“Collage” with Davey

Today Davey, Buster and I went on a picnic.  After we ate, I thought we’d draw for a little while.  We tried drawing what we saw around us.  Davey drew Buster, and then he had another idea.

“Mama.  I want to do a collage.  I’ve always wanted to do this!”  I don’t know if this is collage exactly, but it was a pretty cool idea I thought.

He wanted me to draw a tree, and then he added the details.

collage-found-objects

 

We added twigs to the bark. He told me that the dandelions are yellow apples.  The red flower is the sun!  He specified that he wanted leaves falling from the tree.  Then he added grass.  He wanted a “human” in the picture, so he found what he thought was a “human-like” weed.

I loved this.  I wanted to draw pictures, but he wanted to create a completely different type of picture.  Creative kid. 🙂

Pre-K Graduation

We went to Davey’s  Pre-K graduation this morning.

Davey had decorated his hat with fireworks.  He told us exactly how he wanted to paint them.  We helped him, but he did most of the work.

firework-hat

 

 

They held the graduation outdoors at the Broomfield Commons.  It was a beautiful day for it.

decorations

 

Davey and Daddy.

daddy-and-davey

 

Pre-graduation festivities included a bounce slide.  Here Davey was sliding down with his friend.

sophia-and-davey

 

He grinned all the way down.

davey-slide

 

After the children had marched in and were seated, the parents were encouraged to come take pictures.  Unfortunately, the sun was beaming right into the kids’ faces, so there was no avoiding the squint!

pregrad-pic

 

I love watching Davey have conversations with other kids.  When I took the picture, I was wondering what they were talking about.  When I got home and downloaded the pictures, I realized that Davey’s hat was off.  Looks like they were discussing the hat.

hat-discussion

 

Davey walked up and received his diploma from his teachers Ms. Jenny and Ms. Karen. They were awesome.

davey-jenny-karen

 

The diplomas were good for bopping each other.  They had a fun time with this as they waited for their classmates to receive their diplomas.

diploma-bopping

 

Afterwards we had fun post-graduation festivities.

They played on the playground.

postgradparty

 

Next we had a picnic.

picnic

 

So pretty outside, and we had a nice view.

picnic-view

 

Here’s a picture of me with the little graduate.

me-and-davey

 

Davey finished things up by rolling down a hill with two of his friends.  They found this to be the greatest of fun.

rolling

 

Happy Pre-K graduation Davey!

davey-balloon

 

Muffins for Moms

On Thursday, I went to Davey’s pre-k to go to “Muffins with Moms”.  It was a lot of fun. They had worked on several songs which they sang to the moms.

muffins-mom1

 

They were a little shy singing in front of everyone.  They were very proud of their songs though.

muffins2

 

They decorated the tabletops with pictures they made.  Davey drew this lovely flower.

flower-for-mom

 

Then they brought us muffins and juice.  Davey was very careful transporting my muffin and then he brought me some tea.

muffinfor-mama

 

They made us great little gifts too.  One of the gifts was a portfolio of their work.  It included artwork from the year, but it also had a page where they had written their name and had drawn a picture of themselves on the first day of the school.  Then their teachers had them repeat this on the last day of school.  It was really neat to see how his handwriting progressed and how his self portrait was drawn differently too.  It’s a treasure.

I took a picture of Davey with his gift, but he was more interested in getting back to his chocolate chip muffin!

muffin-present

 

Special day at pre-k.

I also had a couple of pictures from his half-birthday party.  He had had a lot of fun decorating the cookies.

halfbday-cookie

 

I love this one of him blowing out his candle.

blowing-out-candle

“Regrowth” is growing

I have been working on my “Regrowth” shawl.  It’s really hard to see how lace is going to look when it is still on the needles and unblocked, but here’s an idea. 

regrowthprogress

It’s really a fun pattern.  I am finally beginning to learn how to “read lace”.  I am no expert by any means, but I am learning to see patterns in the stitches.  This is proving to be invaluable so far on this project because it’s not a pattern where I can set stitch markers every so many stitches to keep track of where I am.  Each chart is different, and it is even different from row to row in a chart.  It makes for fun knitting because I really have to pay attention to what is coming next. Typically it would make for stressful knitting because I do have to pay such close attention, but because I can now better “see” where I am, it’s been ok.

