Target. I LOVED Battleship as a kid and they've played an online version, but we've not owned the game ourselves. Until now ...
I was especially happy to find a version that incorporated "build your own" and LEGO features. That had to be even better, right?
Yeah, well, notsomuch. It's really rather lame. For starters, the rules are different (and should be ignored in favor of the original games' rules). Second, and worse-ly (what's the right word here?), the little ships don't anchor into the playfield. They sit on a piece of cardboard atop the game board. So anytime any kid touches anything on the board, the ships move all over the board. Which doesn't work very well with that whole A-3, C-5, you sunk my battleship type stuff.
Wish I'd seen and bought an old school set. :( Look for this item at a Goodwill near you soon.
CAPITAL IDEA: CJ had heavy thoughts on his mind this morning. Not sure what got him to thinking about it, but just after breakfast he announced he had a plan "for extra super bad villains." Do tell, I encouraged. "They go into death traps instead of prison," he proposed."Oh," I said. "I just hope you make really Really REALLY sure they're guilty before they fall into death traps."
SUGAR SHACK: Rick's last day of teaching summer school is tomorrow and I volunteered MPA to make some treats for his kiddos. I decided on Rice Krispie Treat lollipops.
Annabelle was more than happy to help. She was chairman of the sugar polka dots.NO DOZE: CJ, a.k.a. the boy who barely sleeps, has been peppering us with questions about how long a person can go without sleep before they'd DIE. Is it days? Weeks? Months?We've speculated, but we don't have a solid answer for him. And that bothers CJ. He wants answers, dammit!
Turning to Wikipedia, we learned that the longest (scientifically documented) period of time a human being has intentionally gone without sleep without using stimulants of any kind is 264 hours (11 days)I told him. "I'll shatter that record to pieces! I'll shatter it to fractions of quarks!" CJ vowed.
Spoken like a true nerd. :)DRAGGING IT OUT: Annabelle was dragging along slowly while getting ready for bed tonight. I called out to her in her bedroom, trying to prod her along. "I'm just hanging my cape up," she called back in a sing-songy voice.
Oh, that's right. Can't rush a superhero. :)Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Tuesday Follies
I pride myself on making a nice cache of art supplies readily available to the kids and boy oh boy does Annabelle avail herself to the supplies - to the point that seriously every table, counter, cabinet top, etc. is covered with her creations.
It presents quite a quandary. What to do with all of them? We simply can't keep them all, our house is waaaay too small. So I talked to her today about how we will, of course, save extra special ones, but the rest we'll have to photograph and recycle.
Maybe I should just upgrade her art supplies and let her open an Etsy store.
FUNNY STUFF: Today, we took two huge bags of things to donate to Value Village. Of course, that meant we had to go in the store and BUY stuff to take its place. ;)
I found CJ admiring this at one point ..."It looks pixelated," he said.
Hahahaha. I told him it's called cross stitching. :)
One of the items we bought today was a riddle book, since the kids both love riddles. This afternoon Annabelle was peppering me with new material. Here's one gem:
Annabelle: How do librarians file melted marshmallows?
Me: I dunno, how DO librarians file melted marshmallows?
Annabelle: The gooey demical (sic) system? Get it? Get it?!?!
Ah yes, soooo funny. ;)
CJ'S NOT GOING TO LIKE THIS: Time travel is impossible, or so some Hong Kong scientists recently announced.
IN HAPPIER NEWS: It was a two-magazine day for CeeJ. His Nintendo Power came in the mail and he found a new MAD Magazine at Fred Meyer.MISSION COMPLETE: Today, the kids took their completed summer reading program certificates back to the library. On them, they'd each listed 10 books they've read this summer so far.
As a reward, they each got to choose a free book, enter their names in a drawing for a special "Breakfast of Champions" and post their name on the wall of the library.
This evening I was laying their goods out on the stereo top to photo them and Annabelle (pizza sauced face and all) worked her way into the frame.GRUMPY MOM: One of the kids' education-related Facebook groups I subscribe to posted a link to an article with the headline, "Lost something? Not my problem. Frumpy Mom rule: Never look for missing kids stuff."
That got my attention. As I read the author's diatribe, I felt my blood pressure rising. She started with, " ... I have a very firm rule in my house: I do not look for kid stuff. Period. Exclamation point. End of paragraph," and was basically downhill (at least for her poor kids, IMHO) from there.
I feel like quoting the whole story, but won't due to that whole copyright infringement thingee. I would just encourage (or should I say discourage?!) you to read it and then come back. ... ;)
I don't usually post comments on group posts, but I couldn't help myself today. I wrote: Wow, not a fan of her philosophy at all. Do we need to teach kids to take care of and keep track of their stuff? Absolutely. Should kids be asked to (really, REALLY) try to find their lost items on their own first? Of course. But teaching kids NOT to help someone in need of assistance finding something, no matter what? Really? How does that help someone become a better person? And where do you draw the line? Will she also not help a neighbor find a lost dog? How about a lost child at the store? Are those also "not my problem" situations, because the things aren't hers? Has she never misplaced anything herself and hoped for help finding it? And when you live in a household with others, sometimes the other people move your stuff - so when other people mess with your stuff and you can't find it, are you still on your own?
