Sister in Training

Ivy has already put Clara in training, which is only right, she is the big sister after all.

Some of the things Ivy has been training Clara to do I could do without: high pitched squeaking at the dinner table, yelling nonsense words in the backseat of the truck, and Clara really didn’t need her sister telling her that dog food is delicious.

With other things it seems like Ivy might be trying to help. The best example of this is trying to teach Clara sign language. We taught Ivy signs when she was a baby, loved the results and so are trying to do so again with Clara. The trouble is that Ivy is “helping.”  Sometimes she helps by giving Clara what ever it is she wants, without being like mean ol’mom who waits for a sign. But perhaps most frustrating is her tendency to make up random hand motions for Clara and pretend they are signs.  I’m hoping Clara will be able to pull something useful out of the whole experience but my hopes are dimming as time goes on.

Of course there are other things that Ivy is training Clara in that are truly helpful. Ivy teaches her how to play somewhere else while I’m cooking dinner, they are working on how to walk, and like every good Tom Sawyer Ivy is teaching her about her new job.

Ivy loves it when Clara comes out to check on the sheep with her, and because she is with her big sister Clara loves it too!

Sometimes looking up to your big sister is a literal sort of thing.

Ivy’s only disappointment with Clara’s training so far is that she hasn’t yet managed to teach her how to climb the fence, fortunately Clara is just happy to be out counting sheep with her sister!

So given all the training Clara’s had recently I shouldn’t have been surprised when I realized throughout the day that the “BAAS”  Clara was producing weren’t at all random…… she was looking for sheep!

The Second Annual Long Lake Lager Fest: The Trip Home

This last weekend was full of fun at Long Lake Lager Fest, but here is the thing.  When everything runs smoothly, fun is had, weather is good, everyone gets along, food is great, a wonderful weekend will be had – but it’s not so great for story telling. Earlier today I put up a post about the fun we had, it was big on pictures, slim on words.  A little truck trouble on the way home on the other hand, now I’ve got a story to tell…

The drive was going quite nicely, we had lunch, stopped and gassed up and were just taking a break after Clara woke up from a huge nap, and then the trouble started.

Or to be more accurate the trouble was noticed.

Trouble was in the form of a greasy oily substance splattered all over the back of the truck and front of the camper we were towing.

Then while Clara and I very helpfully ate snacks, and played on top of the camper John started investigating and making phone calls. Three trips back in and out of the gas station, five phone calls, and a lot of rummaging around later we had a problem, and a plan.

The problem was that the rear differential case thingy-bobby was leaking all it’s oil out (clearly I was not the one under the truck or on the phone for a reason).

The plan was to go find a super Wal-mart with an auto shop (open on Sundays) and cross our fingers that we got there before they closed.

We didn’t make it.

Out came the phone and into Wal-mart went John. A looong time later he reemerged with oil for the leaking thingy-bob and the comment that if there was ever a place that made him want to eat more oatmeal and keeping running this was it.  John called it the “confluence of ugly and fat people” and while that sounded a bit harsh I went inside later and decided he might be onto something. Then as I was wandering around the place looking for dairy-free-eat-able-in-the-back-of-a-truck snacks for Clara, while cursing at the Gerber company that they put dairy in everything and don’t bother with that handy allergen warning at the bottom of the labels (seriously what is with that???) I realized I was wearing my new Lager Fest shirt. I like my new shirt, I think it’s funny, and it’s my favorite color.  But, as I looked down at my shirt with the cigarette smoking, beer drinking, fish and then over to the baby in my arms I decided that perhaps people in glass houses shouldn’t throw rocks and I would withhold all further judgment on other Wal-mart shoppers.

Back at the truck John had patted himself on the back for bringing a few tools along and crawled under the truck.  I set Clara  up playing in the back with Piper (who was completely unfazed by the whole ordeal, I’m not sure if it’s because she is the best dog ever or if it’s because we never made her get up from her comfy position in the back of the truck) and attempted to feed her (Clara that is not Piper) while helping John. My job was to find random items in the truck that John would call out and then throw them under the truck.   You know stuff like: the phone, a socket, a pen, a headlamp, paper towels, baby wipes,  a thing that looks like the square part on this but sort of smaller,  I admit he had to crawl back out for the last one, but I was able to handle the rest.  A mere two hours after getting to Wal-mart he crawled back out from under the truck and said we were ready to go.

So as the sunset over the parking lot we set back off toward home.

A half hour later we were stopped one last time for a very late dinner and an oil refill of the leaky thing.  Clara was up way past her usual bedtime and had no intention of going to sleep when she could be checking out what her Dad was doing under the truck.

With Clara’s supervision the refill went quick and we were back on the road in no time. Thankfully we have really wonderful parents who between them were able to shuttle both Ivy and Storm back to us. We pulled in the driveway just after my parents a mere four hours after our original ETA.

The most amazing part of the trip home? I only heard John utter one very heartfelt “son of a bitch” and it was because he couldn’t make a left hand turn. Fortunately in addition to keeping a good attitude when the truck breaks down John also has a sense of humor when it comes to his wife giggling uncontrollably at his swearing.

