Monthly Archive for June, 2009

Page 2 of 3

Featured Elsewhere & a Sneak Peek!

I have a writing piece up and running at Mile High Mamas, the parenting blog of The Denver Post today!

If you click here, you’ll see my latest writing piece, and you’ll also get a sneak peek of our latest landscaping project! :)

So, what do you think?  At your house, does Daddy do things differently than Momma, and is that okay?  Personally, I’m all for it! Most of the time… :)

The comments are closed here, but I’d love to hear what you have to say over there!  Go check it out!

Grand is a pretty good way to describe it

As you know, our big trip this year was a 12-day road trip out to California via The Grand Canyon. We had a blast, and one of the reasons it’s taking me so long to get these updates posted is that when I open up the folder of our pictures, all of a sudden, hours have gone by! It’s so hard to not get sucked into the memories.

I love reliving the trip, and I hope you enjoy this next segment!

You can read about the route we took and our adventures up to this point here:

The first night in the tent left a lot to be desired, Holiday Inn of Camping or not. The wonderful part of being out in nature is that you’re out in nature. The not-so-wonderful part of being out in nature is that you’re out in nature.  ;) The birds wake up at the crack of dawn. The sun comes up pretty early. Those two things combined make the preschooler in the tent pop up out of her sleeping bag, raring to go, whether the adults are ready to go or not.

I would have been in a much better mood had my pillow situation been a lot better than it was. I remember vividly, standing in our bedroom at home and talking to my husband about how I wanted to take a real pillow with me. We weren’t low on space; we were sleeping on a queen-sized air mattress! This was going to be car camping…not “real” camping. I’d sit on it if I had to. He called me a wussy and said that travel pillows we had would be just fine.

Against my better judgment, I left my pillow at home.

As I was tossing and turning the first night, I regretted that decision. I may or may not have taken pleasure in the thought of smothering a certain someone with my inadequate travel pillow. Maybe. ;)

The travel pillows we have work wonders if you’re sitting upright in a plane or on a train. But, they are terrible if you’re trying to sleep on them like a real pillow.

My Pillow of Doom plus Little Miss Signing Sunshine bouncing around our tent HOURS earlier than we anticipated made our first full day at the Canyon a bit rocky.  (pun totally intended)  I tried as hard as I could to summon my patience, and so, Claire and Momma went on an early morning nature hike while Daddy slept a little bit longer.

That afternoon, after a day of hiking, Daddy purchased a souvenir at the lodge…a pillow! It has a wonderful pattern on it, and it matches our bedroom set. And, because I’d let him sleep in, he and Claire let Momma take a nap in the tent on her new pillow while Daddy and Claire learned how to play with the frisbee.

Needless to say, that next night was a thousand times better than the last.  And, Claire LOVED camping…and when you’re traveling with a preschooler, isn’t that the most important opinion in the group?  ;)

But, enough about the camping part of camping. What about the canyon? The Grand Canyon is unbelievably beautiful. The photos we have do not do it justice. Looking out over the vastness of it all doesn’t even seem real, let alone trying to capture its majesty on film.

I am so glad we camped there for two nights. We had a chance to see so much of the canyon without being rushed.

There is a bus that runs along the rim, following the hiking path. We decided to start out hiking and make it as far as we could before hopping on the bus and riding back to the campground. It was the perfect plan, and we were pleasantly surprised when it worked out well.

Cracks & Layers

Cracks & Layers - Click for more detail!

One of our friends had let us borrow their backpack child-carrier. There was no way we wanted to take a stroller with us on the hike, and we weren’t sure how long she could last.

3 feet on the edge - see the tiny roads beneath us?  Click for more detail!

3 feet on the edge - see the tiny roads beneath us? Click for more detail!

Well, imagine our surprise when she hiked A MILE AND A HALF all on her own! We’d let her wear her little light-up princess sandals, and I think that’s the most action those princesses have ever seen! :)

When her little legs had gone as far as they could go, that’s when we strapped her into the backpack. We are so glad that our friends let us borrow it, but the jury is still out on whether or not it was worth it.

