Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Mud Pies and Frog Huntin'

Apparently, every Tuesday at the Botanical Gardens is Mud Pie and Ice Cream day. Why did I not know this earlier?? (Yeah, we only have two more Tuesdays with the girls before they start day care. I can't describe for you the feeling in the pit of my stomach as I type that sentence. I don't want to.)

We didn't even bother with the ice cream, but the mud pies were fun. The volunteer scooped some really excellent mud into a pie mold and flipped it onto a plate where she'd written their names. Then we were directed to a table full of flowers and ferns and leaves to stick into the mud.



Lillian enjoyed plugging hers into the pie or dropping them on the ground, saying "uh-oh" until someone picked them up. She stayed at that table for almost half an hour. Naomi was dead set against anyone sticking any flowers into her perfectly unadulterated pile of mud. We managed to stab a few in there while she wasn't looking. She made great attempts, though, at earnestly sniffing flowers. The thistly one we picked out was a bit of a surprise.



While Lillian was hard at work sorting and dropping flowers, Naomi was racing around the rest of the Children's Garden. She ran smack into some poor man near the front entrance (part of a very nice couple with whom Lillian tried to go home later on). She spent a long time sticking her head through the rails on this bridge in an effort to ferret out the rubber-band sounds of a bullfrog William had showed her earlier. She was really intently searching for the source of this sound and looked back at me several times, her face seeming to ask, "You hear it too, right? Let's get him!"



In all, today was a really great day. Excepting the girls' kindergarten-style slappy fight in the race car cart at the grocery store. They thought it was hysterical, but I was mortified. We've been working on the whole 'no hitting' thing quite a bit, even instituting our first time-outs. Haven't worked out how to do that when outnumbered in public. But, to redeem themselves, they were both giggly and crazy after dinner, dancing and diving onto pillows and our laps, choosing books to read and snuggling with Arnold the stuffed pig. I just love when they are silly and affectionate all at the same time.

Please pardon me while I go and weep and pull all the batteries out of the clocks.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Moo! (Plus bonus blooper footage)



Animal noises. They're a never-ending source of entertainment. For me, I mean. She doesn't pull off the elephant here, but both she and Naomi have roughly interpreted elephant sounds as blowing rasperries while humming.

Meanwhile, here is the outtake roll. She grew bored with the performance requirements, so I flipped the LCD screen towards her instead. I know you've seen one like this before, but try to forgive me the repetition.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Week of Adventure

After the zoo on Sunday, we were on a roll. Okay, Monday didn't totally count because we only went to the grocery store, but, believe me, I consider it an adventure.

Tuesday, we went back to Lake Farmpark to visit the goats and pigs and sheep, moo at the cows and ride the pony again. Did I take any pictures? No. Who wants to hire on as our full time photographer?

This morning, we took the girls back to the Children's Museum, where we haven't been since last fall. Last fall. When the girls weren't even walking yet. Is it really possible that Naomi's only been walking for five months and Lillian for under 3? They enjoyed it much more this time, climbing stairs and pretending to drive the bus. Naomi tried repeatedly to steal groceries from the pretend store. Lillian hung out in the kitchen room for what we estimate to be more than 30 minutes. That play kitchen we bought in April and were saving for Christmas? I don't think it's going to make it that long.





Tomorrow, Parent Center playgroup (where it's air conditioned) and then, I don't know. Maybe the mall. Anything with air.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Zoo!

We chose one of the hottest days of the summer to go to the zoo today. It was hot. Sticky. Oppressive. But the girls still seemed to enjoy themselves. They really paid attention to the animals, not just the other people walking around. Lillian mooed at anything remotely cow-like, including the rhinos and elephants. We took her to the petting zoo and she almost short-circuited. "Moo! Neigh! Baa!! Neigh!! Baa!" Naomi was fascinated by the flamingos and the heron near the giraffes. And the tiny little birds that came to take pieces of our lunch.

Here is Naomi, being not quite as tall as a newborn giraffe.



And, since it was so outrageously hot, we made Nana and Papa pick up the playhouse we found on craigslist and drive it out to our house. Washing it down was one of the best parts of the day. The girls splashed in the puddles and peeked through the doors and windows of the dissassembled house. I'm sure more picures will be forthcoming, but here, with thanks to Gary Larson, is Lillian trying to get out of the house.