For example, I am working on the “blossom chart” right now (which not only looks like flower blossoms, but the number of increases in this chart is making the shawl also “blossom” greatly!).  I have to take 3 stitches and increase them into 9.  The subsequent rows involve adding yarnovers to these 9 stitches, and then doing different decreases to form the blossom shapes.  So I can “read” to know where I am most of the time.  It makes for engaging knitting.  However, when I finish this chart, I am going to add a lifeline just to be safe.  I may not be able to “read” the next chart quite so successfully.

Lace was always really frustrating for me.  I’d get lost and I never thought I was going to progress.  Turns out, just like anything else, I needed practice.  And lots of it.  And I still need lots more practice!

 

5.5

Davey had his half birthday yesterday.  We don’t celebrate hugely, but we did get him a couple of things and we made some cookies.  Our day got away from us so we didn’t get to decorate the cookies yesterday.  That’s the plan for this afternoon.

Davey has been majorly into Batman Lego so we got him some batman lego things.  He also likes the game on the Wii and has been playing that some.  Just set the timer to bring an end to this play session!

Here’s the 5 and 1/2 year old!

davey-bday

 

This morning we had soccer.  He had a great day.  He’d been a little discouraged with soccer because several of the other boys have gotten really into it and have become pretty competitive.  He really wasn’t ready to charge in after the ball.  He likes to check on his friends and follow along.  He always hustled, but he didn’t want to jump into the fray.  Today though, he really began to focus and was all of a sudden ready to jump in and get the ball.  He made a beautiful goal where he ran the ball down the field and did a great kick!  He was so proud, and David might have been even more excited than Davey.  🙂

Fun day with the 5.5 year old.  Now to close out of Batman Lego, and we are off to decorate his birthday cookies!

Waiting for snow?!? and a short story

We are preparing for another snowstorm.  Really.  May 1st.  They are predicting around 6 inches.  It should melt pretty fast as it was 80 degrees yesterday.  Crazy weather, but it’s always interesting!

I have a short story I want to record into my blog.  But first – I’m actually working on Blurb.com to turn my blog into a book.  I like the idea of having a hard copy to keep just in case something ever happened to my blog.  So far I am working on 2012 and it’s going to be at least 135 pages alone.  Blurb is awesome for this.  It imports the blog – pictures and all.  They call it “slurping” which I think is kinda hilarious.  I still have to go through it page by page though and do some formatting.  I am thoroughly enjoying it because I get to read back over my blog.  I read about things that I had already almost forgotten about.

So anyway, a couple of weeks ago we flew to Seattle.  We got to the Denver airport and started going through the security process.  That’s really an experience these days.  I haven’t flown much in the last several years.  In March, I actually flew for the first time since Davey was born.  There’s lots of putting shoes and other things into totes.  So they put my suitcase through the x-ray thing.  As it passed through, I heard one of the security people say “Bag Check”.  It did not even occur to me though that they would be referring to my bag, but over came a lady to check the bag out.  Sure enough they were referring to my bag. She said that she was going to have to inspect it.  I said sure, and I told her that the only things in the bag were my clothes and hairdryer.

She told me that once she started going through my bag I should not touch or even approach it.  Then she went through it all very thoroughly.  She had a piece of cloth that she used to wipe around the inside – looking for explosives I guess?

I thought she was done, but then she unzipped the outer compartment on the front of the suitcase.  From this compartment she pulled out not one, not two, but three pocketknives.  I felt like my jaw hit the floor when I observed this.  I was just a little embarrassed.  Three knives?  Why would I have three knives?

Apparently David had stowed the knives there when we moved at some point.  I hadn’t used that bag in a long time.

They confiscated a pocketknife from David the last time he was at the airport.  We are now down four knives.

The guard was very nice about the whole thing.  I kept apologizing.

That’s my story.  I guess I won’t forget it, but I wanted to get it down in my blog anyway!

How about a picture to end with?  Davey is graduating from preschool in two weeks.  Today they sent the kids home with their graduation caps which they are supposed to decorate.  I’m not sure how to decorate a boy’s hat; I’m going to be looking to pinterest for guidance!

577450_10201027036058531_1910427767_n

Arm Warmers, Socks and Pre-k

I’ve had a chance to do more knitting lately.  yay for that.  I just finished up my first arm warmers and another pair of socks.  I’ve been working quite abit on the Regrowth shawl, but it’s not evening time tv knitting.  I’ve learned this the hard way.  Twice now.  So in order to avoid tinking back entire rows, I am not allowing the shawl in front of the tv.

