Summer is Good

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Anya has been out of school now for about two weeks, and we are both still alive. Yay! Her school had an awesome end-of-the-year celebration. Students, staff, and families gathered outside for parting words, thank yous, and a great song summing up the year.

After that, we had a potluck lunch (mason jars of fresh milk, ice cream sundaes, watermelon, and lots of other yummy treats), and then playtime! There were water balloons for the big kids and shower poofs dipped in water for the little kids (and for me!). Tons of paper airplanes. Frisbees, balls, running, yelling. Art projects to look at and student-authored books to read.

Leading into summer break, I was a bit nervous about being with Anya 24/7 for the first time. Silly me forgetting about my part-time job. Anya is back hanging out with her old buddies at T’s house a few hours a week while I play with numbers mostly uninterrupted in a nice, quiet place. So, my nervousness was mostly unwarranted. Still there is the wailing that fills the house at least a few times a day. (And that’s not mentioning the kid.)

Aside from hanging at T’s and at work, we’ve been going to the library and the post office and buying chicken food and swinging on swings and taking multiple baths a day and baking a cake from scratch and watching cartoons and playing with dolls and rocks and pulling chicken tails and reading so we can get prizes from the library and napping and painting and asking lots and lots of questions. We also went blueberry picking.

I’ve gone a few times in years past to pick berries with friends, but this was the first year I felt Anya was old enough to go to, and it was also the first year Andy realized his need to make blueberry wine. We got there right around opening time at 7am on a Saturday (!??!?!!?). I think we left around 9:30, 18 pounds of blueberries heavier. When we first weighed in, we only had 17, and Andy wanted 15 for his wine, so I sent him back to get another pound for pancakes and muffins and pie. Doesn’t he look sad having had to pick that one last pound? I think he was jealous that Anya and I sat around eating corn flakes and watching chickens while we waited for him.

The garden is starting to produce. I’ve picked two cucumbers so far, and there are teeny tomatoes on some of the plants. Every day for the last week or so, we’ve been getting raspberries…mostly from the wild plants but some from the berry bed. There is lettuce. (Wait, are we supposed to be eating that?) I’m very proud that the garden areas I planted are being maintained. Yeah, I didn’t get as much area cleared or as much planted as I wanted, but at least the stuff I did clear/plant is doing well. (Except for the pees. And the carrots. And the radishes. Radishes are gross anyhow.)

We bought 10 feeder goldfish and threw them in the pond. Will they survive? Who knows. We go look for them and once in a while see a flash of orange.

And finally, the summer has brought ticks. Teeny, tiny, wee, itty bitty ticks. They look like a speck of black pepper. I’ve found three (two on me, one on Anya) in the last two days. The only consolation is that they are so tiny that they aren’t quite as creepy as the bigger ticks. Still, on the other hand, because they are smaller, they are harder to notice and more likely to dig in for the long haul, which provides more possibility for Lyme’s disease. STUPID TICKS. I think I need a shower.


Playground

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Last week Anya’s new playset from Grandma Diane and Uncle David and Aunt Nancy arrived. All one thousand pounds of it. Last weekend, Anya and I put it together. Cabol helped a little bit too. It would be great if there were pictures of us putting it together, but Cabol has learned to hide far, far away whenever I am trying to build something.

Ok, it may not look completely level, but that is just an optical illusion. Or the fact that our house is built on top of a mountain. But a half ton of wood tends not to shift once it is in place.

Anya loves it. I will probably cover up the opening on top where the monkey bars end with a railing, since she is too small to use them right now, and I’m afraid she’ll roll out one day (see ‘built on top of a mountain’ above).


May List (with some April, too)

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I missed a crafty day last month, and it has thrown off everything since. Birthday cards were late. No blog posts for a month. Groundhog moved in under the tool shed without even signing a lease. Chaos. Must never miss craft day again. Here’s the list of what’s been going on. Sorry, no pictures of the groundhog. He hasn’t been so friendly since I posted the eviction notice on his burrow.

