Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Summer Update 19 June

Posted by julie on Wednesday, 19 June 2013, 9:56

We’ve been so busy. Here’s a sample:

Sage and Elena are very busy on the beach.

Kids on a log.

Swotti from Neverending Story? The Kinetic Sculpture Race in Arcata is amazingly fun. Thank you, Kari!

Yup, the trees grow big here in Cascadia!

I climbed a big mountain–the tallest in Oregon!

Sylvan’s in the midst of his first season of baseball. He pays attention, which is 90% of the game (and of life, his Dad will tell you). Here he is playing first, readying himself for the play.

Elena graduated from preschool while wearing a clown nose.

Mom (and Elena) had never been to Yosemite, so the kids, Mom, and I went down for a quick trip. Great weather the whole time, no marauding bears.

Here’s the Yosemite Valley looking like a Hudson River School painting.

I climbed Mountain #15 for the year while I was in Yosemite: Lembert Dome up in Tuolumne Meadows, a great little pre-dinner hike.

Sitting on a rock in the sun in the Tuolumne Meadows campground, near one of the world’s loveliest rivers, the Tuolumne, which the kids and Mom used as inspiration to paint pictures and do yoga.

Long Hike Thoughts

Posted by julie on Tuesday, 5 March 2013, 8:30

I met the bearded man just after I’d skied over the bridge, topped with about three feet of snow, piled to the top of the bridge’s railing (I didn’t do the math, but I wondered how much extra weight was just sitting on that bridge all winter long). I planned to explore a new ski trail for me, along the north side of Gold Lake. As a Backcountry Ski Patroller, a large part of my “job” is connecting with the public and helping them have great, snowy, winter experiences, so I stopped to chat as this man awaited his companion.

As I figured out how many miles they had already snowshoed that morning (about 5, down from the South Waldo Lake Shelter), then found out what they were training for (hiking the Continental Divide Trail), it suddenly dawned on me that I’d met Sunshine and her Dad (trail name: Balls). I first read about the duo on the Backpacking Light website in 2011, when they were completing their Pacific Crest Trail journey. Last year, they hiked the Appalachian Trail. So, this year, they’re going for the Triple Crown with their CDT hike, completing all three long hikes by the time Sunshine is 13. This 12-year-old has more experience with bear hanging, sleeping on the ground, trail food, and pushing herself through challenges than most people will ever have. As I considered the school that Sunshine has missed in the past three years, I kept coming back to what she’s gained in self-confidence and outdoor skills from her experiences.

Earlier that morning, I’d talked with my friend Walter about adventures with kids: living abroad, rock climbing, and, yes, even through-hiking. A couple of things have been pointing me toward more serious adventures with my kids. First, I just started a book, Before They’re Gone by Michael Lanza, about a family’s year-long quest to visit National Parks imperiled by climate change. Although I’ve only just begun reading it, it’s easy to see that this family had what most people would consider “grown-up-sized” adventures. In the first chapter, they’re heading out for an early spring, 4-day, 29-mile backpack with a 7- and 9-year-old on icy Grand Canyon trails. That’s believing in your kids and their abilities!

After meeting Monkey, who turned nine while hiking the Pacific Crest Trail last summer, I’ve been considering how feasible it might be to complete a long hike with one or both of my children. The PCT was Monkey’s idea, by the way. She wasn’t coerced. Last summer, when we gave Monkey and her Mom a ride to their campsite after they’d inhaled 1200-calorie meals of pizza and milkshakes, I asked Sylvan if he’d like to try a long-distance hike with me. He balked. The little one, though, seemed interested. With her constant singing and smiley demeanor, she’d be the perfect companion, too! Sunshine to balance my native grumbles. I asked her yesterday if she’d like to try some backpacking this summer. Without looking up from her art project, she said, “Yes.” As she shapes up as a hiker, we’ll see if she enjoys pulling off long days (with enough Jelly Bellies) and is driven by the challenge of a good, long-term goal. I hope so!

This is why I’m on the Backcountry Ski Patrol (and why I can’t imagine leaving Oregon, even when I wish we lived much closer to grandparents). Look at that sunshine!

Beating the Heat

Posted by julie on Friday, 17 August 2012, 0:09

What a joke. It was supposed to be 100 degrees today; it turned out to be 93. When it was 90 yesterday, I said to someone, “It can’t be more than 85, right? It just doesn’t feel that hot.” That’s what two weeks on the east coast will get you. 80 degrees and humid there was, well, darn hot.