The arm warmers are from a Berroco pattern called Radius.  Very simple pattern, but it was fun.  I used Cascade Heritage sock yarn (I’m almost positive).  I got David to take a couple of pictures for me.

arm-warmers-1

 

The pattern is plain stockinette with the ribbed cuffs.  There is no additional thumb work required. I like the way the thumb (or lack thereof) looks though.

arm-warmers-2

 

I also just finished the first sock in the basic “How I make my sock” pattern that I always use from Susan Anderson.

socks-tofutsie

 

This is Tofutsie yarn that I bought back in Arkadelphia. I don’t know why I hadn’t used it before.  It’s great yarn.  It’s made out of a blend of superwash wool, soy silk (made from soybeans), cotton and chitin (chitin is made from shrimp and crab shells!). The yarn has a silk feel to it and knits up so pretty.

These are going to be end of the year gifts for Davey’s preschool teachers.  I can’t say enough how happy I’ve been with his “first school experience”.  He has been going to preschool at our rec center.  I just by chance learned of its existence from another mom on his soccer team.  On registration day, I had to arrive early, wait in line, and cross my fingers that I was in time.

Fortunately, we got in. He has two awesome teachers.  The lead teacher is about my age, and she has just been the greatest with them.  He is in a class with eleven other kids, and they are this little unit who all play together and get along really well.  They are nice kids, but I give lots of credit to the teachers too for teaching them how to work so well together.  Pre-k just meets two days a week, but he’s learned so much and he absolutely loves to go to school.  That’s what makes me the happiest I think – that he has had such a positive early experience with school and is ready for more!

Pavlovas!

So I just finished an excellent book called The End of Your Life Book Club by Will Schwalbe.  I really like to read books about people writing about books they love.  I learn about new books, and I often gain new perspectives on books that I have also read.  This book was more than that though.  It was also about the relationship the author had with his mother, and it’s also a tribute to his mother.  They began this book club after she was diagnosed with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer, but throughout the book I also learned about her life.  She’s very inspiring.  She worked in refugee camps in several places around the world.  A very important cause to her was also establishing a library in Afghanistan (she successfully did this).

So anyway, I really enjoyed it, and I was curious to learn more about the author.  He’d been a book editor and in the book he describes how he left that work to start a website called cookstr.com.  It’s a fun site with lots of great recipes.  So all that to explain how I discovered that the national dessert of Australia and New Zealand is the Pavlova. I’d never heard of this dessert before.  I read about it, learned that it was very low fat, and so decided to try it out.

cookstr had a recipe for individual pavlovas.  It’s kinda like strawberry shortcake, but the base is not cake, instead it is a baked meringue.  You shape the meringue into disks and then bake it.  My disks do not look nearly as tall and nice as the ones pictured on the website.   This may be a combination of my altitude challenge here in Colorado, and perhaps I am also somewhat meringue challenged, as I’ve not made it many times.

However, I think I succeeded in capturing what the bases were supposed to taste like.  The base is just eggwhites, sugar, vanilla, cornstarch and a pinch of salt.

Here’s the finished pavlova.

pavlova

 

Once you bake the meringues, you just layer whipped cream and berries on top.  Very easy.

David took one bite of the meringue base and his first comment was “Strange”.  Not exactly what you want to hear. But it is unlike anything I’ve ever made.  It is kinda chewy and sort of reminds me of a more solid cotton candy.  It is very sweet and I wouldn’t want to eat it by itself, but I thought it was really good combined with the whipped cream and berries.  I didn’t actually use whipped cream this time.  I used Cool Whip.  David loves cool whip and we were trying to keep the dessert low fat and low calorie.  Next time though I’d love to try it with real whipped cream.

Despite David’s initial “Strange” reaction, I think the dessert grew on him.  He was ready to have another one today.

Davey wanted to try one too (without the fruit).

He looks a little unsure here.

unsure-pavlova

 

He wasn’t too thrilled.  I wish he’d tried it with the fruit as well!

So in summary this was a great book that led me to a good website where I found and tried what I think is a pretty fun dessert!

 

Dungeness Spit

Last week we made a trip to the Pacific Northwest.  David and I had lived there for nine months back in 1997, but we’d never ventured out onto the Olympic Peninsula while we were there.  We decided we’d take Davey on the ferry to Bainbridge Island and then go out to a place I’d read about called the Dungeness Spit.