The three of us may not be very fast when it comes to getting a truck back up and running but we can smile while doing it!P.S. Now that you’ve made it all the way through that take a big breath! In school my teachers used to mark my papers with a lot of big R.O.’s apparently I haven’t learned my lesson yet!

The Second Annual Long Lake Lager Fest

Since starting this blog I have been harassed by a number of people about never putting pictures of myself on it. The reason for that is that I’m always taking the pictures, so I have no pictures of myself. This posts photos are all courtesy of Katie who was the last one to admonish me for my lack of pictures so I told her I was leaving my camera in my bag for the weekend and she’d have to share her photos, thanks Katie! So here is a quick recap of our weekend fun, starring myself, which feels awfully odd but I’ll try to get over it.

John and I left Ivy behind for a weekend of fun with grandparents and cousins and went north with Clara for our own weekend of fun with friends.

Then Saturday morning I left John and Clara behind at the cabin for my own morning of fun on the boat, he he he…

We water skied and tubed…… and then Clara was up from her nap so we let them join us after all.

Happily Clara loved the boat ride cumbersome life jacket and all.We finished off the day on the water with a after dinner trip for ice cream! Yum!All and all it was a wonderful weekend and we are already looking forward to next year.

And look, there was more people than me having fun, here is the whole crew in our official t-shirts! Missing from this picture are the six dogs who were along, I’m thinking next year we need to line them all up for a group photo too! Speaking of official t-shirts, by the time we got home on Sunday Johns shirt looked like this: That my friends is a story for the next post.


Happy Anniversary!

Today is my Granny and Grandpa’s 60th anniversary, Happy Anniversary guys!

Not only have you survived 60 years of being married to one another but you also made it through the party!

Last Saturday Granny and Grandpa threw a huge anniversary party in their barn.

Friends and family came from all over the country.

The food was excellent.

The barn was beautiful with family quilts on the walls, teacups on the tables and flowers in between.

Even though all the planning Granny and Grandpa still liked each other enough by party time to renew their vows.

All in all it was a great success!

The only downside, they also invited these guys…

…family, what can you do?

Buried

I have pictures to share, stories to tell, we’ve had an epic anniversary party, and a trip to the state fair.

But…today I processed peaches and blueberries.

Two bushels of peaches and five pounds of blueberries. Today I got buried. Buried in peaches, dishes, laundry, and general mess.  It may be awhile before I can dig out.  Good news is that there are 14 pints of peach salsa, 4 frozen peach pies, peach marinade, frozen peaches and frozen blueberries to show from it all.

I’ll try to keep that in mind as I get out the shovel and start digging in the morning!

Everyone’s a Specialist

Here is what we did the other day playing outside. It turns out Clara is a bit of a specialist…

I made Ivy a “helicopter” with some duck feathers and she ran all over throwing it around.

Clara ate a feather.

Ivy did somersaults.

Clara ate a water hose.

True confession time:  This is actually a picture of what happens when Clara is eating a water hose while Ivy is doing somersaults and my inattentive self is just sitting in the shade taking pictures.  Ivy unnoticed by me grabbed part of the hose, and was just starting to rip it out of Clara’s mouth as the picture was taken. Oops!

Ivy threw her feather some more.

Clara ate dirt. Then Ivy joined Clara and showed her how to pretend to be a dog and dig in the dirt.

The dirt that I had finally used to fill holes Storm dug as a puppy over two years ago.

I let them dig, I thought my little specialist could use to expand her horizons.

Then Clara ate more dirt.

I gave up on horizon expanding and we went inside for  nap time.

Delicious!…?

For dinner tonight we had shiskabobs with sweet potato, apples from our own apple tree, ham from our own pig, zucchini from next door, and pineapple. Served with our own sweet corn and brown rice.

Delicious!

Well,it could have been…

The epic badness I called dinner started around 4:30 while mixing everything up in the bag of marinade.  As I mushed and mixed my bag exploded spewing juice and chunks all over me and the floor. Of course a dog came running, and since I had no extras of any of the ingredients on hand I shoved the dog away, while frantically scooping everything up into a strainer and then attempted to wash it off in the sink. It was one of those times where you’d like to throw a fit and cry but since you are the mom nobody is going to help anyway so you might as well just swear a few times and get on with it.

So I did. Rinsed off, re-bagged, re-marinated, refrigerated, and well cursed, only a few hairs were left when it was time to make the skewers. Already dinner was not looking as delicious but I still had hope. Then John was late. This was a problem because clearly shiskabobs go on the grill, and clearly I have no business going anywhere near a grill. In fact I’m pretty sure the last time I tried I was 21 in collage and drinking enough beer that it didn’t matter how my brats (in buns!) turned out.  As John was delayed later and later I decided to bite the bullet and do it myself. It’s a grill, its charcoal, how hard can it be right? I can start fires, I can cook over fires, Ivy says she’ll help.

Turns out Ivy is no help.

I finally figured out how to get the charcoal lit with the help of the chimney thingy and get my skewers on, I’m so proud I take a picture.