My squadron and I had a heat-beating plan in effect for today. After picking everbearing Albion strawberries in the morning (McKenzie River Farm still has lots of berries; go get your jam fixin’s), we headed upriver with our cooler of berries to the headwaters of the McKenzie: Clear Lake. Water doesn’t get any colder than that. We could barely wade in up to our knees before hopping out with numb legs. And the air temperature up there, at 3200 feet, certainly wasn’t in the 90s. Best of all, we didn’t even have to put on sunscreen, because both our wading spot and our picnic spot were shaded. It was lovely—not shivery and not sweaty.

 

"Mom, will you tell us a story?" I regaled them with memories from elementary school (I tried not to be too preachy; only some of my stories had morals).

 

Elena wanted to check out Fish Lake, 2 miles up the road. It was probably formed at the same time as Clear Lake, during a lava flow 3000 years ago that dammed them both. Fish Lake dries up every summer and becomes a meadow–a meadow where there are thumbprint-sized crawling frogs.

 

Trip to Tidepool

Posted by julie on Monday, 9 July 2012, 0:37

We made it to the beach, it's sunny, and we even got a campsite (even though the sign said "Campground Full"). I told Mom I wanted to come to the beach to tidepool because the first graders usually do that in the spring.

We're out of the car, we crossed a stream, crazy Oregon kids are boogie-boarding when it's only 60 degrees!

This morning, we found the best beach in the world! Mommy and Daddy are going to retire to Otter Rock, Oregon – at least for a year.

Did YOU see one of these today?

Look at our tunnel – and there's another one out to the ocean (see it?). This is the Devil's Punchbowl; it's a little punchier at high tide.

I'm ignoring you people. Tide, please come in and save me.

I'm sorry, Mr. S. You're going to have to stay here if the anemone decides he wants to digest you.

Gives new meaning to the term "star party."

No, you guys go ahead. We'll hang out here.

Not only did this beach have tidepools with sea stars, anemones, and mussels; caves; and a smiley pirate flag; but it also had agates! And beach glass. Fourteen years in Oregon, and the place never ceases to impress me.

Good thing this one's so handsome, because it looks like he's going to have his Mommy's beaver teeth for a few years.

Yup, we parents felt like this at the end of Saturday.

Do you know who’s fabulous?

Posted by julie on Thursday, 31 May 2012, 23:32

Happy Mother’s Day!

Posted by julie on Monday, 14 May 2012, 10:40

To all those Moms we love, to whom we’re related or who treat us with loving kindness anyway:

Elena's new skill: representational drawing

Walking meditation

 

Last Ski Day at Willamette Pass

Posted by julie on Monday, 16 April 2012, 11:26

Much to my dismay, yesterday was the last day of lift-accessed skiing at Willamette Pass this season. The snow is still great; the weather was 55 and sunny yesterday; and Elena, Sylvan, and I shared the place with 50 other folks (okay, perhaps there were more, but we didn’t see more than about 50 – and that’s why they have to shut down while the snow’s still fantastic!). Elena was on her game:

Miss E and ski instructor Tom took a shine to each other. He balanced some snow on her head and taught her how to sidestep. She didn't have a lesson, but we have Tom's card for next December, when she'll be old enough for Ski Camp (lessons) and Mommy will be able to ski again. Yippee!

The walk from the car wore out Mr. S:

Know what's hard? Life. Oops, I meant throwing snowballs at your sister. It's exhausting.

Guess which one is more reliable in a photo booth:

The Active Kids, March 2012

Posted by julie on Monday, 19 March 2012, 16:55

Look who's downhill skiing! She occasionally snowplowed, and she figured out how to turn. Go, Miss E!

Mr. S at his belt test/recital. Two black belts later came up to this proud Mom and said, "You know, he did really well." He was superbly focused. He knows when to step it up.

4-, 5-, and 6-year-old karate line-up

Playing the snow bunny

 

Happy Birthday, Sylvan: You’re 6 1/2!

Posted by julie on Monday, 12 March 2012, 13:26

Dear Sylvan,

Six months ago, you wouldn’t read books; you couldn’t write thank you notes; you were a neophyte martial artist; and you’d played soccer a mere handful of times.

Now, I catch you reading books. Sometimes, you read to Elena. Those are gratifying for you, because you understand all the vocabulary and can sight-read all the words. On car trips, you sometimes read Harry Potter to yourself—just one or two pages, because you recognize how relatively slowly you move along and that you can’t understand the more complex vocabulary through context. It’s okay; I love the time I spend reading Harry Potter books to you. I’ll be sad when you’d rather read alone.

Know what's funny when your 3 1/2 and 6 1/2? Scatological jokes.

Do I have something on my head?