  • Got out the swimmy suit, and filled up the mosquito breeding ground water table.
  • Anya said cute things: garbage trash, soccer kick, sticky tape.
  • My parents are weird. (Anya took this photo.)
  • Got four chickens. They lay eggs. They poo. They eat. Mostly the latter two.
  • Came out of retirement to be the part-time office manager for Anya’s school.
  • Gave a chicken a bath. We thought she had a stuck egg. Turns out she was probably just constipated. MORE FIBER.
  • Anya turned four.
  • Anya had first friend birthday party. There was a bouncy house. And rainbow frosted cupcakes. And lots of grandparents (and friends, of course).
  • Got three fish. One dead so far. Found it hanging half sucked up into the filter.
  • Caught a swarm of bees.
  • Have baby lettuces and radishes growing in the garden. Ate a few strawberries before something else ate them. Stared at baby plums on baby plum tree.
  • Harvested two batches of asparagus from various random spots about the yard. And one green sword.
  • Plant light melted, filling the scary bathroom with smoke.
  • Andy found a really good deal on paper towels. Then he sold half of them to some friends. Then he made Anya a new bed.
  • Dishwasher WORKS!

Easter Bunny, Take I

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This past Saturday, Anya’s former sitter, T., was helping organize an Easter Eggstravaganza in town (pancake breakfast, pics with the bunny, egg hunt). We decided to go because (A) we really like T, (B) it was for a great cause (Relay For Life), and (C) Anya loves her some egg hunting. I have to admit I was a bit sad because the event fell on a scrapbook day. This meant I missed two and a half hours of prime crafty time. But, we make sacrifices for our kids, ya know? I was also sad because it was chilly and cloudy, so Anya couldn’t wear her cute new sundress and the pictures wouldn’t be as awesome as last year’s. So, for me, the day started out kind of sad.

We had to take both vehicles to town because I planned to leave for crafty time right after the egg event. Anya and I got there first, got out of the car, and stopped. There were flocks of little kids heading back from the hunting grounds with their baskets full of eggs. I was confused. I checked my clock. I checked the time on the sign. I thought, maybe I am just confused and hallucinating the eggy baskets. I started to prepare Anya for a very likely lack of egg hunt, and we walked on over. There was one small flock of kids and parents with empty baskets near the hunting ground. They looked sad and perplexed. Since I felt sad and perplexed, there was an instant kinship.

“Did we miss it?” I asked.
“Yup.”
“But, it’s not 10:30 yet.”

Andy arrived, and I had to share with him the sad news. We missed it. Anya was sad because no egg hunt; I was sad because two and a half hours, and Andy was sad because this was his day to sleep in. We tried to make the most of things, so we moved on to pics with the bunny. Anya didn’t want to have her picture taken; she wanted to take the pictures. So, she did.

We tried to herd her back over somewhere near the bunny for a picture. She ran.

I tried to convince her the bunny was sweet and nice, but even I was scared to pet him on the head. I think it was the bow tie.

No one seemed to know what happened with the premature release of the hunters. Possibly the person in charge needed a new watch battery. More likely, I think, the little kids were so hyper and excited and WANT EGGS NOW that they overran the poor person in charge, maybe even knocked her over or buried her in pancakes, and went wild like the feral people kids around candy are.

While I headed out to be crafty, Andy and Anya stopped at the store for some candy to put into eggs at home for a little egg hunt of their own. I haven’t heard any sad tales of the egg hunt that didn’t happen, so I think everything turned out fine.


*SQUEAL*

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Anya got TWO packages in the mail today. TWO. One from each of her Grandmas. She thought it was her birthday. (She told me today that she wants 18 presents for her birthday. I’m not sure if that is total or per person.) I let her open the box from Grandma Cheryl, but I wanted to wait until Andy was home to open the box from Grandma Diane. Anya would have none of that. I went to get the phone to call Andy to see if he would be sad if we opened the box without him, and before I could make it back to Anya’s room, I hear crazy squealing. I open the door and she is pulling off the box’s packing tape. She is ripping that box apart. So, I let her open it.

