"Take chances! Make mistakes! Get messy!" --Ms. Frizzle

"Take chances! Make mistakes! Get messy!" --Ms. Frizzle

Friday, August 13, 2010

What did I do today?

Why, I'm glad you asked! It was just another typical day at work...


Step 1: Dress the child.

Hmmm, this isn't quite right. 
Okay, this is slightly better, but Geneva chose to accessorize with a snow hat and over-large frog wellington boots, which made her sweaty and unable to walk.


Step 2: Feed the child.

Note: some of the cereal actually did enter her mouth.


Step 3: Grooming

Geneva is "brushing" Lucas' hair. Ow.


Step 5: Create a Giant Mess

Done and done.


Step 6: Learn About Sharing

Okay, we actually did pretty well with this one. Lillie temporarily has the upper hand here, but it's all in good fun.


Step 7: Hug a Tree

The best part of any day!


Step 8: Post-Dinner Mad House

What can I say? The girl loves a good slip 'n slide, and/or and excuse to be nude. Here, Owen, Oliver, Jack and Geneva are involved in a pileup.

Geneva and "Baby" Jack. Is it just me, or is the size difference hilarious?

Jackie

Owen

Grandma and Oliver

Allison, our beautiful Hostess with the Mostest

Oliver and his horsie, Uncle Avery

Geneva, Avery and Oliver. If this isn't a good way to end a day, I don't know what is.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Getting Attached




Something's happening. Something I didn't think could happen, and then something I didn't want to happen. But there's no denying it: we've been living in the Yakima Valley for two years now and I am officially Attached. More than simply tolerating life in the valley, I'm finding that I really do like it in a lot of ways. Love it, even. Don't get me wrong, we'll still make our way back to Western Washington one day. It's just that when I think of that day, there's a whole lot of sad mixed in with the happy. I'll actually miss the hot days (although maybe not the really hot days), the exposed rock in the landscape, the vineyards rolling back into the folds of the hills, the cow smell. And for now, I'm content to live here, within walking distance of the places I've now become a "regular," close to friends that I suspect I'll still know when my children have moved away.

I blame the house. How could I not love a place that's my very own, even if it were an absolute hole? I pour my heart into this little haven. It might not always be clean or cool or quiet, but it's where I want to be when I'm someplace else.

I blame Geneva. Her life began here, and everything she touches is saturated by my love for her. When we leave, we leave the door we carried her through on her first day home. We leave the floor where she took eight prancing little steps on the same day we rushed her to the hospital with croup. We leave the ever-mucky windows where she peers out at the world and calls her kitty home. We leave home itself.

I blame the people I adore. We chose to look for work in Yakima because we have family here, and although my idealistic vision of semi-weekly visits is laughable considering we all have young children and busy lives, it has been wonderful to be closer to them. Getting to see Geneva run and play with her cousins (for all intents and purposes) is a joy I don't think will ever get old. And then there are new friends, people whose presence in my life has completely shaped my experience of parenthood so far. When I feel overwhelmed by incompetence or utterly baffled by the creature I call my child, these friends are the ones who gently let me just talk myself sane again. When I experience even the slightest victory, they are there to celebrate with me. And-- coolest of all-- our families are knit together by our babies' fondness for one another.

So you see, I'm Attached.


Beautiful Maya Rose, daughter of our dear friends Allison and Pablo. She is the calm, chill counterpoint to Geneva's excitable nature.


Cousins-- or rather, cousins' kids-- gathered in Harrah for an evening of dinner and slip 'n sliding. From left to right there's Jack, Geneva, Owen, Oliver and Silas. And yes, this is the best photo I got of the whole gang.




Lucas, Geneva and me making cream cheese brownies in the kitchen. Don't worry, the brownie batter didn't turn out purple. That's just paint on the kids' legs.


