He Doth Talketh!

Last week William said his first full sentence. 

Unfortunately, that sentence was “Eleanor pushed me.”

On the bright side, it does show a working knowledge of past tense.

Wimmy also has picked up the adorable habit of saying “Missed you” to whoever’s been away for a while.  Awww.

The First Day of First Grade

First%20GradeJeffrey is at that beautiful age when school is still a fun place ruled over by a teacher he adores.  First grade is promising to be wonderful, so far — we managed to have the good fortune to be assigned to the teacher that everyone in the neighborhood says is the best. 

We’ve finally retired the “Barack Obama” lunchbox — a Spider-Man lunchbox that managed to be plastered with election stickers during the Democratic primaries in Pittsburgh — which is kind of a sad rite of passage, but Jeffrey is exceedingly pleased with the new Star Wars lunchbox we found to replace it. 

Jeffrey is very glad to be back in school; he missed having lots of playmates this summer and would often become bored in the afternoons when I ran out of ideas for what to do.  The afternoon after his first day, I found him standing on one of the kitchen counters, reaching up to move the hands of our wall clock around.

When I asked what he was doing, he replied that he was trying to change the clock so that it would be school time again.  Cute boy — if only time worked that way!

Good Boys Do Fine Always

For those of you who are curious, Jeffrey is indeed still slogging away with piano.

Yes, I was truly upset about his teacher’s recommendation that we take some time off, but after consulting my mother-in-law (who not only is generously funding the lessons, but has also put six children through lessons herself) I’ve decided to just keep slogging on through.

The last thing I want is to give my kid the message that two so-so weeks of lessons grants him the right to quit. 

So: we’re slogging.  The biggest obstacles Jeffrey faces, other than the usual attention-span problems, is learning the notes on the keyboard and proper fingering.  Kim, his teacher, has therefore issued flash cards and a finger exercise known as “tabletop tapping.”  We’re also reviewing many of the songs he already knows, teaching him to look at the music instead of his hands, and to hold his fingers the right way and play instead of pounding the keyboard.

After nearly two months of flashcards and table-tapping, Jeffrey has improved enough to focus on directly identifying keys on the keyboard and working on playing his review songs properly.  Every now and then I see him make a small leap, a connection — hey, when the notes on the page move upwards, it means the notes are higher! — and he’s really starting to make an effort in making a sound that is “smooth like ice cream.”

And the bribes rewards?  Those don’t hurt, either.  Jeffrey has only two or so more days until he gets enough stickers on his chart for an R2-D2 toy.  Woot.

In other music-related news, a few weeks ago I found a bag of plastic busts of composers’ heads for $1 at the thrift store.  They’re kind of dated (Edward MacDowell is the lone representative of American music) but I thought they made for goofy fun.  Look — I can juggle them in the air and say they’re too hot to Handel!

Jeffrey on the other hand, was fascinated and spent a great deal of time making this on top of the piano:

 composer temple

He gathered the boxes, the flowers, and ribbon all by himself, and dubbed it the “Piano Temple.”  In case you can’t tell (it’s kind of blurry) Beethoven is at the top (the only composer Jeffrey knows).  I think the Maestro would approve.  And what is up with Bach’s friggin’ enormous head?!?  (He’s just below Beethoven on the right.)

Yellowstoned

Two weeks ago we returned from our first big vacation as a family that didn’t involve visiting relatives.

Really, this was one of our chief reasons for moving back to Utah — so we could go somewhere else for a change.  This year we decided to visit Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons, staying at a campground between the two parks (in a rented trailer!  With heat!).

I’ve decided to be bold and experiment with technology.  Here’s my first stab at creating a slide show via YouTube.  With subtitles!  (No music, however.)

Here are the vital stats:

Number of Junior Ranger patches earned: 2 (Jeffrey wore a jacket proudly displaying all of his ranger patches.  He has four of them now.)

Number of Tourists Jeffrey Personally Warned about the Dangers of Geothermal Features: 4

Bears Sighted: 1 (a grizzly, he’s in the slide show)

Moose Sighted: 5

Wolves Sighted: 0, alas

Coyote Sighted Whom Many Tourists Thought Were Wolves: 3

Eagles Sighted: 2 (one of them was an immature bald eagle, and lifted out of a meadow just as we walked by)

Elk Sighted: oh, who cares?

