Photos from today

The weather has been warming up this week and I was finally able to get the kids outside today. After school, lunch, and naps, Lex usually just wants to play in the living room. Today I mentioned sidewalk chalk and he was running for his jacket! By the time we got out there the sun was going down and it was getting chilly again, but we all had fun anyway. I’m sooo ready for warm weather! C’mon Spring!

Chalk races

One of our favorite games is called "chalk races." Lex draws start and finish lines on the road and we have running/hoping/skipping/jumping races. Fun for all!

Throwing rocks

I was hoping this activity would lose some appeal this year, but nope, they were thrilled to be right back at it. Eve even dropped a piece of chalk down there. Oops!

Tree face

Eve loves our neighbor's tree.

Doggie surgery – round 2

As I’m sure you recall, last year I performed abdominal surgery on Lex’s doggie. He was a champ and recovered well, despite my sewing skills. Yesterday I had to do surgery on Eve’s poor doggie. She bit a hole right through its nose! These kids are tough on their dogs! She was very sad to discover the hole, but they were thrilled that it meant mommy got out the sewing box again. Doggie’s nose looks a little odd now, but the hole is repaired and doggie will live to see another day, and be bitten many more times, despite my best efforts to thwart that odd habit!

Crazy shirt dilemma

We have a funny (I’m trying not to let it be annoying) dilemma in this house. Lex is a quirky kid, right? We all know this. We’ve been through some odd wardrobe situations here, like the 24/7 PJs for about a year, last summer’s pants/long sleeves only wardrobe, and the well known 4-season blue sun hat.  Now it’s a shirt thing.

A few months ago he had a variety of shirts that he would wear, but as he outgrew them or they got holey, he refuses to replace them with new ones. The boy is down to just two shirts that he will wear. He has a drawer full, as I had to explain to his teacher the other day when she commented on how he wore the same two shirts over and over. Really, he has plenty of shirts. I even bought one from a thrift store (soft, gently worn) that is the SAME as one he wears only a different color.  Will he wear it?  Nope!  Last week I even removed a bunch of shirts from his drawer thinking maybe it was just overwhelming. I left four shirts that are either a) almost identical to one he will wear with just a difference in color or something or b) a character shirt (Thomas the Train) that he likes. Any luck? Nope!

He had a total meltdown a few nights ago when he went to pick clothes for the morning and found “no clean shirts!” (except all the clean shirts in his drawer that he won’t wear!) He threw a fit and said he would not go to school in the morning. Sigh. I made sure there was a “good” shirt clean by morning. This afternoon his shirt got dirty and the other one was dirty too, so he went shirtless all afternoon! He even started the laundry to wash his shirts, checked in on it often, and switched it to the dryer. Eventually he was freezing so I proposed an early bath. He happily accepted and put on snugly PJs after that. He keeps telling us that he will wear new shirts when he is a 5yr old. We’ll see. One of the two he wears now is too small for him, but I’m debating whether or not to put it away. I’ll have to choose a time when I’m up for the battle. Or just let him wear a too small shirt until the weather warms up and HOPE he’ll wear t-shirts this summer.

Parenting, never a dull moment.

She drives me crazy

Look at this beautiful girl.  Happily watching Toy Story and cuddling with the baby doll that was mine as a little girl.  So sweet.Eve on the couch

She drives me crazy! I love her, really I do, but she drives me crazy lately! She is frequently one big ball of tears, she answers 90% of all questions with “woof” or “quack,” and she leaves a trail of stuff behind her everywhere she goes. Everywhere! She picks up little things, toys, shoes, rocks, etc, and then puts them down in other places. Like she’s trying to drive me crazy! With Lex at least I can say “go clean up the blocks” and he can do that. With Eve I have to tell her to go clean up… well… everything! We have a rule about putting away toys when you’re done with them, but in order to stay on top of Eve’s trail I practically have to follow her around reminding to her pick up everything she puts down. Then, when she does pick it up, she just puts it on a table or counter, not back where it belongs. It exhausts me! And the constant crying, and baby talk. Oh, so sweet and so exhausting! Want to hear a little secret? One that Alan reminds me about often and laughs at me. When I was doing daycare here I had two little 3yr old girls and they drove me crazy. Why? Because they did the exact same things she does now! Such an amazingly different personality then Lex was at this age, though from a sleep standpoint I’ll take her personality any day! She is sleeping now, thankfully, though I expect her to wake up again later. The past few nights she has been waking up crying. I think she’s hungry because she doesn’t eat much during the day. Why? I don’t know. She’s a nutter.

I was telling a friend the other day who was asking for childrearing advice that each child is different and what works for one may not work for another. I have to remind myself of this frequently and I really need to figure out some tricks for Eve because she’s driving me crazy! But I do love her. Really. She’s so sweet how can you not?!