Her is Anya posing with her Grandma Diane Easter Loot. I tried to get her to smile a normal-ish smile, and she did. A normal Anya smile.

And what was in the Grandma Cheryl box, you ask? Why this awesome new summer dress with fairy tale fabric (and some other clothes, but this was the big squeal generator).

Yes, I cut Anya’s bangs. Yes, they are incredibly crooked. Send me a kid-sized strait-jacket, and I’ll do a better job. Maybe.


Welcome, Spring!

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Anya’s school had a party to celebrate the start of spring. I was a bit concerned about going seeing as how last time there was a celebration, I ended up with a broken foot. The party started off with a Marshmallow Challenge where each class was given a few pieces of dry spaghetti, some dental floss and masking tape, and a big marshmallow. They had about 20 minutes or so to build a tower using the supplies and with the marshmallow on top. Anya wasn’t very interested in this, and decided to camp out in the Quiet Corner of her classroom.

After that was finished, we all went outside to sing and dance. First, though, we were sent out into the woods to find something special to put on the Spring altar. Anya found a large branch, and I found a piece of bark with a mossy thing growing on it.

The people leading the dancing and singing had starting playing drums, and we all gathered back, put our items on a large mat of felted wool, and sat in a big circle.

Most of the little kids weren’t very interested in the singing and dancing, and they ran off to the sandbox. I used Anya’s leaving the circle as my excuse to sit out the rest of the songs. It was just a little bit too much singing and dancing for me. I did enjoy watching the others, and I took a lot of pictures for the school to have. The afternoon ended for us when Anya was chasing a little dog someone had brought (we aren’t supposed to bring dogs to school, but inevitably someone does), and she tripped and fell and scraped up her knee.

Later in the week, Anya’s class went to visit Ed’s farm, one of the founding fathers of the school. We got to see baby goats, baby chickens, and baby frogs.

The kids had a great time, but I think Ed had the most fun.

Finally, back home, we had a few nice days when we got the berry bed mostly cleared out and mulched and some pea and carrot seeds planted. We need to improve our fencing around the berry / pea bed because right now all that we have is a two or three foot chicken wire fence. We put it up last year to discourage the rabbits from eating the strawberry plants. Other than that discouragement and keeping little Anyas and neighbor dogs out, the fence isn’t very useful. Deer scoff at it, birds think it is a nice place to land, and rabbits mostly like to stretch their legs jumping over it.



Ta Da!

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My Mom sent these two outfits a while back, and I have been remiss about posting the photos. I think part of the remissness was because I did post a photo of Anya in one of them, and so my brain said everything was taken care of even though that was more a picture of Anya’s tummy than her outfit.

The pants are a bit big right now (because I asked my Mom to make them big so they would fit next winter), so Anya hasn’t worn the pants much yet. She has, however, been wearing the jumpers a lot. I think the springy plaidy sort of one is her favorite. Thanks, Mom/Gramma!

(NOTE: Mom just made the pants and the jumpers, not the shirts. Any weird shirt combos are all Andy’s fault. It doesn’t matter if he didn’t pick the shirts out, it is still his fault.)


What’d she say?

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I was listening in during Anya’s speech group this morning. The teacher was asking the kids questions. This is what I hear:

What animal barks? A dog!
What oinks? A pig!
What quacks? A duck!
What growls? MY TUMMY!

A week or two ago, Anya was playing pretend. A shiny rock was trapped inside a bracelet (or some similar scenario), and the rock was not happy. The rock was saying, “Help me! You da man!” I was confused. I tried to get her to explain to me what she was saying, she tried to act it out for me, which is something she does when she says something we cannot understand. I was still confused. The pretend game happened again when Andy was home, and he couldn’t figure out what “You da man!” was about, either. I was very perplexed. Usually one of us eventually figures out what she is trying to say. This time we were both stumped for days. One afternoon I was sitting at the table working on something while Anya was playing a Dora game on the computer. Suddenly, I hear, “You da man!” Er? I went over to the computer, where a person was trapped in a castle tower, “Help me! Help me! You da man!” Turns out that in Spanish, “help me” is Ayúdeme.