Saturday, July 30, 2011

More excellent story telling from my lovely sister Jessamyn

After Yellowstone, we spent Thursday and Friday at my aunt Sheryl and uncle Bob's house, over in Minidoka county (where my dad also grew up). I've always loved visiting Bob and Sheryl's home; here are some of the things we enjoyed during our stay...

There was a lot of playing with Papa.

My brother-in-law Jim challenged Oliver to 1,000 consecutive jumps on the trampoline and then sabotaged his jumping.
My aunt Sheryl has the most beautiful garden, usually it takes teams of people to have a garden like this. I'm in awe of the amount of work and know how (and talent) that would go into a garden like this.

A box of dirt, what more could little kids ask for!?

Hosing off from the box of dirt turned in a water fight, that turned into a flood, that turned into a slip and slide.

4 wheeling excursions

enjoying my adorable nephew, Jack Jack

more outside playing

more 4 wheeling

some star watching and constellation finding

and of course, shoot stuff!

stay tuned for part 3...

Friday, July 29, 2011

Dinner. Sigh.

As most of you know I live in a house of very picky eaters. If any of you have picky eaters you know it makes meal time very unpleasant. Often there are threats involved, negotiations, and crying.
Today I decided to make a kid friendly dinner and enlist Lilly to help make it. I thought that this would make the fight at dinner shorter if she prepared the food.



The meal: ham and cheese sliders.

The ingredients: rolls, ham, cheese, mayo, butter sauce.

I gave Lilly the task of applying the ham and cheese to the rolls. As we were assembling the sliders the conversation went like this:

L: These are going to be so good.
Me: oh good! Ok, now put the ham on.
L: ok, but I don't want ham on mine.
Me: Ok, you don't have to have ham on yours. Add cheese too.
L: Ok, but I don't want cheese on mine or mayonnaise.
Me: So, you just want a roll?
L: With butter.
Me: That is not what we are eating for dinner.
L: Oh, and I don't want mine to go in the oven either.

Clearly my plan backfired. Having Lilly help only made her refuse to eat the food at an earlier stage of the meal.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Copying at it's best: Crane reunion Part 1

This post was copied word for word; picture for picture, from my amazing sister.

Last Tuesday, my Dad, and [my family] flew into town for a week of Crane festivities, including a trip to Yellowstone and the annual Crane Reunion in Idaho.
(Brian was job hunting in California most of the week)


Johnny and Jack (my nephew) playing with Elizabeth's ipad before bedtime.







Fun with Papa in the hotel before and after Yellowstone.




Wednesday we left our hotel in Idaho Falls at 5 am and headed for Yellowstone.

The last time I was in Yellowstone, I was nine years old, and it was just as incredible as I remembered.



Firehole River

Madison River



Fountain Paint Pot Nature Trail.
The Spasm Geyser name made me laugh, it goes against everything Old Faithful is all about.



Excelsior Geyser, which has a crater 200 x 300 ft with a constant emptying of more than 4,000 gallons of water per minute into the Firehole River.



The variations of blue throughout Yellowstone were unreal.




Midway Geyser Basin (Firehole River bottom left)







Because my child's scream could be heard from 150 feet away (geyser fears), I chose to take a picture slideshow of Old Faithful instead of video.... which can be printed out, cut out and formed into an excellent flip book.


Interesting factoid: Yellowstone contains approximately one-half of the world’s hydrothermal features. There are over 10,000 hydrothermal features, including over 300 geysers, in the park.



The Great Continental Divide, which means all rain that falls to the east of this line flows into the Atlantic ocean and rain that falls to the west of this line flows into the Pacific Ocean. Isn't the Earth incredible and so efficient??




Nonstop breathtaking scenery.

Yellowstone Lake (below), the largest natural freshwater lake in the country that is above 7,000 feet. Yellowstone Lake is 20 miles long by 14 miles wide and the entire lake completely freezes over during the winter!




More of Yellowstone Lake




Bison, bison and more bison.




I feel like this picture might have been planned... look closely.




I think people forgot that bison are wild, unpredictable animals that weigh between 700-2,000 lbs and can reach running speeds as fast as 35-40 mph; not to mention that the number of bison attacks are triple that of bear attacks over the past 30 years in the U.S.




The Grand Canyon of Yellowstone/Artist's Point


No picture could do this canyon justice and there is no question that something this incredible could be created by anything other than a greater power, there are no accidents.



My sister and I had both been on the look out the entire day for a bear, it was our one goal. I knew we would see a bear, Elizabeth was a little less optimistic. My dad has been to Yellowstone 5 times and said he had seen a bear each time, I thought these odds were in our favor. And finally after 9 hours of searching, we found ourselves in a line of stopped cars, abandoned by their drivers; everyone had was gathering along the road to see a bear that was most likely a mile away. It was exciting not only to see the bear making it's way slowly across the side of the mountain, but also that all these people were so engaged in the simplicity of nature. The media makes it seem like our National Parks are ghost towns, but they are wrong, Yellowstone was filled with people from all over the world, enjoying one of America's treasures.




Mammoth Hot Springs




And that was our day at Yellowstone; 10 hours in the actual park and worth every minute of it!