Far Side--gifted school-726975

Friday, July 15, 2011

Do You Hear It?



I'm not sure you can hear it in this video, but for the last few days, Lillian has been singing the first four notes of the Alphabet Song. The first four letters are A, D, D, D. She has also realized that letters are letters, even though they are currently all A. It's not as though we sit around and drill the alphabet or letters. It amazes me what both of these girls absorb casually. Even though Naomi is not as verbal, she quietly identifies the same body parts and pictures that Lillian does. They are starting to legitamately help with tasks and model simple things that we do around the house. All without 'teaching', just observing. Also, this week we graduated from the Help Me Grow program (the early intervention program the girls were enrolled in because of their prematurity). One their latest assessments, both Naomi and Lillian are scoring in their chronological age range in all areas. These include gross motor (walking, steps), fine motor (pencils, crayons, pushing buttons) social/emotional, cognitive (problem solving) and language (both hearing and speaking). All these measure of progress are so exciting, but they also remind me how fast time is racing. I spent some time looking at video from last September this afternoon and nearly cried over the tiny babies who were just starting to babble and scootch. Now, they use a railing to climb the steps out back and ask for cereal. Does it ever slow down?

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Reprise, vol. ii

Remember when we tried to re-do the girls' summer picture with Ivy? Remember how it was an unmitigated disaster? Apparently Nana captured the one sweet shot before it all disintegrated.



William, Nana and I took the girls to Peninsula this past weekend for what we thought would be a thrilling adventure. It turns out, being strapped into a bouncy, flimsy box and strung along behind your dad's bicycle for a couple of hours (while your party fails to locate the intended farmer's market) is not the pleasurable pastime we assumed it would be. They endured the bike ride, but were downright enthusiastic about collecting crabapples at the lunch stop. Naomi filled Nana's apple bag with those and other treasures like pinecones and twigs and thoroughly enjoyed sorting through them repeatedly.




Also? The alligator likes Cheerios.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Mea Culpa!

I can't believe it's been since June 24 since I posted! Yipes. Time has flown, with the aid of more traveling.

We spent most of this broadcasting break in Massachusetts, where I figured most of my regular readers were living in the house with us and the girls. But, a few folks have reminded me that it's not just my grandparents who read this thing. (Hi, Granny and Pop-Pop!)

The trip was marvelous, for the most part. Even the traveling parts, since we bookended the Boston stay with overnights in Aurora, NY. Thanks to Claire's gracious hosting!
Even though the girls had 11 people in their faces at any given minute, they were more than tolerable. Naomi did take her daddy preference to a near obsession level. She wouldn't let the poor man out of the room without a hissy fit. She was perfectly darling on the day where he disappeared before sunrise to go hiking in New Hampshire, but if he was on the property, she was attached to his side. And vehemently opposed to being held by anyone else.

We spent lots of time in the yard, playing in the pool and on the swings. We took the girls back to Duxbury beach. They loved it--Lillian for the waves that played chase with her, and Naomi for the acres of open sand to run on. They sorted rocks and tried to eat seaweed and got compliments from a small group of 10 or 11 year old boys. (Not a demographic known for its social graces, so it sticks in my mind.) Here are the bathing beauties. (Or a couple of 90 year old ladies. It's hard to tell.)





We watched the charming 4th of July Parade from Pat and Richard's front yard. The girls loved the music floats and danced to the steel drum band. It was hot enough that passers-by were begging to be squirted by the water gun stationed there.



I didn't take enough pictures because I was having entirely too much fun. But here's a basic rundown of the trip. (With half the photo credits going to Nana.)
A very sleepy Lillian, being lullabyed (that's a verb now. I say so.) by Luke.



One of the tent toys found by Richard at the Duxbury 'mall'--the girls rather loved it.

(Please pardon Naomi's super-wedgie. She's a skinny little thing, but too tall for a 12 month suit.)

Hey!! It's you!! Both girls in their ridiculously cute dresses, part of the summer line wardrobe provided by Pat. We brought their sunglasses, which just happened to perfetly match the dresses, so we tossed the babies into this swing and took 8 million shots.



Lastly, for anyone who wonders if I play favorites, this photo tells you why there aren't as many pictures of Naomi on this blog. We shall make her superhero name "The Blur".