At this point I’m still hoping that John will swoop in and save us, but it seems to be going OK… and going and going and going… then I realize that I am slow cooking my shiskabobs.

In case that didn’t make you gag, let me just let you know right now that slow cook shiskabobs that include ham are not good, not good at all. The girls and I are hungry so we eat it some anyway.  Ivy eats very little, then feeds the rest of hers to Storm while I am not looking. It’s bad enough I don’t even have the heart to yell at her for it.

All of a sudden I realized it was 7:00 (Clara’s bed time) I had more to grill, Clara seriously need a bath, food was out on the picnic table where the dog would grab it if I didn’t put it away, Ivy wanted to play in her sprinkler and John still wasn’t home.

So, I…

-stripped my filthy dirty daughter Clara naked

-brought food inside

-found Ivy’s swim suit

-put rest of dinner on grill (still assuming John will show up any moment)

-set up sprinkler

-moved Clara over to play in sprinkler with Ivy

-flipped kabobs

-finished cleaning up dishes from outside

-took dinner off grill, stashed in microwave so the dogs wouldn’t get it

-went to go get Clara for her shower (and mine too, don’t forget the spewing bag incident)

When I reached the girls Ivy looked at me and asked “Mom, what’s on your shorts?” After a flurry of questions, answers and running around the yard  I confirmed that Clara had pooped near the picnic table and I had carried her over to the sprinkler with out noticing, getting poop on my shorts, shirt, legs…

John got home while I was upstairs putting Clara down to bed. As soon as I got downstairs I told him that while dinner was in the microwave he might want to be careful, since in addition throwing it on the floor, and  slow cooking it I also had probably moved it around two different times with poop on my hands, but that I had only touched the wooden skewers so if he was feeling brave he could probably cut the food off instead of sliding it off, discard the end pieces and still salvage some of dinner.

Part way through my explanation John got a funny look on his face…I guess he was hungry when he got home.

John went and had a shot of Scotch, and I re-gave up grilling.

Bobble Head Girl

Today while running errands we all ended up at Farm and Fleet. Ivy and I left John and Clara to finish buying tires and headed off across the store to start on the rest of our list. I wasn’t two aisles past where we left them before I realized that I was missing Ivy.

In my world this is not a cause for alarm.

You see if Ivy is missing in a store all you have to do is stop and listen it’ll take about 5 seconds before you hear her talking. If you don’t hear talking, you’ll hear feet running, and if you don’t hear that you’ll hear her ask someone “You know where my Mom is?”.   So I stopped, listened and immediately heard something that sounded like Ivy…but not quite.

I soon found the source of the muffled noises when I realized my daughter had transformed herself into a walking bobble head.

Bobble head Ivy was dressed in her favorite pink stripy dress, purple flip flops, and black, adult size large, full face, motorcycle helmet. She was following me, walking a bit crooked from the restricted vision, with the helmet bobbing around on her head, chatting all the while.

Who knew that you needed a camera at Farm and Fleet?

Sprinklers

This year I bought Ivy a new sprinkler. I’m not usually all about buying my kids stuff like huge beach ball shaped sprinklers but since I ran over her old sprinkler over with the tractor I sort of felt I owed her one. The problem is that a huge beach ball that is a sprinkler was cooler in theory than in actuality, there really isn’t a whole lot of water that comes out and so it seems that in order for Ivy to be amused by it I need to make up games for her to play with it. In the past we have played things  like run and touch a color. The other good game I discovered is try and jump over the water while I take your picture. What a face!

That face almost worth the fact that she needs me to sit and play with her to play with it for more than five seconds. The plain old garden watering sprinkler, seems to promote solitary play but no, guilty me went and bought a “cool” one and now I’m playing too, and of course noone wants to play with a plain old sprinkler when you could use the beach ball one.. Clara on the other hand actually does like the new sprinkler better, the gentle sprinkles are just her style and she can pull up and stand on the ball while smacking the water. Sadly it is only a matter of time before Clara realizes that she could be eating rocks off of the driveway and makes a break for it. Then we made up a new game for Ivy called bring your little sister back up here. Oh and then sometimes Clara eats my tree. A fact that is completely unrelated to sprinklers but makes a good picture.

One Hundred and Seventy Seven

One hundred and seventy seven questions asked of me, from Ivy, from the time she got up from her afternoon nap until she went to bed.

That was over a period of two and a half hours.

Which puts her questioning rate just above one question per minute.

Then you realize that I didn’t actually talk to her for two and a half hours straight (because clearly my head would have exploded).  It was more like many minutes of blissful silence while Ivy was otherwise occupied followed by rapid fire questions as soon as she caught me again. At one point I counted seven questions in one minute. SEVEN in a minute, I’m not even sure how she manages to breathe.

Then she got back out of bed, and went to the bathroom and between hearing about the “mama poop” and the “baby poops” and getting her back into bed I had another 31 fired off at me.

That’s right a grand total of TWO HUNDRED AND EIGHT since five o’clock.

Yes, I know, learning, development, blah, blah, blah…

Just don’t come over here and ask me any questions, I’m not guaranteeing what the response will be.