We were able to hike an extra mile, but neither Daddy nor Claire liked it. My husband is used to hiking with a 40-lb pack, so her weight (barely 34 lbs.) wasn’t an issue. For some reason, it just wasn’t possible to adjust the backpack properly, and it soon became a torture device. That coupled with the fact that his normal backpacks don’t wriggle around and complain probably added to his stress levels. :)

I think the funniest thing that happened was when Claire said, “Daddy? I don’t like this backpack. My back hurts!” It was all he could do to mutter, “Your back hurts? I don’t even want to hear about it.” :)

Two and a half miles of hiking provided us with plenty to see. We got some wonderful photos, and we all had a fabulous time exploring. We hopped on the bus and rode back to camp. After taking a break (and that much-needed nap I mentioned earlier), we had a snack and then drove out toward the East Entrance, where we’d come in the day before. We’d zipped by it so quickly in our mad dash to get to the campground and get set up that we wanted to explore it some more. We were able to catch the setting sun as it slipped into the canyon, and the shadow portraits we took were amazing.

Shadows on the edge

Shadows on the edge

I have more shadow portraits to share, but you’ll just have to be patient.

As I mentioned, that night was much better for everyone. Claire still woke up at the crack of dawn, but my patience levels were bolstered by a good night’s sleep on an awesome pillow, so we were ready for the day. We broke camp and headed out, leaving the Grandness of the Canyon behind us.

California, here we come!

Stay tuned for the next installment of The Great Road Trip of May 2009!

Review: Globeology at The Wildlife Experience

Have you checked out Globeology at The Wildlife Experience yet?  You should!  In the meantime, here is the review we did of it:

Globeology at The Wildlife Experience

We can’t wait to go back!

:)

Comments are closed here, so feel free to pop on over and tell us what you think over on The Casual Perfectionist’s Review page!

I’m keeping my ruby slippers close, just in case.

Colorado’s weather has been rather unsettled this week, so I think it’s appropriate to re-post a piece I wrote about our trip to the Midwest last year around this time…

What did they sound like before there were freight trains?
Published Friday, June 13, 2008

It was around 10pm, on June 5th, and Claire had been in bed for an hour or so. My hubby and I were exhausted from spending another day playing with my nephews, and we had settled into the comfiness of our friends’ entertainment room.

The local weather had taken over the airwaves, and a fierce rain storm was howling outside, the sky alive with dramatic displays of lightening.

Things were getting rather heated outside, and the weather department was hopping. There had been tornadoes spotted, and every show was being interrupted with continuous updates.

When we moved in 1999, I was happy to leave the tornadoes behind. In our Mountain Time Zone home, tornadoes are rare. Yes, they have been known to appear in this state, but if they do, it’s usually out on the plains and not near the foothills that we call home.

This is not the case in my childhood home.

I’ve lived through a tornado, and it pretty much scarred me for life. That sounds so dramatic, and maybe I’ll forget that night….eventually…but I doubt it. It was the year before I went into Kindergarten (1978 for those of you playing along at home), and it’s all as clear as though it happened yesterday.

Anytime I see Tornado Watches and Tornado Warnings flash on the screen, I feel a tightening in my chest. I find it hard to breathe.

I am one of the few people I know who can describe to you, in great detail the difference between a Tornado Watch and a Tornado Warning. They are not the same. One means that conditions are right for one to appear, and the other means one has been spotted. They are both serious, but the warnings make me tense.

I grew up on a farm, miles and miles away from any type of warning system. Our chimney would whistle, and if that happened, it was time to go the basement. Now.

So, the weather guy is blabbering on and on about these storms, and I’m creating an escape plan in my head. Claire is in the pack-n-play. Her sandals are clasped on the handles of my bag.

Sandals? Why sandals? After the tornado in 1978, there was so much broken glass throughout our house that my parents sat me and my two year old sister on kitchen chairs with the instructions of not to move. My sister remembers that vividly. You can imagine the severity if someone who was just two years old at the time still remembers it.