Bison Sighted: dozens and dozens and dozens

Books Read Out Loud While Driving: 3 (A Countess Below Stairs by Eva Ibbotson, The Perilous Gard by Elizabeth Marie Pope and When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead)

U.S. State lisence plates sighted: 48 (we couldn’t get Delaware or West Virginia, although we did see Hawaii, Maine, and Rhode Island).

Marshmallows Toasted by Wimmy: 6

Marshmallows Wimmy managed to take off his toasting fork and eat: 0

Miles hiked: Um . . . perhaps something like twenty, over the course of the week

Times Eleanor complained that her legs hurt: too many to mention

Ice Cream Cones Consumed by Family: 20? 25? I lost track after the third day.

Minutes Eleanor lasted in boring ranger-led lecture about Native American Art: 10

Minutes Jeffrey lasted: 45

Minutes William lasted: 0

Number of four-year-old girls we met on the trail who are also named Eleanor: 1  She and my Eleanor became friends, and held hands for much of our hike, how cute!

Toy moose that William stripped of antlers and fuzzy fur, rendering them into creepy shriveled lumps of pink plastic: 2

Parents who had a great time and are a little sad to be home, although happy to have a comfortable bed once more: 2

July 4th Photos — Only Ten Days Late!

I’ve finally uploaded our pictures from the 4th of July.  Wanna see?

 July 4 2009 parade ella's back

We enjoy going up to my parents’ town, West Point, for the festivities.  They have a cute town picnic on the 3rd, which lead to what I think is the best photo of the holiday, William With Watermelon:

July 4 2009 Wimmymelon

The town picnic’s entree that year was sloppy joes.  It wasn’t until we had sat down to eat that I noticed that Jeffrey had rejected the meat in favor of his own original creation:

July 4 2009 cookieburger

Mmmmm!  Delicious cookieburger!  Now that’s nutrition!  Actually, in truth, Jeffrey could only stomach about one bite of this.  Too sweet, even for him. 

There was  a stage near our picnic site wherein you could see the winners of the West Point Beauty Pageant perform their talents (the runner-up sang “The Greatest Love of All” and wore sparkly earrings so gigantic that they could be seen by us in the nosebleed section).  However, Eleanor and Jeffrey preferred climbing this really cool tree to listening:

July 4 2009 ella in tree

July 4 2009 Jeffrey in tree

The next morning we trotted out to see the West Point parade.  My dad usually drives a truck in the parade, and this is the second year in a row that Jeffrey has been allowed to ride with him.  Check out the glee:

July 4 2009 parade jeff truck

William’s favorite part of the parade was Miss Utah Rodeo . . . or rather, her horse. 

July 4 2009 parade rodeo queen

The local LDS missionaries also walked and rode bikes in the parade, which was something new this year.  They looked overwhelmingly happy to be there:

July 4 2009 parade elders

Brian, however, considers the quintessential parade photo to be this one:

July 4 2009 parade wimmy otter pop

A toddler sucking down an Otter Pop while giant tractors stroll by in the background.  That’s Americana, baby!

The rest of the day was spent cooking by myself — and I found it rather blissful.  The kids were entertained by Brian and Uncle Alex while I made cherry pies and baked beans in my mother’s peaceful quiet kitchen while watching The Devil’s Disciple and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington on television (the movie that celebrates congressional inertia!).  While the pies baked, I got to read The Namesake.  And a good time was had by all.

Third Annual Backyard Circus!

Backyard Circus 2009 group

Last week, in order to celebrate my birthday, we held a backyard circus.  What’s that, you say?  Our backyard is always a circus?  Well, you can just keep your snarky comments to yourself, Mr. Smarty-Pants Reader.

This event works thusly: we invite friends with kids over for a barbecue, and afterwards the kids put on a circus routine in the backyard before a makeshift “stage” (read: sheet clothespinned to a rope).  Costumes are makeshift, usually involving lots of swimsuits, and enthusiastically performed.  This is the first time we’ve held such an event since we moved from Pittsburgh; in years past we’ve had a dancing bear act that involved an old Winnie-the-Pooh costume, and a rather awesome Tattoo Man created with body crayons.