Sweet Lucas Jose. It's a bummer of a week if I don't get to look after him. He's tenderhearted, and will cry if he sees Geneva crying, but he also has an easy smile. If you give him a cracker, he will turn it into the most disgusting slime-covered turd-looking thing and slowly dribble it down himself... but I can't resist feeding that boy crackers all the same.


Mom and Baby Group was the focal point of my week for a long, long time. It's for kids and their moms from birth to one, but this picture was taken during an informal gathering at the park and a few "graduates," including Geneva, are present. From left to right are the babies (and their moms): Hagan (Rachael), Tillie (Sarah), Jack (Melissa), Geneva (Jamaica), Lauren (Jennifer), Johnny (Andrea), Lillie (Tarah), and Ava (Liz).



Pablo and Allison were kind enough to sneak us into their apartment complex's shindig on National Night Out. To continue the sneaking theme, we slipped Geneva into the bouncy house. She may look tiny and fragile, but don't believe it. She had the best time bouncing with the big kids.


My girl.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Rocky and Pippin

I was planning on blogging about our trip to the beach today. It was to be a post filled with pictures and prose about the beauty of the world and the loveliness of having good friends with which to enjoy it. But I'm afraid I can't write that post today. Simply put, I'm sad.

At 5:45 this morning a neighborhood dog escaped from her yard and made a beeline for our chickens. They were just waking up and I'm sure the noise is what attracted her. She was able to tear off some of the fencing around their pen and get inside, at which point the frantic cackling of the chickens woke up Avery and me. The good news is that two of our chickens actually made it out of the pen and were able to get away. The bad news is that the other two did not. Our silver wyandottes, Rocky and Pippin, died this morning around sunrise. They were smaller than the others, and more shy. They liked to roost on the top of the chicken run, and usually foraged together as a pair. After an awkward chicken adolescence they turned into very pretty birds. I will miss them.

I know that not everyone who reads this will feel the same kind of sadness that I do. They are, after all, only chickens. But when you raise a creature from its infancy, providing for its every need and watching it grow and thrive, there's an indelible connection that's formed. I loved those little hens.

I know I won't always miss Rocky and Pippin, but today I do. Today I miss them terribly. Looking out into our yard, there are no chickens to be seen. The other, luckier two haven't moved from the spot where we buried Rocky and Pippin this morning. I can only see an empty chicken pen, and occasionally hear a sad cock-a-doodle-doo.



Pippin, Percy the rooster, and Io the cat.
Rocky and Pippin roosting...
...And taking flight.
Rocky


I think they had a good life. They had sunshine and shelter, bugs to chase, grain to eat, and a nice little flock to belong to. It won't be quite the same without them.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Goin' to the Zoo, Zoo, Zoo....

Geneva Lynn is one lucky little girl-- as a birthday present, her Nana gave her an annual pass to the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle. As you may or may not be aware, I've basically been humming that Raffi song Goin' to the Zoo since Geneva was born. When she was two months old we hauled her around the Point Defiance Zoo and she literally slept the entire time, waking only once to nurse in front of a walrus. Now that she's a Big Girl and is capable of giving a hoot about small noisy creatures other than herself, I am giddy with zoo fever. That annual pass is going to pay for itself in record time.


Off we go! 
Trip #1 took place on July 4th. Thanks again, Nana, for a lovely time.



Geneva and the ocelot, whom she addressed as Io.



Three happy generations.




Uncle Jordan was able to meet us there for a little birthday celebratin' and general animal gawking. To clarify, he's in the picture on the right, not the left.



We embarked on Trip #2 a whole week after Trip #1. This time we were accompanied by Auntie Kristen and Baby Tommy. I can only guess that the kidlets had fun, but I know for sure that I did!



For as many times as I've wandered through the Rainforest House, I've never seen a bird quite like this.



Goodbye, zoo! I promise we'll see you again soon.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Water Baby

If it drips, dribbles, drops, sprinkles, splashes, puddles, or pools-- we'll be there.