Yummy granola bars

Eve and I made some delicious granola bars this afternoon from Smitten Kitchen, a blog Rosy sent me. You can pretty much add any “dry” stuff you want (dried fruits, nuts, etc.) and choose your “wet” ingredients (honey, syrup, etc.) I’ve tried several other granola bar recipes in the past and none came out quite right. A trick I learned here though, that I didn’t know before, is that if the granola bars are crumbly when you try to cut the, stick them in the fridge for awhile to let the “glue” harden. I have been trying to bake bars longer and longer to get them to harden. Oops. We cut these pretty quickly (we have no patience for baked goods around here!) and they crumbled a bit, so I put the rest in the fridge and finished cutting them later. Perfect! And oh-so-yummy!

Read the Smitten Kitchen post for the whole details, but here is the basic recipe:

Granola Bars

  • 1 2/3 cups quick rolled oats
  • 1/2 to 3/4 cup granulated sugar (I used 2/3c.)
  • 1/3 cup oat flour (I don’t have oat flour so I used whole wheat flour)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 2 to 3 cups fruits and nuts (I raided the cabinet and found 1c. dried cranberries, 1/4c sesame seeds, 1/4c crushed hazelnuts, 1/2c cinnamon bits and 2/3c. shredded coconut)
  • 1/3 cup peanut butter or another nut butter (I used sunflower seed butter) (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 6 tablespoons melted butter
  • 1/4 cup honey, maple syrup or corn syrup (I used maple syrup)
  • 2 tablespoons light corn syrup
  • 1 tablespoon water

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line an 8? x 8? x 2? pan in one direction with parchment paper, allowing it to go up the opposing sides. Lightly grease the parchment paper and the exposed pan, or coat with a non-stick spray.

Stir together all the dry ingredients, including the fruit and nuts. In a separate bowl, whisk together the vanilla, melted butter or oil, liquid sweeteners and water. Toss the wet ingredients with the dry (and peanut butter, if you’re using it) until the mixture is evenly crumbly. Spread in the prepared pan, pressing them in firmly to ensure they are molded to the shape of the pan. (A piece of plastic wrap can help with this, as you press down on the back of it.)

Bake the bars for 30 to 40 minutes, until they’re brown around the edges — don’t be afraid to get a little color on the tops too. They’ll still seem soft and almost underbaked when you press into the center of the pan but do not worry, they’ll set completely once completely cool.

Cool the bars in their pan completely on a cooling rack. (Alternately, after about 20 minutes you can use your parchment “sling” to lift and remove the bars, and place them in their paper on the rack to cool the rest of the way. This can speed the process up.)

Once cool, a serrated knife (or bench knife) to cut the bars into squares. [Updating to note, as many had crumbling issues:] If bars seem crumbly, chill the pan of them further in the fridge for 30 minutes which will fully set the “glue”, then cut them cold. To store, wrap the bars individually in plastic or stack them in an airtight container. In humid weather, it’s best to store bars in the refrigerator. They also freeze well.

Here we go again!

I know it’s prudent to wait a few more weeks (or months) but I cannot keep a secret, and I learned this morning that Lex can’t either! So, for all the world to know…

We’re having a baby!!!!

Obviously we are all very excited. I was trying to put together a cool image to post here, but Picasa lost my work and I got annoyed, so text is what you get today.

We are going with the smaller community hospital this time instead of the big teaching one. Alan, Eve and I went over this morning to tour the birthing center and I spoke with the midwives and I’m excited! We have the first prenatal appointment in two weeks. My estimated due date is October 26th, but I’ll be adding a week or so to that, so I’m expecting an early November baby!

We found out this weekend and told the kids right away. Actually, the kids came in while the test was working (Privacy? What’s that?) and asked me a million questions about it. They are now both well versed in pregnancy tests. :) When I saw that oh-so-hoped-for + sign I was thrilled. Eve ran upstairs to tell Alan, yelling “Daddy! We are having a baby!!”

This morning, when I went to pick up Lex from school, another mother came up to me and said that Lex might have spilled some beans this morning. Apparently after I dropped him off he went up to his teacher and announced, loudly, that “Mommy has a tiny baby in her belly! A real baby! We are going to have it in the winter!” The teacher, this mother, and most of the kids all heard. I guess he’s pretty excited! Like the rest of us! :)

Spring in the kitchen

It’s starting to look a little like Spring around here!  I see a few crocus poking through the snow and we have some serious wheat grass growing in the kitchen :)  Thanks Rosy!  The kids each planted their own pots and I wrapped the remaining seeds in damp paper towel to watch them sprout.  Gardening is fun.   Sadly our body snatcher and sensitive plants aren’t doing as well.

Wheat grass plants

Wheat grass plants in paper towels

Happy March! As Lex noted this morning, this year March came in like a lamb. (February certainly went out like a lion though!)