This year Jeffrey was a magician, using my old Fisher Price Magic Set that my parents gave me when I was seven.  He was SO EXCITED to be able to wave his wand over the little plastic dove and make its egg disappear.

Backyard Circus 2009 Jeffrey

Eleanor was a bareback horse rider.  She bounced on stage, did a leap across its back, and then did a flip (with my help).

Backyard Circus 2009 ella

William was supposed to be a strongman, with barbells Brian made by attatching black balloons to the ends of empty paper tower tubes.  We had practiced with him, teaching him to pick up a “barbell” in each hand and give a mighty grunt.  But at performance time, he must have been rather enthralled with the kids who had been acrobats and tumblers, because he simply marched up to the stage and did this:

Backyard Circus 2009 wimmy

Some kinda yoga pose?  Brian brought out the barbells, but Wimmy waved them away (“No no no!”) and went right back to his odd little position, on all fours with one leg stretched out behind him.  Everybody just about died laughing, especially when the kids who had done a juggling routine picked up the barbells and began tossing them into the air.

Perhaps next year he should be a contortionist.

Viva Las Something

This past week we went to visit our friends, Tim and Becca, in Las Vegas.  Tim is a freelance musician.  Becca is a freelance writer.  They are overwhelmingly creative and fun to visit.  Here’s a quick summary:

On the way down we went for a short hike in the Kolob region of Zion’s National Park.  It isn’t for the faint-hearted, owing to the heights.  (Don’t worry — there really isn’t a dropoff behind us, it just looks that way.)

 Zion's 2009 Kolob Area 1

Ella was  a Ranger Girl (if you couldn’t tell from her shirt).  She and Jeffrey both recieved their Junior Ranger badges while we were there.

Zion's 2009 Kolob Area 2

Brian and I are not fond of casinos.  So, when we weren’t hanging out with Tim, Becca, and their five kids (they are nocturnal people, so there was lots of time for this) we went to the Natural History Museum (where Jeffrey “dug up” this fine pot) . . .

 Las Vegas Natural History Museum

. . . and saw the Hoover Dam.  We’re standing on top of it.  The cool suspension bridge under construction in the background is unrelated to the dam, albeit very cool.  I’ll admit that the dam is not really at its most spectacular from this angle, but it’s difficult to photograph in its entirety.

 Las Vegas Hoover Dam

Then we went home.  Eleanor was very sad to leave Anda, who is the only girl in Tim & Becca’s family.  The children of both families were all of similar temperaments, so they made friends easily, and played together spectacularly well.  Aren’t the girls cute?  I hope we see them again sometime soon.

Anda and Ella

Every Good Boy Does Fine

piano_keysThere’s an old Irish folktale about a mother who wishes for her son to play music.  She goes to talk to a druid man, who gives her a choice: he’ll give her son the gift of music if she gives up her soul.  If she gives up her body, the druid will take away any desire to play music.  The mother chooses to give her soul, and her son becomes a renowned harpist, but when she dies, she spends eternity in purgatorial agony.

I’m sure any parent who has decided to give their child music lessons can readily relate.  Gifting a child with music in exchange for soul-deadening limbo?  Been there.

For the past four months, Jeffrey has taken piano lessons.  We got a recommendation for a highly regarded teacher in the neighborhood with scads of experience, and after about three months of waiting, she was able to find a slot for Jeffrey on Tuesday afternoons.

I made the effort of waking everyone else up half an hour earlier so we can practice before school.  There was no small amount of stress surrounding this effort; Jeffrey is bright — very bright — but doesn’t necessarily have the best attention span, and he usually resists doing activities that require a great deal of discipline.  He’s also a very emotionally sensitive kid, and sometimes throws himself down into my lap after he makes a mistake at the keyboard.

It probably doesn’t help that I’m bringing my own wound-up-tight ball of concerns to practice; out of my five siblings, I’m the only one who really stuck it out with piano, studying it all the way through high school (and even, very very briefly, toying with the idea of getting a music education degree in college).  I resolved early on that I wouldn’t let my kids hissy-fit themselves out of piano lessons the way that my brothers did. 

So what do I do with my big whiner of a piano man, Jeffrey? 