And speaking of car trips, your Dad and I recently talked about kids being plugged into movies and video games during car trips. You were playing Train Maze on my iPod, and Elena was watching a princess movie on Daddy’s phone at the time. It was marvelously quiet in the car, and we had the opportunity to have a grown-up conversation. It was nice.

Yet our conversation consisted of how happy we were that we’d waited until the last hour of our 6-hour trip (2 1/2 hours to the east side of the mountains, then 3 1/2 hours back two days later) to say yes to electronic media for entertainment. And don’t be mistaken: both of your parents really enjoy watching movies, and one of us likes to play video games and even sees educational value in them.

But, earlier that afternoon, to entertain yourself—and us—you’d developed a game to play with us. You had a brochure for a natural history-oriented destination. You selected words from the document, then asked us to guess the word, giving hints such as, “It has an A-R in it.” “Arkansas,” I’d guess. “Lard,” your Dad would say. You even kindly tried to handicap your father when he started advancing in the standings. We laughed a lot. That game wouldn’t have happened if you’d been playing Angry Birds all afternoon.

Long-suffering Sylvan

It's a sand clown, of course.

I can’t believe how much your handwriting has improved in the last few months. Your class wrote thank you letters to Dance Africa, because we performed at your school a few weeks ago. As I flipped through the letters, some decorated with colorful drawings, I stopped at yours because the handwriting was so neat and small. Only then did I realize that it was yours. Wow.

I rarely watch your karate classes, but I caught the end of one as I was picking you up last week. All of the students were running through katas, practicing for your belt ceremony later this week. You breezily announced, “Kiso Kata Number 1,” then performed the kata’s movements in order, unfalteringly.

When I pick you up from Edison on Wednesdays and Thursdays, we skirt a game of soccer on the asphalt just outside the cafeteria. Every day, a 1st- or 2nd-grade boy says, “Bye, Sylvan!” I asked you the other day how they all know you. (Kindergarteners, because of their shortened days, have relatively few opportunities for interaction with older kids.) “I play soccer with them every morning at recess,” you responded. It was definitely one of those moments for me of recognizing the breadth of your life outside of our family.

I love you, Luke Skywalker.

Love,
Yoda

My tooth is falling out at breakfast! I'm so scary!

Science Friday: What color is your car?

Posted by julie on Saturday, 4 February 2012, 0:37

Eugene (and global climate change) gave us a sunny, dry Friday afternoon for a little scientific study. Recently, the kids and I were chatting about what color car is the most common. I suggested we come up with a little counting study. This afternoon, the kids made charts (Sylvan’s had some columns with colors written at the top: green, black, blue, red, brown, silvr, wite, and u for another) and hopped on their bikes to find out if silver really is the most common color car (actually, we hadn’t even ventured a guess or talked about hypotheses before we set out).

Once on the sidewalk, Miss E wanted to head west and Mr. S was hoping to venture south. Could we do both? Sylvan magnanimously suggested we go to Elena’s preferred corner first. We’d brought chairs, and, once we were comfortable and ready, I used my iPod timer to set 15 minutes. Then, the craziness began. That first corner was 22nd and Hilyard, which has a traffic light just two blocks south. When the light turned green, I’d say, “Okay, head down, Sylvan. Ready?” Then I’d call out, “blue, silver, silver, white, black, white, silver, red, blue, black, black, black,” and hope that he got it. “Can you just remember them, Mom?” Um, no.

Elena, independently, figured out her own system, and, while she didn’t really get a complete sample, she did pay attention and fill in her chart.

Then we biked to the second corner counted for another 15 minutes. While we didn’t have the same rushes of cars, the steady stream at 24th and Harris was challenging to keep up with. And we had to keep saying hi to all the folks we knew (1 in a car, 3 on bikes).

The final tally:

  • 6+12 green=18 green
  • 33+36 black=69 black
  • 21+11 blue=32 blue
  • 24+15 red=39 red
  • 2+3 brown=5 brown
  • 41+31 silver=72 silver
  • 38+32 white=70 white (includes city buses, of which there were 3 or 4)
  • 2+10 other=12 other
  • 167 cars at Hilyard/22nd; 150 at 24th/Harris

Silver it is. Blue may have been under-represented and counted as black in the second count (21 vs. 11) because we were squinting into the sun the second time around. We didn’t count any parked cars, by the way.

Sylvan started to make a histogram after dinner. I’m not sure he’ll have the staying power to finish it, but here it is in its nascence.

Beginning of a car color histogram, broken out by study location

If we were to do this study again, I’d suggest putting the chart together with some rhyme or reason to it to make recording simpler. I’d also add a “gray” column. Lots of gray cars were counted as black. And I’d add a bicycle column, just because I’m interested.

Happy scientific creativity