Anyway, back to the plan. I could put my purse in that bag, grab her and the bags and get to the safe room in a matter of seconds. I could put her sandals on in there. We’re already on the basement level, so that’s one less step. How much time will we have?

I’m probably being silly.
We probably won’t need an escape plan.
Maybe they’ll miss us.

10:29pm Central Time
The tornado siren starts blaring.

Tornado!

My worst fears are coming true. My hubby and I bolt for the guest room, and I grab Claire and my bags and head to the room, as planned. Our friends join us with their two sleepy girls and their dog.

In my head, it was 30 years ago, and I was the scared 4-yr old huddled in the basement fruit cellar.

The shaking of foot-thick concrete walls.
The clanking of my mom’s canning jars.
So worried about our dog Susie, an outside dog.
Would she be okay? Where would she go?

There had been no warning, the weather radio crackling “partly cloudy skies.”
My dad had heard the chimney whistling and determined that something wasn’t right, and we’d fled to the basement.

His instincts were correct and saved our lives.

The electricity goes out and we’re left in the dank fruit cellar in the dark. I can smell the dirt on the potatoes. This room has always kinda scared me, and now it’s the only safe place in the house.

Glass breaking.

Then I hear that sound.
That deafening, horrible, powerful sound.
Raw fury.

From that day forward, I’ve always wondered what tornadoes sounded like before there were freight trains.

Years later, I sobbed through the movie Twister, my friends not sure I should see it in the theater. “I need to see it,” I told them. “I want to get rid of this fear.” It helped a little to cry. A little…but my fear is still here.

They got the sound in that movie dead on.

I will never forget it.

Susie was fine. Some of our neighbors weren’t. Their home was destroyed. Two of them lost their lives that day…a dad and his daughter. She was my age. My dad had been part of the National Guard, so he was one of the first people on the scene and helped with the bodies. I can’t even imagine. I get tears in my eyes just thinking about how hard that must have been for him. A little girl my age. A father like him. Not spared. The mother survived but spent her remaining years in a wheelchair.

Lives ripped apart in an instant.

Flash forward to now…

I’m the mother. I’m clutching my little girl as if her life depends on it, as if my life depends on it.

This room is too big. Something smaller would be safer. Right? Would it matter?

We haven’t lost power, so that’s good. Right? If the walls start shaking, where will I go? Where will I huddle with Claire? What’s on these huge shelves that could come crashing down on us if they give way. Nothing dangerous or heavy. I’m going under there. If the walls start shaking, I’m going under there. I don’t care if there are spiders.

We’re listening to the weather radio. They are taking calls from outside callers. Things are sounding pretty hairy out there. “And, now we go to Ed. Ed? You’re on the air. [dead silence] Well, folks, it seems as though we’ve lost Ed. Next caller…”

“Oh no!” I try to joke. “They’ve lost Ed! It must be serious!” I try to say with a laugh. Maybe levity will belie the fact that I’m crying inside. And that I can’t stop shaking.

Please let this be over soon. Let it hit so I can react, or let it pass so that I can breathe again.

Then…
The sirens stop.
The weather announcer gives the all-clear.

There was no shaking of walls or clanking of jars.
This time.
Here.

That storm system that chased us to the safe room traveled almost 60-miles north and east toward the farm where I grew up, and where we’d been the last two days. My sister and her husband heard the freight train around 1am and were able to get their four boys to the basement before the brunt of the storm hit.

A huge old tree having landed on the lilac bush, two uprooted apple trees, and a bent basketball hoop later, the storm had passed. The house and garage were still standing and didn’t sustain damage. The dog was covered in mud but happy to see everyone. The family members were safe.

You really can’t ask for more than that when you live in a Tornado Alley.

In the phone call that next morning with my sister, I asked her if we should reconfigure our trip and try to come up to help them clean up. She declined, saying she understood how hectic our trip already was. Plus, with four boys, they had a lot of helpers. So, we traveled on as planned, and they started the process of cleaning up the debris.