Obviously (hopefully?) by the writer's tone, she's trying to be humorous, but I guess I don't see much funny about a statement like "I don't really care so much if my kids like me or not ... at my age, I just don't give a horse's behind." Sounds more like a grumpy mom than a "Frumpy Mom" to me.
BACK IN THE DAY: Harvard used to boast about its easy entrance exam, hoping to attract more applicants in the mid-19th century. So when I read that a 1869 Harvard entrance exam was recently posted to the Web (PDF HERE), I thought, "Oh, that sounds like fun."
Um, not so much. At least for me. Turns out, in order to even take the test, you need to know Latin, Greek, Greek history, ancient geography, and more. Yikes. :/
ANOTHER OUCH: Here's a comment from a NASA-related Facebook group I'm a part of, which was posted today: "If you watch NASA backwards, it's about a space agency that has no spaceflight capability, then does low-orbit flights, then lands on the moon." Yikes. That will leave a mark! :(
In other news, tonight a robotic space probe scheduled to orbit Jupiter made its way to the rocket assembly building at Cape Canaveral's Complex 41. There, a powerful Atlas 5 booster awaits its $1 billion cargo, per Spaceflight Now. Juno's launch is scheduled for August 5 at 11:34 a.m. EDT.
Monday, July 25, 2011
City Livin'
We headed down to the waterfront a little after noon. There was a light drizzle, which made it really easy to tell the Seattle and surrounding area visitors from the out of town tourists. The out of towners were wearing heavy coats and hang dog expressions. I think a lot of them think the sun we had this weekend is normal, which it is most absolutely not.
There was quite a line to get into the museum. While we were waiting in it, Christian gave an extra voucher we had to a family in front of us. Boy were they happy - it saved them $12. That's right, it's $12 for a kid to get into the aquarium. Yikes. And the adult admission? It's NINETEEN damn dollars apiece. Good gravy. Certainly not something we'll be doing very often (like, until next year, if Starbucks has another promo and/or when the aquarium is a Groupon deal or some such thing). And let me tell you, we were packed in like sardines in the aquarium. So. Many. People, and about every other one seemed to be pushing a *&%^$ stroller the size of a Volkswagen. At times it was impossible to even move just because of the mass of humanity. But enough complaining.
We did manage to see some sea creatures. The starfish are always a favorite ... ... especially because the kids get to touch them (with a gentle, one fingered poke). We checked out the circular-shaped jellyfish tank. It reminds me of the portal in Stargate for some reason.CJ was attacked by an octopus ... ...they rode an orca ...... and Annabelle measured up to a sixgill shark! In their second building we saw some harbor seals. They have the sweetest faces.And we spied some sleeping sea otters.There were things to see outside the aquarium, too, of course. For starters - the orb is back! In fact, it probably never left. ... A few days ago, I reported that we saw it floating out in the bay instead of docked. At that time, we presumed that it was on its way home, wherever that may be. Instead, now we think maybe they were just testing something and then hauled it back into port.
We also got to see the tremendous amount of progress that has been done on the John T. Williams memorial totem pole. It was at Seattle Center, but now the project has been moved to the waterfront, just north of the aquarium. Two of Williams' brothers were there, one older, one younger. The younger one spoke to us for a bit, telling us how they're trying to make a positive out of a negative (their brother being gunned down while minding his own business, crossing the street, by a Seattle police officer). The totem pole is gorgeous. I wish I'd thought to ask the man where it will be installed.
WEEKEND REWIND: We had lots of fun in the sun this weekend. On Saturday, we went to Seattle Center, where the kids enjoyed splashing around in the fountains.
We also popped into Experience Music Project, checked out the displays, including the always jaw dropping instrument sculpture. We also saw the Avatar exhibit ...
On Sunday, we spent an hour or so at Golden Gardens, a park about 10 minutes to our north, where a neighbor was having a party. It was hot-hot-hot, and the water was oh-so-blue.RAIN IN SEATTLE! FILM AT 11: I kid you not, the LEAD story on tonight's news was that it rained today. Oh, and there was thunder and lighting, too!
I will admit, I said to Christian this morning 'round 7:30 a.m., "That was the LOUDEST thunder I've ever heard in my life." And a few minutes later, Rick texted me and said the same thing.
SAY WHAT?: "I'm going to live with you forever," CJ announced around 7:30 this morning. Given that, I was surprised a bit later when he told me that he has decided on a career path that involves being "Santa's Apprentice." I told him if that was going to be the case, he'd have to move to the North Pole. He seemed OK with that, saying, "I'll remember to take a coat."