Kudos to anyone who actually read through all of this post.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Top 10

Here are the ADHD friendly highlights from our week:

1.  Book of Mormon camp (like summer bible camp, but for mormons)

2.  Nap time. Lilly and I fell asleep on the couch together on Thursday for a blissful hour.

3.  Nap time = sibling bonding time.  As I napped today, Lilly and Jack cuddled in the chair and played on the ipad together.

4.  Youtube.  Jack and I spent some cuddle time on the couch watching Winnie the Pooh trailers. He was so engrossed that he didn't notice I was hugging and kissing him the whole time.

5.  Zucchini.  We had a lot of zucchini from Jim's garden this week. I made some delicious zucchini bread today that Jack actually ate. I actually got some vegetables into that boy!

6.  Facebook.  The children and I peruse facebook together and they click on links and video that strike their fancy (Hence the Winnie the Pooh trailers).  This weeks favorite was Uncle Oliver playing follow the leader in Africa.


7.  Steve Martin.  Jim and I have recently become enchanted with Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon Rangers.  Specifically "Athesists don't have no songs." Great harmony and really funny.



8.  Pool.  We made it to the pool this week.  Jack and I sat at the edge eating popsicles while Lilly swam like a fish.

9.  Trash.  After months and months of storing our construction trash in our back room our neighbor kindly brought his dump truck over and got rid of all our trash!

10.  Amazon prime.  I have diapers delivered to my door, for free. Awesome.

Obsessed

When Lilly was a baby I was obsessed with her. I was obsessed with her eating and sleeping habits. Her growth and bowel movement habits. I was a first time mother living in my narcissistic delusions that my child was the center of the universe. Every one's universe.

Each month I happily emailed family, friends, and college roommates Lilly's most vital stats.  Her weight, height, head circumference, percentile categories, like and dislikes.

As Lilly grew my obsession honed in on her eating habits.  I painfully made every single meal and snack at the same time each day following pediatric guidelines.  There was fresh fruit at every meal.  I steamed vegetables, on the stove, twice a day.  I cooked and shredded chicken, scrambled eggs, made pancakes and sometimes syrup from scratch.  Planned out nutritious meals weeks at a time using fresh ingredients and I avoided cookies and cakes like the plague.  When friends and family offered her cupcakes I would cringe.  I avoided the bakery section of the grocery store because employees always tried to give her cookies.

I worked nights during that time and Jim was often responsible for her dinner.  A typical dinner by Jim (because I would call and ask him what he fed her) usually included cheerios, corn, chicken, and a sliced banana. I was horrified by this dinner!  Where was the color variety?  Cheerios for dinner, can you imagine?? Corn is one of the least nutritionally dense vegetables available, what was he thinking??

Well, fast forward five years, and I would love to have my children eat a meal that included cheerios, corn, chicken, and a banana! Instead of avoiding the bakery section I walk very slowly past the cake counter hoping they will give my children a cookie to keep them quiet.  Instead of boiling and shredding chicken I will sometimes open a can of chicken. Fast food thrills me because I know they will both eat chicken nuggets getting some good protein in them. I can't remember the last time I steamed vegetables on the stove. Now we're lucky if we steam one of those microwaveable bags from the freezer once a week.  Cheerios are a meal staple which makes me so happy because it is a grain.  In fact that is all Jack would eat today. (Except when I found him and Lilly in the kitchen eating raw ramen noodles for a snack.)

I am not unhealthily obsessed anymore with my children.  Rather, healthily involved in the details of their lives.  I realize that friends and family are not as interested in their weight and height as I am.  While my obsession with Lilly's food consumption wasn't bad, it wasn't great either.  Hopefully one day I can find a happy medium and get back to some good nutrition.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Neglect

I have been neglecting my blog. I have all these great photos to post, but I have just been caught up in our daily life. I haven't made the time to post. Maybe soon.

In the mean time, for posterity sake, I will tell you what Lilly said yesterday.

She told me that Jack loves four things.

1. Shoes
2. Trains
3. Cars
4. Milk


Jack is not much of a talker, but he does have verbal communication for those four things.

More updates soon.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Sick like it's winter

I mentioned that we were sick last week and that was why I was able to get all that crafting and blogging in.  I now realize that it didn't really qualify as sick. It was perhaps, at best, under the weather.

This week we were REALLY sick. Sick like it's winter sick. Antibiotics for me - sick. Antibiotics that I did not have the energy to pick up -sick. My friend went and picked them up for me - that sick.

Sick like it's winter sick.

I had to cancel swimming lessons, piano lessons, my book group,  and summer fun.  I went into work, but ended up laying in the back room (curled in the fetal position) while a friend filled in for me.

I am finally on the mend but my children are a sniffling raggedy mess.

Lilly woke up at 4 this morning screaming for a tissue.  At noon, when I told her we were all leaving the house to buy more tissues, she was quite concerned with how she would blow her nose in the car. I assured her that we could take our tissues in my purse with us in the car and to the store.  When we were at the store we were all coughing and sneezing and spreading all kinds of germs and she just begged for more tissues.

I have no pictures to show, which is for the best. I just hope we are all better next week and thank goodness there was no stomach flu involved!

Background

1