My little childhood state and other areas of the Midwest are taking a beating right now. If people aren’t being blown away by tornadoes, they’re being flooded out of their homes.

And, my heart goes out to all of them.

The Holiday Inn of Camping

I think it’s about time for another installment of The Great Road Trip of May 2009, especially considering the fact that it’s June already. I had intentions of getting these written right away, but Real Life has gotten in the way.  But, it’s okay!  This way, we can relive our trip for even longer!

You can read about the route we took and the first stop on our trip by checking these out:

The next stop on the list was a canyon…but it wasn’t just any ol’ canyon. It was The Grand Canyon.

It wasn’t only Grand, it was Awesome.

The three of us had never been there, and we were not disappointed. We’d purposely gone at the tail end of shoulder season (off season), because we didn’t want to deal with the crowds. We knew it would be a bit nippy at night, but that was a price we were willing to pay.

Even then, we were surprised at how many people there were! We can’t imagine it at the top of the season!

Because we were going so early in the season, it was easy to decide between the two rims: The North Rim or the South Rim. I’m not even sure most of the North Rim would be open that early, so the South Rim it was!

We’d decided to camp at The Grand Canyon. My husband and I love camping, and Claire had never been. (We tried to go camping last year, but were thwarted by a snow storm!) Well, it’s a good thing we like camping, because hotel rooms anywhere near The Grand Canyon cost an arm and a leg. (And, we wanted all of our appendages for the rest of the trip…).

If you decide to go to The Grand Canyon, I highly recommend staying overnight. There is so much to see, and it’s really “easy” camping.

We stayed in the Mather Campground. My advice is to reserve a camping spot before you go. If you go to recreation.gov, you can see maps of the campgrounds and reserve it right online. It was super-simple to go to the ranger cabin and check in when we got there. After a long day of driving, it was great to know we had a place to stay and that we wouldn’t be searching for something with a flashlight should our trip take a turn for the more adventurous. ;)

Because this would be Claire’s first time camping, I wanted something relatively close to the bathrooms. Now, this is where my husband starts muttering under his breath that there are no bathrooms in camping, and he’s right. When he goes on his Mondo Hiking Trips With The Guys, they can do camping “right.” They can hike 8-miles in to Base Camp. They can become one with nature and all that entails. I prefer “The Holiday Inn of Camping” (his words), especially when there is a preschooler in the mix. In the end, he’s a big talker, because he seemed to get over it pretty quickly. ;)

Anyway, before the trip, I painstakingly searched for the perfect camping spot. I finally found one that was on a large lot, across the road from the bathrooms (Yes, there were flush toilets! Yay!) and was surrounded by RVs. Now, in the height of RV season, this may be annoying, but most parks regulate the running of the generators at night, and I had a feeling that this wouldn’t be an issue. It would allow us as much privacy as possible.

It was nice to see that the reality of the campsite matched what was on the online map! It was an awesome spot!  (If I do say so myself…)

One of our friends let us borrow his tent. Correction: This thing was an apartment!  For real!

It was 204 square feet! It was massive.

The Apartment Sized Tent

The Apartment Sized Tent

This is the tent WITHOUT the rainfly attached! That in itself has a vestibule that made it even bigger! The mattress behind us (on past the living room, next to the kitchen. Ha.) is a QUEEN SIZED BED. Needless to say, we had plenty of room. It was actually too big for us. BUT, we are so thankful that we got to borrow it!!

Our friend brought it to us a couple weeks before we left on the trip so that we could practice setting it up and taking it down by ourselves. I’m glad we did a dry run, because nothing adds stress to a trip quicker than wrestling with a humongous tent in a new environment (most likely in the dark and in the rain)…oh, and with a preschooler “helping.”

Speaking of rain…there was none! The weather on our trip was superb. We couldn’t have requested better weather! And, we arrived at the campground with plenty of light left to set up the tent.

So far, so good!

Stay tuned for the next installment of our trip: Grand is a pretty good way to describe it.

In the meantime, check out The Great Road Trip of May 2009 Category for more stories.