For a while, it seemed as if lessons were going wonderfully — he had a few attention problems at first, but then we hit a big streak of success.  For about six weeks, I’d arrive at the end of Jeff’s lesson to find both teacher and student beaming with pride.  “Jeffrey was great today!  He wins the prize for Most Improved Attention Span!”  Early morning practice sessions were . . . well, not exactly fun, but fun-ish, full of a sense of hard-earned accomplishment.  Jeffrey put stickers on a chart to show his practice progress, and we filled up two pages’ worth.

But then something changed.  I don’t know if the advent of summer vacation caused it, but two weeks ago I picked up a rather jittery Jeffrey from lessons, and his teacher took me aside.

Perhaps it was time to stop lessons, she suggested.  Maybe we should wait a few months, or years, and then begin again.  He’s perfectly capable of playing the music; it’s more that he won’t take personal responsibility for it. 

This, in no small terms, freaked me out.  We had been doing so well, but it followed almost the exact same bell curve that Jeffrey has shown at preschool, in kindergarten, in pretty much every other endeavor he’s undertaken: rough start, some improvement, then he gives up. Or rather — so it seemed to me — his teachers give up. 

So we gave it another week’s worth of practice, and my ball of worry wound itself even tighter.  I pushed him — perhaps too hard.  We talked about following instructions and playing the piano all the time.  I knew I was talking about it too much, but somehow it kept blurting out of my mouth.  Jeffrey wailed at the keyboard, fussing and whining and sticking his toungue out at me, pushing every single one of my buttons in order to get out of practice.  I didn’t give in; one of our practice sessions lasted an hour.  Purgatory, indeed.

Needless to say, our most recent lesson is one of the worst he’s ever had.  His teacher highly recommended quitting.  “If we keep going now, piano will never be fun, never be enjoyable,” she said.  “Progress will be slow, like putting on thumbscrews.  If we wait six months, or a year, his progress will be twice as fast, and you’ll be getting your money’s worth out of the lessons.”

Quitting?

I don’t know if I can do it. 

Would it be better to give him lessons on my own, or should we wait?  Do I honestly think he’ll go “twice as fast” when he’s seven or eight?  Or will it just be more difficult?

On Wednesday evening, our ward had an ice cream social, and the Primary hosted an informal talent show.  Kids spontaneously leapt up to dance, tell jokes, or sing.  Jeffrey eagerly hopped on stage, dragging me up to play “Hot Cross Buns” –one of his favorites he’s learned so far — on a little electric keyboard.  He was nervous, hands shaking, but seemed more concerned with ordering me around than making mistakes.  We played, the audience was enthusiastic.

Jeffrey took a bow.

The Princess Festival, Egads

Princess Festival 2009 Pumpkin Coach

It’s tough being the only girl in the family, right?

It’s also tough being the middle child, right?

So it’s a good idea when Mom decides to lavish some one-on-one time with said only girl/middle child, riiiiiight?

That’s basically the logic behind my decision to take Eleanor to the Princess Festival that was held down in Lindon yesterday.  It’s hosted by this very wealthy family as a fundraiser for impoverished Kenyans.  They even flew some Kenyan children in to participate.  Here’s Eleanor jumping on the trampoline with them (they were very sweet to involve her in their play):

 Princess Festival 2009 tramp

The site of the Princess Festival is “Hatfieldadelphia” (sworn enemy of McCoyadelphia) — a privately owned reception center/pleasure garden/castle owned by the aforementioned very wealthy family.  It features a witch’s cottage with a twisty slide running out its back, a massive fountain, a pavilion topped with a giant Russian-style dome, a big giant playground, a covered picnic area, a tiny Statue of Liberty holding aloft a street lamp, etc.  It gave the impression of being a very small amusement park with no rides.  The reception center was surrounded with giant iron statues of African animals.  Here’s Eleanor on an elephant:

 Princess Festival 2009 Elephant

ANYWAY — the Festival.  Girls came bedecked in their sparkliest duds, and a woman dressed as the Blue Fairy guided them through a role-playing adventure.  The kids helped Snow White decline the witch’s apple (Ella was a tad afraid of the witch, and had to find Mom for a moment).  They helped Rapunzel’s Prince reach the just-out-of-reach braid of hair hanging from the castle tower.  They gave the Beast a hug and he turned into a prince.  They helped Cinderella go to the ball.  They taught the Blue Fairy how to dance and twirl (said Rapunzel’s Prince: “You guys dance awesome.”)  The photo below is of Eleanor with Beauty and her Beast-turned-Prince.  Love them braces:

Princess Festival 2009 beauty & beast

At the end of the adventure, the girls went into the fairytale-decorated ballroom and watched the various princes and princesses they had just helped while they did a spiffy ballroom dance routine (the teenagers involved in this program deserve MEDALS, let me tell you).