This was Davey’s first ferry ride and he loved it.  We drove up into the ferry, and then we were able to hang out on the sun decks as well as inside.  It was really chilly out, but Davey enjoyed looking out at the Puget Sound.

ferry-ride

 

We walked to the front of the ferry where it was really really windy!

crazy-wind

 

Once we got to Bainbridge Island we had to drive for a little over an hour onto the Peninsula and then up to Dungeness Spit.  (This is near Sequim – which I learned is not pronounced “SEE Quim”, but instead “Squim”.)

The Dungeness Spit is a long stretch “spit” of land that extends 5.5 miles. It’s the longest natural spit in the United States.  It’s like a long finger of land.  Here’s a picture I took that gives a little bit of an idea.  It extends on around the edge for another several miles.

spit-pic

 

You can hike to the end of the spit where there is a lighthouse you can tour.  Families can actually volunteer to work at the lighthouse for short periods of time.  One of these days, I hope we can return and hike to the very end.

We parked and walked along a bluff on our way down to the spit.

We had some incredible views.

bluff-and-view

 

 

We were looking out from the bluff pictured above in order to see this:

view-from-bluff

 

Eventually we wound into the forest and began the walk down to the Spit.  The forest is just incredible.  So green and lush.

forest

 

The Spit was covered with huge pieces of driftwood and the beach was pretty rocky.  I was listening to a forest ranger though who recommended beginning a hike at low tide.   She said at this time there is hard-packed sandy beach which would definitely make for much easier hiking!

Davey really enjoyed playing in the driftwood.

driftwood-and-davey

 

We played and looked around for a little while, but it was very windy and chilly on the unprotected beach, so we soon made our way back up.

Davey requested assistance going up the hill.

piggy-back

 

I enjoyed taking pictures of the light coming in through the trees and bushes.

green

 

I can’t recommend this trip highly enough.  We had a little bit of trouble figuring out where the entrance to the Dungeness Spit trail was.  I don’t know if we missed a sign maybe, but we just kept winding around toward the shore and eventually found it without much trouble.

Davey also enjoyed the ferry ride back.  He was pretty tired at this point and so was getting fairly wound up.

davey-ferry-back

 

I have to recommend any ferry ride in and out of Seattle as well.  The Puget Sound is so beautiful and we loved seeing the Seattle skyline as well.

seattle

Koko Puff

We lost our Koko Puff last Friday.  I’ve wanted to write about her, but I have had trouble figuring out just what to say.

She was born around 2-14-96 (that’s the date we determined based on the vet’s estimate of her age).  We thought Valentine’s Day sounded nice.  When we adopted her, she was a 4 month old ball of fluff.  I’ve got to find those pictures.  She joined our family in the pre-digital era, and so I have actual pictures somewhere.

Here she is at 17.

IMG_8674

Koko was such an interesting dog.  I think it’s because she really did not believe she was a dog.  When David brought her home, I picked her up; I was ready for lots of puppy kisses.  Koko was not a kisser.  She kept turning her head.  I remember finding this so odd, but that was Koko.  She liked pats though, and she’d paw you if you stopped before she was ready for you to.

Koko was pretty much in charge around here.  I used to joke (but it really wasn’t a joke) that the hierarchy went:  Koko, David, me and then Timber.  Timber and I were kind of tied at the bottom.

Koko was the most stubborn dog in the history of dogs.  If you put her behind a gate or a door, she’d make it her mission to try to escape – even if this meant totally destroying the door trim or the top of the inside of her crate.   She was stubborn until the day she died, and I’m pretty sure that it was that stubborn streak that kept her alive so long.

She was also very very loyal.  She finally stopped barking and protecting us in the last few years, but prior to that she kept a close watch on us.

In her lifetime, Koko broke her leg, and she also had a couple of bouts with an inner ear problem which caused her to spin around and around in circles.  We thought that would be the end of her, but she recovered again.  For the last few years, she’s suffered from arthritis and I’m pretty sure some doggy dementia.

She’s at peace now.  Davey has been sad about her going, but he explained some things to me.  He said, “Mommy, you know heart and heaven sound kinda the same.”  I said that yes I guess so!  They both start with “h-e-a”.  He then said, “I think heaven is in our hearts because when someone dies, their spirit stays in our hearts.”  I liked that.

He also told me that “God is happy that Koko is in heaven.” and then, “Mama, he might be a little mad at us for keeping her for so long.”

We will miss the puff.