The Ninja Route

So, partly because the novelty of Glenda, my new BlackBerry, has yet to wear off, and partly because I’m always looking for new and fun ways to entertain a certain someone in the car, I have a confession to make:

I’ve been using Glenda’s GPS skills even when we already know where we’re going.

Yes! It’s true.

What’s wrong with that!? She’s so calm and awesome, and Claire loves listening to her tell us where to go. Claire also tries to ask her questions and engage her in conversation, but Glenda is pretty focused on the task at hand.

So, the other day, as we got closer to home, I decided to go the way I wanted to go, rather than the way I knew would be programmed into Glenda’s psyche. I have a Ninja Route that I like to take. (What’s a Ninja Route?  Click here for the official definition.) It bypasses a major intersection, and although it’s debatable as to which way is quicker, if i don’t have to deal with that intersection, I’m okay with it taking a few seconds longer.

Rather than turn where Glenda was going to tell me to turn, I turned sooner. She didn’t get huffy with me. She didn’t tell me to turn around (or “please make the next legal u-turn”). She just calmly said, “Rerouting…” and then proceeded to tell me how to get home.

But, here is where is where I was surprised. Rather than tell me to turn again onto the main road (the way I was going takes you back up to a major street, the one that intersected with the street I was on before disregarding her directions), she had me continue on The Ninja Route!

Glenda knew The Ninja Route!

I was amazed at how intuitive she was. She assumed that I was avoiding that street for whatever reason and then told me how to get home, turn-by-turn via The Ninja Route.

Either The Ninja Route is not as ninja as I thought it was, or Glenda is part ninja.

My money’s on the latter…

;)

Math is hard. Let’s go shopping!

Remember that skit on SNL? That one always made me laugh, and it’s become a catch-phrase we use around here. (Even though I don’t mind math, and I usually don’t like shopping. I know! How crazy.)

This weekend, as we were headed to the mall to look for a dress for the wedding we’re going to in July, I Twittered, “Math is hard; let’s go shopping!”

Little did I know that this shopping expedition would render some funny signage involving shopping and math.

Upon first glance, you’d think that 70% and 30% is 100%. Sweet! All the dresses on this rack are free! I know that’s not what they mean, and it is an awesome deal, but it still makes me laugh.

:)

And, I found a dress!  It wasn’t on this rack, but I did get an awesome deal on it, too.  The math wasn’t too hard, and the shopping was fun.  It doesn’t get much better than that!

Dive Olly Dive! A Review.

Here is another review!

Claire and I just completed a review of the DVD: Dive Olly Dive! The Adventure Begins in the Sea.

Click here to check it out!

Feel free to check out the other reviews we’ve done here…

Check out this new Review of Recess Monkey!

I don’t normally post on the weekends, but I wanted to get the word out about this review!

Claire and I just completed a review of the new CD by Recess Monkey, named Field Trip.  And, it’s going to be released to the public on Tuesday, June 9th!!

Click here to check it out!

Feel free to check out the other reviews we’ve done here…

We named her Glenda

Today, as we were listening to the calm voice of my BlackBerry direct us to our next destination, Claire suggested we name her “Glenda.” “As in the good witch?” I said in my head. And, then I laughed out loud. I’d referenced witchcraft yesterday in regards to my CrackBerry, so I thought it was appropriate.

Then, I realized that Glenda is the perfect first name, because her initials are G. P. S. ;)

When I asked Claire was a good name starting with P would be, you know, “P…Puh…P.” She said, “Princess!” Of course, she did.  Big shocker, there!  And, when I asked her what a good last name would be staring with S, she shouted “Sign!” which is pretty comical considering Glenda reads us the street signs. I couldn’t get Claire to tell me how it was spelled: “Sein?” or “Sine?” So, we went with “Sign,” just to be safe.

So, Glenda Princess Sign, or Glenda, for short, has been officially named.

Not only is she calm in the midst of traffic, she’s an awesome note-taker and fabulous assistant. I think I’ll keep her around awhile. :)