At the end, Eleanor shyly introduced herself to the various fairytale characters, with emphasis on the shyly.  She was a wee bit overwhelmed by the sheer bigness of it all, but it was nothing another ’round of bouncing on the trampoline couldn’t fix.  Ella says her favorite part was meeting Cinderella.  You gotta admit, she does look just like the Disney cartoon.

Princess Festival 2009 Cinderella

Grandma Shirts and Great-Grandma Hanson accompanied us on the trip through fairyland, for which they deserve medals, as well.  Much cuteness was enjoyed by all.  Ella is a lucky girl.

Great Basin National Park

We took a trip to said park over Memorial Day weekend.  The park is one of the least visited in the country, so most people don’t know where it is: it’s just on the Nevada side of the Utah/Nevada border, a.k.a. No Man’s Land.  The only town nearby is so small that is doesn’t even have a stop sign, much less a stoplight.  Most of the surrounding area is dry dry desert, but the Snake Range of mountains — which comprises the park — is unusually high, catching banks of rainclouds and allowing for snowpack reservoirs of water.  So it’s unusually lush, what the rangers call a “mountain island.”

 Great Basin 2009 Pole Creek

It’s still pretty deserty.  You can see in the above photo the contrast between desert (on the left) and mountain forest (on the right).  There’s a tiny creek that flows through the right hand side, allowing for the little scrap of forest.

Great Basin National Park is famous for Lehman Caves, a group of limestone rooms similar to Timpanogos Caves.  Apparently the caves served as a jazz club/speakeasy in the ’20s. Eleanor looks rather surprised to hear of it.  We took our cave tour with a biker gang from Salt Lake.  They were rather funny and polite, and had wicked cool leather jackets.

Great Basin 2009 Lehman Caves

Wheeler Peak is the highest peak in the park.  I supposed I would have been more impressed with it if I didn’t see peaks like this every day in Salt Lake.

Great Basin 2009 Mt. Wheeler

BUT — Wheeler Peak also hosts several groves of ancient bristlecone pines.  Really ancient.  Recent research calculated the age of one tree to be around 4,950 years old.  It’s the oldest known living tree in the world.

That’s right, 4,950 years old.  Think about that for a second.  That means that tree was a sapling when, like, Moses brought the Ten Commandments down to the Israelites.  Or when the Brother of Jared was contemplating how to light up his boat.  Old with a capital O.

Unfortunately, the trail leading to the grove was still covered in snow.  We gave up when the drifts got up to our knees.

Great Basin 2009 Snow

Wildflowers were in abundance in the park — Brian gave me a local wildflower guide for Mother’s Day, and we had fun looking up all the little blossoms we found.  We were able to identify nearly 20 different flowers.  The hillsides were carpeted with this variety of sunflower — the picture here just doesn’t do it justice; imagine the yellow flowers going on for miles, up and over slopes, and you’ll get the idea.  Gorgeous.

Great Basin 2009 Wildflowers

Jeffrey and Eleanor were good little troopers on the trip (William stayed with Grandma back at home.  Bless that grandma!).  Even though the campgrounds were at full capacity, the trails still seemed almost deserted.  We didn’t see any other children in the park at all.  When the kids finished the requirements for the Junior Ranger program, the park rangers were really excited; I don’t think they get to see very many kids.

Great Basin 2009 South Route trail

The kids made for slow hiking, (we estimated that our hiking speed was 3/4 of a mile per hour) but they were very good natured about it, even when slogging uphill.  Our only complaint is that we didn’t expect the cold temperatures.  Our campground was at 7,000 feet, so the nights were rather brrrrrr.  On the plus side, there were no gnats or mosquitoes.  So there you go.

The sad part of the trip is that we hoped to do some stargazing — the park is a protected Dark Sky Area, and has ranger-led astronomy programs — but the skies were overcast every night we were there (and there was a new moon, what a waste!).  I suppose this means we’ll just have to go back in late summer another year!